wzRS SA... eon SOS IMR 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, March 23, 1963 SIBLEY STAY SHORT BUT... This Hour Has Repercussions By MICHAEL GILLAN OTTAWA Sibley was in Canada less than one hour last Friday, but it was enough to create an inter- national cause celebre and plunge another immigration minister into political hot water. His banishment from the country and a speaking engage- ment for the Voice of Women in Winnipeg had Prime Minis- ter Pearson under bal Se wer fire in the Commons Monday; and Immigration Minister Nich- olson on his way to the Mani- toba capital to investigate. Prof. Sibley teaches political science at the University of Minnesota and once advocated establishing Communist and free-love clubs on campus in or- a to challenge orthodox think- ing. «The prime minister confirmed t Mr. Nicholson last Thurs- ly approved a department de- cision to refuse entry to the pro- fessor unless he underwent a special examination or the (CP)--Mulford Q. baker and New Democratic Leader Douglas, arguing that nobody should be kept from speaking in Canada simply be- cause of his ideas, tried unsuc- cessfully to get a full explana- tion from Mr. Pearson. y The prime minister sought to| @ fend off opposition questioning] F 4 until Mr. Nicholson, who was in Vancouver when the incident arose, returns to Ottawa from his Winnipeg investigation. Already, Minnesota Governor Karl Rolvaag has fired off a telegram to the Winnipeg im- migration office saying he is "pleased to testify regarding the personal honesty, integrity and high moral character of Prof. Sibley." Stanley Knowles (NDP--Win- nipeg North Centre) demanded a statement from the prime minister because of a state had complained "about our denial of a fundamental human _free- dom." Mr. Pearson: said "I do not consider that a telegram of pro- test from a governor of a state sponsoring organization made an application. | SEEK EXPLANATION | , Opposition Leader Diefen-! Pearson's Statements 'Drew Him Into Affair 'The prime minister has been personally drawn into the affair because last Friday, as he told the House that he had been in- formed the professor had not yet reached the border, the pro- fessor was being bounced out of| the country. the prime minister. | Mr. Pearson explained at length that this misstatement was caused by the necessary delay in relaying the interview with the professor to the de- partment in Ottawa, and then to his office. | But this did not satisfy Mr. Diefenbaker who charged there was a "large degree of negli- said prime minister that his heated rejoinder indicates a guilty con- H " r science on his part." | With results final in 79 of the Douglas said the Commons had/ minister and her allies had won a right to know why Prof. Sib-/2§ parliamentary seats. Opposi- ley was refused entry. in the United States necessarily means that there is a question of privilege before this House' of Commons, , . ." American astronauts John W. Young (left) and Virgil (Gus) Grissom, who blasted Right Wing gence" on the part of the im- migration department. He said officials must have known the Should Oust fue facts "wnich ter mus] Woman PM gg oie | COLOMBO (AP) -- Conserva " i " -- Conserva- ihn LAR agh re ge retorted), ve political parties held a comfortable lead today in their election fight to oust Ceylon's leftist-backed prime minister, Mrs. Sirimavo Bandaranaike. The Opposition leader then "let me suggest to the country's 151 electoral districts, Mr. Diefenbaker and Mr.|the world's only woman prime |tion parties had 49. Independents} HERE and THERE Gerry Hill is the new president of the Fernhill Park Neighborhood Associa- tion. Elected Sunday to the executive were: Ted Low- son, vice-president; Mrs. Frank Densham, treasurer; Mrs. Lorne Crowells, sec- retary; Harry Patfield, sports chairman. Several committees were named to for the efficient operation of the park. The retiring executive reviewed the year's activities which placed Fernhill second in the city under this cate- gory. Next regular meeting will be held Apr. 13 at 8 p.m. The Kingsway .College Elementary Band is pre- senting their first public band concert on Saturday, March 27, at 8.30 p.m. in the Kingsway College Auditorium. The program is free and open to the pub- lic. Featured on the pro- gram will be a trumpet trio, a marinba solo, waltze, overtures, and marches. The members of. Tri-Coun- ty Farmers' Co-operative Market are planning to celebrate their first anni- versary with a dinner to be held in the Glenholme School for Retarded Chil- dren, 1365 Simcoe street, on March 29 at 6.30 p.m. Bowmanville teams made a clean sweep of the finals in the Eastern Ontario Little NHL tournament Saturday at Port Hope. Its juniors blanked Port Hope 2-0; the pee wees blanked Port Hope jhad four. | Losses by the prime minis-| ter's Freedom Party made it off on the history-making three - orbit Gemini flight this morning, showed no CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) Astronauts Virgil Grissom and John Young soared into orbit today in the world's first steer- able spacecraft. During their intended three- times-around - the-world flight, the astronauts were to manoeu- vre their "Molly Brown" space chariot to qualify it for later long-duration and rendezvous missions. The flight, the first in which more than one American rode in the same spacecraft, started the manned phase of Project Gemini. The program is to "ib FINAL TERRESTIAL HOURS -- RELAXATION sings of tension during warm-up sessions last night. Still in space-suits, Young U.S. Two-Man Blastoff Marks New Space Era' planes, headed by the aircraft carrier Intrepid, were stationed in the intended impact area. Grissom, the command pilot, fired small jets to provide the final manoeuvre that steered |Molly Brown into orbit. He 'thus helped himself to the distinction of becoming the first man to rocket twice into space. On July 21, 1961, he sailed briefly across the threshold of space on a 16-minute Project Mercury sub-orbital flight and, in a hair-raising finish, swam for his life when his Liberty Bell 7 spacecraft filled with water and sank. | By THE CANADIAN PRESS The eniphasis swung to bor- Win Support WASHINGTON (AP) -- Erm- son Foote, chairman of the U.S. national interagency council on smoking and health, endorsed Monday a congressional move to put "a clear health warning on cigarette packages and in all cigarette advertising." "Cigarette smoking repr e- sents a totally unique peace- time hazard to life and health," Foote said in testimony for the first day of Senate commerce committee hearings on various bills requiring health warnings on cigarettes. The tobacco industry main- tains there is no solid proof to claims that cigarettes are a health hazard. Foote, who resigned as head of a New York advertising agency to head the council formed by 13 private and three federal agencies, said such warnings--"intended to reduce the sale of the item packaged" rowing and credit buying in at least two of Canada's legislative assemblies Monday. The Nova Scotia legislature's law amendments committee ap- proved a bill to empower the government to guarantee short- term borrowings by a Crown corporation, Industrial Estates Limited, and allowing the gov- ernment to guarantee loans ma- turing within a period of 12 months. Current statues provide for long-term borrowing by the cor- poration. | Another bill proposes full and complete disclosure in terms of simple annual interests of the! cost of borrowing money and purchasing on credit. But after a five-hour public hearing which uncovered diversified views, the committee took no immediate action, Meanwhile, legislation to make more credit available to 'Danger' Ads|2 Provinces Turn On Fag-Pack To Loans, Credit eligibility age to 35 from 31; lowering the amount of equit required by farmers; and su sidization on interest rates fo' the first five years of the loan Here's what happened in th other legislatures in session: Newfoundland -- Premie Smallwood condemned a magi zine (Time) article passages which, he said, we' false and without founda' The article dealt with the p posed transmission of surpl electric power from Church (Hamilton) Falls in Labrador customers in the eastern Can dian provinces and the Unit States. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. --are "without precedent con- young farmers in the province and Grissom lounged in padded chairs for their final briefing at Cape Kennedy. --AP Wirephotos Both the ability to manoeuvre and to operate outside an or- hni. was introduced for second read- ing in the Manitoba legislature. Changes proposed for the Ag- riculture Credit Act include raising the ceiling on loans to cerning any product as widely sold as cigarettes." MP Figures 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS $30,000 from $25,000; raising the Some Merit In Fiasco' By TOM MITCHELL OTTAWA (CP)--A New Dem- ocratic MP suggests Finance Minister Gordon should do more thinking along the lines of his "fiasco" budget of two years go. The advice was given in the Commons Monday by Reid Scott (Toronto Danforth) as the biting spacecraft are techniq which must be developed oc- fore either Russians or Amer- icans go to the moon. On' the next Gemini flight, scheduled in June, astronaut James McDivitt is scheduled to House di d a bill covering provinces that choose to stay out of federal-provincial cost- sharing programs. "Many of us still look back with a bit of excitement to his first budget," Mr. Scott said of emerge partially at least from his spacecraft. Twenty three minutes after lift - off, while Grissom and Young soared high over Africa, they made checks of their life support system. Grissom re- ported to a tracking station in the minister, "because even though it turned out to be a fi- asco we felt that he was em- barking on some imaginative schemes in an attempt to grap- ple with some of the problems facing this country." Mr. Scott made a plea for able... the cost is low. Save yourself neediess time and worry. See BLOCK today. We ¢ to OPEN TONIGHT Let Block solve in myste this omar of every tax return, mathematically impossible for|train crews for later journeys ithe Canary Islands that all sys- more imagination in the opting- her to form a one-party govern- ment to prolong her five years |of rule, during which Ceylon has }come close to bankruptcy. Opposition Leader Dudley Se- nanayke said that if he wins he will give Ceylon and' foreign capitalists more scope than they have had under Mrs. Ban- daranaike's program of public) ownership of industry. Top-ranking members of his United Nationalist Party hinted that a victorious Senanayke would attempt to improve rela- tions with the United States by paying compensation for Amer- proposed motel at the north- west corner of Champlain avenue, and Thornton road south, was referred last night to city council. The Commission noted that if the request was approved the service would extend into a buffer zone, Council referred the matter to the planning board for consid- eration. Judge Sweeney of Toronto and about 10 other Toronto to the moon. Grissom and Young are the) Grissom, 38-year-old air force|18th and 19th persons and the major, and Young, 34-year-old'seventh and -eighth Americans started their breath-taking jour-|hited 10 men and one woman. ney at 9:24 a.m, EST when aj Three Russian cosmonauts powerful Titan II rocket flashed|went aloft in the Voskhod I last) to life on a Cape KennedyjOct. 16 in the first multi launching pad and thundered|manned flight. Just five days) into the sky. ago, two more Russians shot The launching was delayed 23)into orbit tae one of them minutes because of a leak in-a\stepped outgide the capsule in} fuel oxidizer line. ta historic space feat. Six minutes after launch, the! Although jthe Gemini space mission control centre reported|craft is about 4,000 pounds that Molly Brown was in a suc-|lighter than /the Voskhod, it has) cessful orbit. ja key capability which the So- Officials will visit Oshawa's Simcoe Hall Boys' Club about 4.30 p.m., Thursday. ican oil firms expropriated in 1962. The United. States sus- ; in retaliation for the seizures. During the week ending Mar. 20, 338 patients were | MARXIST BEATEN admitted to the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital, Other hospital statistics for the week are: births -- male 31, female 26; discharges, 331; newborn discharges -- male 24, fe- male 27; major surgery, 89; minor surgery, 99; eye, ear, nose and throat, 77; treat- ments and examinations, 209; casts, 32; physiother- apy treatments, 1037; visits, 713; occupational therapy, |seats in Parliament. 232; speech therapy, 5. | Mrs. Bandaranaike allied her- jself with a Marxist offshoot of | minister and the architect of the! \expropriations, Ti -B. ratne, was among top Commu- nists defeated in Monday's bal- \loting. Colvin de Silva, pro-Russian |secretary of Ceylon's Commu- nist party, was also beaten. | Both Mrs, Bandaranaike, 49, and Senanayke, 53, a former {prime minister, retained their Congratulations are ex- tended to Mrs. Winnie Bar- rett, Rossland road 'east, who celebrates her birth- day today, no - contest understanding with 'jthe Communists \Criticism of the West and its } Campaign A collection of 14 "Contem- porary Canadian Drawing and Prints" from the Art Gallery of Toronto will go on display at McLaughlin Collegiate today in an exhi- bition lasting until April 6. The exhibit, sponsored by the Art Institute of Toronto Mrs, Bandaranaike and her left- Ceylon's 11,000,000 people. He also emphasized moves by the prime |ties with China, 5 to 0 and the bantams whitewashed Cobourg 7 to 0. A $103,251.59 contract for the construction of storm sewers on Whiting avenue, was awarded to a Toronto was awarded to a Toronto company last night by city council. Con - Drain Com- any Ltd. submitted che lowest of five tenders for the project. The highest tender was more than $173,000. Net cost to the city will be $34,300. The amount will be debentured. Houdaille Industries Lid. will contribute $73,283 and the balance will be paid through winter works sub- sidies. Fred Crome, city en- gineer, said the sewer will replace an existing sewer used mainly by Houdaille Industries. He said the Whiting avenue section of the sewer will be completed by the end of April and the balance of the work will be completed by the middie of June. A request to the Public Utilities Commission to ex- tend a watermain for a is organized by the Colleg- iate's art director Murray Hofstetter, and features works by such contempor- ary artists as Harold Town, Jock MacDonald, William Ronald and Allen Collier. It is open to the public up to 9 p.m. throughout the exhibition, economic slump. Mrs. Bandaranaike a Buddhist monk. She won his ister | In the last Parliament, party had 70 seats, the Allied Marxist Sama Sanaj had 12 and the Communist 'party three Children are believed to have caused about $300 dam- age to windows and screens at an apartment building un- der construction on Chaucer avenue in the southeast sec- ion of the city. Joseph Ho- genboom of Hogenboom Con- struction Limited said to- day the damage could have been done between Friday night and this morning. Stones were found inside the building. The five-suite building is situated near railway tracks, Mr, Hogen- boom said the stones ap- peared to have come from this. area. Mr Hogen- boom has offered a $50 -re- ward for information lead- ing to apprehension of per- sons responsible for the damage. Police were noti- fied of the incident. Gordon B. Miles, manager of the King and Simcoe streets branch of The Toronto - Dominion Bank, has announced the appoint- FOR THE FINEST Custom Made DRAPES in the Latest Shades and Fabrics Need Mortgage Money? McGILL "sc: Doy or Night - 728-4285 SEE M & DRY GOODS & DRAPERIES 74 CELINA STREET PHONE 723-7827 TRACKS EXPERTLY INSTALLED pended economic aid to Ceylonjtheir three orbits in four hours,|teams can practise techniques Mrs. Bandaranaike's trade 2:15 p.m. Recovery ships andlade. j WEATHER FORECAST Heavy Snowfall, Continued Cold Tlanga-| themselves.| iSs|Continuing unseasonably the widow of former prime min-' Winds light increasin, ister Solomon Bandaranaike.|to northeast 15 to 20 this after-| |who was assassinated in 1959 by | noon AWAIT IMPACT viet vehicle did not. It can be The pair were to complete;manoeuvred so that astronaut 52 minutes and parachute to ajthat must be perfected for Proj- landing in the Atlantic Oceanlect Apollo manned lunar land- near Grand Turk Island aboutlings planned late in this déc- tems were working well. out bill, which would give the As they wheeled around the lnavy lieutenant commander, |to fly into space. Russia has or-|globe, Grissom was to be in con-| trol of the 7,000-pound craft most of the time. Weather, which had threat ened the shot for several days, showed signs of improvement and project officials decided Monday to go ahead with. the effort. INEED DAYLIGHT A major requirement is at least two hours of daylight after the spacecraft lands in the in tended recovery area near Grand Turk Island, southeast of the- Bahamas. Planned flight time for the three-orbit journey is four hours, 52 minutes. Vice-President Hubert Hum- phrey was among thousands of persons in the area to view the launching, which will be the first in the American man-in- space program in 22 months, TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts {the Communist party and had ajissued by the weather office at/to northeast 15 to 20 tonight. 15:30 a.m.: Synopsis: More snow is expected across |culture played a big part in hersouthern Ontario as far north|Cloudy periods today. as the Muskoka and Haliburton Senanayke told Buddhists that/areas. Northern Ontario is ex-|!ight snow tonight. |pected to escape most of this ist supporters threatened Budd-/spring storm. hism, the faith of 6,000,000 of| Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, jNiagara, Lake Huron, Lake jOntario, Windsor, London, Tor- minister to strengthen onto, Hamilton: Snow today in [the accumulations of from four The winner faces a tough jobito eight inches before ending trying to pull Ceylon out of its Wednesday morning. Cloudy with a few flurries Wednesday. cold. to north Georgian Bay, Haliburton: seat in Parliament in 1960 and Cloudy with occasional periods i ae ie i ; . 5;/Mount Fores his party made her prime min-'of light snow today, Snow to- = porated night tapering off to a few flur- her ries by Wednesday. Continuing ment of Claire L. Roth as assistant manager. Mr. Roth succeeds Paul Pautler, re- cently appointed manager of Forest Hill Village Branch, Toronto, Mr. Roth, who comes ta Oshawa from Ham- ilton, has been an employee of the bank for the. past 16 years and has served in various _ cities Ontario and provinces. the western | The Rock of "S-H-A-K-Y" Compared to th "ACTIVE REALTY" LISTING throughout | White River...... 'Timmins Grissom, 38, an air force ma- jor, and Young, 34, a navy lieutenant commander, were slated to make a relatively brief trip to qualify the Gemini space- craft for long-duration and ren- dezvous flights planned in the) next few months. | Grissom sought to become the) cold winds light becoming north|first man to rocket twice into} space. July 21, 1961,. he made southern white|a brief sub-orbital flight in the North Bay, | Mercury program and, in a sus- a. few|pense-filled finish, he swam for Clouding|his life when his Liberty Bell Occasional| VII capsule filled with water Mainly|and sank. The incident provided -- the} Algoma, tRiver, Timagami, \Sudbury: Sunny. with jover this evening. \cloudy ' Wednesday. Continuing \cold, Winds light today north to|name for the Grissom - Young northeast 15 to 20 tonight and/capsule. It officially is called | Wednesday. jGemini | Ill because it is the Northern White River, Coch-|third flight in the Gemini pro- lrane, Western James Bay:|8Tam. The first two were un- Sunny and a few cloudy periods|manned. light winds and continuing cold NaME STUCK today and Wednesday. ae | | But the astronauts kiddingly| called it Molly Brown after the \broadway musical and movie,} |The Unsinkable Molly Brown.| Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Wednesday: Windsor 22 St. Thomas.. . and the name stuck, LONGON: sevcocrecss 9 5 | Grissom, as command pilot. Kitchener jwas to shift his space chariot| all over the sky-flying it back-| |wards, forwards, sideways and jupside down and executing the/ jfirst orbit changes ever at-) |tempted by a manned space- ship Hamilton .... \St. Catharines.... | Toronto . |Peterborough .... |Kingston ....0.... Twice during the flight he) Trenton . j 5 {was to shift his orbital path by, Killaloe ...secsee.s : jas much as 50 miles, He also \Muskoka ..... jplanned to change his orbital! North Bay..sesoce plane in a rehearsal for future} {Sudbury ... \flights, when a Gemini craft will |Earlton .....+c0ss jbe called upon to link up with |Sault Ste. Marie.. janother orbiting satellite. i iprovinces tax abatements or cash payments if they decide |to withdraw from any of the \17 programs covered by the legislation. | The minister should "resur- rect the corpse" of the Canada Development Corporation, pro- posed in his first budget to channel Canadian funds into Canadian investments. This had "gone up in a,puff of smoke." | The government ; should be \thinking in terms' of establish- cost you eny penelty er interest, or interest. we meke @ny errors thet we will the NORTH AMERICA'S LARGEST TAX SERVICE 135 SIMCOE ST. NORTH WEEKDAYS 9 A.M. - 9 P.M.--SATURDAYS 9 A.M.-5 P. PHONE 725-6322 si NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY ing a second Trans - Canada Highway system, a_ national power grid a national man-) power policy and steps to put} into practice the aims set out in the report by the Economic Council of Canada. Your Clothes @ Will Look Like New @ Will Feel Like New When Cleaned By "The Best In Town" Phone 725-1191 VISIT braemor gardens (Stevenson Rd. N. and Annapolis Ave.) Community For Young Moderns and So-o-0-o Convenient | Kapuskasing re Moosonee se eeenee Gibraltar of stenographer, All. applications conta e Value of Your March 29th, 1965. 728-5157 may be had upon applic 48 Salar ; y to be commensu Simcoe St. South qualification. Membars Oshawe & District Real Estate Board WILLI TOWNSHIP OF WHITBY STENOGRAPHER Applications are hereby invited for the position education, etc., must be submitted in person to the undersigned, not later than 4 p.m., Mon. Information as to salary and fringe benefits Clerk -- Brooklin, Ontario ining personal data, ation. rate with ability and AM H. WALLACE, AOR NEW ERA... IN OSHAWA LIVING ... where CONVENIENCE is a by-word. What do we mean by convenience? It means that Braemor Gardens was planned in such a way that you and your family may treat yourselves to leisure living; it means that all the functions you perform every day have been brought to YOU . . . schools, churches, shopping areas, recreation facilities and all the advantages that go towards modern living are here... Whether you are looking or not... come out soon and see our definition of Convenience. . . visit Braemor Gar- dens! FOR | CONVENIENT LIVING <>. IT'S braemor gardens (Stephenson Rd. N. and Annapolis) d