The Oshawa Times, 3 Oct 1961, p. 1

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THOUGHT Those who complain about ile way the ball bounces should be sure they didn't drop it. FOR TODAY Zhe Osha Tine WEATHER REPORT Partly cloudy and continuing cool today and Wednesday, winds northerly up to 1 5. VOL. 90--NO. 229 Price Not ( Over 10 Cents Per Copy Authorized es Second Class Mail Post Office Deparment, Otiowo EIGHTEEN PAGES OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1961 LANNING NEW SHAWA PLAZA | | | | Monday and the United States _ |before the General | {member UN U.S. Refuses | Russ Proposal UNITED NATIONS (CP) Russia put its proposal for an interim UN secretary-general Assembly promptly gave it a thumbs down. U.S. delegate Adlai Stevenson said the Soviet proposals "main- tain the idea of the troika--of dividing the world in three blocs." He said 'there is no such world." Russia proposed that the 11- Security Council propose to the 100-member Gen- ommend members before the question can go before the as- sembly. The United States has been trying to persuade nationalist China not to use the veto against Mongolia. Such a move was seen as a possible step to bring on a vote to replace nationalist China with Communist China in the assembly. Eleven French-language states in Africa, campaigning to bring Mauritania in, are re- ported to feel a nationalist China veto of Mongolia would | Oshawa will have the first lintegrated midtown shopping {plaza and midtown apartment. |village in Canada, if a compre- hensive plan presented to City Council last night by Dominion |Stores Limited is approved. | Council referred the entire Dominion Stores' proposal to the City Planning Board for a report. If the Board recom- mends approval, and Council endorses such recommendation, the re-zoning bylaws would have to pass the Ontario Municipal Board. | The land area involved, all now owned by Dominion Stores, | comprises about 21 acres lying Village Of Apartments And Big Shopping Area ing and deepening of the Osh- awa Creek from King street scuth to Gibb street, in a more direct line, to prevent spring flooding. It was reported to Council that Proctor Redferm Lid., consulting engineers, had been retained by Dominion Stores to prepare plans and specifications for the creek proj- ect, in accordance with require- ments of the City Engineer's Department. All trees would be retained except for any in the direct line of the work, a Domin- ion spokesman said. Gently slop- ing creek banks would be sodded. Complete cost of the creek eral Assembly the appointment bring on a Soviet veto of Maur-| 00 "050 Fag 0 To a pel of a man who would work in co-|itania. They are reported ready project would be borne by Do- # DARK LINE ON AIR PHOTO SHOWS PROPOSED DEVELOPMENT AREA Forced Weapo Il Ban Mentioned UNITED NATIONS (CP), Canada said today that in a world faced by the '"Armaged- don bomb" there is a danger nuclear war has come to be not only possible TT al Affairs Minister September, following recent So-| 3. Green warmly commended viet weapons testing in the at! President Kennedy's "flexible" mosphere, the level of radioac-|disarmament plan, which Can- tive fallout over one major Ca-/ada helped formulate. But dele- nadian eity -- Toronto--jumped gates need not decide now be- by as much as 1,000 times over|tween rival American and So- p readings." - |viet plans--the important thing The Canadiin said the radia-|is a presumption of negotia- w 'Green, in speech in the United Nations, spoke of *"'compelling" the nuclear giants to quit test- ing weapons of vast destructive power. Addressing the 100 - member 16th General Assembly, Green said in effect it will avail noth- ing if mankind solves all prob- lems except the nuclear race, and he added: "During the last two weeks of hazard alone justifies de-|tions. mands for an end of nuclear| 4 Space travel has nade im- weapons testing but the devel-|nerative laws to govern out opment of "even more terrible|space--a matter on which the weapons' was another reason. |S. and Russia have made no MENTIONS THREAT progress. Green outlined sev- He referred specifically to So-{eral proposals, including viet Premier Khrushchev's|"means for registering and threat of a 100-megaton bomb, |identifying space launchings." equal to 100,000,000 tons of TNT,| 5. The UN is facing bank- and dubbed it the bomb of ruptcy and peace-keeping ef- Armageddon -- biblical scene of [forts in The Congo and the Police Hunting | Lone Gunman | MONTREAL (CP)--Montreal police were searching today for a lone gunman -- believed to) have participated in a $3,000 bank robbery in Ortawa Monday --who robbed two local taxi drivers of small amocunts Mon- day night. A police spokesman said the bandit--armed with a double- barrelled shotgun wrapped in a sleeping bag--is apparently the same one who commandeered a cab in Eastview shortly after three men made a Fullet-splat- tered getaway from the Ottawa bank, and forced the driver to bring him to Montreal. Driver Aurel Tremblay said the suspect, about 2%-vears old, got into his taxi at Eastview, near Ottawa, and asked to be driven to the airport. | 1. Prompt appointment is nee-| the supreme conflict. {Middle East are imperilled. In the face of Soviet. efforts|Canada has the "greatest un- to revamp the UN structure,|derstanding" for those UN Green stoutly defended the in-|members who would pay but tegrity of the world 'organiza-|cannot, but no sympathy for the tion although coming out for few who can pay but will not. changes in the secretariat and| 6. Canada invites greater par- cuck bodies as the Security| ticipation in the world-wide ra- Council in view of increased UN|dioactive fallout study it initi- membership. {ated in 1959 to promote greater The white-haired foreign min-| understanding of the hazards of ister made these other points: | radiation. essary of an interim executive to succeed the late secretary-| general until a new secretary- general is agreed upon. With- out mentioning them, he re- jected the Soviet Union's pro- posals for multiple leadership. | But the apointee could have lee-| way in adjusting the secretar- iat. 2. Primary responsibility for solving the Berlin crisis rests with the four occupying pow- ers, but the UN could play a role as an observer or even by| operating an "international re- gime" for all Berlin. Phillips' Request For Amalgamation TORONTO (CP) Mayor Nathan Phillips says he will ask Metropolitan Toronto council to- day to seek provincial govern- ment permission for full amal- gamation of Metro's 13 com- munities Jan. 1, 1963. However, many of the coun- cils in the surrounding suburbs have voted against amalgama- tion at present and others have come up with alternate plans. Rebel Regime Neutral Over Foreign Affairs DAMASCUS (AP) -- Pre-|four-month time limit on the pe- into custody a second time "to| mier M a m o un Kuzbari today launched his revolutionary Syr- | ian regime on a neutral course| in foreign affairs. | At home he propounded a pol-| icy of encouraging private own- ership. aod Thus he followed President! Nasser's foreign policy of non-| alignment in the cold war, while putting a brake on the United Arab Republic's nationalization program that stirred unrest in| Syria. | The Syrian lawyer - politician outlined his views Monday night fn his first press conference since the uprising that broke the Syrian-Egyptian merger under| the flag of the U.AR. Mental Hospital : Fire Kills Six WEYBURN (CP) -- Six per-|sistant director of the Saskat- sons were reported to have died chewan government's psychia- today in a fire on the top floor|tric services branch, said first | | of a four-storey wing of the Sas- reports indicated the fire was katchewan Mental Hospital. Sev-| "more a matter of smoke than |eral were reported injured. [anything else." The fire was extinguished at| officials of the hospital would about noon EDT, two hours neither confirm nor deny re- after it was noticed. ports of patients being missing Earlier radio station CFSL| or trapped. said initial reports indicated 20 Mr. Rands said the fire was persons wer trapped. lin the top floor where the pa- At Regina, Stanley Rands, as-| jon are bedridden. They are physically as well as mentally Comparative rte blazing wing was not at- Religion tached to the main hospital buildings. Course Asked iin Weyburn's volunteer fire bri- sociation recommended Monday | y $ volunteer fire bri comparative religion. A spokesman for Dr. I. L. W. | such a course and a male trus- Sued later. Dr. Clancey was) 'ham Board of Education told] Weyburn is 60 miies southeast | should be given instruction in Cl . U | . groups," she added: '"We should |be taught in our secondary chemicals Limited, said in a sociation approved a resolution has placed Canadian manufac- Malcolm Beach, a Toronto] "Many of the materials used school children in Ontario was may be entirely exempt," Mr. "I am not opposed to religious| Canada is not subject to pay- in the immediately {wing was not 540 patients in the hospital. tario Public School Trustees As-| p p schools receive a course in PUMPers. | representative appealed for said a statement would be is-| Mrs. Gordon Hill of the Chat-|the wing. children in our public schools -- | "And since we must also be tolerant of our minority tive religions where all the great| MONTREAL (CP) -- Kell An- religions of the world may|toft, president of Nordic Bio- In June, the Ontario Urban tive Trade Practices Commis- and Rural School Trustees As- sion Monday that fhe sales tax | between Grades 1 and 13. The commission is inquiring Opposition here came from into drug prices in Canada. "The legislation approving re- eligible for sales tax exemption ligious education for all public|even though the end product were occupied with fighting manufacturer, howe ver, who nazism," he said. sells sales tax-exempt goods in nor in church schools. I am, however, strongly opposed to religious education of anv kind, in any form, in the public non- sectarian, non - denominational riod he and his cabinet would put an end to his subversive ac-|schools maintained and sup serve, adding "I hope the time tivities," an announcement said. | ported by the taxpayers . . will be less." | Serraj resigned as a U.A.R.|for all the children of our prov- Kuzbari termed the four-|vice - president and fled from | ince regardless of race, creed or month period the maximum he|Cairo to Syria two days before color." would allow the new regime '"'to|the revolt in an apparent break -- prepare for elections and par-|with Nasser. He was considered liamentary rule." |Syria. DISCUSS TAKEOVERS Kuzbari said Syria now looks| He said the cabinet will dis-| on Egypt as having the same cuss thie possible return of firms status as any other Arab coun- nationalized Iast summer by de-|try and discounted chances of |Nasser's strongest advocate in| Treaty Talking | VANCOUVER (CP) -- Liberal ree of President Nasser. Buti any type of federation with that|Leader Lester Pearson said Nasser's agrarian reform pro-|country. {here Monday the federal and gram, the premier said, "'will| British Columbia governments remain as is." | WANTS UN ENTRY should get together to work out The government, which he| The Syrian Arb Republic, hela common basis on which to called the Syrian Arab Repub-|said, has formally applied for|ask for renegotiation with the lic, will aim toward "a sound, membership in the United Na-|United States of the interna- democratic socialist life" which|tions and also in the Arab|tional Columbia River treaty. Pearson Pushes | Pledging a return to parlia- Kuzbari said will' encourage pri- mentary democracy, he put al and foreign investment. Kuzbari said the ruthless in- "CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 by Col. Abdul Hamid Serraj had |been closed and its agents ar- rested. He said Serraj was {placed under house arrest the day of the coup but slipped away. League. Nasser has a strong vate ownership, industrialization voice in the league and is sure|Club meeting a 'dog in the to oppose Syria's application. "We are not with the West or clared. "Syria is with every {country that extends the hand {of friendship." Kuzbari- said foreign consuls here have been handed official notification of the new regime Agents tracked him to a hide- and he hopes for more recogni- tion financing and the Jout Sunday night and took him tions. | ment between the federal and] Mr. Pearson told a Canadian manger" attitude over export of ary commodity, including | eltigenes agency once headed|the East," the premier de- power, would hurt Canada more {than the U.S. The treaty has been ratified | by the U.S. government, but not | by Canada because of disagree- B.C. governments over construc- selling of | (downstream benefits. I Number of patients Mr. Rands said there are 1,- | NORTH BAY (CP)--The On- : d i vit! | that all children in secondary | 52 e fought the. fire With three The vote came after a woman | Clancey, hospital superintendent tee opposed it. helping to direct evacuation of |the meeting she believes "all|of Regina. | Christianity." institute a course in compara- To Pro ducers schools." brief presented to the Restric- calling for religious education turers in an unfair position. school trustee. in a Canadian plant are not passed in 1944 while most of us|Antoft said. 'The American | instruction in private schools.|ment of Canadian sales tax as {any part of his manufacturing jcost."' operation with three deputies now in the secretariat. | The proposal specified that the three deputies would be from Russia, the United States| and one of the Afro-Asian coun- tries. | There was no intention of the deputies using a veto, a Soviet statement said, but added that the temporary UN chief would have to 'seek to achieve mutual agreement with them" on the major questions of the work of the secretariat. In another development, the council stepped around a mem-| bership question that could have| become a hone of contention. Christie Doe of Liberia moved for postponement of the coun- cil's consideration of member- ship for Outer Mongolida and Mauritania to allow further East-West consultation. Delegates generally had pre- dicted that if the meeting hall continued the Soviet Union would have vetoed Mauritania's bid and nationalist China would have used the veto against Mon- golia. The council has to rce- Green Says UN Facing Bankruptcy UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- External Affairs Minister How- ard Green of Canada said today "the United Nations now is fac- ing bankruptcy." In a policy speech prepared for the UN General Assembly, Green underscored a problem that has been haunting the world organization for years but has been acute since the start of the UN operation in the Congo last year. Secretary-General Dag Ham- marskjold said before his death in a plane crash Sept. 18 that the UN would be "'virtually with- out funds" by the end of Sep- tember--a prophecy that proved only too accurate. The trouble is that many UN| members have not paid their shares of the cost of running the UN forces in the Middle East and in the Congo -- forces in which Canada has been active since their inception. Hammarskjold got by partly by using money from one UN source to feed another but Green said today: '""A limit has been reached to the process of raiding one reserve fund to sup- port another." Windoc drowned today when Windoc had been unloading g day afternoon. Announces UC Registra Examiner, has been apypointed part-time professor in the department of English: Uniyversity College. fessor in English literature a Mr. Davies is master designate College. Thieves Get $2,000 DELTA (CP) -- Thieves obtained $600 in cash and $1,400 in signed notes when they loot Mill here overnight. Entry was gained by forcing notes were taken from an unlocked safe. door of the safe was closed b he fell off a dock while re- turning to his ship about 1 a.m. The body of Ralph Verrill, 54, of Port Arthur, was recovered about 40-minutes later. No decision has been made about an inquest. is survived by his wife and two sons in Port Arthur. Mr. Verrill The rain at Goderich since Mon- r TORONTO (CP) -- Dr. Claude Bissell, president of the University of Toronto, Monday announced Prof. Shepherd has been appointed registrar of Univesity College. Robertson Davies, editor and publisher of the Peterborough Ronald '| University of Western Ontario, LATE NEWS FLASHES | Drowns In Fall From Dock GODERICH (CP) -- A wheelsman of the grain carrier to vote to unseat nationalist China if this occurs. E. Germany Escape Operation DUDDERSTADT, West Ger- many (Reuters)--Fifty-five per- sons crossed the East German ation during the night, German police reported today. evacuated from the border ar: their hooves to prevent noise. Household goods were stacked to provide protection against any bullets for an 89-year-old woman and children in the party. BERLIN (Reuters)--An East Berlin worker in a mobile crane today crashed through the con- crete border wall into the Amer- ican sector in a hail of bullets from East German police. The crane driver reached West Berlin territory safely al- though East German police gun- fire shattered the windshield of the crane. Police said seven other East Germans escaped across the barricaded borders into West Berlin early today. Ask Committee On Resources SARNIA (CP) -- Owners of Lambton County lands used for storage of natural gas, or pro- posed for storage, asked a pro- vincial committee on gas and oil resources Monday to recom- mend single county unit to re- negotiate leases. During the committee's first day of a study of the problems posed by natural gas storage, the owners sought a county-wide bargaining unit. As reasons, they alleged inequality in leas ing, differences in agreements from storage pool to storage pool, outdated leased and leases signed under the threat of court expropriation action. Dr. G. B. Langford, head of | the department of geology at the heads the three-man committee. Other members are Dr. A. D. Foundation and Dr. J. P. Currie, professor of petroleum geology at the University of Toronto. Byron Young of the Moore Township Ratepayers Associa- tion said the county unit would be similar to farm produce eting schemes or like a la- union bargaining for a working agreement. 3 Gunmen Rob Ottawa Office OTTAWA (CP) -- Three masked gunmen entered the Ot- tawa Transportation Commis- border in a mass escape oper- West They were 16 families who had heard that they were to be ea. The escape column included a rubber-tired cart pulled by horses with rags tied around Delta is 25 miles north of Brockville. sion headquarters on the east- ern outskirts of Ottawa early to- day and escaped with an esti- mated $5,000. Police said the men backed | their car up to the office and-- |with one shouting, "Hey! This is a stickup"--held three em- ployees at gunpoint. Detectives said they believe a Visiting pro- t Trinity College last year, 2 ofy the university's Massey ed the Hastings Steele Feed tween McGregor street and the rear of King street properties. "MIDTOWN PLAZA" PLANNED A large, ultra-modern 20,000- sg ft. Dominion supermarket, a 61,000-sq. ft. department store, {would be located north of John |street in a development to be {named "Midtown Plaza." The completed plaza would cover about 10.5 acres and have ap- proximately 105,000 sq. ft. in There would be parking accommoda- overall building area. tion for 800 cars. GARDEN COURT APARTMENTS A garden court apartment de and McGregor streets. architect - ment, to be known as town Village," would be pletely landscaped. MAYOR VOICES APPROVAL Mayor Christine Thomas said the proposal fits in well with long-term city plans for the area. just what we need," Her Wor- ship commented. "It would clean up -the ragged creek area and produce substantial new assess- ment without cost to the city for roads or services," he said. The Mayor pointed out that all fast-growing municipalities were striving to redevelop down- town areas to minimize costly urban sprawl into raw farm- lands, necessitating new roads, sewers and other strvices. "Here we have a well-engineer- ed plan that would give our whole downtown business area a shot in the arm," Mayor Thomas said. She predicted that the new commercial facilities would make downtown Oshawa a greater magnet, attracting more business into the whole downtown area. "I hope that all necessary approvals can be speeded up in order to create extra construc- tion jobs during the coming win- ter," the Mayor added. The comprehensive Dominion a new Brewers' Retail store and 20,000 sq. ft. of 11 other stores velopment, comprising modern multi-storey apartments and two-storey maissonettes, is pro- posed for the area between John This designed develop- "'Mid- laid out with curving roads to local- 1ze traffic, and would be com- "Such a development is minion Stores Limited, a spokes- man said. DONATE LAND TO PARKS BOARD All Dominion Stores' land east of the new creek line would be donated to the city for parks purposes, it was stated. Approx- imately two acres of table land and a similar area of creek land would be turned over to the city for extension of the Civic Centre park lands, or as a future river- side drive area. Another parcel of land south of the proposed McGregor street extension would also be given to tht city of Oshawa to enlarge its present park land on which the Kiwanis Club maintains a playground. IMPROVE DOWNTOWN TRAFFIC As part of the Midtown de- velopment, Athol street would bc extended westward from the creek and thence northward across the present site of the Brewers' Retail parking lot, providing access to King street, (CONTINUED ON PAGE 9) Austerity Opposed BLACKPOOL (CP) -- Dele- gates at Britain's Labor party convention have taken a solid stand against the government's wage-freeze austerity move. The 1,300 delegates put up a solid front against the move Monday as they drafted a policy program. The stand was expressed by Frank Cousins, general secre- tary for the Transport and Gen- eral Workers Union and its 1,- 000,000 members. He said he is against wage restraint, proposed by Prime Minister Macmillan's govern- ment, "in any form, shape or disguise." The government move is de- signed to make British industry more competitive in world mar- kets. It has brought protests re- cently from a broad section of workers, including school teach- ers, who have staged one - day Stores' plan involves the widen- protest strikes. DETROIT (AP)--Members of the United Auto Workers went on strike against the Ford Mo- tor Company today as company and union negotiators appar- ently remained deadlocked on a new contract agreement Acting under union orders, some 120,000,000 Ford hourly workers walked off the job. UAW leaders here telephoned walkout instructions to locals across the United States in ob- servance of its 11 am EDT strike deadline. It was the first nation-wide strike against Ford by the UAW since company workers were or- ganized by the union in 1941, An estimated 10,000 workers at Ford's huge Rouge plant in Dcarbgrn, Mich., jumped the strike deadline by two hours. Other workers went out early at the Ford engine plant in Cleve- land. The union, however, in its last .- minute instructions, told [fourth man might have been | waiting in the getaway car. The| money was stuffed into three iboxes and two club bags. | a door and the money and Police said the ut not locked. Ford local leaders to stand by for a possible last-ditch settle- ment. 5 The walkouts came as nego- UAW Strikes Against Ford Misener of the Ontario Research | tiators continued a marathon bargaining session in 'an effort to avert a crippling strike. Com- pany and union negotiators had been in continuous session fof almost 25 hours. Ford, facing its first general strike in 20 years, and the un- ion were struggling in bargain. ing talks to reach an agree- ment as the walkouts took place. There were limited strikes in 1955 and 1958 during contract negotiations. Ford and the UAW were re- ported deadlocked over non- economic contract issues, in. cluding production standards, after having settled on economic contract issues, including pro- duction standards, after having settled jon economic terms at midnight Monday night in mara- thon, overnight negotiations. ~ Negotiations have been on al- most continuously behind closed doors since Monday. At stake was a new national three-year agreement covering economic and non-economic matters for 120,000 proguction workers. WE EIEIO ST WT ---_r 34-41-00 r= ER

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