Suggested Downtown Redevelopment Plan--P. 9 he Oshawa Times THOUGHT FOR TODAY The matrimonial knot holds tighter when children put a strain on it. WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny S unday with not much change in temperature, winds northeasterly 10 to 20. VOL. 91--NO, 65 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Deporenert, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in EIGHTEEN PAGES SOVIET DELEGATE EXPLAIN ducts. a news conference there today. Conference' today call- ed on Dean Rusk of the U.S. Semyon Tsarapkin, Soviet delegate to the 17-nation dis- armanent conference in Geneva, gestures as he con- and Andrei Gromyko of the | VANCOUVER (CP)--Canada has refused visas to two Cuban officials who were scheduled to attend and address the 18th an- nual convention of the United Fishermen and Allied Workers Union here, the union said Fri- day. The union said it had been informed by the external affairs department that the Canadian embassy in Havana had been instructed "'not to issue visas" to the two, Odon Alvarez de la Campa, foreign relations secre- tary of the Cuban Confedera- tion of Labor, and Monolo Rua, director of Cuban fishermen's co-operatives. "The Canadian external af- |fairs branch refused to tell the union of any reasons for re-| lfusal of the visas," said H. Stevens, UFAWU general secre- tary-treasurer. | S STAND Soviet Union to start prompt | ty Ottawa, an external affairs| acs crea on their | .,okesman confirmed that visas le, sergargaes © Wirephoto jhave been refused the two Cu- --AP Wirephoto |hans but said he is not prepared Issues Remain In Chrysler Dispute WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Notjin the industry has been to only are the issues not settled|quickie strikes. Recent disputes in the four-week strike of 3,000|at Ford and GM in Canada at Chrysler of Canada; it's not/were short. But at Chrysler it clear from the outside just whathas dragged. | the issues are. Reasons? There are a num-) i duction - halting|/ber, regarded in varying de-| walheat at th of Canada's on grees of importance by the an-) tomotive big three, labor calls tagonists, though the customary! it the "battle of the stopwatch,' |central issue of wages is not at meaning it has to hustle more|stake in this largest Canadian| for the same pay as in the othe r/auto scrap in several years. two firms. : JOBS VARY ON LINE Management says it wants) Chrysler's big car assembly only something that is basically|pjant here is a mixed factory, comparable to settlements made) and a man on the assembly line by the United Auto Workers|may work on several different (CLC) in the plants of General| models. The union says a Wind- Motors and Ford. sor hand cannot be expected to When the strike started Feb.|do a job as quickly as a man 18, many industry cage) eg works on only one kind of predicted a short one. The trendicar. Power, Pressure Engaging Ottaw Mr. Bennett plans to develop the Columbia and the Peace River to the north simultane- ously and he says B.C. can go| it alone this way, spurning Ot- OTTAWA (CP) -- Two high- voltage topics -- the Columbia} River stalemate and a national power grid--start the week in Ottawa. |WANTS MORE LIAISON as to make any other comment. D ] KEY WEST, Fla. (AP)--Pre-| jmier Fidel Castro charged to- |day that Cuba's revolutionary leaders are abusing their au- Rocket Falls Near Houses VENICE, Fla. (AP)--With a loud whoosh, a 500-pound Nike booster rocket plunged into a vacant lot between two homes today and. almost completely buried itself in the sand. The two houses were sprayed with sand and rocks but there was no damage and no one was Ron W. Todgham, Chrysler president, says, the real issue is "the determination of the union to force upon our company an entirely different settlement from that granted to our com- petitors by their UAW locals-- in other words, an attempt to put Chrysler of Canada into a position of being non-competitive with the rest of the industry." He tackles the union, too, on|injured. wants. The UAW has settled for) At Eglin Air Force base a three-year pacts with the others|spokesmian said the Nike boos- with, of course, no strikes inter-|ter malfunctioned during a vening in return for concessions.|space experiment launch. "Our local," says Mr. Todg-| Al but 18 inches of the 13-foot ham, "is holding our for a one-|booster was buried in the sand. year contract--the only one in/An official said it was the first the industry--or else a three-|malfunction of a Nike booster Bar Entry Of Cubans To Canada jyear contract with the right to|in three years of tests. thority, mistreating the public and creating general chaos. His sharp: denunciation came} during a post-midnight speech, his second attack of the week) _ on his own regime. He ordered! _ rationing Monday and criti-| cized Cuba for not meeting food production goals. Sweeping changes made, he said. ™ "The revolution needs to re- vise all the revolutionary nuclei B and all the political apparatus of the revolut:ca to do away with the errors and abuses and le gain good performance,' the! ' bearded leader declared in al} televised address monitored] 7 here. lf "Those who are useless will not continue in their positions) : and authority." | Only Details Now Awaited On Cease-Fire PARIS (Reuters)--An Alger-| ian cease-fire is expected to be} proclaimed simultaneously to- night in a nation-wide radio-TV broadcast by President de} Gaulle and by Moslem insurgent leaders from their Tunis head- quarters, Sources close to both delega- tions in the French Alpine re- must be! | Alexis Caron, Liberal mem- ber of the Commons for Hull, drops a torn copy of the Commons agenda after being suspended from the MEMBER SUSPENDED = Friday for accus- | ing Deputy Speaker Paul ISRAEL-SYRIAN | BORDER BATTLE Israeli Planes Attack Gunners TEL AVIV -- Israeli and Syrian forces fought a seven- hour ground, artillery and air battle near the Sea of Galilee early today that ended with a United Nations-arranged cease- fire on the tense frontier. It was one of the biggest flare-ups in the area for several years. Israel sent bombers to attack Syrian artillery which opened fire on an Israeli village after an Israeli ground raid on Syrian outposts near the fron- tier. An Israeli staff officer said five Israelis were killed, six se- verely wounded and others slightly hurt. He said the Israeli raiders counted the bodies of at least 30 Syrians, though the Syrians claimed only one of their soldiers was killed and five wounded. The Israelis said they cap- tured one Syrian. Two civilians were reported | Martineau of being partial | to Conservatives on a ruling. --CP Wirephoto wounded in the village of Por- iah on the eastern shore of the Sea of Galilee, which was sort town of Evian said all but the final details have been set- tled and that the announcement would follow a final meeting there today. The sources said de Gualle will proclaim the cease-fire in a broadcast from the Elysee Pu ace at 8 p.m. (2 p.m.). | B U S Co Insurgent provisional Premier} y obJe urt Ben Youssef Ben Khedda was due to make a simultaneous an-| NEW YORK (CP) -- John nouncement in Tunis and then|(Pops) Papalia, 37, of Hamilton leave for Rabat, Morocco, to|appeared in a federal court here greet Deputy Premier Moham-|Friday and was charged with med Ben Bella and other rebel/importing and conspiring to im- prisoners of the French who,|port heroin illegally the sources said, will be freed|United States. and flown to Rabat. Judge William B. Herlands set strike at the end of each year,/-- which is really no better than ja one-year agreement." George Burt, Canadian UAW director, puts it this way: "What has happened at Chrys-| bs ler is that so-called industrial Riot-Llorn relations experts have been su- perimposed upon the plant and| have destroyed the relationship}) GUATEMALA CITY (AP) -- jbetween union representatives/The army held this riot-torn jand foremen in various depart-|Guatemalan capital under vir- |ments. tual martial law today as op- "The stopwatch has become ajposition mounted to President gun those whiz-kids have placed|Miguel Ydigoras' Conservative Army Patrolling FILS --|bail at $250,000 after Assistant U.S. Attorney Edward Brodsky asked for bond of $350,000. Papalia will be tried on a three-count indictment in com- pany with three men who were brought back from Spain after jumping bail totalling $110,000. The three, Frank Caruso, Sal- vatore Maneri ana _ Vincent 'Mauro, held on bail of $350,000 each, are alleged to be ring- cial life was nearly stilled. leaders of the narcotics ring. - | Brodsky said Papalia was "'in SEEK REBEL BANDS lthis conspiracy on the highest The army was searching for/jevel." He said the defendant two small rebel bands in the/sat in on policy-making decisions City businesses shuttered. Commer- into the) Some time Sunday afternoon, Premier Bennett of British Co- lumbia and Finance Minister Fleming are scheduled to hold another session--first this year --on the issues delaying imple- mentation of the $458,000,000 hy- dro and flood-control project on the Columbia , which rises in southeastern B.C. and dis- charges into the Pacific from United States soil. Monday, the federal govern- ment and nine of the 10 prov- inces -- Quebec is staying at home -- will hold exploratory) talks on advantages of a na- tional power grid, the technical problems and the possible roles} of federal and provincial gov-) ernments. A national power grid is en- visaged as a means of carrying power at high voltage from} tawa's long-standing offer of ajat the workers' heads." $172,000,000 loan to pay half the| Mr. Todgham: "A fair day's Columbia dam cc- -truction| Work for a fair day's pay is all costs. jwe ask from our employees, and The federal government|@ collective agreement which is stands committed . veeneng| generally comparable to the American - generated power, | Pattern established in the in- which it calls the cheapest from} ustry : any source that B.C. can get.| Mr. Bennett has said he will! of the 3,000 strikers work at the passenger car as- ' . sembly plant. Key . office and fake before B.C. keeps that) maintenance personnel have not P ; : ' |been affected. The power grid question has| The strikers are losing about regime. Army troops chased two guerrilla bands in the hills The army seized control of the city on Ydigoras' orders follow- ing four days of street fighting and other violence thai left 20 persons dead and more than 200 injured. More than 250 ~ersons were reported arrested. The army declared it is ready mountains in northern andjand "himself brought in 20 northeastern Guatemala. |kilos" of heroin. One group is led by Carlos} Herlands scheduled next Tues- Paz Tejada, who was defence|day for Papalia's pleading. minister under former pro-Com-| munist president Jacobo Ar-| benz, ousted in a United States-| backed coup in 1954. Arbenz was| last reported in Havana as a| guest of Cuban Premier Fidel Castro. Algerian Killers Blast Pharmacies to take extreme measures to put down students protesting what they called fraud in last ALGIERS (AP) -- European Informants said guerrilla band is largely of former arm the other] -- ; composed|killers struck at pharmacies y officers|throughout Algiers today in 'Railway | OTTAWA (CP)--Will a strike \tie-up of the railways, viewed |by the government as a "catas- \trophe"' in December, be con- sidered just as calamitous in April? The answer will probably tell {whether the federal government will intervene in the one-two |strike punch planned early next {month against the CNR and CPR by Canada's 4,500 locomo- tive engineers. Indications are the cabinet may come up with an answer early next week. The cabinet may decide to Stay clear of the dispute--to let the railways and the Brother- hood of Locomotive Engineers (Ind.) settle it themselves. Or it may decide to try to bring the disputants together for government-sponsored talks aimed at averting a transcon- tinental tie-up of trains. This latter action was taken when 110,000 non-operating rail- waymen threatened to walk off their jobs in December, 1960. In that dispute, the govern- ment first tried to persuade the parties to settle their differences during cabinet - backed talks. When this failed, Parliament was asked to pass an emer- gency law prohibiting a strike until May, 1961. | not lacked altercation either, chiefly through Premier Lesage'| of Quebec and Mr. Diefenbaker.|handing out $75,000 a week in The third annual premiers' con-| ference at Victoria this summer will discuss a grid. |December's elections that Te-|calling their group the 13th of turned Ydigoras' Conservative/November movement. Ydigoras party in control of Congress. is An 8 p.m.-5 a.m. curfew was|Noy. 13, 1960. clamped on the city. Anti-gov-| Three opposition parties and a fernment strikes spread and| growing number of professional ----- ---------------- groups, including doctors, law- yers, teachers and journalists, denounced the government for alleged police brutality in $50,000 daily in wages. Union officials say they are strike pay but still have to raise funds for special cases of hard- ship among strikers jsmashed an officers' uprising on} what appeared to be a system- atic campaign to paralyze the|CALLED NEW STRIKE economic sinews of the city. The unions promptly called Agents of the terrorist Secret|@"°ther strike for the day after Army Organization fighting to the law was to expire, but it keep Algeria French gunned s 'Man And Wife down six Moslem pharmacy ing raids. All pharmacies shut} employ in a series of lightn- down anu notices were posted areas of surplus or distant gen-| erating sites to those in need.| Technical problems remain to} be licked--from efficiency and Quebec MP Expelled cost standpoints. } Pressure--political and other-} er O XC qan e wise--has been building up in the Columbia situation since be- fore Canada and the U.S.| OTTAWA (CP)--Persistent re-|sitting during the furious pipe- signed a 60-year development/fusal to withdraw a charge that|line debate. treaty Jan. 19, 1961. Financing) Deputy Speaker Paul Martineau| ' and other problems separate| gave a biased -ruling led to ex-|CCF MP ALSO EJECTED the federal and B.C. govern-|pulsion from the Commons Fri-| A slightly different case oc- ments and Mr. Bennett is com-|day for Quebec Liberal Alexis} curred Feb, 10, 1961; when ing to town with his colors) Caron, |Frank Howard (CCF--Skeena) nailed even more firmly in) he MP for Hull was ejected|was suspended for four place than ever. : for the remainder of the day's|hours after being "named" by His plan is simple. Sell Can-|sitting--two hours and five min-|Speaker Roland Michener. ada's share of American - gen-|ytes--on a vote of 84 to 24, Pro-| The British Columbia Socialist erated power accruing from the | gressive Conservatives over-|had declined to modify language government members debating a $25,000,000 loan to bolster the unemployment insurance fund. When W. H. MeMillan (L-- Welland) said there was con- siderable unemployment in Cornwall, Grant Campbell (PC --Stormont) countered that the unemployment was due to the Liberals having built the St. Lawrence Seaway. Mr. Campbell, whose riding 'Dead In Fire | At Brantford | BRANTFORD (CP)--A_ man and his wife died of asphyxia- tion when fire broke out in their 1%4-storey home here early to day. The victims were George C. Gordon, 50 - year - old son of George T. Gordon, Liberal member of the Ontario legisla- breaking _up_ student protests with gunfire and tear gas. SABOTAGED ? Plane Mishaps Puzzle Probers ture for Brantford, and his wife, BURBANK, Calif. (AP) --jAleutians, killing one man. The|Marjorie, 48. Striking coincidences and unex-jother, a passenger plane with} Gordon was found in the hall- plained circumstances in the|107 persons, is missing out Of|way outside his bedroom. His ill - fated flights of two big}Guam. wife died in bed. A pet beagle planes taking American mili-|. The 1049-A Super) was found dead beside the bed. saying not even emergency service could be assured. identical left Travis Air Papalia's Baill Cabinet Ponders Threat never took place because the railways settled the dispute. Labor Minister Starr told the shelled by the Syrians. There was also serious damage to both Poriah and Ein Gev. The battle climaxed 10 days of Syrian-Israeli hostilities on the sea, where the Syrians have charged Israeli armored boats have been "violating the demil- itarized water zone" to open fire on Syria positions. Fighting started when the Is- raeli ground force made a mid- night raid on Syrian outpests which had shelled Israeli fishing boats on the Sea of Galilee Fri- day. According to an Israeli an- nouncement, the Israeli troops occupied the Syrian posts and demolished their fortifications. A Syrian broadcast said the Is- raelis were repulsed. Minutes after the raid, the Sea of Galilee was lit up with Syrian starchlights and bursts of artillery fire directed at Pouah and Ein Gev. _ Then Israeli planes were sent in and silenced the Syrian ar- tillery, the Israeli announce- ment said. The sea is about 15 miles long and the frontier between the two countries is roughly halfway along its eastern shore. A. Syrian army spokesman called the clash a "treacherous Israeli aggression" against Sy- rian outposts on the eastern shore. Italian Storm Commons Nov. 30, 1960, a ces- sation of railway operations "'at this time'"' would mean a "cal- amity of nation - wide propor- tions." | This poses two questions: | 1. Will a strike of the engin-| eers be successful -- in other} words, will it be supported by} other railway workers, thus} halting train operations on the! two major railways? 2. If the trains are stopped,| would the government view a} cessation of rail operations in| April, instead of wintry Decem-| ber, as a calamity? In December, a railway strike would leave Canada depending largely on trucks to haul vital supplies. Road transports would be at the mercy of the weather, perhaps tied up for days by road-clogging blizzards. There isn't the same degree of danger in April, although spring road limits would curtail truck loads. 'Toll Climbing ROME (AP)--A bus on a lo- cal run in Sicily plunged off a storm-swept bridge into a small . iriver today, killing at least 10 passengers. Other passengers hig reported trapped in the us. The accident--which saw the bus pitched into the Imera River between the towns of Cal- tanissetta and Enna--raised to at least 21 the death toll in Italy's worst winter storm in years. Seven crew members from a sunken cargo ship were miss- ing and presumed dead as a result of the three-day storm and police searched the moun- tains of southern Italy for a lost truck with five men. Snow was still falling from the Alps to southern Italy, except in scattered provinces including Rome, Naples and eastern Sicily. tary help to Communist-threat-| Constellations Cause of the outbreak is not! ened South Viet Nam led the/Force Base, Calif., at 9:45 p.m. known but it is believed to have| owner of the planes to raise| Wednesday. Both were bound|started in a piece of living-room) year-round control provided bYiwhelming 19 Liberals and five|directed at Prime Minister Die-|takes in Cornwall, said it was three storage dams to be built "CF.New ' seein " il oe in BC. Canada is to get Willioccetic Pury aan, New Dem-'fenbaker and Veterans Affairs) que to the fact that the locks the extra power provided in the U.S., plus $65,000,000 in flood- controgfenefit ~-vments. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE. DEPT. 725-6574 - HOSPITAL 723-2211 Minister Churchill, government/have been removed from the The suspension came after an) House leader. canal which for 120 years angry uproar in which Quebec! As in the 1956 episode, the|flowed by our door." MPs exchanged insults. |House was in committee Fri-| "Inaccurate and wholly un- At one point Mines Minister|day with a deputy speaker as!foynded," said Lionel Chevrier Flynn, the former Deputy chairman (L--Montreal Laurier), a for- Speaker, shouted at Mr. Caron:| Mr. Martineau was chairing|mer transport minister, former |"Salaud!" -- a French epithet|the House in committee of sup-|St. Lawrence Seaway Authority jwhich translates roughly tojply, considering supplementary|head and one-time MP for Mr. |skunk or dirty dog. |spending estimates, when Mr.|Campbell's riding. He began to It was the first such suspen-|Caron accused the Quebec Con-|elaborate but was halted by the sion since May 25, 1956, when}Servative of being partial to the|/Deputy Speaker |/Finance Minister Fleming--then|Conservatives in a ruling Mr. Martineau pointed out jin the opposition--was ejected) It came during a sharp ex-|that the House was not debat- |tor the remainder of the day'g! change between Liberal andling unemployment at Cornwall. % jthese possibilities: for Saigen on flights for the| furniture, | 1, Sabotage of one or both|United States defence depart-| The blaze was discovered by planes. |ment. Both mysteriously hit/a passing motorist, who tried 2, Possible kidnapping of one|{rouble a few hours later,/without success to rouse the f the craft missing with 107) persons aboard, mostly trained American jungle troops. ___|ity and Civil Aeronautics Boardjhad to drive to the fire hall But the Flying Tiger Line|opened investigations. to turn in the alarm. stressed it has no evidence of| Company officials are puzzled} The Gordon's 13 - year - old either possibility. Coincidence by failure to receive any dis-|daughter, Lynne, was spending was not ruled out. ltress signal from the vanished|the night at a friend's home. One plane, carrying secretjplane which was flying at 18,-| The Gordons are survived by military cargo, crashed andj000 feet in relatively goodjthree other children--two sons routes, though they'd taken different/Gordons. He hurried to a nearby|} | : nurses' residence but the phone}; The Federal Aviation Author-|was out of order. The motorist|; Tuk, a new polar bear cub at Stanley Park in Vancou- ver, gets his. lunch from burned while landing in the!weather. anya daughter, all married. > 4 pretty Lynn Thorstenson, a si aharroairocostini BOTTLE BABY park board employee. 'The six-week-old bear was cape tured near Tukoyaktuk, Northwest Territories.