Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Apr 1962, p. 2

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2 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, April 6, 1962 Dief Ends Tour, Claims Vote Soon STRATHROY, Ont. (CP) -- Prime Minister Diefenbaker ended a day-l.ng barnstorming tour of this key southwestern Ontario district Thursday night with a ringing declaration that the government will call an election soon to put an end to Liberal party obstruction in the Commons. He steered away, however, from committing himself to a June or October election, but left the clear indication with his audience that he has the for- mer in mind at the moment. He spoke in terms of "in a few weeks," "in the near future," and "in the weeks to come." When reporters asked him afterwards whether this was really the start of the formal election campaign, he replied "All, but." The campaign will get under way. formally when Parliament is dissolved. The government, he told an estimated 1,400 delegates to the Middlesex West Progressive Conservative nominating con- vention, has been stalemated and frustrated in the Commons by persistent opposition debate on supplementary votes for last year's appropriations. COMPARES RECORD The opposition had spent 19 days on this rehashing of old spending authority this session, and Mr. Diefenbaker compared it to nine days spent on the same kind of supplementary es- timates in the last five years of the former Liberal govern- ment when the Conservatives were in opposition. "The machinery of govern- ment has been held up," he said. '"'The fact we cannot get ahead with our legislation makes a decision (by the eicc- torate) not too long delayed." He asked voters to study the government's record of govern- ment promises made and car- ried out. Others were being carried out --"and would have been car- ried out by now, if it were not for the opposition that holds up estimates to the end that the legislation cannot be carried jthrough." Mr. Diefenbaker spoke for jover an hour in the hot, packed jarena auditorium where he kicked off his 1957 election cam- paign five years before to the day. Thursday's engagement was made four months ago by William Thomas, MP for Mid- dlesex West, who was renom- inated Conservative candidate. SETS FAST PACE It was an 18-honr day of rushed, intensive campaigning. From London he drove about 150 miles, taking in five district high schools, at eash of which he made an off-the-cuff speech on different subjects. | The Senate reform measure which is to appear on the Com- Imons order paper today calls for the retirement of senators at age 75, on non-contributory pensions of a so-far undisclosed amount. This, he said, is in ne with the retirement of ju'iges and should be a "'first step" 'o- wards strengthening the Senate as a parliamentary institution. Steelworkers Outlining | 1962 Demands VANCOUVER (CP) -- The pace-setting Steelworkers Union has laid dowr its general de- mands for collective bargaining for 1962. The 83,000-member union will / set its economic sights on: 1. Higher wages, shorter hours, longer vacations and elimination of geographical 1& | \3 ! wage differentials in the Cana- | dian steel industry. 2. A new general plan to pro- tect workers displaced by tech- nological change, with a greater voice for the union in how big business introduces automation The policy objectives were outlined at the opening session Thursday of the annual confer- Although agreement with the Steel Com- pany of Canada and Algoma Steel Corporation last year, it still faces a new contract talks later this year with the Domin- ion Steel and Ceal Corporation. The Stelco and Algoma agree- ments called for a 21-cent pay boost spread over a three-year contract ending in 1964. Indications are the union will press for pay increases for Sosco workers at Sydney, N.S., Toronto and Windsor in a bid to close the wage gap separat- ing them from Stelco workers There. will also heavy emphasis on provisions to protect likely be | einen vis "SCATTERED SH OWERS FOREC WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy, Colder For Saturday sgegavee ChargesLaid (Another Possible 'In Highways 'Discrepancies | TORONTO (CP) -- Financial irregulariites in the highways » department's New Liskeard dis- © . trict have resulted in the sus-| + pension of a district official and the lodging of criminal charges, : Highways Minister W. A. Good- * tails but it was reported at New AST Does U.S. Act Without NORA In Emergency | OTTAWA (CP)--Does United) have been laid but did not say about 450 divorce bills by a fili- |States Strategic Air Command Forecasts issued by the Tor- Mainly cloudy today and Satur-|@ct as a lone wolf without con | Algoma and'onto weather office at 5 a.m.|day. ;EST: | Synopsis: Light rain and snow jnight and Saturday. Mild today, yjcolder tonight and faturday. contract| will spread over eastern sec-|Winds southerly 15 to 20, shift- workers|tions of southern Ontario this|ing tonight north to northeast against layoffs, including supple-|morning, while' rain should end/15 to 20. mentary unemployment bene- fits. A tough fight is expected. The union also spelled out a in southwestern Ontario afternoon. ;winds w this} Strong northerly|gions: Mainly cloudy today and} White River, Cochrane re- ill bring much colder|Saturday. Colder with scattered) detailed plan for meeting auto-|weather with some snowflurries|snowflurries tonight and Satur- mation-era problems. | INTERPRETING THE NEWS Student Will Stay In U.S. BUFFALO (AP) David Ebeoglu, a Turkish student who expects his doctorate in nuclear science and engineering in June, was granted permission Thurs-} day to remain in the United} States permanently. Ebeoglu, a student at Rensse-| laer Polytechnic Institute in| Troy, N.Y., will be able to ap- ply for U.S. citizenship in three| years. The U.S. immigration and naturalization service waived, a| provision under which foreign) students who come to the U.S. By DOUG MARSHALL Canadian Press Staff Writer Ten years ago Kenya nation-| alists set sail for independence|KADU on a sea of Mau Mau blood.| I'This week they finally approach port. Barring upsets representa- tives at the Kenya constitutional co jdon for seven weeks, will come|jority of the together today to sign an agree- ment. Settlement has been made to go to school must return|Possible with the acceptance by) home for at least two years after completion of their school- ing. Earlier this week Ebeoglu said he had been offered a po- sition by Dalhousie University in Halifax. One factor may have involved his marriage to an American girl and the approaching birth of the couple's first baby. Murder Charged In Shotgun Death SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP) -- Jesse Casey Kendrick, 54, was charged with murder "hursday after the woman with whom he had been living was found shot to death with a 12- gauge shotgun. Dead is Eugene Annie Math- jeu, 45, shot in the chest. Police found the woman on the kitchen floor in the house she shared with Kendrick in suburban Sault Ste. Marie. They said Kendrick himself asked neighbors to call the po- lice. He told them it was no use calling a doctor. } | | | Buled Obscene | OAKVILLE, Ont. (CP)--Mag-! istrate K. M. Langdon Thurs- day ruled two magazines ob- | | Jews Ask Equality In Quebec Schools MONTREAL (CP) -- The Ca- nadian Jewish Congress today asked that the British North America Act be amended to give Jews equal status with Protestants in the Quebec pub- lic school structure. The congress said in a brief to the Quebec royal commis- sion on education that the Jew- fsh community pays school taxes to the Protestant school boards "'and yet Jews are not free to present themselves for election or be appointed to any of the boards. "Surely this is a classical case of taxation without rep- resentation." with Jomo Kenyatta's Keny African National Union. CERTAIN TO SIGN |Ronald Ngala's Kenya African)'§ | [Democratic Union of the con-|general secretary, Tom Mboya,|4ay stitutional framework proposed|i8 a Luo. by Colonial Secretary Reginald Maulding. Kadu has also agreed to form an interim coalition government} a Kenyatta and his KANU col- leagues have already given their approval of the Maudling plan,| although with reservations, and it seems certain they will also sign the agreement, Broadly speaking Maudling has outlined a compromise con-| stitution that the delegates will take home with them to fill in Kenya Nearing Independence jtive, administrative and execu- itive powers." to northern regions by this eve jning and to central Ontario Fri- day night. Lake St. regions, Windsor, London: Cloudy with light. rain, vecom- after- noon, little change in tempera- ing partly cloudy this ture. Winds light. Saturday mainly cloudy and colde: westerly 15 to 20 Niagara, western Lake On- tario region, Toronto Hamilton: Cloudy with light snow or rain, becoming showers this after- Clair, Lake Huron with scattered showers. Winds north- iday. Winds southerly 15 to 20, | shifting this evening to north to northeast 15 to 20. Forecast temperatures: Low tonight, High Saturday Windsor eseceas 88 St. Thomas... 38 London .. 35 Kitchener 35 Vingham 35 Hamilton .....008 St. Catharines.... Toronto Peterborough .... Trenton Killaloe .... The core of the clash between "00n, ending this evening. Sat- Muskoka ... and KANU Kadu gional governments. This was to counteract the possibility of domination from a central government formed nference, stagnating in Lon-|/by KANU, which won the ma-)'egions: votes in the elec- tions a year ago KANU is composed mainly of Kenya's two largest tribes, the Kikuyu and the Luo is a Kikuyu and the party's; Maudling's tactics during the| troubled conference have been| to quell rivalries based on tri-} bal fears and force the African Negroes to see the perils of| failing to work together. | Soon after the delegates ar-! rived in London it became ap- parent that no formal constitu-| tion could be signed and the) independence date set at this time. Maudling this worked for a coalition government that would| co-operate in solving Kenya's mounting economic crisis. Since last year's elections capital has} been draining out of the country| aat an estimated rate of k1,000,-| southerly 15 today, northwest- erly 15 to 20 Saturday. Isastern Lake Ontario, south- ern Georgian Bay, Haliburton urday. Light rain today, mixed with snow this morning. Scat- tered showers or snowflurries Saturday. Mild today, colder Kenyatta|Saturday. Winds southerly 15 to-| day, northerly 15 to 20 Satur- Northern Georgian Bay, Tim- agami, Algomia- regions, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: | Chrysler, UAW Talks Resumed WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Ne- gotiations between Chrysler of Canada and the United Auto Workers union resumed Thurs- day without the services of La- bor Minister Warrender. Mr. Warrender had _ an- nounced he would arrive here Thursday. He later explained: Cloudy today and Sat-)}---- has been|Urday mainly civudy and colder North Bay 's demand for strong re-|With scattered showers. Winds) Sudbury Earlton Kapuskasing . White River. Moosonee | Slow Progress On Financial | Disclosure Bill OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com-} mons made progress slowly) Thursday on the government's| financial disclosures bill requir- jing corporations and trade un- ions to file information on their {operations and foreign connec-| jtions. It has been under debate 'for four days. Much of the criticism has jcome from Frank Howard (CCF --Skeena). Thursday an aroused | Justice Minister Fulton charged that "distortions and misrepre- |sentations'"" by Mr. Howard in- dicated that the CCF member Scattered snowflurries to- Suiting the Canada-U.S. North ear |American Air Defence Com- | |mand? Indications are that the an- jswer is "'yes" after an incident jlast fall during the Berlin cri- | sis. Indications also are that the Canadian government is jalarmed over this situation and |has asked the U.S. administra- \tion for some explanation. | NORAD, with headquarters at |Colorado Springs, Colo., con- |\trols and operates the radars which would provide warning of jany bomber or missile attack on North America. | Strategic Air Command \(SAC), a purely U.S. command is the West's chief arm of nu- clear retaliation in event of at- tack on North America. Pre- sumably, it would order its bombers airborne only after NORAD had warned it of pos sible attack. But in the incident last fail SAC ordered its nuclear bomb- ers to prepare to take off with- out receiving any alert from NORAD. SAC headquarters at Omaha, Neb., confirmed April 1 a Washington Star copy- jat the height of the Berlin cri- sis last fall indicated the U.S might be under attack. But NORAD head quarters told The Canadian Press here that there was no false signal jin its system and that there was) question no comunications failure of any kind. NORAD added in a state- ment: "The loss of 4 single communications line is not al matter of great importance to! NORAD because all systems | | plex or multiplex, which permit continuance of communications by means of bypass or standby} circuits," | The SAC statement about the incident said SAC got in touch with the ballistic missile early warning system at Thule, fellow told the Thursday. Mr. Goodfellow gave few de- legislature Liskeard that between $75,000 and $125,000 is involved for; work paid for but not done, The minister announced the) department's. district municipal! engineer in the northern area, in charge of provincial subsi-|; dies to municipalities for high- way work, is under suspension as the result of what he de- scribed as "discrepancies" in the records of the district of- fice. (The engineer is Tracy C. Swartman of New Liskeard, He has been replaced during his suspension by Jack Moffett of Toronto.) LAY CHARGES Mr. Goodfellow. told the House) that "certain criminal charges"'| who was charged. It was learned at New Lisk- d that a fraud charge was) laid Thursday against A. Har-) |ris, a foreman with the O'Heara Construction Company of Kirk-| land Lake, which is in the New Liskeard district and has been doing highway work. After Mr. Goodfellow made his statement in the legislature, | CCF Leader Donald C. Mac-! Donald asked if it were true that) the O'Heara Construction Com- jpany was "owned by the sus- pended engineer." The minister, who had not mentioned the company, re- plied: 'Not to my knowledge." He also said he does not know of any other such cases in the highways department. 5 UK. Tobacco Firms Halt Early TV Ads LONDON (Reuters) -- Five) major British tobacco firms an-| nounced Thursday they will no longer advertise on television jrighted story that a false signal|pefore 9 p.m. in order to dis- courage children from smoking The five firms, the Imperial Tobacco Company, Ardath, Gal- lagher, J. Wix and Sons and Godfrey Phillips also agreed to idiscuss with the government the of removing public vending machines which make cigarettes available to children. A sixth firm, Carreras Roth- mans (U.K.), a subsidiary of Rembrandt Tobacco Company of South Africa, said it wil withdraw its vending machines {have backup arrangements, du-|from streets and public places to prevent children from buying cigarettes. British law forbids the sale of |cigarettes to children under 16, but butdoor dispensing ma- \chines make the law virtually jimpossible to enforce. | The moves followed a report Greenland, and "'learned it was;by the Royal College of Phy-| still there and had not been at-jsicians and Surgeons last month | .|Divorce Blockade | OTTAWA (CP)--The possibil-, "I am tired of the broken | parliamentary divorces this | j some 225 couples, already ap- proved by the Senate. Arnold Peters (CCF -- Timis- kaming) put the ul the line Thursday as he calle | would shift Quebec and New- foundland divorce cases from} Court. the SEN. ity of another CCF blockade of|promises that have been made, . unfulfilled commitments year hangs over the Commons.|that have been given to the At stake are the divorces of|House." ATOR RETORTS Mr, Peters' ultimatum on di- "7 timatum on! Voree bills brought an indignant qicomment from Senator Arthur lon Justice Minister Fulton to/Roebuck (L-- Ontario), chair- laccept his private bill which|™an of the Senate committee jwhich acts as a divorce court |\for Quebec and Newfoundland \Parliament to the Exchequer divorce petitions. hat is a judicial outrage," "If he does not do so, no more| Senator Roebuck said in an in- divorces will be granted in this|terview outside the parliamen- 'No more divorces will be granted this year." | been Parliament,"' Mr. Peters said.| tary chambers. More than 200 people had found entitled to a divorce Ferguson Browne (PC--Van-|hy the Senate, he said. "Their couver Kingsway) interrupted: | judicial rights are being held "We are not going to be black-!yp and abused for ulterior pur- poses."" Senator Roebuck said it was mailed." Mr. Peters' bill was talked out without coming to a. vote and without indication of the|®@ | government's intentions. sion Mr, Peters and Frank How- ard (CCF--Skeena) blockaded bustering debate on them. | LIFTS BLOCKADE The blockade was finally lifted after a government un- dertaking to consider alterna- tive means of handling divorces from Quebec and Newfound- land, which have no divorce courts. A number of inter-party dis- cussions have been going on FOR ONLY $ this year seeking a possible so- lution, and as a result no at-| tempt has been made to have) the Commons pass the 225-odd| divorce bills which have gone through 'the Senate so far this| session. Mr. Peters and Mr. Howard} have been bitter critics of Par-| liament's methods in handling| divorces. Last week there were reports of a new proposal shap-| ing up which would permit the Senate, acting alone, to grant divorces by resolution. Thursday: Mr. Peters said he is tired of waiting. Gambling Controls TORONTO (CP)--Allan Lam.) port, former Toronto mayor, Thursday said a provincial body similar to the Liquor Control Board should be established to control gambling in Ontario. Mr. Lamport made the re- mark during panel discussion at the Metropolitan Club with Philip Kelly, former mines min-| ister of Ontario; Rev. A. W.j Downer, Progressive Conserva-| tive member in the provincial) legislature for Dufferin-Simcoe; | and real estate, oil and publish-| ing magnate Percy Bishop. , Urged By Lamport = a ally outrageous for the gov- ernment to let two CCF mem- The Commons has had expe-|bers "abuse the rules and pro- noe of Bh pd sonipd divorce cess of Parliament" in blockad- bills can be stalled. Last ses-\ing divorces, It should have |Parliament stay in session "'all day and all night' to break that kind of filibuster. H HARD OF EARING! ZENITH HEARING AID + FU Demo | 5 6) oo LL POWERED + 4-TRANSISTORS Come in or phone fora (LLL "LIVING SOUND nstration today! 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"Things are coming along al poses. eee says KADU accepted | The colonial secretary must nicely in Windsor it now ap-| Mr, Howard said the bill was po Ahoy because it provides Alalso hope that the constitution|Pears unlikely that my services|, "sham and a farce" aimed ederal type of constitution and/to be worked out in Nairobi will|Will be needed." -- ' at misleading the public into regions with their own legisla-| preserve the rights of minority He said conciliation officer Al-| thinking the government was |groups such as the whites, the|bert Dennis, who has been sit-|a¢ting on its promises to curb ting in on negotiations for the Two Magazines scene, dismissed charges of) selling obscene material against! the newsstand proprietors, and prompted appeals by both the Crown and the defence. The Crown announced it would appeal against the dis- missal, and defence counsel for the two proprietors involved said it would protest the ruling of obscenity. Magistrate Langdon said he had difficulty under the law in judging the magazines--Novem- ber, 1961, issues of Scamp and Modern Man--and said he could | not hold the dealers. respon- sible, He observed it was unfortun- ate that by the time the ap- peals are over the magazines will have gone off the stands and "triore objectionable mater- Asians and the Arabs. It now looks as if Kenya will) get independence much later) than Kenyatta and Ngala| wanted but with a better chance of success Crime Commission Reopens April 16 TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's |= royal royal commission -- on jcrime Thursday held its second istraight day of secret sessions) jand then adjourned to April 16 \for resumption of public hear- ings. Mr, Justice W. D. Roach of the Ontario Supreme Court, the jone-man commissioner, said at jthe conclusion of the day's sit-| tings that he had no informa-| tion to make public regarding | jthe two days' proceedings be-} jhind closed and police-guarded doors. Commission counsel Roland |F, Wilson said it is expected | similar hearings will be held \from time to time as develop-| ial will have taken their place.' |merits warrant. Let "Little Bill' balance Your Budget PLAN Aneada Don't let big, seasonal household budget next winter. Plan now to start the next heating seaso Budget Plan". |t divides monthly amounts to fit no interest or carrying start anytime. Why not 3581 and we'll give you all the details. REG 43 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA fuel bills bother your n with our' "Little Bill your total bill into equal your budget. There are charges, and you can call us now? Dial 725- PHONE 725-3581 past week, has made "good re- ports on progiess." Mr. War- render said he would be avail- able to come here later should "'unforseen" obstacles arise. Mr. Warrender's optimism was not supported by either un- ion or management negotiators. There have been no indications that a settlement of the strike by 3,000 production workers, |/now in its seventh week, is near. foreign economic control. "Unfounded and malevolent nonsense," the justice minister replied. A series of CCF amendments jto the financial disclosures bill were put forward and defeated jby the Progressive Conserva- 'tive majority as the House |ground its way through detailed |clause-by-clause study. | NEW 1962 "Com Model FDA-11C-62 10.51 cu. ft. net capacity FRIGIDAIRE PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS FRIGIDAIRE 447 pact Designed to fit in limited space. No defrosting ever in re- frigerator section, 71-lb. zero zone freezer © Giant Porcelain Enamel Hydrator. Spacious storage door. @ Famed Frigidaire Depende- bility | ONLY 229 AS LOW AS 90 SIMCOE ST. S. NEW 1961 MODELS TO CLEAR 199.00 HOME APPLIANCES (OSHAWA) LIMITED PHONE 725-5332 tacked." 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