Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Nov 1962, p. 1

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| Your Community Chest--Investment In Humani THOUGHT FOR TODAY We all agree: Anybody who be- lieves in violence ought to be } - fort he may have made to con- punched in the nose. e Oshawa Time Rain tapering to WEATHER REPORT showers late today. Partly cloudy Sunday, little change in temperature. i VOL. 91 -- NO. 263 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1962 'Authorized @s Second Class Mail Post Office Gaave aad tor parnie oh Tenage oe teak: TWENTY PAGES" US. Plans Prolonged. Blockade WASHINGTON (AP) -- More than half the 44-odd Soviet mis- siles secretly installed in Cuba are reported on their way back to Russia. The rest are due to be headed home by Monday night. Soviet Premier Khrushchev is also understood to be pulling out several thousand military technicians assigned to the Cu- ban rocket bases. But there were indications the U.S. blockade may no: soon be ended. The cleanup of the known Cuban missiles sites coincides with the apparent end of Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas Mik- oyan's mission to Havana. U.S. officials now believe Mikoyan has failed in any ef- vince Cuban Premier Castro to accept international inspection to verify removal of the mis- siles and dismantling of the bases. In Havana, Mikoyan was re- ported to have conferred again Friday night with Castro. Washington officials believe --- may leave this week. en is concerned, these officials said, this assumed failure of will not ive up to that part of his Cuban crisis agreement which called for international verification. Kennedy, informants added, plans to maintain a prolonged naval blockade and aerial sur- veillance of the island to safe. guard against any new deliver- ies of offensive weapons. Friday the U.S. Navy began intercepting merchant ships hauling the big Soviet rockets away from Cuba. The missiles were loaded as deck cargo and photographs made public showed eight on one ship and six on each of two other vessels. Reporters aboard a navy pa- trol plane Friday night saw a So far as President Kennedy | Mikoyan means Khrushchev oe INDIA REPULSE FRESH ASSA VIOLENCE AT SOCCER MATCH ment may move in a few weeks to implement some recommen- dations of Canadian municipal leaders seeking more federal help for local improvements. Mayor J- A Mongrain of Trois- Rivieres, Que., president of the Canadian Federation of Mayors and Municipalities, organization presented its an- Municipal Aid Move Expected need for redeveloping downtown areas, new traffic and rapid transit problems were emerg- Mr. Diefenbaker said after the one hour and 40-minute meeting that the brief had been discussed broadly with several ministers speaking'in reply. He promised careful consideration of the proposals, but did not! elaborate on government inten- ions. NEW DELHI (AP)--Commu. nist Chinese troops launched new attacks along India's north east Himalayan border but were repulsed, the defence min- OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- Indian and Chinese tanks were reported poised in Ladakh on the northwestern front. This was stated Friday by came over the past two days near Walong, 15 miles west of the Burma border, and at Jang, about 300 miles to the west near|}, f that a th the Bhutan border, a ministry equipment, UL Tanks Reported Poised On Northwestern Front of light military arms that bee gan last completed Monday. The equip- ment is valued at $5,000,000. Saturday should be Department officials said Im istry announced today. dia had not submitted any quests for additional wea oe authorities here A U. rig..Gen. John E. Kelly wae The attacks in the northeast pie in New Delhi cond the weekend to discuss further aid. French Ambassador Jeag Paul Garnier announced that is country is speeding military including helicop. nual brief ot Prime Minister Diefenbaker and the cabinet. The municipal leaders praised spokesman said. He said the Chinese push near ters. * A Canadian official said siz U.S. destroyer sweep in beside the Russian freighter Anosov, catch it in the glare of a pow- erful searchlight and by signals arrange to inspect it after day- break today. "We have arranged an in- tion without boarding," the lestroyer Barry reported by zuelan league game. Fight in cizing decisions of the referee. stands erupted after support- There were no _ serious ers of one team began criti- injuries. --AP Wirephoto Walong was under cover of ar- tilery fire. In Jang, he re- ported, the Indian forces shelled advancing Chinese. Informed sources said Indian commanders in the northeast sed confidence they can hold their present lines where the Chinese threaten mountain Fans engage in fisticuffs during soccer match in Cara- cas last Sunday as Canario West Germany Rocked government loans for sewage systems, with writeoffs for work done speedily, and said the principle should be carried to other projects, particularly in urban transport. The brief also praised the municipal winter Mayor Mongrain would not say, however, what recommen- dations seemed to meet with ready approval. Other proposals would need more study by the cabinet, The principal recommenda- tion of the federation was for Dakota transport planes from Canada should be in New Delhi next week. Prime Minister Nehru told @ meeting of civil servants the government has started making automatic weapons' that should UN Plagued By Stalls On Cuba UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- Cuban defiance, Soviet stalling and a resulting welter of con- fusion are plaguing United Na- tions efforts to resolve the three week old Caribbean crisis. Negotiations, which started after U.S. President Ken- fom hed placed slssles In Guba, jon les fave turned into an endless round of East . West haggling that apparently produced little in the past week. The Soviet Union has balked over two U.S. demands--to pull its jet bombers out of Cuba and allow on-site inspection of its missile bases. Cuban Premier Castro has virtually doomed hopes of mov. ing the long-range bombers by insisting that they were given to his government by Moscow and that he intends to keep them. Castro has refused from the beginning to permit on-site in- spection by the Red Cross, the United Nations or any other agency. Many delegates here believe the United States will quietly drop the question of first-hand verification once it is convinced the missiles have been pulled out. But the U.S. insists long- range jets capable of carrying nuclear bombs are offensive weapons, and the Russians have sidestepped saying any- thing about moving out the bombers. In an attempt to solve the confused inspection problem, three Latin American countries have proposed that the western hemisphere nations draw up an agreement to keep the continent free of nuclear weapons or rockets capable of delivering) them. The resolution, put in by Bra-| zil, Chile and Bolivia, would) provide for verification ar- rangements to make sure the radio. This will include a closeup view by daylight and photo. graphs, the inspection pattern reported to have been followed Friday. The Anosov appeared to be heavily loaded with military equipment, including what looked like eight missiles. Other ships believed loaded with missiles were also under- stood to have 'sailed from Cu- ban ports and further intercep- tions were due to be announced. PREMARITAL SEX GIVEN ITS DUE. DERBY, England (AP) -- An Anglican vicar of the mid- lands says he believes those who experiment sexually be- fore their wedding are more faithful marriage partners. That doesn't mean he ap- proves of experimenting, said Rev. Percy J. Powlesland, vicar of St, Barnabas Church, Derbyshire, in his parish magazine published today. "Tt is often true that those who experiment sexually be- fore marriage make more faithful partners than those who pride themselves on hav- ing come to their marriage absolutely pure." The 49-year-old father of three grown 'children then added: "I don't want to give the impression that I approve of sexual experiment before marriage, but I do not think it is anything like as bad as some people think." He told an interviewer "I would much prefer that a Pregnant bride should be married in church than at a register office, and I am pre- | pared to conduct such serv- ices." In his article, he said, "I certainly do not ask couples what they have done, and still HAMBURG (AP) -- Chancel. lor Adenauer says he doesn't read it because it is a "'dirty Paper." German writer Alfred Gros- ser, on the other hand, speaks of it as a "symbol of press. freedom" in West Germany. Both are referring to Der Spiegl, the Hamburg newsmag- azine, which figures in a row that has been rocking the coun- try for more than two weeks and at one point nearly top- plied Adenauer's government. Its publisher, Rudolf Aug- stein, and four editors are in jail, on suspicion of committing treason by publishing military secrets. Some 34 rooms of the magazine's editorial offices are still under police seal, although 83 rooms. The Bonn government has called the treason allegations the most serious since the West German republic was born 13 years ago. But Spiegel supporters. con- tend the police action was ac- tually meant as a blow against what an independent Munich newspaper described as the "only real opposition'? element in West Germany. WIELDS WIDE INFLUENCE Those who like it and those who don't appear agreed on one thing: Der Spiegel (The Mir- ror) is the most influential pub. lication of its kind in West Ger- many. In 1946 the British military government granted a licence to an enterprising former Wehrmacht lieutenant, Rudolf Augstein, then 23, for publica- tion of a weekly. An initial 15,000 copies of Der Spiegel came off the press, loosely patterned after North American news magazines. Its the staff has regained use of) authorities banned it because of a story on the Dutch. royaj family which was felt to be of- fensive to an allied country, Since then, Spiegel have been seized almost a dozen. times in one country or another. The Magazine pro- voked an international stir in 1956 with a story on the influ- ence of a faith healer on Queen Juliana of The Netherlands. In 1959 an item on a secret Is- raeli - German arms contract sparked the downfall of one of Premier Ben-Gurion's cabinets. TOUCHES SOME SPOTS It tackled taboos--calling for the recognition of Communist East Germany, for recognition of the Polish-German border. Under the pen name Jens \Daniel, publisher Augstein By Big Magazine Row Bonn government, Adenauer and Defence Minister Franz. Joseph Strauss were his pet targets. Austein is a registered copies|member of Demo. the Free eratie party. which is in coali- tion with Adenauer's~ Christian Democrats. Der Spiegel printed anti-Nazi, anti-allied, anti-labor and anti. big business stories. There was none of the traditional German respect for authority. It delighted nonconformists and thrived among younger Germans. An estimated 40 per cent of all German students are regular readers. Circulation now is more than 500,000. Advertisers, criticized by Adenauer, run from the gi- ant Krupp concern to the Bonn defence ministry and Soviet- |fought a running feud with the bloc trade agencies. OTTAWA (CP) -- It may be chilly outside, but inside the Commons it's April in Novem- er, Exactly seven months ago to- day, then - finance minister Fleming introduced tax changes in his farewell budget speech, A new finance minister, Hon. George Nowlan, now is piloting these tax resolutions through the: Commons after a parlia- mentary pause for a general election. i Actually, all the tax changes went into effect last April 10. But Parliament still must ap- prove them, Approval still has Nowlan Piloting Tax Resolutions formally the Income Tax Act, Estate Tax Act, Excise Tax Act and customs tariff. the matter ill occupy the Com- mons again Monday. Foreign corporations operat- ing in Canada came in for a going-over Friday when. the government resolution seeking a new tax concession for Can- ada's oil and gas industry was strongly criticized. THINKS SHOULD ACT ' T. C. Douglas, New Democra- tic Party leader, said that if the federal treasury, through tax exemptions, is going to help pay for oil and gas exploration, establishment of a municipal loan fund to enable municipal governments to borrow money as easily and cheaply as the senior levels of government, All of the recommendations hinged cities for more capital. government's works on the need of the towns and aur F : : also be covered in ' : 4 part 'by the passes leading down into the In the Ladakh area, informed sources reported, the .Chinese shot at but. missed an Indian transport plane carrying ' mili- tary supplies to Chushul air- field, situated on a 14,230-foot teau. Piindia 'flew light, tanks into the elosed doors, main Municipal problem stems from rapid and frequently unplanned growth of the suburbs, and growing obsolescence in the downtown. areas. Many cities-were approaching a surplus of medium to high- cost single houses and luxury apartments. The need for low- cost housing and urban renewal was not being met. With the spread of the suburbs and the Thomson Trust Welcomed By Kenya Paper NAIROBI, Kenya (Reuters)-- The newspaper Daily Nation Friday welcomes Canadian pub- lisher Roy Thomson's. $15,000,- 000 training trust for journal- ists in underdeveloped coun: tries as a way. of checking the "inexorable extinction of the free flow of ideas and informa- tion" which it says is "taking place before our eyes." The newspaper says in an editorial that this process is evident "'not only in some of the newly emergent countries, Big NY. Raid In Gambling Crackdown DETROIT (AP) --A raiding force of 112 city, state and fed- eral officers chopped their way through the Gotham Hotel Fri- day night in a crackdown numbers gambling. The raiders carried crow- bars, hatchets, fire axes and sledgehammers. They kicked in every door and left hallways littered with splintered doors hanging from hinges. Persons were arrested. Forty- Lieut. John O'Neill of the De- troit Vice Bureau said search warrants for all the 174 rooms = the hotel were obtained earl- er. O'Neill said the hotel long has been known as a centre for numbers. and other gambling operations but police were un- able to raid it successfully be- a counter,.a and across the disputed border at Rudok in Tibet. be available in large quantities plains of India's Assam state. |by next month. He also said the Soviet U which he described as "in a fix retiag Popes are ina," is standing ise' fo supply india ait jet fighters. He said deliv are expected in allies of Nehru accus me. airfield tactics hed offering - feats said were phoney peace. offers, Communist tanks were seen only a few miles from the air- strip, an Indian defence ministry spokesman said. The airfield is the only one the Indians have in the area and is vital to their supply line. Only sporadic shelling and rifle fire was reported Friday in the 'northeastern sector of the frontier battleline where the Chinese have paused after early/¢ advances that threatened the thickly populated Assam Plain. Both sides have reinforced their positions in Ladakh in the last 11 days. Indian outposts in the area were overrun by Communist tanks in the initial Chinese of- fensive Oct. 20 and the Chinese surged swiftly toward Chushul. Unlike the steep mountain terrain in most of Ladakh, the frontier between Chushul and Rudok is fairly flat and barren, making tank warfare possible. In Washington, the defencela department said the U.S. airlift Blaze Destroys Ford Rotunda DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) = Fire destroyed the Ford Rot unda Friday at a mated between $15,000,000 and loss. esti. 16,000,000. The stone and steel structure --shaped like-a gear--collapsed in less than two hours after the roof caught fire from a tarring operation. The Rotunda--a landmark at Schaefer Road in Dearborn fer 26 years--was one of the 10 most-visited tourist attractions in the United States. The building originally designed for the Chicago World Fair of 1933-34 and later was moved to Dearborn: It beca! glamorous display arena fe Ford products. fore because they could get a warrant for only one or two rooms at a time. The hotel is scheduled to be torn down as part of an urban renewal project. Inspector Arthur Sage said but in older established states too." and television men he can help them keep the flame of free expression alive." the raid dealt a crippling blow| j to the numbers racket in De. troit. Nine of the 41 arrested faced arraignment in federal court today on charges of failing to have a gambling stamp and for evasion of excise taxes. Thomson evidently hopes 'that by training journalists The Thomson Foundation will train journalists and TV tech- The other 32 were held by agreement is observed. HELP The Chest CLIMB $236,000 less whether I am marrying the government itself should do | two or three." the exploration, "If the public treasury is go- ing to pay the shot, it ought to get the benefit," he said. Mr. Douglas and Gilles Gre- goire (SC -- Lapointe) also ob- jected to a resolution exempt- ing foreign iron ore mining companies from the special 1960 tax of 15 per cent on the profits of foreign-owned branch plants. Mr, Nowlan said iron ore de- velopments are '"'terrifically ex- pensive." Mr. Douglas said it was a dubious argument that iron ore mines are more expensive to bring into production than cop- per, zinc or potash properties. YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Manchester Farmer Honored Oshawa Income Fifth Highest Orono Youth Charged In Robbery to be given to changes in the excise tax and tariffs, then bills will be introduced to amend tongue-in-heek language soon made it popular. : | Within a few months, British Lakes Labor Inquiry To Reopen In Ottawa The SIU lawyer has argued several times that he and the SIU's case are, being treated differently by the judge. Mr. Justice Norris suggested that_Mr. Nuss make the state- ment™to him privately "and then I will decide whether you should make it thereafter in public." The SIU, through its Execu- tive Vice-President Leonard J. McLaughlin, filed 30 documents) nichians from underdeveloped countries at institutions being established in the United King- dom. It will also sponsor edu- cational TV programs in those countries. Voters' Approval Sought By Roblin WINNIPEG (CP) -- Premier Duff Roblin called a surprise Manitoba general election Fri- day for Dec. 14, saying his Pro- gressive Conservative govern- ment has completed the pro- gram for which it had a man- date and wants voters' ap- proval for a new four-year pro- gram, The move, climaxing a polit- jically-dramatic week for Man- itoba, caught all opposition par- ties by surprise, Their leaders admitted they had been think- ing in terms of a spring vote. It will be the fourth previn- cial general election in Canada within a month. Quebec will vote Nov, 14, Newfoundland Nov. 19 and Prince Edward Is- jland Dec. 10. Mr. Roblin told reporters it was "'coincidental'" that he|Manitoba Social Credit league tried Wednesday to appoint for-|said: "I must say I didn't ex mer Liberal Rene Prefontaine}pect an election this year." Detroit police for investigation of violation of state gambling laws. Police said they were caught in the penthouse of the hotel playing dice on a pool table on which there was $5,000. Seafarers' International Union man inquiry of Mr. Justice T.jof Canada, prompting Mr, Jus- G. Norris. into labor strife andjtice Norris to declare that the shipping disruptions on the/SIU appeared to be waging a Great Lakes reopens in Ottawa) "campaign of attrition.' Tuesday after three weeks of| The SIU has filed 88 bulky hearings in Montreal. exhibits in the last three days, The Vancouver Jurist made/|4ll aimed at refuting early testi- the announcement at the end of|mony by Michael Sheehan, head his 45th session Friday, taking|Of the rival Canadian Maritime all parties appearing before him|Union (CLC). by surprise. Several times, Mr. Justice Norris said the SIU was 'wast. Only the lawyers for the var- ing time'? Z ; ~ g time" by reading long pas- ious parties need appear in Ot-) 006s of the documents into thelas exhi Priday tawa, he said. No witnesses| Swicial record BURIED TS ANtO Se exhibits Friday to refute) | e ' would be called. At the beginning of Friday's iters of earlier testi. There was noindicationisitting he barried SIU lawyer] ONY. whether Mr. Justice Norris Joseph Nuss from making a| In some cases, several docu- would sit for only one day, or/ public statement on the grounds|ments were filed to refute one whether he would continue the|that Mr, Nuss had made a state-|Sentence of earlier testimony, hearings in Ottawa jment Thursday and that an-|. Many of the documents dealt He told reporters later, bow. | other statement would serve nojin détail with a dispute between ever, that he would make alother end but publicity. {the SIU and Owen Sound Trans- statement on several! matters at! "It's not for publicity," re-|portation Company. They were the Ottawa session, which plied Mr. Nuss. "It is a very/filed to contradict charges made would be open to the press. jimportant matter on the waylearlier-that the SIU held an in- Friday's sitting was @ dreary|in which inquiries are held injferior contract with the com- session of documentation by jhe Canada." pany. MONTREAL (CP)--The one- to the cabinet, only to have Mr. Prefontaine, son and grandson of 'manitoba Liberal ' Progres- sive cabinet ministers, back out at the last moment. However, Liberal Leader Gil Molgat saw a connection. "It seems the province is: be- ing run on fits of temper tant- rums. The premier didn't get his way Wednesday and we have an election Friday." A. R, (Russ) Patilley, provin- cial leader of the New Demo- cratic Party, said: "I'm sur- prised Mr. Roblin called a win- ter election. I don't think it is the proper time for an election in Manitoba, but I can under- Stand his trying to clear the air} and get a new mandate: from the people in view of his recent faux. pas." Reg Pearen, president of the $200,000 $175,000 $150,000 $125,000 $100,000 $75,000 $50,000 $25,000 A as BED OF ROSES Times Reporter Scares Off Thieves Page 9 | 5 Aldermen Undecided About Running .... Page 9 Agricultural Winter Fair in Toronto Friday. The roses are . worth $1,500. Wearing a $1,000 Canada mink stole, Marg Carter re- clines on a couch of roses during a fashion show at the opening might of. the Royal Start a

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