2 ' THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, November 13, 1962 GOOD EVENING| By JACK GEARIN RIFLE $585 CASH FROM MESS QUARTERS City Police are investigating a unique nocturnal break-in at the Armories -- more than $585 in cash was stolen from a@ cash register in the Sergeants' Mess after the premises was locked shortly after midnight Saturday. Entrance to the second-storey Mess was gained by "jimmying"' a lock on a "private" door used by staff personnel, such as stewards, Cigarettes and liquor stocks in the canteen appear to have been left untouched, but this can not be determined until a complete check is made. : PUBLIC SERVICE HAS COMPENSATIONS This is often the time of year when strong appeals are made to citizens, prominent and otherwise, to allow their names to stand for public office such as those to be contested December 3 in Oshawa's municipal elections. These citizens are usually reminded of their. public duty to serve the community to the best of their ability, even at the cost of out-of-pocket expenses in time lost from regular employment, fatigue, etc., (not to mention personal incon- veniences and irritations as unfair public criticism which all duly elected representatives are bound to attract), This may seem like a big sacrifice to ask of any citizen, but, of course, there is another side to the picture, one that is far more encouraging for the poor candidates. Public office, of course, is not a one-way street despite the loud pleas of some incumbents. It has heartaches and disappointment. It can also have worthwhile compensations of a strictly legal naure for those who would venture forth across its tumultuous seas, Not only is the general atmos- phere in Council and Board life stimulating (especially be- hind closed doors in the committee rooms where most of the A cinder - block building owned by Rdio Oil Company in the greater Winnipeg city of East Kildonan goes up in $500,000 BLAZE DESTROYS BUILDING flames Monday. The $500,000 fire for a time threatened to spread to gasoline anks (fore- ground), but firemen contain- ed the flames. Eight com- pany trucks, a 70-foot fibre glass yacht and two more United Church Assails boats under construction in- | side went up in flames. --(CP Wirephoto) Sentenine Said 'Ludicrous' Counsel Claims Lucas Victim Of Frame-Up a double slaying in Toronto a year ago was brought before the Supreme Court of Canada Monday as Arthur Lucas of De- troit d an appeal i his murder conviction and death sentence. Toronto lawyer Walter Willis- ton is seeking to have the con- viction quashed on grounds of miscarriage of justice in the trial of Lucas, 54, for the mur- der of Therland Crater. Crater, 44, and 21-year-old Carolyn Newman who lived with him in Toronto, were killed last Nov. 17 in a strug- gle in their apartment during which their' threats were cut.' - During the trial, defence counsel argued that Lucas was the victim of a frame-up, In his.case submitted to the Supreme Court, Mr. Williston argues that the trial jury was prejudiced by actions of the Crown counsel, and that Chief Justice James C. McRuer mis- directed the jury as to the law and the facts in his charge to them. Mr. Williston argues that the crown counsel unfairly preju. diced the jury by leading evi- dence as to other criminal acts alleged to have been done by Lucas, and by having alluded jin his opening address to dam- aging facts without later pre- senting evidence to prove them. OTTAWA (CP)--The case of CP from AP-Reuters VATICAN CITY --The Vati- Romano says the acquittal of a t} young Belgian mother and four others in the slaying of her thalidomide-deformed baby girl "'did not cancel the moral guilt."" An editoril signed by the paper's editor, Raimondo Manzi, says 'We do not want to be the judges of a weeping mother. Only God can give a personal verdict." But, the editorial adds, "It's not permitted to kill; to. sup: press a life is a crime. No cir- cumstance, but self - defence, can allow us to suppress a life . .. there are laws of a divine and human nature that hang over us and it is not permitted to substitute an arbitrary 'emo- tional feeling for them." The mother, Mrs. Suzanne Vandeput, her husband and two other relatives, and Dr. can newspaper L'Osservatore| Drug-Baby Killing Verdict Attacked guilty although all had Admit. jted their part in the killing. Belgium's Roman 'atholic Press condemned Saturday's verdict, but the remainde: of |the Belgian press was divided gs: the subject. The Catholic La Libre Beige |said it was legally and moraily juntenable, But the Socialist Le Peuple jsaid: "Justice is done, Justice is well done." It accused the Vatican radio of "intolerabie pressure" in calling for a con- viction. The independent Le Soir called for an international in- quiry and strict control of new drugs. Vatican City radio said Mon- day the acquittal had "breached the dam _ protecting the weak, the 'fragile, the old, the suffering and the disabled " In the eyes of the Roman Catholic Church the chiid had been discarded as an imperfect product, but was in fact.a per- son, enjoying all the rights and Jacques Casters were found not privileges of a human being, UNITED NATIONS (AP)--A Dag Critic Said Trresponsible' his book of any supporting evi- RC Schools Requests "We In Winnipeg | Marines Wounded, nce imposed by a Magsteate| AdMiral Discloses debate is held), the experience is an invaluable education spokesman for Acting Secre- for almost any walk of life. There is another factor to be dence or documentation for it TORONTO (CP)--The United approved by the sub-executive recognize quite. clearly lary-General U. Thant accused/and the existence of copious of- considered -- the resultant publicity can be of great value to incumbents whose personal business requires that they keep in fairly close touch with the public at large. This, too, can pay off in a legal way. Who make the best elected representatives? It would be equally as fallacious to say that the best representatives come from the professional world as it would be to claim that they would all be found in the trade union world -- the simple truth of the matter is that they are liable to be found in almost any world and that no single group has a strangle-hold on them. The most efficient elect- ed bodies would be composed of a good cross-section of the community with each large population sector represented (to our way of thinking). All of this preamble is by way of pointing out that there are influential municipal groups without a representa- tive on Council to speak out on behalf of their best interests. Two such groups that come immediately to mind are the Oshawa Lake Vista Ratepayers, the fledgling community Church of Canada said Monday|of the church, was to be sent|that some differences of a' re- that requests by Ontario Ro-|to members | c s man Catholic bishops for changes in the separate school system cannot be justified and threaten the high standards of the province's public schools. inary statement drafted by ale special commission, the United Church said requests made in a brief to the govern- ment and .legislature members 'cannot be tolerated in Jaw or the public interest . . ." A memorandum. accompany-} ing the statement said the United Church would, after fur- ther study, submit its own de- tailed brief to the legislature. The preliminary statement by the commission, formed prior t church officers. | Church In what it termed a prelim-| Catholic concern for Christian)' lity the increasing demands of a| Separate secondary schools, the articula See hen which seeks more special constitutional background, "not privileges larger | tion." the highest possible level of ed-| ucation teh children and appreciated the|"9t ask whether. . . public manner be in- " the] of the genera:|ligious character will ouncil executive, the church/volved in our discussion, tate education commission and|statement said, but "'we must : set forth plainly our position on} The statement said the United/this subject." endorses the Roman, ASK BROAD VIEW ducation, but views with grav-| Dealing with the request for religious denomina-|United Church said the whole and a share of larger anq|just those parts of the constitu- public taxa-|"!on or law which are said to |justify the claim," should be considered : "If we are to review. the; |whole body of law, there seems} no good reason why we should) in the sit- stand in It said it sympathized with he desire of the bishops to get for Roman Catholic} in which the uation in which we tence imposed by a Magistrate} on a Winnipeg mother of 11 was} GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba termed "ludicrous" Sunday|(AP)--Rear - Admiral Edward night by Irving Himel, secre-|J. O'Donnell disclosed Monday tary of 'he Association for Civil/two U.S, marines had been Liberties. ' |seriously wounded about Nov. 3 Magistrate Isaac Rice placed| py "explosive ordnance." Rita Dzedzora, 34, of Winnipeg) 'The U.S. naval base com. on suspended sentence and res-|mander declined to give de- tricted her to the inside of her|tails. Unofficial reports here house and banned visitors ex-|are that the marines wandered cept close relatives for. two|into an anti - personnel »mine years after convicting her of be-| field despite the fact that these nd in possession of stolen! fields are surrounded by barbed goods. i "The Criminal Code doesn't allow for such a sentence,' Himel said at a meeting. | McLaughlin (Kilmarnock); "The whole thing becomes sort of ludicrous," he said. "How is she going to look after her family with this kind of im-! son wire. ) | Names of the marines were Mr. not made public. Speaking to reporters, the first group to visit the base since the Cuban crisis began, the ad- miral said this was the first in- cident in which military per- Irish ex-diplomat Conor Cruise O'Brien Monday of irresponsi- ble fabrication in his new book To Katanga and Back. The spokesman accused O'Brien also--by publishing the k--of violating contracual Obligations he undertook as a UN official. ficial records to the contrary, to. expose it as the irresponsible fabrication which it is." The spokesman said that in writing his book O'Brien drew widely on information and events available to him in his eee position as a UN of- ficial. O'Brien charged in his book tary- general Dag Hammar-| skjold's top representative in| ist Ka-| COMING EVENTS the Congo's tanga province in 1961. O'Brien charged in his bok vublished in London that Ham- sion of how the first fighting started in Katanga in Septem- ber 1961 and that the United Nations: actually undertook to end the secession by force. marskjold put out a false ver-|------ THE Remembrance Association of the Oshawa Silver Cross chapter are hold- ing their annua) bazear at the Legion Hall, Thursday, Nov, 15 at 2 p.m. Pre- e towards welfare work. L Bingo tonight, Avalon, 7.90 20 games, $6 and $10. Seven $40 jack- Pots, door prizes, EUCHRE Sunnyside Park, Wednesday P.m. Refreshments, Prizes. Admis- jsion 50 cents. Door prize. nel had been injured here. to the Roman Catholic brief, possible restriction?" The Katangan fighting began group of property-owners; and the Oshawa Downtown Busi- nessmen's Association, which has no less than four members on the Board of Education but nary a representative at City Hall, which certainly represents an overbalance of power in some way. The time is ripe for such groups to think of such things, Apathy and indifference towards municipal politics -can be a costly mistake, and the time for action is now. LAKE VISTA TO HEAR CANDIDATES The Oshawa Lake Vista Ratepayers Association -- Osh- awa's only organization of this kind -- is completing plans for its first big political rally, This is to be held in St, Philip's Church on Sunday, De- cember 2, the eve of the City's municipal election. An over- flow crowd is expected because the fledgling Lake Vista group already has a membership of more than 300, accord- ing to President William R. Eyre (who acted as spokesman for the group recently when a delegation visited City Hall to discuss grievances with Council). No final decision has been reached by the OLVRA as to which municipal candidates will be heard that night, but tentative arrangements call for the appearance of such speakers as Alderman Finley Dafoe, who has always lent a sympathetic ear to the group's plight; Clifford Pilkey, who is making his initial run in the municipal arena as an alder- manic candidate after long service as a trade union official and spokesman; Robert Wilson, another sophomore candi- date in the aldermanic race who has many friends in the City parks associations set-up; and George Martin, a young insurance man who also seeks a seat on City Council. The Lake Vista Ratepayers have attracted much publicity of late by their determined fight to gain some of the things to which they believe they are entitled in the way of muni- cipal services, etc. MAPLE LEAF INSURANCE DECISION LOOMS There's an excellent chance that machinery will be set in motion this week for the amalgamation of the 67-year-old Maple Leaf Mutual Fire Insurance Co. with the Farmers' Union Mutual Fire Insurance Co, of Lindsay. The directorate of each firm voted in favor of such amalgamation, which also seems advisable to =o less an authority than Mr. E. Dodd, chief examiner of the Department of Insurance, Queen's Park (watchdog of Ontario's insurance _ busi- ness) -- Mr. Dodd explain- ed today, however, that such action had never been formally recommended by his department. The proposed move is of great concern to Maple Leaf's 5,000-odd policy-hold- ers -- 90 percent of whom are farmers located in On- tario, Durham, Northumber- land and York counties-- who will be keeping a close eye on the company's head- quarters at Columbus next Friday, , The endorsation of the policy-holders is required by law before the amalgamation move is made. A special meeting of all policy-holders will be held in Columbus Friday to determine the amalgamation question-- the group could veto it and vote in favor of continuation under the Maple Leaf set-up. This would mean that the com- pany could exercise its option té assess each policy-holder on his premium note, as previously agreed to, and raise much-needed funds for the continued operation of the com- pany. There are approximately 64 such farm co-op insurance firms in Ontario under the jurisdiction of the Department of Insurance, Mr. Dodd said he will attend next Friday's Columbus meeting, but Thomas J. Temple, company secretary, said today that he could make no "accurate estimate" of the number of policy-holders expected because this meeting will be unique in that it likely will decide the future of the company. eareaior: Bee WILLIAM NEWMAN | was made now because "some of the statements and implica- tions of (the bishops' brief) t t Bret waagpresented~ io pro 92 we shoul nt serous ask vide all with the oppor-| - k ee a os unity to ett nd discuss|£0r the continuance of separate schools."' The United Church hese issues." strike at the very heart of the| school system of the province." ASK CHANGES In their brief made public Oct. 28, the Roman: Catholic bishops asked for establishment of Roman Catholic teachers' colleges, separate secondary schools, a review of corporation framing the curriculum. Hugh _ Foot, -Britain's representative on Nations trusteeship committee, | jtax distribution to schools, con-/said in a television interview| |sultation of Roman Catholic ex-|Monday night the future in Af- |perts on separate school text-|rica is "horrifying." | jbooks and greater freedom in} 'In the next 10 years we |face commotion, bloo The United Church statement,| violence," he said. WEATHER FORECAST said the |bishops' request for govern- |ment-aided Catholic teachers' colleges contained a veiled sug- Dark Continent's The woman's 11 children are by two fathers, both of whom have been sent to jail by Mag- istraie Rice, The family is on welfare, Police said they found stolen |gestion that public school teach- ers do not have the same con- cern for the moral and spirit Future Said Dark LONDON (Reuters) former |olic teachers. the United) --------_--_-- INTE goods in her basement which she claimed were left by friends for storage. She said she did -- Sirjual welfare of pupils as Cath-|not know what the cartons con.| tained. RPRETING THE NEWS dshed and Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 4:30 p.m. EST: Synopsis: Mainly cloudy skies|S Lake St. Clair, day and Wednesday. light, Toronto, Hamilton, London, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault* Ste. Marie, Lake Huron, Lake Eric, Lake Ontario, Georgian Bay, Niagara, Haliburton, Fri- magami, Algoma, White River} regions: Cloudy with sunny pe-| riods today and Wednesday. A little Winds or snow this morning, temperature change. | light. Cochrane region: Cloudy with a few periods of light snow or! freezing drizzle today, Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday,} little temperature change, winds light. I Remand Given For Mother Of Dead Baby SARNIA Sunny Periods For Wednesday © Low tonight, High Wednesday |Windsor .. and near normal temperatures| London prevail across Ontario this/Kitchener ..... jmorning. Little change is ex-| Wingham be jpected today and Wednesday /|Hamilton . Windsor: |St. Catharin Sunny with cloudy periods to-|Toronto .. Early|Peterborough .. morning fog both days. :Little| Trenton temperature change, winds/Killaloe .... {Muskoka ... |North Bay,... Kapuskasing |Wh | Moosonee S Mount Forest. few brief periods of light rain|Timmins .... Dawson |Victoria ... {Edmonton . jRegina ... |Winnipeg . White River. ~~ |S, S. Marie.... |Kapuskasing «+... \North Ba | Sudbury Muskoka Windsor . |Toronto .. | Ottawa |Montreal ... |Quebec .. «.;,, |Halifax (CP)--Velma Ship-| ----_____ By CARMAN CUMMING Canadian Press Staff Writer After almost a year of un- comfortable peace, the Congo appears to be rolling inexorably toward a new crisis point. For 24% years Moise Tshombe |has resisted pressure from the United Nations and the central |government to bring his rich |Katanga province back into the 50 |Congo. ft; THOMAS, ss000.. 9 50 | Now time is running out for 45 |the UN, and' acting Secretary- 45 |General U Thant faces the! 42 |choice of taking decisive action 42 (against Tshombe or pulling the 45 |UN force out with Tshombe still 45 |in control of Katanga. 40 | Thant has set an_ unofficial 40 |deadline of Thursday for some 35 j|move by Tshombe towards ac- 38 .|ceptance of a UN reunification 35 |plan, UN sources report that 35 | Thant has threatened to 30 |take action against the Katan. 28 |gan regime if no progress is 35 | made, CASH RUNS OUT | How long the UN can stay in ithe Congo is not known. Some |reports have predicted a pullout jas early as February. The |$200,000,000 bond issue floated by the UN has staved off im- |mediate crisis, but much of the jmoney has already been spent, | In addition, some of the na- |tions contributing to the 15,000- man UN force are reported an- xious to see the operation }wound up, India in particular, |contributing about a third of the jforce, needs its troops at home |{o face the Communist Chinese} jthreat, ~ | Until last weekend Tshombe| | appeared to be playing for time, | talking reunification while hold. | ing tightly to independence in| hopes the UN would be forced to leave. | This approach appeared to Forecast Temperatures ite River....... i De MATCsssessse Observed Temperatures w overnight, high Monday se neeeeeens sakehead .. man, 21, of Walpole Island was} remanded Monday until Friday! for judgement of a charge of failing to provide the necessities of life for her one-month-old niece who died in hospital Sept. 24, i Miss Shipman, who had pleaded not guilty to the charge, was caring for the baby while, the mother, Mrs, Lenora James, | was looking for a job in De.) troit. Dr, Percy Glady of Wallace- jburg, Ont., testified the baby |was a "healthy, normal living \female" when discharged with her mother from hospital Aug. 25, : ; Dr. Bessie Cathcart of Wal- laceburg testified Miss Ship-| man brought the baby to her Sept, 22 in "an emaciated, de- hydrated, undernourished, list- | NOW! $300,000.00 Auto Liability Insurance 30.00 A Court Judgmgnt can ruin your life financially , . , be safe with adequate insurance. SCHOFIELD-AKER AT PREMIUMS AS LOW AS PER YEAR 723-2265 @ Reg Aker (Limited) @ Ralph Schofield 360 KING ST. WEST @ Don Ellison @ Gerry Osborne less and weak condition. ' Crisis In Congo Seems Imminent have a fair chance of success, since Thant has consistently op- posed use of force against Ka- tanga. Some Western countries, led by Belgium and Britain, have argued against either force or economic boycott. DENY RAIDING But a new factor was intro- duced by UN charges that Ka- tangan planes raided northern parts of the province held by central government troops dur- ing the weekend. | This appeared to be an open Katangan invitation for a show. down, a development that the central government would al- most certainly. welcome, But the Katanga government flatly denied the charges and said the UN was "looking for an excuse to start a military action again." Tshombe is much more ready for a showdown now than he was in earlier clashes in Sep- tember and December of last year, : In the September encounters the Katangan "air force' had only one operational plane. Now the UN: says it has some 50 planes, Katangan ground forces also have been built up, with estimates of their strength ranging from 12,000 to 40,000 men. The UN continues to main? tain a strong force in the Ka- tangan capital of Elisabethville. But clearly the regime cannot now be brought to submission Sept, 12, the day Hammar- skjold arrived in The Congo on the mission that was to end in his death in a plane crash at Ndola in Northern Rhodesia 'four days later- Eleven weeks later O'Brien was retired from UN service on the initiative of Thant. Coin Collection 'Stolen From | 'Truman Library INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) A collection of rare coins, BAZAAR | Christ Memorial Church HILLCROFT STREET Wednesday, Nov. 14 2.30 P.M, | 8th Oshawa Sea Scout Mothers' Auxiliary. | -- KINSMEN BINGO TUESDAY, 8 O'CLOCK minted during the administra- {tions of 35 presidents of the | United States, was stolen Mon. day from the Harry S. Truman Library. John W, Snyder, treasury sec. retary in the Truman adminis- tration who loaned the collec. tion to the library, said the coins were worth about $50,000 if sold individually, .but the col- lection was worth much more, Former president Truman, cutting short a visit in New York to return home, said the collection had a value "way over $100,000." It is one of the most valuable coin collections of its kind in the country,"' Truman said, The theft was termed "quick jand quite professional'? by In- | dependence police, who investi- gated before FBI agents ar- rived. In his home in Toledo, Ohio, | Snyder said the theft was "a considerable shock to me.' 'CONCEALED REALITY' O'Brien wrote in his book. of events on Sept, 13 that Ham- marskjold "allowed the world to be given an official version which was so phrased as to conceal the reality of what had happened, making what had been an active intervention by the United Nations look like a defensive action." The UN spokesman said O'Brien himself is on record to the contrary and made no men- tion of his newest interpretation to anyone at UN headquarters prior to his leaving the organ- ization or in articles published erward. "Whatever Mr, O'Brien's per- sonal reasons for this remark- able about-face may be," the spokesman added, "'it is neces- sary, in view of the absence in in British newspapers soon a" FREE ADMISSION EXTRA BUSES Jackpot Nos. 50 and 54 aig > G GAMES | AM 1 |____ JUBILEE PAVILION | BAZAAR | and TEA \WED., NOV. 14, 7.30 P.M. Fancy work, home cooking, candy, driftwood, Christmas | HARMONY UNITED CHURCH | Oshawa Tennis Glub | BRIDGE | ond | EUCHRE EVERY TUESDAY | 75c¢ includes, prizes, lunch (Corner Ritson & Hillcroft) Telephone 723-4490 Japanese Premier | Backs EEC Moves LONDON (Reuters) -- Pre- mier Hayato Ikeda of Japan told Prime Minister Macmillan Monday that he welcomed Brit- ish efforts to enter the Euro. pean Common Market, a well. Ikeda was understood to have said Britain's membership in the European Community would give nations such as Japan a guarantee that the Common Market would be an "outward looking" organization. | The sources said Ikeda--who was holding his first meeting with Macmillan after arriving here on a three - day official visit--also said Japan would be interested in eventual full mem-} bership in the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and De- velopment, of which Canada is ti without a major operation. a member. 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