THOUGHT FOR TODAY It's strategy, though not eti- quette, to walk between the wife and shop windows. She Oshawa Sime WEATHER REPORT Partly cloudy ' Sunday and little colder, Winds northwest erly at 16. Vol. 91 -- No. 293 Price Not 10 Cents te aeey it ONTARIO, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1962 Authorized @s Second Class Meil Ottawa and for payment ef Postage. in Cash 8 Die As Airliner Hits City NORTH HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (AP)---Hight persons died Fri- day night when a four-engined airliner, coming in for a land- ing in a fog, plunged into a business - residential quarter of a mile from the run- way. Eight homes were set afire. Pieces of wreckage the size of through automobiles smashed roofs of frame homes, and blaz- ing gasoline spewed across a) block-ong area. The plane crashed in a San Fernando valley section west of Lockheed Air Terminal ih Bur- bank, destination of the Fiying Tiger Airlines Constellation. Firemen said four of the vic- tims Were aboard the plane and two Mén, a woman and a girl died in shattered homes. There may be more victims, firemen said. The victims were] ' terribly mutilated by the force! of the pen we and the flames which follow A witness ai the plane ap- peared to be coming in for a perfect landing--except it was on top of homes and businesses near Laurel Canyon Bouievard instead of at the field. SIGHT HORRIFIES "The plane was lowering in just like for a landing," said area a couldn't believe it could come down there, Then the left wing dipped and the plane smashed in, nose first." The plane clipped power lines which whiplashed across homes and yards, trailing sparks--and plunging an already panic- stricken neighborhood into darkness lit only by blazing homes and wreckage. "Screams rose from the block as the rumble of the crash sub- jsided," said a resident. 'The children were terrified. Every- thing was black ,and the homes were burning." The big Constellation was coming in from Chicago. The Flying tiger line saii three crew members and an em- ployee's husband, hitching a ride, were aboard the liner. TAIL SECTION OF WRECKED PLANE Montreal MONTREAL (CP)--A_ fake Santa Claus and three hooded helpers, armed with deadly tic w killed two Mike Powers. He said he looked up, horrified at the apparition of a big airliner roaring in out policemen Friday in a frenzied bank holdup in suburban, St. Laurent that netted them about | Evade Police Net Bandits Bank of Commerce branch on Cote de Liesse Road, just as a police cruiser pulled up carry- ing Constables Denis Brabant, 31, and Claude Marineau, 40. Santa Claus, shouting profan- Kennedy Sees | Tax Reduction | As U.S. Spark | NEW YORK (AP)--Presidenit Kennedy called for an early! and substantial tax cut, then) drew enthusiastic applause from his businessmen listeners Friday night by pledgixg econ- omy in government. TORIES IN MANITOBA V H| SALISBURY (Reaters) -- The white supremist Rhodesian Front today was reported to have won a sweeping victory in Friday's general election in Southern Rhodesia. Final official results were not jyet known, but observers here jsaid the Rhodesian Front had |won a clear majority over Pre- imier Sir Edgar Whitehead's | United Federal Party which cam) paigned on promises of a 'non-racial" society and preser- vation of the federation of Rho- |desia and Nyasaland. The federation, made up of Northern and Southern Rhode- isia and Nyasaland, appears to Ibe doomed. WILL JOIN FORCES Friday night, the two major Negro nationalist parties in Northern Rhodesia announced they had agreed to form a coali- White Supremists Gain Large Vote The Rhodesian Front, led by tain '"'white control' in South- ern Rhodesia and has rejected tion." The election was the first un- der a new constitution giving a limited number of Negroes the right to vote, but few of them exercised it. Whithead had banned the main Negro nationalist party in the colony, the Zimbabwe Afri- can People's Union, and the na- tionalists' resulting call to Ne- groes to boycott the election ap. peared to have been a complete success, Only 13,000 of the total Negro population of 3,600,000 were eli- gible to vote. About 90,000 of the 225,000 whites were on the elec- toral roll. what it calls "forced integra-| © Winston Field, is pledged to re-| Ej DUFF ROBLIN 25 Children Unharmed In Bomb Blast . the popular vote. RETUR By STAN McCABE WINNIPEG (CP) -- Premier Duff Roblin led his Progressive Conservative government back to power in Manitoba-general election but the Liberals made slight gains in both seats and The New Democratic Party lost strength, dropping a seat Friday in its North Winnipeg stronghold, and the only Social Credit member of the last leg- islature retained his seat. Party standing: Prog. Con. Liberal NDP-CCF Social Credit Tie Deferred 2 --- Total 7.8 The tie is in Kildonan. LIBERALS IMPROVE One of the most notable re- 33 18 7 1 1 36 11 10 vote Conservatives with 44 of the total. In 1059 istributed ridings of the vote: With 1,897 of of 1,916 per cent) rennin 'showed the Liberal Leader Gil Molgat, re- elected in the rural riding of Ste. Rose, commented particu- larly on his party's gains in the popular. vole aak fn tie Wika peg urban area. A. R..Paulley, leader of the NDP, perrcager daly ha nipeg suburban riding of Radis- son, but was disappointed | Appearing before 3,000 diners at the Bconomic Club of New York, Kennedy argued that, despite formidable opposition in Congress, a 1963 tax cut offers the best hope in the long run of spurring employment and bal- ion ge vj beer gine a tax reduc-|_ With 44 of the 65 seats in the tion bill going to Congress next Southern Rhodesian legislature month would be coupled with/7ecided, the party standing a new federal budget that would|W8S: Rhodesian Front, 28; keep spending on domestic pro-|United Federal party, 15; Inde- grams at current levels. Pendents, one. Although Kennedy conceded there will be heavier spending| defence and programs, said inter: a-question| Soviets Claim Mcxemara foresees te] 3 Americans Rided US. Spy Robert McNamara foresees the time not far off when defence expenditures will peak off. MOSCOW (AP)--Three more Officials of the U.S. embassy were accused today by the Rus- Kennedy said Soviet Premier) Khrushchev has kept all his| known commitments made dur- ing October's Cuban crisis. He said Cuba "'does not present an Offensive threat under present sians of engaging in espionage activity, The official party newspaper Pravda accused: Capt. Alexi H. Davison, an assistant U.S. Air Force attache conditions" but that aerial sur- who serves as the embassy's BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP)-- Twenty-five children practising for a Christmas play in a Negro church basement escaped in- jury when a home-made bomb damaged the church and wrecked two nearby homes. The shattering blast Friday was blamed on' racial troubles by a trustee of the church who is active in an integrationist group. The basement of the Bethel Baptist Church was showered with broken glass and plaster. The main floor of the church wad littered with ee ere glass windows a shatter Progressive Conserva> paintings. The ,walls were)erais in the North Winnipeg seat|tives and Liberals ran _candi- has L. Shuttlesworth, |! Burrows, where he defeated|dates in Aa 55 seats at bah Negro leader of the Alabama luk en ee. ee Chutrebill pel will Rona ténuar or > perm Liberal Gordon Johnston won -hgaes ogee no 4.'The Ot the hiikeh la Prairie over Welfare Minis-|" <r Ging at dissolution Nov 9 Only one person was reported Sant aie eee pod Bo ey Prema Gereeoeatios roposed federation of Malaysia|hurt--a seven-months-old grand- $4, Liberal 10, NDP 9, Sovial Ohich ta planned to include|daughter of a Negro active in|maix issue in that campaign : Credit 1, vacant 3, total 57 2 ttl ' tat was a controversial proposed % veillance will continue as long raya pr gy pb Borneo, seminoma pro - integration] 5 ion of the Assiniboine|, 18¢, vo northern seats were doctor. as that country remains a So- River into Lake Manitoba. held by Progressive: Conserva- ih tlh ti ' . The Progressive Conserva- ayes Scientists Probe _ Robert K. German, a second) "eh « «Mariner II Data tet regained me traditionally; ELECT ber vegirece onservative southern Manitoba} Among prominent caadi- Castro Plot Uncovered In en nary attache. alleged to have had contact with O. V. Penkov- rural seat of Turtle Mountain|dates was former Liberal-Pro- from the Liberals, who won it|gressive Premier D. L. Camp- Rio De Janeiro | "tier were RIO DE JANEIRO (AP)--Po-|sky, a Soviet government offi- cial who specialized in scientific in a byelection in 1960. They|bell, who was re-elected in the also took the rural constitueacy| Lakeside riding near Portag: la of Fisher from the NDP . Prairie which he has repre- lice said Friday they have un- covered a Castroite Cuban plot|work in the Soviet central co- to organize a socialist revolu-|ordinating agency on scientific research. His arrest as a spy sented since 1922, Former CCF TWO ARE TIED provincial leader Lloyd Stinson, When counting was com-|defeated in the Winnipeg city pleted in the suburban Winni- tion in Brazil. Cecil Borer, chief of the social] was announced Dec. 11. political division of Rio de Jan-| Assistant U.S. agricultural at- tache, Rodney W. Carlson of re A riding of Osborne in 1959, lost peg riding of Kildonan, Pro-|to tie sitting Progressive Con- eiro's police force, said that Cu- bans trained by Russians and|Alcester, §.D., who previously $2,000 in cash. The bandits, led by one ae ing a Santa Claus suit, burst from the .Canadian Imperial of the mist. "It had its landing gear and the flaps down. The landing lighte were burning. i just! Report Predicted In Seaway Probe tion and give the self-governing colony its first Negro govern- ment. Nyasaland's Negro leader, Dr. Hastings Banda, has vowed to take his country out of the white-dominated federa- sults. of the election was that! the Liberals improved their ten- uous grip in the Winnipeg met- ropolitan area, gaining a seat from each of the Progressive Conservative and New Demo- cratic Parties to add to the St. Boniface seat they held before. Steve Patrick,: middle guard for Winnipeg Blue Bombers, the|hened te' sepince the i oes Canadian football champions, as. the official opposition. made a successful political de- é but by winning the Winnipeg The beard ag gag vandi> suburban seat of Assinibuia for|dte elected "Mhincland riding, the Liberals from the former|i" the rural member, Progressive Conserva- a -detaadashdant tive George J oh ns 0. Mark} i2 ' : Smerchanski won for the Lib-| The ities, opened fire, followed by his helpers. The constables did not have a chance to get out of the car although one of them managed to fire a few shots be- fore slumping over dead. "I couldn't believe it,' one girl eyewitness said. "There was this Santa, with glasses, and sadistic looking. I just couldn't believe it." J, Adrien Robert, Montreal British Troops Retake Rebel Strongholds LABUAN, North Borneo (Reu ters)--British troops were re- ported today to have captured the last two rebel strongholds of Sebuti and Niah in North Sarawak, army sources said here. The sources 'said- the British fook the..tewns. late. Friday night after reaching the area on a march through dense, mount- ainous jungle. The reports said the British encountered little resistance from the rebel "northern Bor- neo Liberation Army." The rebel movement was launched 'in opposition to the By ROBERT RICE quiry, has indicated x plans t0|police director, obviously upset, OFTAWA {GP)--The contrast|teport his findings in fore the by the deaths, ordered his men take 'chances. "These men are. arcl-enemies| of society and we shall treat them as such," he said. early April after the ice- breakup on the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River. So far, in his 67 public sit- tings, he has heard testimony amounting to more than 2,000,- 000 words and has accumulated a filing cabinet full of exhibits, He has been told of a pattern of violence and intimidation on the waterfront--a pattern that the Canadian Labor Congress blames on the SIU and its American-born president, Hal strife on the Great Lakes be- e@omes sharper every day. The bitter struggle between the Seafarers' International Un- ion of Canada (Ind.) and the rival Canadian Maritime Union (CLC) set off both inquiries last July. The United States investiga- tion lasted about a month and reported that "no direct recon- ciliation" appears in sight in the sage é The S. inquiry recom- mended joint Rariei-Conan- C. Banks. dian conferences to solve the} Witnesses have said the SIU dispute. jis run as a dictatorship by Mr. Mr. Justice T. G. Norris, a|Banks. 69-year-old Vancouver jurist, in-- The SIU has held the spotlight sisted when his public inquiry|since late October, presenting began in mid-August that he|witnesses to refute the allega- planned a searching investiga-|tions against itself and to de- tion that would get to the bot-|fend its actions. tom of the inter-union rivalries x | that had disrupted Great Lakes i acct: eee 4 shipping. Indications are the v pieingsh 'on " ia, sec- hearings will not wind up until ia 'ranking SIU official, _re- urns to the witness box next ently next year. week, along with Bernard Bou- REPORT BEFORE SPRING __|langer, administrator of a un. The judge, a tough-mindedjion-company welfare plan for man who, abhors delays and|SIU members. FIND THE CAR The bandits' getaway car, a white 1960 hardtop convertible carrying stolen license plates, was found just before midnight abandoned on a street in Town of Mount Royal, adjacent to St. Laurent. It contained the Santa Claus suit. The bandits actually escaped with $10,000 but most of it~ except for $2,000--was in. non- negotiable bonds. Police said the bandits ap- peared to have been armed with Belgian FN automatic rifles, the type reported stolen several'months ago from Cana- dian Army stores in Quebec City. Police said there was a pos- sibility a fifth bandit may have been with the gang as driver of the getaway car. Blood in snow on a field through which the bandit car fled wildly indi- cated that one of them may have been wounded. WASHINGTON (AP) -- Mar- iner Il, a miracle of space science, has given man his first close look at another planet. For 42 minutes Friday it scanned Venus, flashing back 36,000,000 miles the information which may unravel the secrets of the "veiled lady of the uni- verse," Mariner is expected to send periodic information about inter planetary space from as far out as 72,000,000 miles from the earth. That's twice the distance it was from earth Friday after a long journey plagued by fre- quent, troubles. The space craft's final jestin- ation will be an orbit around the sun, each lap taking 400 gressive Conservative James T. Mills and A. J. Reid, the NDP candidate seeking re-election, were tied with 3,156 votes each. The tie could be broken in sev- eral ways before the result is official Dec. 20. But if the tie servative in the city riding of Wellington as he tried a come back. John Bracken, nephew and namesake of the former Mani- toba premier and one-time na- After the SIU winds up its distractions in his public in- Searchers Cut : Through Jungle To Find Plane commission of inquiry is chartered accountant mission at this point. case--and there has been ne clue when this may come--the pected to call witnesses itself. made a study of SIU financial books, as well as those of other involved unions, and is expected \to file a report with the com- ex- has The holdup was the third in- volving killings this year in and near Montreal. Two bandits were killed last May in an at tempted bank. robbery at St. Scholastique, 30 miles north of Montreal. Including the two deaths Fri- day, 23, policemen have been killed while on duty on Mont- real Island in the last 77 years. Red Chinese had slipped into the country to train guerrilla bands. Borer made the charge in an- nouncing the interception of a station wagon loaded with arms, ammunition and Communist propaganda. Three persons were arrested. Juliao, a federal deputy-elect has been organizing peasant groups in Brazil's northwest. had been mentioned by the offi- cial Tass news agency as hav- ing had contact with Penkov- sky, left Moscow for the United States Friday. The U.S. embassy felt his usefulness as an embassy staff member had been impaired, and feared he would be ar- rested though the Soviet gov- ernment has made no official |charges against h him. RIO DE JANEIRO (CP-AP)-- Searchers renewed their efforts today to find a Brazilian air- RCMP BLAMELESS FLEMING SAYS liner with 50 persons aboard that vanished in dense Amazon jungle six minutes before a scheduled landing at the busy river port of Manaus. An all - day search Friday yielded no trace of the four- engined Constellation that dis appeared at 3 a.m. on the last leg of a 2,500 mile 35-hour trip from Rio de Janeiro. The pas- senger list indicated that all aboard were Brazilians. There were all kinds of con- flicting reports Friday ranging from all were dead to all were safe. The reports all were er- roneous, Both The Associated Press and Reuters news agency car- ried the first report that the wreckage had _ been sighted early Friday and that no survi- vors were spotted. The AP said this was based} ona report from the newspaper! Jornal do Brasil that quoted military sources as saying -no| sign of life could be detected around the plane. By DON HANRIGHT tivity" among university been told have not been approaching ple on campuses in an tion. |. Mr. |New Democratic mation from 'a force has been }people at universities oz CITY EMERGENCY |: jand their colleagues. PHONE NUMBERS | From time to time, the POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-65; HOSPITAL 723 j job applicants are rity 'risks' before -- they OTTAWA (CP)--Justice Min- ister Fleming said in the Com- mons Friday, that the RCMP is "not interested in political ac- stu- dents and faculty members. He said he has given no in- structions for the RCMP to interrogate either students or teachers and added that he- has that the Mounties peo- effort to develop sources of informa- Fleming. was replying to Party mem- jbers who said they have infor- number sources" that the federal police interviewing of the political activities of themselves min- ister said, the RCMP is asked to check on whether prospective "good secu- are production, required. These checks applied to peo- ple in academic life as well as others. NDP Leader T. C. Douglas asked whether Mr. Fleming's statement meant there have been no investigations of stu- dents and faculty members "taking part in. meetings to state their opposition, for --in- stance, to the acquiremezt . of nuclear weapons." Mr. Fleming said he did not use that: expression, He re- peated that there are no spacial RCMP activities, relating to stu- dents or academic circles. The RCMP's job was law enforce- jment. He added: "The security investigations will obviously involve the police keeping their eyes open as to anything which might go on which relates to the enforce. ment of the law or the sub- version of our institutions by unlawful methods."' John R. Matheson (L--Lreds) said he has discussed the mat where secrecy jhired for some government jobjter with people on the campus 'or, say, for industrial defencelof the University of Toronto and is| No University Probes other universities--"people who in some cases held high posi- tions."' Mr, Matheson said he recog- nizes that security investiga- tions are necessary. But he said the officers and constables of the RCMP should be given a pro-forma series of. questions for this purpose. "Frequently in past months the police have commenced their investigations by appear- ing to ask standard questio:s, but what has become particu- larly obnoxious is when they embark on their own course of question in the course of an. in- vestigation. "This has caused offence to many thoughtful people who felt the police were really . witch- hunting.' WONDERS WHAT ILLEGAI David Orlikow (NDP--Winni- peg North) said the governinent should say what it coxsiders to be illegal or subversive activ- ities. Did the minister regard as subversive or illegal the movements which had sprung up urging the banning of nu- clear arms? ihe fact is, said Mr. Orlikow, that "investigations are always being made at Laval and other universities about this type of activity." Mr. Orlikow said he gained personal knowledge of RCMP activities: in this field recently when his brother, a Winnipeg teacher, was questioned after taking a group of Students to listen to a talk by the secretary of the Manitoba Communist party. Mr. Orlikow said that profes. sors from one end of Canada to the other take the matter so seriously that the Canadian As- ss¢iation of University Teacuers now is circulating a sticker to be attached to security ques- tionnaire forms; The sticker, with a place for a date and signature, reads: "The Association of Univer- sity Teachers has expressed its disapproval of questions con- cerning the political or religious beliefs, activities or associa- Today, as the spacecraft ex- plored deeper into space, scien- tists dug into the mass of data --more information about the earth's closest planetary neigh- 'bor than has been recorded in all the history of star-gazing. It was an incredible feat and excited scientists rejoiced. The historic fly-by came at 3 p.m. EST after a 109-day, 182,- 000,000-mile over - all journey that began at a Cape Canaveral, Fia., launching pad. At its nearest approach to Venus, the space laboratory was 21,100 miles from the planet. Special monitoring devices be- gan to probe the cloud-covered surface at 1:55 p.m. and were switched off at 2:37 p.m. Then the oraft was speed'ng toward the sun, after having come closer to a planet than any other space vehicle. Forfeited Deposits Increase Treasury WINNIPEG. (CP)--Manitoba's treasury will benefit by $9,000 in forfeited election d:posits from 45 candidates who filed nomination papers but failed to get one half*of the votes. cast for successful candidates in their respective ridings: The heaviest loser in Friday's provincial election was the New Democratic Party, which hai 22 of its 38 candidates lose their deposits. The Liberal party had six lost deposits, including their candi- date who. ran against Premier Roblin, The Conservatives iost three deposits, and the Social Credit party eight Two Independents ahd thre2} | tions of students. I share this view, and am not prepared to answer such questions." Communist candidates ac-| counted for the other lost de- posits. days, never coming closer than 40,000,000 miles from the earth. It will take days and poss:bly weeks for scientists to analyze and evaluate just what was by the electronic "eyes" of the 447-pound, gold- and-silver plated space mess1- ger that rocketed from the 2arth found out Aug, 27. THIS IS A DRAWING of Mariner HI released this year by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Mariner II whizzed close to Venus about 36 million miles persisted it would be up to the returning officer to cast thede- ciding vote. One factor in deciding the contest may be ballots cast by occupants of hospitals, nursing homes and homes for the aged. These votes were to be sen: to the chief electoral officer and leader, NDP candidate t Oe ete Lae du Bonnet riding. His campaign. was marked by by the government's Manitoba hydro system for political acti- vity, but after protests he was reinstated and granted leave of absence to campaign. tional Progressive Conservative ran uni his dismissal away from earth. Radio con- tact between Mariner II, the planet Venus and earth was established about 2 p.m., EST. Through the space probe's heat and radio sensitive scientists hope to learn the weight, temperature and something about the atmos- phere of the cloud: - veiled planet. 'P Wirenhetay