Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Dec 1962, p. 1

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4 it nt i! | CNR Track Removal Delayed Until Spring -- -P. She Oshawa Cine ' Sarre am Se Cetin canediomaabany ar _ 700,000 compares with a trade THOUGHT FOR TODAY. - It's easy to recognize a home owner -- he's always coming out of a hardware store. PAPE I ee caster nett cern een Sense Pe aad nips cap allege ABE a abies op etn rain today and Wednesday. Little ehange in temperature. Price. Not 10 Danie Pes Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1962 Py asetyga cle Ottawa for Vol. 91 --- No. 295 JFK Flies To Nassau For Talks NASSAU, Bahamas (AP) -- President Kennedy flew to this resort island today for summit talks with Prime Minister Mac- millan dealing both with strains in the Western alliance and di- visions in the Communist bloc. Kennedy's jet plane landed under a brilliant sun after a two-hour flight from Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland, near Washington. Macmillan headed the official welcoming party. Brushed by the pleasant breezes of this colonial resort, the two leaders will delve deeply into problems that threaten to cause serious quar- rels within the Western alliance, and into assessments of the present cold war situation and the widening split between the Canada Trade Deficit Cut By $36,700,000 OTTAWA (CP) -- Record ex- port sales in October have trimmed Canada's trade deficit to $36,700,000 for the first 10 months of the year, the Domin- ion Bureau of Statistics re- ported today. With exports to the United States continuing to rise, total exports in October were $618,- 300,000, up 10.6 per cent from a year earlier, while imports to- tajled $571,100,000. up 3:1 per cent. The October trade surplus-- two Communist camps led by the Soviet Union and Red cae Their discussions will cover the Skybolt controversy, the strategy to be followed in the wake of the October crisis over Cuba, the Moscow-Peking split which deepened following Pre- mier Khrushchev's backdown over Cuba and Red China's border attack on India and the future British - American milit ary assistance program to In dia. The United States has in- formed Britain it intends to scrap the Skybolt bomber-borne missile, in view of five test fail- ures and an estimated eventual cost of $2,500,000,000 to develop it. This intention, still to be hardened into a definite decision, has raised objections in Con- gress and protests from Britain Firemen search through the rubble of a two-storey build- ing which was levelled by an explosion early today. The building, in Toronto's Bloor- Dufferin area, contained a grocery store and two flats. Occupants of the flats were BLAST LEVELS TORONTO BUILDING away at the time of the blast. The building was be- ing fumigated to rid it of bed- bugs but firemen said'the gas used for fumigating was not the cause of the explosion. (CP Wirephoto) that it would scrap their deterrent as well. The London Daily Mail re- ported Macmillan will ask Ken- nedy for a "stay of execution" of the Skybolt 'decision for at least three months. This delay would enable Brit- ain still to claim she is a nu- clear power as she faces the six nation European Common Mar- ket in the hard bargaining still eoming up over her admission to the trading bloc London's Daily Sketch says Macmillan will propose putting Britain's nuclear weapon stock- pile under NATO control on ihe condition that President de Gaulle and Kennedy agree to equal three-power control over a multilateral, NATO deterrent. WINNIPEG (CP) -- Welfare' Manitoba said Monday night the provincial government has no intention of giving "handouts left and right' to Indians in northern Manitoba. Mr, Christianson, defeated Friday in his bid to retain his Portage la Prairie seat in the excess of wy bg imports totalling $47,100,000 reduced ayer, tana htt months of the year, The aman deficit of $36,- surplus of $93,400,000 for the January-October period of last year. Total exports for the 10 months rose 8.6 per cent to $5,- 239,800,000 from $4,822,700,000 a year earlier while imports were up 11.6 per cent at $5,276,500,000 compared with $4,729,200,000. In the January - October period, exports to the U.S. were up 19.3 per cent and imports from the U.S. were 14.8 per cent higher. In trade with the United Kingdom, exports in the 10 months were down 1.2 per cent while imports were 6.6 per cent lower. This is the trade picture by main areas for the January- October periods of this year and last, in millions of dollars: Exports 1962 1961 United States $3,143.1 $2,635.4 United Kingdom 748.5 757 Other Cmwith 271.5 All others 1,076.6 1, Total 5,239.8 4, Imports DIES OF CANCER Thomas Mitchell, noted actor of stage and screen and winner of a Motion Picture Academy Award in 1938, died today at his home in Bever- ly Hills, Calif., of cancer. He was 70. His career spanned more than 50 years. He is shown as he relaxed in his dressing room in New York's 3,651.4 476.2 267.9 $80.9 3,181.9) 510.1) 238.9) United States United Kingdom Other Cmwith All others Total 798.4| red in 1960. 5,276.5 4,729.2! Ambassador Theatre of the opening performance of "Cut of the Axe" in which he star- Manitoba general election, saiq program tion. We're not he, sympathizes with the In- dians. "and I sympathize with the whose hearts we ave - ae \ to wlleviate the situa- giv! away handouis left and right,/Bit we say to them, 'If you niélp your- selves we'll help you," and we back it up." He said emegency aid based on emotional reaction to news- paper reports on the Indians' plight would do more harm Minister John Christianson of} "You have to restore their ethnic pride so they will learn to build good lives for them- selves." READY TO FLY The Salvation Army has un- dertakex to fly supplies to a re- serve at Nelson House, 400 400 Indians and Metis are re- ported to be starving in sub: zero i from . plans vetoed at the Tast minute 'on orders from Ottawa. He said he had been advised the airlift would not be allowed until the situation became a matter of life and death. "Where does death begin?' he asked. "The need is there." In Toronto, Army Commis- than good. sioner Wycliffe Booth said two 'Senghor In Senegal Fray DAKAR, Senegal (AP)--Pres- ident Leopold Senghor today ap. parently won a full victory in his power struggle with Premier Mamadou Dia in this west Af- rican republic. The Senegalese National As- sembly voted 51. to 0 with three abstentions to abolish the office of premier and place Senegal on a presidential-type system. The Assembly also voted, by the same margin, to remove parlia- mentary immunity from Dia, thus leaving him open to civil (AP Wirephoto) arrest. Victory The Assembly has a total of 80 members, and Senghor's forces thus had a clear major- miles north of Winnipeg, where} light aircraft flew to the re- taking with them 150 food hamp. ers. The reserve is about 40 miles northwest of Thompson. The Salvation Army stepped into the picture after its Maj. Stanley Preece of Brandon, fol- reported the Indians and Metis near starvation with "a bare existence" standard of living. Howey Chris trapping was } this year, 'There is want and privation, true. But there is want and pri- serve from Thompson, Man.,|Indians, summer was being picketed by Indians seeking employment Indians Not To Get Handouts Man. Welfare Minister Says cused of prejudice against the and. for a period last with the company. The immediate situation de- veloped following a letter to the Manitoba and federal govern- ments aad.a Toronto news- lowing a short tour in the area,|paper From K, A. Valentine, .of: the United Steel Workers of Amer- ica, who coommy won the te si with -deprivation'-because of althe report. burgeoning population and). The report said resources. ; |surrounding the city of Toronto. Report Urg 10 New Seats For Province" first}A. Richardson, "thas concluded that a reasonable maximum size for the legislative assem- bly is 120 members." There now. are 98 members. If a bill creating the new rid- ings is passed this session, the new seats will not become ef- fective until a writ is issued for a provincial election. It is ex- pected that all three parties will require at least four months to get their election machines geared to the new setup. First reaction from the two opposition' party leaders indi- cates the recommendations will most likely pass through the privileges and elections com- mittee with little trouble. TORONTO (CP) -- report of the Bird inde. pendent distribution com- mission, tabled by Premier Ro- barts proposed 10 new seats in the Ontario legislature. The report Monday recom- mended increaseod representa- tiom for the six York ridings should provide a basis for more scientific redistribution. ' The legislature's private bills committee approved a. bill, in- troduced by Thomas D. Thomas (NDP. -- Oshawa) authorizing Oshawa to pay three firms $30,< 000:as compensation for loss. or damage in removing tracks from the city's main. street. Judge Shot : In Brazil, Satisfactory RIO DE JANEIRO (CP) -- 73-year-old Set up last June, the commis- sion said its studies are "far from complete" but a report on the Metropolitan Toronto area was made because "the most one need for a redistribu- tion . . . is outside the city of Toronto itself." Further recommendations with respect to the rest of the province will be made as the study progresses, -the report said. The commission proposal would set up 16 ridings from the present six York ridings with populations "ranging from 45,000 to 65,000. The report said recommendations were based} on a "reasonable. relationship) of population" of 60,000 to: 75,000 persons for an urban constitu- ency and 25,000 to 50,000 for a rural constituency and 50,000 to 60,000 for an "urban-rural" riding. WILL DISCUSS The recommendations. will be ] LIBERALS Liberal Leader. John Winter- meyer said he is pleased with the report. -- j the 'ew ee Party " * ic y an ; hey yn of the. six members whose|riohting . off holdup. men ridings would be affected. was reported in "'very satisise- ic. MacDonald said the in-|tory . condition" in Strangers te! report is forward-looking| Hospital here today: in its population formula, which} 'Thorson, accompanied. by Mr. Justice Gerald .Fauteux, of; oe 32. Guests Flee {is ms" discussed by the legislature's standing. on. privil-| Fire In In Hotel » ustice | sion, headed by Mr, vation on Jarvis Avenue in Winnipeg. Ten thousand dollars would do a lot of good there." Mr. Christianson was refer- ring to $10,000 given the Salva- tion Army by the Canadian Council for world relief to get supplies to the Indians. J. R. Bell, superintendent of Indian affairs for the: federal| government at The Pas, Man., Europe A-Arms Opposed WASHINGTON (CP) -- Pres- 450 firemen, three - quarters of 'the city's firefighting force, bat- tled the outbreak in 25-degree eather, peg-born judge who also is head of the. Cana dian Campaig> for Nuclear Dis- armament, had been an international jurists confer Fauteux: By JFK The part of the hotel not de- stroyed by flames was water- satiety mas." said: 'This relief effort' is def. overlapping, frosting on ihe cake for Christ- a little Caught in the middie of the Situation is the International Nickel Company whose nickel mise at Thompson largest in the world. The company has been ac- is second ity. Troops loyal te Senghor blocked an attempted coup by Dia Monday in this recently in- dependent country whose cap- ital, Dakar, was one of the great Allied bases in the last years of the Second World War. The African west coast port lies only 1,870 miles from South America. Dia, a Moslem. but with strong pport among Christian fac- Cardinal Leger Raps RC Ecumenical Meet MONTREAL (CP) Paul- Emile Cardinal Leger of Mont- real said Monday night the re- cent session of the Roman Cath- olic Church's ecumenica! coun- cil moved too slowly and fault- ily for his taste. "Byerything that was done was badly done," he said in an address in Papineau Hall in eastern Montreal on tis im- pressions of the council's first session, which adjoursed 10 days ago. "[ was not listened to. I _ in the desert. I put forth y daring proposals, but I don't know if they will be ac- cepted," he said. in his speech in French, the cardinal stressed the slowness of the council's deliberations. "J will tell you frankly ,1 spoke to the Pope. I told him that unless. a committee was created with sufficient powers to get everyone iato action, we would achieve nothing. "7 had to fight to have af/ firmed the necessity of commu- nion in both kinds during the marriage ceremony. Would it not in fact be a fine thing see the bride and bridegr not only eat the body of c but also drink his blood? DELEGATE OBJECTS "Well! Do you know what one of the delegates objected to me. He stood up and said: 'And lip- stick'?"" "I am convinced myself that if young women were told they were going to drink the blood of Christ, they would certainly put their tube of lipstick aside for the day." Cardinal Leger said he ad- mits to being a "'lively, if not impulsive,"' man. "When I am taken with an idea, I want to put it into prac- tice immediately. I teil you, that is not at all the style of a council. I can't gather together 2,600 bishops and say: go. m ist However, the cardinal prom- ised the audience the second CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1183 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 A -pEP 1; 728-2211 4 of the council, which hegins in September, will be more "active." He also said the council will remain "the most striking fact in my life." He predicted the present council will set a trend for continued meetings of the world's Roman Catholie pre- lates in Rome. ' ~ Let's} He said that the simple, calm manner in which the delibera- tions were conducted could serve as a model for priests to adopt in their sermons. 'RESPECT NEEDED' "A text must be read with respect. If each cure would preach his sermon in this way, without raising his voice in re- spect for a weighty and mean- ingful text, we would then reach the modern world. ' "Truth shorn of its trap- pings, that's what modern gen- erations seek. What matters for. them is not grand flights of onatory but believing in what is said." : Cardinal Leger defined the ecumenical spirit as an answer to the present division in the Christian church, "The church should 'wait for the priests who are delayed, not pass sentence on them. The church will be good for them "Furthermore, the should no longer say: 'I above you.' firming. that we alone. possess the truth. "It is true that we possess the truth but we must stop say- ing it. Do it without saying it. "Tt is by living he whole truth that we will attract them to us "That is the . ecumenical) tions, had been quarreling with Senghor over the premier's left- ist orientation in economic mat- ters. Senghor and Dia are mem- bers of the same party, the Sen- egal Progressist Union, which holds 79 of the 80 seats in the National Assembly, Dia sent police to occupy the assembly building, and they ar- rested four members. But 48' other deputies met at the home of the Assembly president and voted Dia out of office. Seven members of the premier's cab- inet joined in the revolt, Senghor then in vok ed tem- porary emergency powers, took control of the armed forces and sent troops to the government administration . building, where Dia and his supporters were meeting. The president said Dia and his backers were prisoners on: one floor of the building and would be prosecuted for abuse of authority. YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Council Turns Down Zone Change ....... Page 9 Council Approves church} am| We must stop af-| Boulevard Signs ..... Page 9 Area Fishermen Win Prizes ......00. Page 9 Thief Robs Chureh Poor Box ;. Page 9 Custodian Dispute To Arbitration ...... Page 3 Criminal Negligence Trial Planned ...... Page 3 years. Dr. B.C. Riding Vote Won By Liberal VANCOUVER (CP) -- Lib- eral Dr. Patrick McGeer, poll- ing almost as many votes as his three opponents 'combined, Monday scored an upset byelec- tion victory in the provincial rid- ing of Vancouver Point Grey, a Social Credit stronghold for six eGeer's election also represented the first byelection defeat in nin® years for the Sc- cial Credit government of Pre- mier W. A. C. Bennett. He re- places Mrs. Buda Brown, Social Credit, who died last' summer. Reg Atherton, 59-year-old ag- countant, pulled the Progressive Conservatives narrowly into second place' with 8,784 votes to 8,447 for Mrs. Eve Burns-Miller, 62, Social Credit candidate. Antony Holland, 42, New Dem- ocratic Party candidate, trailed with 5,302. Dr. McGeer polled 21,669 voets. The 35-year-old scientist successful deterrent . . . ident Kennedy says he is op- posed to the development of in- dependent nuclear power in Eu- rope, warning that the spread of full war that would leave 150,- 000,000 dead in the first 18 hours of conflict. Summing up his first two years in office, Kennedy also re- jected the Skybolt ballistic mis- sile program, saying its proj- ected $2,500,000,000 cost would be higher than the security ben- efits it would bring. On the threshold of talks with Prime Minister Macmillan at Nassau, Kennedy told Western Europe it should do more to help Western defences through '<«-eonventional means and leave the nuclear deterrent to the U.S. "Why duplicate what we have already done and are doing in Western Europe today, as long' as our gua' are good?" he said in an hdur-jong televi- sion broadcast. OTHERS MIGHT ASK If the U.S. helped France be- come a nuclear power, then It- aly, West Germany and Belgium also might demand help. Soon security would be threatened by as many as 30 nuclear powers firing off weapons under differ- ent conditions. "That isn't in our interest or, in my opinion, in the interest of peace or the interest of West- ern Europe." Though some senators had threatened a congressional bat- tle against death of the Skybolt, Kennedy argued the U.S. now has sufficient nuclear strength to destroy the world many times Many times do you have to hit atarget with. nuclear weap- ons?" The U.S. now is spending $52,- 000,000,000 a year on defence and must tighten up its budget. Kennedy said Premier Khrushchev's forces have been able to build a missile that could hit an incoming missile in the sky but he doubted that the Soviet Union has been able to master the difficulty of pick- ing out the real missile among a flock of decoys. DOESN'T BELIEVE. The president said he didn't believe Khrushchev planned to fire the nuclear missiles in Cuba but rather intended to use them to change the world political bal. ance of power. _"So it is going to be some time before it is possible for us to come to any real understand- ings with Mr. Khrushchev." The amazing part of the Cu- ban experience, said Kennedy, is that Khrushchev really be- lieved the U.S. would not inter- fere with the missiles, smoke. Sam Hoffman, part owner of the hotel, at 101 Street and Jas- per Avenue, said the building was worth $1,000,000. The hotel guests, who fled in night clothes, were taken by taxi to another hotel owned by Hoffman. logged and heavily damaged by Th day and the two Lege pod a4 driven to the gal al photographs Sunday when holdup occunred, Jean ambassador to Brazil in an sc count of the incident re wounds as superfi- cial. As Party MONTREAL (CP) -- Division| within the movement to have Quebec secede from the rest of Canada appeared several hours after separatist leader Marcel Chaput's announcement Monday of formation of a new provia- cial political party. Early today the separatist movement Rassemblement pour Separatists Split Formed ja statement. dissociating iteett from the new R.LN, members who joined the party were threatened with expulsion, party. - The 44-year-old Mr, Chaput, once president of the R.UN., am nounced. at a press the new party, called Le Parts Republican du Quebec Re) lican Party of Quebec), l'Independance Nationale issued in independence for the prove Mr. Chaput resigned as hea@ of the R.I.N. to contest Quebec's Nov. 14 provincial election as an independent. He was. de- feated in Montreal Bourget Tid ing. WANTS UNIFIED FORCE. He said he believes "fervene tly" the time has come for a une ion of the forces seeking separat- is m. t But the R.L.N. said in its state ment Mr. Chaput's decision te over. "There is just a limit to how much we need as well as how/f, much we can afford to have a How will represent the riding in the provincial House in conjunction with Attorney - General Robert Bonner and Social Crediter Tom Bate. His election brings to five the number of Liberals in the 52 seat British Columbia |legisla- ture. There are 31 Social Credit- ers and 16 CCF-New Democratic Party members. There are no Progressive Conservatives. NEPHEW OF GERRY Dr. McGeer, nephew of the late G. G. (Gerry) McGeer, said when victory was evident: 'The name of McGeer certainly didn't hurt me." Gerry McGeer was a Liberal Mayor of Vancouver, a mem- ber of Parliament and a sen- ator. At times he was various Oshawa Zoo Idea Turned Dowa ..0.+.. Page 8 combinations of all of them. $4,000,000 Damage In Strike Clashes damage was done and four men were injured severely in clashes with strikers at the mining cen- tre of La Oroya Monday. members of the Communist-led metallurgical union at the head- quarters of the United States- owned Cerro de Pasco Corpor. ation, a lead, zine and silver|? mining' firm. The men are on strike for higher pay. LIMA, Peru--Some $4,000,000 The strike involves some 4,000 Company officials denied ear- member of the legislature, twice/lier reports two policemen were killed during a clash with the strikers Monday morning. But they said a police lieutenant and three guards were injured. form a political party at. this time "will only slow the pro gress of the cause of independ- ence." The R.I.N.: said it will become a political party in spring, 1964, "sh was decided at. its last .gem eral meeting. : Mr. Chaput's move, the RIN. said, is a defection from' the movement for independence: - At his press conference,' Mr, Chaput said in French one rea son for the formation of. the party was "unification of the separatist forces." He referred to two other 'sep aratist groups -- L'Action So-' cialiste and L'Alliance Laureti- cae & said: is se associations, their multiplicity," would wf the impression there is 9. sion among the advocates of im pendence." He said, formation of the new party would recruit separatists from their support of existing political parties into a party @f ee 5 5S SEPARATIST MARCEL CHAPUT their own. 4 e

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