Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Jan 1963, p. 1

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ET nad a a ek ee A es | Mayor Gifford THOUGHT FOR TODAY It's fairly safe to say that a girl's kiss usually leaves some- thing to be desired. peals For Exp Oshawa Tones today. Cloudy mild Tuesday. ense Cuts - Page 9 Occasional light snow or drizzle: and continuing ' VOL. 92 -- NO. 5 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1963 Second Clase for peyment Authorized es Ottewe and Mall Post Office of eg Cath, SIXTEEN PAGES CITY COUNCIL INAUGURAL Judge Alex C. Hall pre- this morning. At left ie Rev. in his inaugural speech, ap- gents the chain of office to Dmytro Luchak, of St. John's pealed for cuts in Oshawa Mayor Lyman Gifford at the Ukrainian Greek Orthodox expenditures. (See story Page Oshawa city council im- Church, who dedicated the 9.) augural ceremony at city hall mew council. Mayor Gifford, --Oshawa Times Photo BLISABETHVILLE (AP) -- Moise Tshombe, president of Katanga province in The Congo, apparently is being given a chance to invite a bloodless United Nations occupation of his war capital of Kolwezi and thus insure a place of power for Diplomats indicated Tshombe was pondering this course of ac- tion as the UN military buildup continued. Amphibious armored troop carriers and bridging equipment poured in on U.S. U.K. Ministry Denies Mock Attack On US. LONDON (AP)--The air min- tetry denied today that | bombers staged a successful/ mock nuclear attack on New York and several other large) ot States cities. eiderable . had reports of been a from one --iP and lot of nonsense.' 'our bombers about two months ago,|planes» flying from bases ' ' were the Mock Atta. Were) the US., he said, advance warning British newspapers say|lied planes from being mistaken exercise was carried -- bylfor enemy craft. 00-mile-an-hour to say whether * was @ suc-|/Britain, were opposed by nearly cess. }1,000 NORAD supersonic fight- In Denver, Maj. Ford Daw-jers son, a spokesman for the North) '"'They got through to their American Defence Command, targets by using new decoy ra- said there was no truth to the/dar signals which confused the denial, issued after con-i|newspaper reports. He termed/American radar - warning sys- hesitancy confu-ithem 'just a lot ef nonsense." tem," The Herald reports, said it ba not the} " te find °: [the "Brick te toree wee head."" The British force struck from across Canada, after taking the short polar route from their bases in Britain, the air min- istry spokesman said is given to prevent al- The Herald says the British in Air Force Globemasters, putting the UN force in a better posi- tion to press an advance on Kol- zi. Officials of the central Con- golese government arrived in Elisabethville to take steps to reintegrate Katanga into the Congo in accordance with UN Secretary - Genera) U Thant's himself in the reunified Congo. |~ unity plan. The reunion scheme includes merger of the Katan- gan and Congolese armed forces and a share of the revenues from Katanga's industrial wealth for Premier Cyrille Ad- oula's central government in Lepooldville. Three Sisters Die In Blaze At Milliken MILLIKEN, Ont. (CP) -- Three young sisters died Sun- day as a boarder tried to fight his way past flames and smoke to rescue them from their biaz- ing second-storey bedroom. Their mother Mrs, Emily O'Day, 29, and her two other children, Morris, 8, and Daniel, Justice Norris Resumes Probe In Lake Labor | (CP)--Mr, Justice Af mateiaes ti 3 of Great Lakes labor stale twday--with burly Hal Cc. Banks, president the 's' Intern Union. of Canada, scheduled to be the star witness. The Vancouver jurist has been ' ' and that the planes could have} destroyed such major cities as| New York, Washington, Chi- eago and Los Angeles CHANGES MIND } said an exercise took place) about two months ago but de-| success, Then, after some ap-| came around to the official U.S.) version. ercise a couple of months ago are wrong," an air ministry The British air ministry first) clined to say whether it was a parent confusion, the ministry) "Reports referring to an ex- spokesman said | PCs Keep Seats In Deferred Vote WINNIPEG (CP) -- Progres- sive Conservatives have re-| tained two seats in deferred|/PC Manitoba elections that indi-|Lib cate Premier Duff Roblin's gov-/NDP ernment has solid support)SC 1 _ among the province's north-/Total 37 ern Indian population At dissolution Nov. $ the Con- The comparative standings: 1962-63 1950 % % 18 +0 | 8 10 (COF) digging into the turbulent mari- time labor situation since last August in an effort to get to the bottom of an inter-union fight that bas disrupted shipping in the St. Lawrence Seaway and around the Great Lakes. A key figure in the dispute-- Paul Hall, president of SIU of| North America and boss of the) powerful AFL - CIO Maritime| (Trades. Department, met priv-| lately with the Canadian judge! |for three hours Sunday Mr. Hall flew to Ottawa from) New. York for the meeting: ap-} parently pre-arranged earlier.| The judge has said publicly! 1, escaped from the bottom floor as fire swept through the seven-room brick house in this village on the northern out- skirts of Metropolitan Toronto. Dead are Clara, 9, Judy, 4, and Catherine, 3. oO is to his" aut hands when he ni re peated atfenipts to get up the stairs to rescue the children. He then tried to reach them|u# by climging a ladder te an up- stairs window, but was forced back by flames. Water had to be trucked five miles from a well as firemen \from Markham, Unionville and Scarborough fought the fire. U.S. Congress To Reopen With Battle WASHINGTON (CP) -- Con. gress reopens Wednesday and "The last occasion on which Re-election of Joseph Jean-|servatives held 34 seats, the/that he wants Mr. Hall to give| will at once become involved in we took part in an exercise of! notte in Rupertsland and the vic-|Liberals 10, the NDP nine andjevidence this kind was in an operation) referred to as Skyshield I) a@bout Oct. 14, 1961. That exer-) Cise was a joint operation de- signed to test defences." The spokesman declined to comment when .asked if British hombers penetrated North America's radar network in the 1961 exercise The newspapers claim con- tained several important stra-) tegic implications, particularly} that the manned bomber has However, since Mr.) a bitter struggle for power be- At Elisabethville airport, cen- tral government representatives set up customs and immigration offices, Financial experts stud- ied means of unifying The Congo and Katangan currencies, Ka- tanga issued its own banknotes after its 1061 secession WON'T MEET TSHOMBE UN Undersecretary Ralph Bunche, who flew to The Congo on a special mission over the weekend, said he had no plans to meet with Tshombe. He added that the time for negotia- tion is over. "We have stated that we ex- pect complete freedom of move- ment (through the elimination of all armed resistance). That is a principle and it sticks," Bunche told reporters here. 4m MOISE TSHOMBE $30,000 Blaze In Montreal Tshombe is likely to be al- lowed up to a. week to comply with this demand, diplomats said. This would entail UN oc- cupation of Kélwezi, a mining town 150 miles northwest of Elisabethville, 'the Sakania bor- MONTREAL (CP) -- Fire to- day destroyed the costumes, | props and records of Montreal's renowned French-Language the- jatre group, Theatre du Nouvéauw | de. | "The: damage is estimated at der post 110 miles southeast of|$30,000,". said. Jean-Louis Roux, Elisabethville, and Dilolo 'near|#® actor, emectar oe o--_ the frontier of la. jtary - general of the 'troupe, Should pet to ena| Which has toured. North Amer stance, 'he ° ica. and, Bupape. for now- "But Sip i the political swim and enhance|Photographs of ' for a the new seston, able. Though battered militarily retains a political following in|storey brick building on east- : central Sanguinet street. Province, / e said, Thig would leave him in| Work -- 'posters, programs and st our productions hich of|--are, gone. They're irreplace- jas By PHIL CORNFORD. TORONTO (CP)--Fire today! destroyed Toronto's famed Pal-| ace Pier. All that remained of the $500,- 000 dance hall-sports pavilion-- one of Toronto waterfront's best landmarks -- were portions of blackened, blitzed walls and the front facade. The cause of the fire was not) known. | "We couldn't have saved the building even if we'd had 1,000 units here," Etobicoke Fire Chief Albert H. Flannagan said soon after the roof of the 100. yard long building collapsed and sent flames shooting 60 feet into the air, The fire started about 3 a.m., and one hour later firemen thought they had the flames under control. Suddenly flames gushed through the roof along the whole length of the wooden building and scattered firemen working close to the wails. in, OIL STORED IN TANKS Firemen an ored in. concrete tanks plumed more than into the air firemen to the The workshop was @ one-) had burst. propane gas tanks at- of the Two to the outside tory of Gordon Beard in Chur-)Socia] Credit one. Three seats/Hall is an American citizen he} tween conservative and Liberal] is beyond the power of subpoena/elements of both the Democra-| chill to succeed a retiring Con-' were vacant servative were confirmed Satur- day as late returns trickled in|another seat in Churchill rose by radio Friday when F. L. Jobin, a min- Voting in the two vast-spars-jister in the Liberal-Progressive untarily Several months ago Mr indicated in Montreal that Hall) he Liberal hopes of picking upland would have to appear vol-/tic and Republican parties. The} battle is mainly an internal po-/ litical problem but the outcome) can leave its mark on prosper-} ely-settled ridings was deferred|government of D, L. Campbell) was willing to testify, but laterjity in Canada and other coun-! until Friday. The rest of the before 1958 province voted in a generalijar white centres of Thompson Election Dec. 14. jand Churchill The final outcome left Mr.) But his narrow Roblin's legislature strength di-|eliminated when the Indian vote, minished by a single seat from) delayed Friday by radio difficul-|timony, but this could not be drive mind There were reports Sunday) jnegotiate terms for his tes- captured the ma-/he seemed to have changed his' tries Worried about continued un-/ employment and short-ofsarget! lead wasinight that he met the judge tojeconomic growth, President! plans to continue a for expansionist pro- Kennedy Judges To Probe 1958 ties, began to come in many more years of useful life as a nuclear deterrent Vulcans were to have been used to carry the now-scrapped 'confirmed officially grams, including tax cuts, a big : : Pee | budget increase, higher defence / |spending and continued deficit |financing. He will make another} | attempt to push such social wel-/ Strikes In N.Y. Within minutes, most of the roof and part of the walls had caved 500,000 FIRE LEVELS ORONTO PALACE PIER Tshombe Gets Chance For Place Of Power One Firefighter Injured At Fire building were removed a8 flames licked through windows. Soon after the fire started, firemen equipped with oxygen masks ventured through dense smoke into the front. of the building in an attempt to reach the heart of the fire. They were driven out as the flames sprea@ to the roof. FIREMAN INJURED Only casualiy was Fireman Leonard Wilson, about 36, of the New Toronto brigade, who was lifted screaming on the end of an aerial ladder with both feet caught between two sections as the ladder was raised. Two firemen clambered up the ladder, -unstrapped Wilson's safety belt and carried. him; te the ground. He was taken to hose pital suffering compound frag tures to toes of 'both feet: ° The fire ended an era whith marked the Palace Pier as one of Toronto's most colorfal en- tertainment spots. In years, it has served a¢ an im portant centre for sports, par ticularly amateur boxing ané ike manager" 'of the sand. Dense, black smoke; ment; Pier 100/ which owned. wheeives b very fire department 5 Metro. 'olitan Toronto had booked # for annual social events. , . e -Pek Split geen twee MOSCOW-Peking Split itm one os wcupme ame nonmeren proved Blue Streak standoff bomb, which is to be the basis of Britain's independent nuclear G@eterrent unti] it is equipped! with Polaris missiles The Daily Express, Sketch, Telegraph and Herald ali re- port the penetration of U.S. air) MOSCOW (AP)--The ideolog-} space. ical battle of the Soviet Union "Had the attack been real, it'and Communist China increased would have wiped out severaljin intensity today, each accus-| major American cities, includ-)ing the other of betraying com-) ing Los Angeles, Chicago andj/munism and playing into the New York," The Herald says. 'hands of imperialism FLY 12 MILES HIGH In the tumult of words The Express says it under-/°Ve! Moscow made an implied stood the operation sacceeded i"Vitation to Peking: to settle the because the dealta - wing Vul- ideological differences by col cans we fast and a rently lective discussion thew ae yoni ts The latest exchange came in miles "leditoriais in Pravda, the Soviet says som rinane(Communist party newspaper, oe Nee. with ee md Red Flag, the theoretical termeasures to keep U.S. pa-|™&gazine of the Chinese Com- " in munist party ee net Selecting: he Each side took unusual steps ' er to get its message across. Prav- Be ce a ame gar ga py da's entire editorial was broad- ercise took place, the planes|\©@st by Moscow radio and trans flying via Canada. but declined Mitted_ in the foreign service of the official news agency, Tass./cussion . The Communist] Red Fiag's broadside, in turn,|party of the Soviet Union is} CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS jwas reprinted in all Red Chi-|deeply convinced that collective} fnese newspapers, said a Pe-discussion of the most impor- POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 king radio broadcast tant questions of modern world BOSPITAL $25-221! Time after time, Pravda's editorial uses a new phrase to emphasize this--'the Albanian leaders and those who support them." Red Flag does not mention Premier Khrushchev and the Soviet Communists. But it an- swers directly a whole series of indirect charges made by So viel officials Pravda is as direct decrying the Red Chinese claim that the Soviet Union and its backers represent only "a temporary majority' in the Communist camp. It is in. this connection that Pravda makes its implied appeal for a settlement "The Communist said Pravda, "have a tested method of settling contentious issues by way of collective dis- how- parties," | As usual, the Russians di- development make it possible to jrected their fire at Albania, the insure cohesion of the interna-! littie Balkan nation backing Red tional communist movement." China in the dispute. But it was Pravda asserts that the So- made a little clearer than be-' viet Union averted world nu-} fore that Red Chins was the|clear war in the Cuban crisis) al, land accuses those who quarrel, Reported Wider Today with peaceful coexistence of fol lowing a policy that could lead to armed conflict SEES OPEN BREAK j and medical insurance for the of three judges begins an in-j|have been recessed. aged vestigation today to determine}. No date has been set for re- Many of these proposals are|whether the public's interests/sumption of the contract talks) designed to speed U.S. economic "are being given due account" | with the striking Teamsters un-| growth and in turn could ex-jim a monthong shutdown ofjion, which represents 455 news-| jpand the American market for/New York City's nine major|paper delivery drivers in the! iCanadian goods. Income tax/newspapers iOhio city. The talks broke off cuts would put more purchas-! The board was appointed by| Saturday ing power into consumer pock-!;abor Secretary ets. Higher federal spending) Wirtz, State Governor Nelson A./paper Guild is scheduled to re- could spill over into more 0V-/Rockefelier and Mayor Robert/sume contract negotiations with} jof personality {Pravda deciares. 'Cuba "The Albanian leaders are|/ernment contracts for Canadian|F Wagner, openly breaking with the Com.' firms munist movement, with Marx-|... pec -- ist - Leninism, and are sinking FAC ES OFFOSITION sould crystalize deeper and deeper in the mo. The Democrats -- the pres-coe vicky i bear t rass of dogmatism, sectarian- dent's party--contro! both the ~ = ee Be va ism and vicious nationalism, House of Representatives and pose Scar ar he daili and are making increasing use|'"* Senate, but Kennedy faces) against four of the dailies cult. methods," |StT0ns opposition from some! * {Democratic It accuses the Albanian Com.) ments who control key congres-|waikout began Dec munists of failing to support the |Sional committees in which cru-/Pybjishers Association, Soviet effort to defend Fi.|°!#! legislation can be blocked, |.enting the nine papers it "What is more, they actually helped the imperialist instigat-| INSIDE... States at loggerheads, thereby pushing all the world into the}, Youths Sentenced charges from Peking that the 7 : Soviet Union capitulated over! Defence Contracts - con of freedom in the western down the two daily newspapers hemisphere ic bureing seit) Eight Injured mn in Cleveland for 30 days, nego- dei Castro's Cuba and "bar the|>ottled and forgotten. -- ors to kindle the conflict, to set abyss of war," says Pravda. In Robbery ........ Page 8 Cuba, it declares, is much brightes."" | Weekend Accidents Fage 8 ltiations involving A joint announcement by the! three said they hoped the board] The other five major papers) 8. The} against all jRockefelier and Wagner, i"The public. has the night to tion continues."' Page 8/| RECESS TALKS road to the atomic maniacs." i FI the U.S.S.R and the United! The editorial calls false the Genstal Meters Gets I. it Council Names stronger today, and "the bea- public opinion| American Newspaper conservative ele-/closed down voluntarily when the|SERVE WITHOUT PAY repre-iboard to study the 31-day-old Dn COM|)New York newspaper blackout jtract bargaining talks, says ajwere Judge Harold R. Medina strike against one is a strike/of the U.S. Court of Appeals, Judge Joseph O'Grady The announcement by Wirtz,).New York City Criminal Court, who/and David W. Peck, former pre- jasked that the board report by|siding justice of the Appellate] Friday "'or earlier if possible,"| Division of the State Supreme jsaid of the newspaper blackout: /Court. ' know why this intolerable situa-|board will not propose terms able to the Standing Committees Page 8 | In another strike that has shut/The board may, however, sug-| gest whatever procedures might! appear te be appropriate. for the Plain working towand 2 settlement." |publishers a week from today! | after- a nine-day Guild, a unit of the AFL-CIO) lapse. The} Guild, rapresents editorial employees} strike|Of both papers and business de-| partment |Press and News employees of The} Named to the non-salaried! of the | the) of] ettlement or undertake media-| ion efforts, unless this is agree- parties concerned. | The atinouncament said "* W . Willard) The striking Cleveland News-/ :

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