Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Mar 1963, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY Why don't you conform to the current trend and become a non- conformist? Overcast. and milder tonight and Saturday, Light snow late tonight, Wet snow and showers ¢ Oshawa OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1963 Saturday. i Nuclear ' Dump For RCAF + In W. Germany has been formed and has been|days. The total order is 200 'In Farm Fire ZWEIBRUECKEN, West Ger- many (CP)--A nuclear bomb dump is being built at the end of one runway at the RCAF CF-104 low-level jet bomber base here. The dump comprises several small buildings surrounded by barbed wire. At $100 each, the RCAF has bought 34. German police dogs which will patrol with their RCAF trainers night and day outside the barbed wire, Stored in the buildings--if the Canadian government signs a nuclear agreement with the United States--would be the 2,000-pound nuclear bombs which would be carried by the CF-104. Inside the wire, a U.S. crew would maintain custody over the bombs. If use of the bombs were authorized by the U.S., an RCAF crew would fit them in a pad hanging below the CF-104 ~ the U.S. crew would fuse m. One 18-plane CF-104 squadron Police Protect Boylen's Home TORONTO (CP)--Police have stationed a uniformed constable to guard the home of M. J. Boy- len, mining millionaire, which was robbed of $411,000 in jewels Monday night. Mr. Boylen did not request the guard, a police official said. It was feared angry immi- grants might demonstrate on the premises in objection to Mr. Boylen's statement that most of Canada's crimes are committed by immigrants. 'flying the supersonic aircrati-- it lands at 200-odd miles an hour with a shriek' of tires-- since January and is considered operational, apart from having iis armament. ' Deliveries of the CF-104 to the RCAF air division in Europe) from the Canadair Limited as- sembly plant at Montreal have een stepped up to one every two days from one every three planes, worth some $450,000,000. Altogether, eight squadrons will be formed and this job is expected to be completed by December. The next base to re- Soellingen, West Germany. After that will come the RCAF bases at Gros Tenquin and Marville, both in France, Fallout shelters have been built at the base here. Out Of ARGENTIA, Nfld. (CP)--The captain of the storm - battered West German freighter Adele Ohirogge reported early today his ship is out of danger and has' resumed her course for Oran, Algeria, A radio message from the ship picked up by the United States Coast Guard said: "Everything is under contro] and at present not in distress." The 449-foot freighter reported Thursday she was foundering in 35-foot_ waves 600 miles south- east of Argentia and asked for assistance. A coast guard spokesman here said the 449-foot Adele Ohlrogge was taking water in her No, 2 hold but the crew was reported keeping ahead of the flooding, The coast guard ocean station Echo, 300 miles east of the Stricken freighter, was the lo- cation of closest known vessel, the Castle Rock. A call went Battered Ship Danger out to all ships in the hope that other vessels might be closer. A C-130 aircraft from here left at 5:38 P.M. EST to pinpoint the freighter's position. The Ohlrogge's crew was try- ing desperately to turn the ship back on a westerly course. She was heading east on a trip from New York to Algiers and was 1,500 miles east of New York. If her course were reversed it would shorten the time in which it took the Castle Rock to reach her. The coast guard said their cutter could take up to 24 hours to rendezvous be- cause of stormy seas. In Halifax, where ships have arrived days late because of rough Atlantic weather, several skippers said the area in which the Ohlrogge is in difficulty has been stormy for several days. The freighter, whose home port is Brake, West Germany, ceive CF-l04s will be Baden-) Allan Bailey (left) and Ber- nard Hunt, Oshawa Times re- porters, made a valiant try to walk from Bowmanville to To- ronto's city hall last night. They left Bowmanville at 8.15 p.m. More than seven hours 2 NOT QUITE FIT and 20 minutes later Bailey's legs gave out and he was forced to quit. At 6.30 a.m. today, at Metro Toronto city limits, Hunt gave in to the cold. He said ice was form- ing on his cheeks, The march ; |but were un: ) \their farm home on Highway 21 -\north of Oil Springs, 24: miles southeast of. here, work in Sarnia when the fire broke out. SARNIA (CP)--Mrs, Donald Strevel and her two children were. burned to: death today in iS le to save the 'The cause was not known. Mr. Donald Strevel was at was an attempt to break a re- cord set by U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy in # recent U.S. physical fitness drive. (See Story page 4) --Oshawa Times Photo New York Post Re-opens Monday NEW YORK (AP)--Publisher|tinue to press for a satisfactory Schiff has announced|agreement to end the current that the New York Post will|strike. resume publication Monday. It} Papers hit by the ITU strike left New York Feb. 23 with a cargo of bulk soybeans and waste paper. The coast guard said she was foundering in 35. foot-high waves amid winds of 64 miles an hour. The Castle Rock was reported by the Boston coast guard to be 250 miles away. The powerful ocean tug Foun- dation Vigilant was steaming at full speed to assist the | freighter. | Foundation Maritime Limited has been closed throughout the|are the morning Times and|in Halifax, owners of the 719-ton New York newspaper blackout,|Daily News and the evening|salvage tug, said the Vigilant | now in its 83rd day as a result|Journal - American and the/|left her station in Bermuda at} |World-Telegram and Sun. Pa.|7:30 A.M. EST when the first) pers that were not hit by the| 'vague' message was received| evening tabloid, said Thursday! strike but that closed include, of a strike. Mrs. Schiff, sole owner of the night: |from the leaking Adele Ohl- |besides The Post, the morning rogge. "I think the strike has gone|Herald Tribune and Mirror and| A spokesman said the tug was on long enough. I see no evi-|the evening Long Island Star- Journal and Long Island Press. dence of a settlement." The Post will be the first of nine closed newspapers to re- probably 800 miles from the freighter but this was difficult to determine. By ADAM KELLETT-LONG PEKING (Reuters)--The Chi- nese Communist party began publishing a statement today setting out in the greatest detail and the bluntest terms so far the Chinese case in the ideolog- ical dispute raging in the Com- munist world. : The party newspaper People's Daily published the first three instalments of the statement, which took the form of an ar- ticle by the editorial board of the Red China Statement Bluntest Terms Yet party theoretical journal Red Flag, not yet on sale. yevey weld the eotire article agency re ec! ran to more than 100,000 Chi- nese characters, and the re- maining five parts would be published during the next three days. Today's instalments cov- ered 3% pages of the People's Daily. The article was a reply to at- |tacks made on the Chinese po- sition by Italian Communist leader Palmiro Togliatti, but the introduction made it clear that it was 'irected at all ideo- logical opponents. This would' include the Soviet party. After a first glance at the brief New China news agency summary of the article, observ- ers here said the article cov- ered little new ground, but pulled together all the threads of the wordy debate raging in the Com ist world for the Of Latin | By ARTHUR GAVSHON UX. Finds Need America \Dundee told The Associated last three months, and com- bined them in one mammoth manifesto, Aceording to this summary, the last part of 'the editorial said "leaders of some parties" had recently accepted the Chi- nese party's proposal for a new gathering of world Communist parties, to be preceded by bi-| lateral meetings between '"'cer-| Silk Appointed Ontario Police Commissioner TORONTO (CP)--Eric Silk, former assistant deputy attor- ney - general, today was ap- pointed provincial police com- missioner with the rank of a deputy minister, Attorney-General Cass said Mr. .Silk's appointment was ap- proved by the cabinet Thursday and became effective today. In a.statement to the legisla- ture, Mr. Cass said the appoint- ment is "the first major step in -the force's reorganization and leads the way to opera- tional revisions and further ap- pointments arid promotions at various levels of command." Mr. Silk had been acting com- missioner since the resignation of W. H. Clark earlier this month, as well as during Mr. Clark's leave of absence last year. Liberal. Leader Wintermeyer given a chance to debate the leaving two people seriously in- jured.- woman and the owner of the asked if the opposition would be}i, » TORONTO (CP) -- A three- uburban York ited in a tre- ion Thursday, A woman tennant was blown through the wall of her second- floor apartment onto the roof of an adjacent house. Another house were trapped in the crum- pled wreckage. An official of Consumers' Gas Company said a gas line lead- ing to the furnace was broken inside the basement wall and the gas "leaked into the base- ment for up to half an hour or so until it ignited." Elizabeth Burns, 23, asleep in her basement apartment when the house. collapsed, was burned over most of her body and was in critical condition in hospital. Alex Christoff, 70, owner of the brick-and-frame structure, was im fair condition in hospi- tal with burns to his face and hands after being trapped briefly in the debris of his first- floor apartment, John Rhodes, 39, a foreman who was working with two men to clear a blocked sewer in front of the Christoff house, was hurled out of a trench by the blast and suffered a broken leg and burns to his face and hands, His condition was satis- factory. Simsa Bakula, 26, a nurse's aide, was catapulted from her bed on the second floor and through the wall. She lay on her neighbor's roof, with most of her clothing ripped off, until Police said they had to carry two unidentified men from a second- storey apartment and lodge them overnight in cells because of drunkenness, Cause of the fire was not de- termined. About five families in the burned building and more than 20 residents of the adjacent be Henry Hotel were evacu- ated. West Germans Ratify Treaty With France ' BONN (AP) -- The upper house of the West German Par- liament ratified the controver- sial treaty of co-operation be- tween France and West Ger many today. The Bundesrat, made up of representatives of the 10 fed- eral states, gave its after Chancellor Adenauer de- livered a strong appeal in favor of the treaty. The vote was seven in favor and three ab- staining. The abstentions came from states of Lower '" Hesse and. Hamburg, whose governments are dominated by the opposition' Socialist party. The treaty now goes before the lower house, or Bundestag, which represents the West a neighbor helped her to. the ground. She was released from cuts, bruises and minor injur- ies, principle of having a deputy minister head the force. Mr. Cass. said. le; would be introduced later 'this session to effect further organi- ment could be debated there, and might also be debated when the Roach royal commission on crime reports to the House, he zational changes. The appoint- KINGSTON (CP)--A stubborn fire .destroyed two floors of apartments. and heavily dam- aged a ground-floor shoe store Thursday night at Kingston's main intersection, Montreal and Princess Streets. Victoria and Gray Trust Com- pany, agents for the building, gave a preliminary damage said. estimate of $100,000. German people directly and wields the decisive voice in leg- islation. A vote there is exe hospital after treatment for|pected later this month. | Before the vote, Adenauer defended the treaty he signed last month with President de Gaulle as necess*~v for further progress towaT i.uropean un- fon and maintenance of world peace: encountering of the un- The treaty is resistance because popularity among all political parties of de Gaulle's "grand design" for a French - domin- ated Europe. = / More than 80) Ontario Riding Mr. Cafik said the Liberai Liberals Pick Cafik For Ontario Riding cal unknown and attained the | LONDON (AP)--Britain 'and|Press, "that Latin America, is . ; ;. both in quest of|the preserve and responsibility ade U S A ait |Latin America--both in qt lee the United States." | It added: "If this is sincere, als 1rcr jnew friends and new or ag Latin Americans think the|and words are followed by discovered they need eac' idea is great. jdeeds, that will certainly be} The role foreseen for Britain|Very good. It is what we havej. Liberals cheered Norman A. Cafik Thursday night when he was nominated at Henry Street High School, Whitby, to carry the party colors in the forth- policy for Canadians includes restoring order in the manage- ment of Canada's business, help- ing unemployment by allowing freer and expanding trade, help- highest Liberal vote in the his- tory of the Riding, that he rep- resents new blood and attracts new blood to the party, and that he has the maturity to realize ; eho pig 4 open. Four of the papers were gn arte paren hit by a strike Dec. 8 by Local 6, AFL-CIO International Typo- graphical Union. The Post was one of five unstruck papers that jhave jother. ae ! That's what the British think| closed voluntarily. Mrs. Schiff said she had re- signed from the Publishers As- sociation of New York City in order to gain freedom to reopen the paper. WAS SMALLEST The Post's circulation reached 335,859 last September, a gain of 21,000 over the same month of 1961. It has the small- est circulation of the city's three evening newspapers. Standing beside Mrs. Schiff as she made her announcement was Bertram A. Powers, pres- ident of striking Local 6, ITU. He previously had offered to send his printers back to work on the non-struck papers when- ever they wanted to reopen. The union had labelled the clos- ing of the five non-struck pa- pers as a lockout. The printers said they would work the five non-struck papers under terms of their old con- tract during negotiations for a new one. Mrs. Schiff's announcement of the reopening came as Mayor Robert F. Wagner shelved plans to umpire the newspaper black. out and called new peace talks for today. He said both sides had requested renewed negotia- tions and saw this as offering "some glimmer of hope." Following Mrs. nouncement of the reopening of The Post, the Publishers Asso- ciation said in a statement: "The decision of Mrs. Dorothy Schiff, publisher of the New York Post, to resign from the Publishers Association of New York City and to resume publi- cation, does not alter the firm determination of the other pub. lishers in the association to con- Schiff's an. il Join Search TRENTON, Ont. (CP) -- United States Air Force aircraft have been called in to search missing light charter plane that carried a Drummondville, Que., doctor and his 12-year-old son, RCAF search and rescue offi- cials here said today. An RCAF spokesman said the U.S. plames will make the search in case Dr. J. B. Mi- chaud and his son. Yves "drifted over the border" into New York State on their flight from North = |Bay to Montreal Feb. 20. DOROTHY SCHIFF An extensive search by RCAF, Canadian Army and ci- vilian aircraft has failed to find jany sign of the missing plane. the area south of Montreal for a| and they're doing something about it. Lord Dundee, minister of state for foreign affairs, listed a variety of examples. Rising British investments in the re- gion; steadily mounting trade; one hundred per cent backing for President Kennedys Alli- ance for Progress program; a stream of important British vis- itors to the area. Latest to go is Admiral of \the Fleet Earl Mountbatten, jwho has just started a 26-day \tour of Mexico, Venezuela, Peru, Chile, Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay. "It is certainly not the view of Her Majesty's government," Chance To End Arms Race Appears Doomed By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON (AP) -- The best. chance Russia and the United States may ever have to end the nuclear arms race now lappears to be collapsing under |the weight of a new disarma- ment deadlock. This, at least, is the grim view of the current state of East-West arms control negotia- jtions held by some high offi- cials responsible for U.S. policy. It is a view subject to sharp dispute. A serious question can be chance of accord between Mos- cow and Washington has existed CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 --or will exist while the cold say " Berlin problem, until Moscow and Peking abandon their am- bitions to take over the world, But for 17 years the United States has operated on the as- HOSPITAL 723-2211 sumption that disarmament may be possible. That hope per- sists today. » The hope rests now, as in the past, on a deeper belief that at some point the Soviet Union will begin to change its fundamental world position and move toward agreements with the West. Then the often-cited need of all na- tsons to avoid destruction in a nuclear war could begin to have its impact. What makes the present stale- mate at Geneva critical is that how can you expect to disarm?" dent Kennedy, State Secretary recent Soviet actions have dealt a severe blow to this deeper be- lief precisely when U.S. leaders be some new trends in Soviet |Since the start of the cold war| policy. ; cold) The high optimism, about the war continues. Some authorities|chances for a nuclear test ban until you can settle the|which prevailed here within the jlast two months was born in the aftermath of the Cuban crisis. There is no doubt that Presi- Dean Rusk and other leaders felt some great results might flow from the easing of the|fn nerve-wracking confrontation of Union over Cuba last October. This optimism was prevalent when Soviet Premier Khrush- chev last Dec. 19 sent a note to the president reversing his stand on internationa! inspection to police a test ban inside the Soviet Union as well as on the territory of the United States and Britain, He sai? he would accept two or three on-site in- |spections a year. This was con- jtrary to the position which he jhad taken in November, 1961. The deadlock has now devel- raised as to whether any real/thought it might finally be jus-|oped over the difference be-j¢rnment warnings of jtified by what had seemed to tween Khrushchev's two or three inspections a year and the eight or H which Kennedy has asked with an indication that he would reduce the number if other inspection problems were solved at the same time. In a speech in Moscow Wed- nesday, Khrushchev slammed the door on any new conces- sions from his side, saying "nothing else can be expected om, us." the United States and the Soviet|the | would range from helping Mex- ico develop her petro-chemical resources to participation in the {Alliance for Progress. The Latin Americans wan more credits, more investments from London to help industrial- ize, develop mines, road, rail and: water links, mechanize ag- riculture, build ships. |ARE DIFFICULTIES | But there are also snags and snarls, Dundee pinpointed one of them, It is a lingering uneas- iness over the risk factor which has cost London's investors bil- lions of pounds around the globe |Communist always hoped for." | This was a clear reference to| a recent editorial in the Soviet party. newspaper) Pravda, which. suggested talks} to heal the rift. The editorial was published here last week. But Western observers in Moscow said the Red Flag ar- ticle, and a People's Daily ed- itorial Wednesday, amounted to a direct rebuff of Premier Khrushchev"s January call ina speech for an end to public po- lemics between Communist States. They felt Russia was not likely to take part in high-level to nationalizers and expropriat-| ors. That's the fallout when an} empire is liquidated, | A few unresolved territorial! squabbles -- with Argentina,| Chile and -Venezuela--still nag away. | Most important snag of all, Perhaps, is that Britain's de- Sire outstrips her capacity to lend, give or invest money in Latin America, The nation sim- ply cannot spare the cash on the Scale that aliowed it in the 19th century, when the empire was at its peak of power, to develop' the economies of Latin Amer- ica. On the Latin American: side the big beef is against the way the British protect their lush market for Commonwealth and European friends, Workers In France Defying Warnings mated 95 per cent of France's |240,000 miners today defied gov- ; tough ac- jtion and walked off their jobs. | Some 228,000 men were -re- |ported idle, with 100 per cent jof the workers staying off the jiob in Grenoble in the French |Alps and 54 per cent of the men idle at Montceau in east jcentral France. In the coke furnaces, govern- |ment-requisitioned oven work- jers, legally required to '"'pre- wi PARIS (Reuters) -- An est{-| § talks on the dispute in the near future. coming federal election. The 34- year-old Pickering Township man won out over John Lay who also lost the nomination to Mr. Cafik last year. In his pre-election speech Mr. Cafik called for a new Liberal approach that would involve de- bate and discussion "of policies --not personalities'. "Our policies are divided into two categories -- those for Can- ada and those for Canadians, For Canada we propose to re- store confidence in the govern- ment, get her growing and keep her growing, and provide tax in- centives for industry for more production and more exports." ing farmers and fishermen so they have a fair share in the National Income, and assisting municipalities. REPRESENTS NEW BLOOD Nomination chairman Bruce Powe, director of the Ontario Liberal Association, recognized John Dryden and Terence Kelly as mover and seconder of the Cafik momination. Ralph Wal- lace and Owen Ashley moved and seconded the Lay nomina- \for all. | tion. Included in Mr, Dryden's rea- sons for nominating Mr. Cafik were, that he came before the electorate last year as a politi- NORMAN CAFIK CONGRATULATED BY JUDY LAMAKsSH jsent themselves," retaliated by iworking-et half speed, --Oshawa Times Photo. * his responsibilities. Terry Kelly called him "a man of boundless energy with the quality and ability to work and lead." SEES IMPROVEMENT Mr. Cafik said that if the Lib- erals come to power things will be improved for Canadians. "After our economy has been expanded we plan: --a 'erate Pension plan --a national medical health plan to insure that no one suf- fers through sickness and ill health, --to take steps to ensure that all can receive equal education regardless of financial ability to pay." Mr. Lay mentioned the same features of the Liberal plan in his pre-election address. He also Said that "one thing the Diefen- baker government has done is that it has aroused the anger of the young people and made them take 'conscious interest in politics." 484 VOTED Following the election of Lib- eral standard-bearer, returnin officer Tom Harris announ that 484 delegates to the nom- inating convention had voted. In some instances alternative dele- gates were called upon to vote in the absence of official dele- gates. Perfect attendance from Ajax, Pickering Village, Scugog . and Reach townships were noted. Guest speaker was Judy La- Marsh, Liberal MP. from Nia- gara Falls. Most people agreed that the gathering last night set records for the number of Liberal sup- porters gathered together at one oo in the history of the Rid- iz. Possibly, within the first 1,000 people to know of the Cafil nom- ination-was a man in Toledo, Ohio, who identified himself over the phone to an Oshawa Times' reporter. The man iden- tified himself as an associate of Mr. Cafik,

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