ef =o a THOUGHT FOR TODAY When your vision begins to blur, you need either stronger glasses or weaker drinks. Tage mcg "A le a GE ageconeTe WEATHER REPORT ~ Mainly, sunny and warm Sature day with light winds, Oshawa OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1963 e VOL. 92--NO. 128 THIRTY-FOUR PAGES 250 Metro Workers On Strike TORONTO (CP) -- About 250\tween Mr. Fine and the hod tile workers went on strike to-|carriers will establish a con- day in the first of a proposed|tract pattern for other unions. series of walkouts that could; The union's demands have not slow down much of Toronto's been released, but it has re- construction industry. \jected the 20-cent offer from! Conciliation talks, sponsored| Contractors. | ' : ; ; ° | ery by the provincial labor depart- The carpenters and the mar-| j 2 é * L e ar S urry : ment, broke up without success|ble workers are pressing for 30-| i -- Massive S trike : ; z, , To Vatican \Ci Thursday night as the Marble|cent raises and the floor work-| } | @ ° Grips Argentina i erg to the Pope resuming ac- Tile and Terrazzo Mechanicsjers are demanding 40 cents. | | Union (Ind. )announced it in-| Meanwhile, the United Asso-| tended to strike. jciation of Plumbers and Steam Three other strikes are threat-|Fitters (CLC) is involved in BUENOS AIRES (AP)--After riotous demonstrations, Peronist Bry cod pee y tad pongsh ox jlabor unions launched a 24-hour Mica Hine: whan' ee still |general strike today to press for weak from the last 0 ened as several major unions|conciliation talks after the ~ \government action to ease un- HOLD LITTLE HOPE VATICAN CITY (AP) -- An unconfirmed report said that Pope John, on the threshold of death after suf- fering a relapse today, had pg placed in an oxygen t. after a day of violence in which federal police used tear gas and high pressure water on about 12,000 marching workers. Half- a-dozen demonstrators were re- ported slightly injured. The demonstrators, who car- attempt to break down the con-|membership rejected a 25-cent struction industry's offer of new|offer which had been approved two-year contracts calling for/by union officials. | increases of 20 cents an hour.! Many trades, however, have| Chief conciliator officer Louis|already signed contracts. They Fine will meet with the Inter-|include bricklayrs, operating] national Hod Carriers, Common|engineers, electricians, cement| and Building Laborers (CLC) today in a last-minute effort to stop officials calling a strike Monday among laborers on Tor- onto's new east-west subway project. A strike vote will be taken tonight by the 4,500 Toronto members of the United Brother- hood of Carpenters and Joiners (CLC). If they decide to strike, they have the announced support of the resilient Floor Workers Un- ion, an affiliate of the carpen- ters. Officials hope the meeting be- U.S. Car Deaths Hit Record High CHICAGO (AP) Traffic deaths in the United States hit a record for a one-day observ- ance of the U.S. Memorial Day |masons, painters and sheet met-| é |alworkers, li Danny DeMonte, business) | |manager of the marble workers, | ; said pickets would be set up only if non-union labor is called} in. The strike will affect several | |hospital, school and hotel proj- jects. re 4 ds § }employment, | The strike, aimed at paralyz- ling the troubled country, was 'icalled by the 2,500,000-mem- lber General Confederation of |Labor to climax a week of pro- |test. The confederation is dom- ilinated by followers of former /dictator Juan D. Peron, now in hunger," threw rocks and bricks at police. In one clash, 5,000 men and women workers, led by Jose Alonsc, confederation secretary- general, battled police for more ~"POPE JOHN'S CONDITION 'VERY GRAVE' than an hour until a police com- missioner assured them they exile in Sprin. All unions except the white TEAR GAS STALLS MARCH 257 Arrested By Florida Polite 'ALLAHASSEE, Fila. (AP)-- another massive protest of seg-| Authorities used tear gas tojregation at two white theatres stall one mass march by Ne-|tonight. groes and arrested 257 during) The mass arrests in Talla- jthe 10th straight day of anti-/hassee provided the major de- |segregation demonstrations in|velopment on the racial. front Searchers |wreckage lyitig on the ocean some 8,400 feet below the) |surface and have identified it las the hull, diving plane and/ Sail area of the nuclear subma-| rine Thresher. | flo 'Thresher Hull, Diving Plane Photographed PORTSMOUTH, N.H. (AP)--, have photographed| could demonstrate in peace. Tear gas scattered 7,000 work- ers in another demonstration. The unions called the demon- Strations and strike to vent [collar workers have agreed to |support the strike, which threat- jened to.slow public transporta- hag to a\ crawl. | Unions dromised to keep skel-|-- : jeton crews "manning utilities, Teed 'Maria ye awe et seg jhospitals, long distance tele- i y phones, airport control towers 8g Soatedetitinn 'Has and other e d the government of failing ential installgtions.|-- ac- | Thegtrike pegan at mitnigy to take action.in the economic ried signs reading "enough of| | Gives Extreme Unction Belgian-born Bishop Pierre Van Lierde, above, the Pope's Sacristan and Vicar General for Vatican City, today ad- ministered extreme unction to Pope John XXIII who took a sudden turn for the worse. u|was on the threshold of death VATICAN (AP) -- Pope John today. The 81-year-old spiritual ruler of the world's 500,000,000 Roman Catholics was reported failing rapidly. ; He was given extreme unc- tion, the last sacrament of the church for those in danger of dying. The Vatican radio said: "The Pope is grave, very grave .. the new crisis is gravissima (most grave)." It was a dramatic turn. This morning the Pope was reported by the Vatican as con- tinuing to rally from a crisis Tuesday. The press office said (AP Wirephoto via cable from Rome). he spent a tranquil night. Vatican prelates were looking Pals Plagu ai. pce Mga has left 1,000,000 Man Awarded Hid In Small Towns _|haging y. personal Professor Antonio G returned to his home in Bologna Thursday. colleagues were confident pontiff would rally. There was little hope he could survive this one. To all mem- bers of the vatican staff, the word went out: "pray." Cardinals hurried to the Vat- ican. Only a few were admitted to the third floor apartment where the Pope lay on a cast iron bed, stomach growth that hag peated hemorrhaging, om caused re- Doctors the : hed teen balled Wedase: The Pope's doctor, "Don't worry too much about me," the Pope said on Gasbar- rini's departure. 'The bags packed and I am ready, in fact very ready, to go." are Gasbarrini said he and his the But Gasbarrini provided possible clue to the new lapse, He told reporters Thurs- Florida's capital city. |Thursday, but anti-segregation Thresher sank April 10 dur holiday and surpassed the pre- P day that the Pope should stay holiday estimate of 130 by saf-|, "0st of those arrested Thurs ety experts. ida agricultural and Mechani- The death toll on the high-'cai University, a Negro school, ways for the 30-hour holiday! 220 of them were ordered period ,from 6 p.m. Wednesday/before state Judge Ben Willis to midnight Thy * 95 14l-ltoday to answer contempt of! boas he lta, The previous sect lt 3 a other 37 are to appear in| ord for a one-day memorial dayicity court Monday to face holiday was 109 in 1956. charges of unlawful assembly. Drownings during the holiday} There was no violence during period totalled 23 and 11 per-|the marches, aimed at segre- sons lost their lives in boating| gated movie theatres. a 4 Plans remained unchanged for Railway Workers To Sue SIU VP. OTTAWA (CP) -- William J.| - Smith, national president of the|the Canadian Labor Congress Canadian Brotherhood of Rail-|and a long-time opponent of the way, Transport and General/SIU, said the Seafarers' Union Workers (CLC), said today le-jhas had a "pattern of violence" gal action is being launched/that was placed on the record against a west coast union of-jof the federal investigation of ficial for accusing the Brother-|labor strife in the Great Lakes hood of attempted murder. Marine industry conducted by "The Brotherhood hasMr. Justice T. G. Norris. directed its lawyers to take le-| He said dozens of witnesses gal action agains Mr. Roderick|told the Norris inquiry about Heinekey, vice- i ithi Seafarers' Int Union the seven-month investigation. of Canada," gai . Smith. |The judge is expected to de- "The actiof arises from Mr,|!iver his report to the federal Heinekey's geous state-8overnment within the next 10 ment, appe: the Wancou-| days. ver Sun May 30, that the| Alex B. Macdonald, a Vancou. was responsible for/Ver lawyer and a New Demo: upon his life." cratic member of the British Mr. Heinekey accused the Columbia legislature, will han- ; die the Brotherhood's action Brotherhood .of trying to kill 4 : him after he was wounded|*s2mst Mr. Heinekey. day night are students at Flor- | Mr. Smith, a vice-president of/POSt office steps to pray for} jactivity was popping in many points across the United States. Integrationists made plans to increase the tempo of demon- trations against segregation in Jackson, Miss,, and Mayor Al- len Thompson contended that odtside agitators are hoping to draw federal marshals or troops into the city. A Negro spokesman said a massive, Birmingham-type cam- paign will be launched in Los Angeles with total elimination of discrimination as its goal. Cities experiencing racial demonstrations ' Thursday iin- cluded Philadelphia, Chicago, Baltimore, Baton Rouge, La., Chattanooga, Tenn., Ans Cam.|fell, commander of the U.S. At- bridge, Md. lantic Fleet submarine force in Police at Jackson, Miss., ar-|Norfolk, Va., said the photo- rested 27 demonstrators Thurs-|graphs "'appeared to be defin- day including an _ integrated|itely correlated with the miss- group of 14 who knelt on the|ing submarine. ing a deep-sea test dive with 129) men aboard. The photographs, taken by the search vessel Conrad, were en route today to Boston. They will then be flown to the navy court of inquiry at Portsmouth, N.J. The court is Investigating the sea disaster, which occurred some 220 miles east of Boston. Dr. J. Lamar Worvel, assit- ant director of the Lamont Geo- logical Observatory whose re- searchers photographed the wreckage Thursday, said the pictures definitely were of the sunken submarine. Vice-Admiral Elton W. Gren- jfacial peace and progress. | The Philadelphia school board and building contractors involved in a racial dispute of- |fered to put five qualified Ne- groes to work on a school con- struction job if the National As- sociation for the Advancement of Colored People will halt pick- eting of the project. ts | Canoes Free From | | Lifejacket Rule port department announced to-; 800 Steelworkers | lfor some time. |will not be enforced, the trans-|y day. mn al The move ha een expect Retum To Work | The department said a survey HAMILTON (CP)--About 800)showed that "satisfactory con-| steelworkers at Steel Company trol" of Canada's cold mill here re- peed to work Thursday night, | e strike that threatened produc-japply the regulation to others, | tion at the country's largest steel mill. and canoes. It was felt it would been wiped out. $350,000 liam G, Borneman, 33, is $250,- 000 richer but there's bitterness in every word he speaks, blind awarded the money--the larg- est damage award in United States Pacific northwest history --against Safeway Stores Incor- porated by a Superior Court jury in Seattle. Stores said they would appeal against the award. to his half-finished shack neighboring Richmond to be greeted by three men on his doorstep. right now trying to get me to invest money in their schemes," he said. friends and they couldn't wait to get at me." of the right side, a punctured OTTAWA (CP)--A regulation|lung, a blinded left eye, three requiring lifejackets and baling|skull fractures and broken jequipment be carried in un-jarms, legs and other bones in |powered rowboats and canoes/an accident near Seattle three ifrom Kimberley, B.C., by Wal- | ter Nielsen, 57, of Burnaby, B.C. because of.a blowout. The car was hit by a Safeway Stores was being used by or-|truck. A $26,000 suit by Neilsen ganized camps using rowboats/was thrown out. ing their four-day wildcat|be unfair to exempt these and/wheelchair, says of his future: thug the-entire regulation has | paralyzed. I can't walk, I can't drive." VANCOUVER (CP) --Wil- OTTAWA (CP)--Weldon Chan, The half-paralyzed and 'half- traffic victim was/to escape deportation, has been given a chance to stay in Can- ada--for a year, at least. Immigration minister Guy Fa- vreau said in the Commons Thursday the immigration de- partment will quash the depor- tation order and permit Chan to rejoin his family in Vancouver for 12 months so that he can "adjust" his status. The minister streed that the move is conditional on Chan coming out of hiding. (A short time after the Com- Hellyer Says ' Defence Data | Was Lacking OTTAWA (CP)--Defence Min. ister Paul Hellyer said Thurs- day night that he had to go out- side Canada to get background defence information when - he was the opposition's defence critic. He told the Commons--inter- the invitation of the Conserva- vening in a defence debate at he could get from the Canadian ation about Canada's defence system outside the country than government. He said Goron Churchill, the But lawyers for Safeway Borneman returned Fp tgp n "They are outside my door "They called themselves my Borneman suffered paralysis ears ago. He was being driven home Neilsen pulled to the roadside Borneman, who lives in a "What can I do with it? I'm last of three Progressive Con- Thursday by a shotgun blast?~ fired by an unknown person who} hid outside his home at Burnaby in suburban Vancouver. HOUSE DEBATES DEFENCE COMMITTEE PLAN "The Brotherhood does not engage in violent, unlawful acts,' said Mr. Smith in a pre- pared statement. | "It deplores them. It deplores) the attack on Mr. Heinekey." | | OTTAWA (CP)--New Demo- cratic Party Leader T. C. Doug- las said Thursda¥ night he sus- pects Canada eventually will be AUDITORIUM PROGRESS $1,000,000 $900,000 $800,000 $700,000 $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 . $50,000 | station offensive missiles in this | country. Mr. Douglas, speaking in the Commons, said he has an "un easy suspicion" that the move less and the continent can be defended only by intercontinen- tal ballistic missiles capable of kocking out bases in Russia. Mr. Douglas posed the sug- without 4 final decision--Prime Minister Pearson's motion to set up an all-party defence commit- tee. He quoted the former Army chief of staff, Lt.-Gen. Guy Simonds, as saying that the real reason for Bomarc nuclear war- ple of U.S. nuclear bases if Canada, Peace River) said the Liberal government surrendered to Washington p: ure when it de- icided to acqt nuclear war- heads | Mr, Douglas and other oppo. sition spokesmen were full of lasked by the United States to| will be based on the theory that! the anti-bomber Bomarc is use-| gestion as the house debated--| heads is to establish the princi-| Later, Gerald Baldwin (PC-- Sideline Arms Issue has a staggering amount of nu- clear power. How great should the deterrent be? In suggesting a different di- rection for Canada, Mr. Chur- chill said: "We might have to cut our losses and direct our defence ef- fort along some other line. I am not prepared to give my so- lution to that particular prob-| lem, but I think that as sensible people we have to look at it! without getting emotionally dis-| turbed."" | Better use, he suggested, could be made of the RCAF in Europe,. now committed to a le of low-level nuclear bomb- want answered in the commit- |tee. The resolution had not been |passed when the day's debate ended at the 10 p.m. EDT ad- |journment. As esult, the issue will be sidetined" today as the house digs into a previously-sched- uled debate on a government money supply for June and July -- the spending authority it needs for that period, pending passage of the estimates. Mr. Pearson said the 24-mem- ber committee could look into defence policy--even make rec- ommendations on policy if it wished. But the resolution itself refers only to "matters relating to defence." Gordon Churchill, former Con-| John R; Matheson (L--Leeds) |servative defence minister,jasked whether the Conservative later complained that the reso-|government had ever volun- lution 'didn't specify policy. teered to make Canada's. de- essiiia a tos ter contended fence contributions to the North ear) | questions they said they will | that the former Conserv-|Atlantic alliance and North ate government wouldn't let)American Air Defence Com- any committee touch on policy;mand conventional only. invited Mr. Churchill to| Mr, Churchill; MP for Winni- amend the resolution to include|peg South Centre, said he policy. Mr. Churchill said he!couldn't reply because he didn't would consider it have sufficient information Carrying the weight for the Conservatives 'while Opposition|/Mr. Douglas as well as Soci |Leader Diefenbaker sat watch-| 'ing, Mr. Churchill said the U.8, * yer made a late-night appear- ance in the debate. ence {o conventional weapons. to welcome the defence commit- tee concept of dispensing infor- mation. four years were "'starved of real information," of three Conservative defence ing. ministers, is the 'most illumi- nating example" of the need for! information, abroad and said it would take just a few hours to equip nv- clear carriers in Canada with! warheads That was "absolute rubbish." |was not true that he had said made available without previ- ous agreement between the U.S and a Prodded by Mr, Churchill and) Mr al had not been achieved by the|ter replied, "and I wish Gredit Leader Robert Thomp-|Conservative government in}government had taken' my ad-/of interest than the broker son, Defence Minister Paul Hell'|four years of effort. | viee.". |charged. servative defence ministers, was the most "'illuminating ex- ample" of the need for the pro- posed parliamentary defence committee. Mr. Hellyer said Mr, Church. ill's government misinformed the Canadian public. He had claimed, in what was "'absolute rubbish," that Canada could get nuclear warheads from the United States in an emergency without a previous formald agreement. This was "an affront to the Canadian people." Mr. Churchill asked Mr. Hell- yer if he was aware that the Canadians in the last three to|Honest John missile can carry |a conventional warhead as well }as a nuclear one. Did he know He had found no reliable in-| that the CF-104 Starfighter can But he made no direct refer- Mr. Hellyer said he was glad formation available in opposi-|carry conventional bombs as tion. There were no hard facts| well as nuclear ones, with mod- on defence background, forcing] ifications?" him to go outside the country! Mr. Hellyer re plied that it ofr information. would not make any sense to use a highly complex and costly missile like the Honest John as a conventional weapon. As for the Starfighter, many modifications would be needed to make it a non-nuclear jcarrier and the aircraft would |be "virtually useless." Eric Winkler (PC -- Grey- in an emergency.|Bruce) 'asked Mr. .Hellyer if it He said Mr. Churchill, the last| Mr. Churchill had gone "These warheads can't be| While. ih opposition that Canaa Starfighters or with said| weapons. "Yes, that's true," the minis- the friendly Hellyer country,"' This "agreement too} To Stop Deportation mons announcement, Chan turned up at his lawyer's office in Vancouver and said he in- tended to surrender to im- migration authorities.) Although Mr, Favreau did not elaborate, it appeared that the government is prepared to give Chan and his family permanent residence in Canada as landed immigrants. FAMILY REMAINED Chan's wife and daughter Alice, now nine, were also' or- dered out of the country in the ofiginal deportation order, But when he disappeared the im- migration department allowed in bed but refused to. Raimondo Manzini, director : of L'Osservatore was ing in small towns in Ontario.| one of those called te the. ~ "I can't, disclose my benefac-|bedroom, Mint tors ..;.. Most of them were Chinese," he said. "T work t..odd jobs and stayed inside-most of the time in Ontario .. . I very seldom even wrote to my wife and I haven't seen my daughter since 1959, when I left," he said. Student Stabs Teacher With he men that the BEGAN BEFORE DAWN Although the Vatican office had earlier today said Pope had : @ tranquil i pa tae oa faa segho Mrs. Chan and the girl to re- main until he might be caught. Mrs. Chan has been working at the University of British Co- lumbia. : The family first applied to come to Canada from Hong Kong in 1950 but the applica- tion, which stated they wanted to remain permanently, was turned down. In 1958 the Chans went to Brussels and obtained a five- month visitors' permit to come to Canada. Three months after arrival Chan sought an extension of the permit and -was turned down. That started a long series of immigration hearings and ap- peals which finally ended with a deportation order, issued by then Immigration Minister El- Small Compass CLOEVERDALE, B.C, (CP)-- Seven school children fainted in a West Whalley high school Thursday when a student stabbed a 32-year-old teacher in the back with a compass. came critical immediately. ; Manzini said Mazzoni re- mained in the apartment and that the Pope, by 6:30 a.m. Rome here hry able to net mass celebrated in the stu wunstecece ekiae te ate next to the bedroom. Manzini ' _|Said the Pope also received com- : ce om pag Pope. still feeling pain, his Rome surgeon, Pietro Valdoni, was summoned to the Vatican. Valdoni has been called in, during every papal crisis, per- sonally supervising transfusions of blood ruhed from the Rome blood bank at the city' Poly- clinic Hospital, Manzini said Valdoni "ascer were holding a junior- school student in con- Inhalator trucks were called to revive -the students who fainted among the class of 36. Witnesses said' Pohn was walking toward the classroom door when attacked by the 17- year-old student. The teacher turned to face his attacker, then len Fairclough. Chan went into hiding. SAW 'URGENCY' Mr, Favreau said in the'Com- mons his move was influenced by: the "relative urgency" of getting the Chan family togeth- er again. In Vancouver, Chan met re- porters after being driven to his lawyer's office from his hiding place since last Monday -- the attic of a farmhouse in nearby Fraser Valley. Chan said he spent most of his 3% years of loneliness work- Metro Police Raids Find $250,000 Gems TORONTO (CP)--Police said stolen jewels worth $250,000 have been recovered by Metro detectives when they raided homes and offices here. Most of the jewels are be- lieved to have been stolen from wealthy Montreal residents. Nathan Kelgarman, 34, a mortgage broker, and Morris Freedman, 37, manager of a knitting company, both of Tor- onto, have been charged with possession of stolen goods. A few days ago, a. detective heard of a man trying to raise should not equip the RCAF with) nuctear| money on a piece of j¢welry worth $12,000 The man told the pawnbroker he wanted the money so he could reloan it at a higher rate tained an increased gravity in collapsed, and fell on the floor.|the Pope's condition. said he is confident he'll win his freedom in Canada in light of announcement by Immigta- tion Minister Favreau that he is. considering granting Chan WELDON CHAN (right) tells reporter Bob Porter of Vancouver Sun about his plans to come out of hiding after 3% years, The Chinese fugi- tive from an immigration de- * immigrant status. partment deportation order * CP r