Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Jun 1963, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, June 11, 1963 Plan To Fight Unemployment Has $500 New Home Bonus OTTAWA (CP)--The Liberal government announced Monday a multi-million-dollar package = to attack ong moblog ployment problem, inclu a novel $500 bonus Bea ye homes built during the heart of the winter, Labor ster MacEachen unw. the package in the Commons, flashed its contents but left the detailed look to later ---- and new legislation, listed nine points, saying some were new and admittin some were borrowed from ideas started under the previous gov- ernment: 1, Promotion of winter house $500 incentive pay- ment tly from the govern- ment to the "first purchaser or owner of a house" built substan- a between Dec. 1 and March This idea, he said, would be tried out next winter and then evaluated in the light of the ex- perience and the need of more winter jobs. TRIED FOR DETAILS MPs tried to get further de- tails during the Commons ques- tion period on this plan. Mr. MacEachen said in reply to Al- fred D, Hales (PC--Wellington South), the bonus would apply to a person who builds his own home during the winter months. Finance Minister Gordon told his predecessor. George Nowlan gi (PC -- Digby-Annapolis-Kings), that he could not say at the Plan Qu OTTAWA (CP)--The Liberal government's proposal to set up a new department of industry |was peppered with criticism in the Commons Monday. Conservative and Social Credit MPs questioned the need Murder, Suicide J Ruled At Sarnia (1% ¢ new department to co SARNIA (CP)--A. 4l-year-old| handled adequately in the trade woman was stabbed to death| and commerce department and Monday night and minutes later|in other government agencies. her estranged husband leaped| New Democrats welcomed 'the 200 feet to his death from the| move, but said they doubted the Bluewater International Bridge|new department would be given into the St. Clair River. ja strong enough hand to co-or- Police said it was a case of|dinate economic planning and murder and suicide. They iden-|implement policy as a super- tified the victims as Dushan| department over other agencies. Krasojevick, 49, a construction} Liberal backbenchers sat si- worker, and his wife, Kather-jlently on the government side ine, a murse's aide at Sarnialof the Commons as opposition General Hospital. |MPs voiced their doubts about Mrs. Krasojevick was stabbed|the usefulness of the new de- several times. with a hunting! partment which will come un- knife as the couple's daughter,|der the wing of Defence Pro- Helen, 6, looked on. 'duction Minister Drury. CMA To Review Medicare Plans present time whether the $500 will be taxable or non-taxable, 2. Extension of municipal win- ter works incentive program-- continuation of the multi-million- dollar program launched by the Conservatives under which the federal treasury will pay 50 per cent of the payroll costs of pro- jects undertaken in municipali- ties between Nov. 1 and April 30, with this share increased to 60 per cent in "designated areas." 3. Extra federal government New Department estioned Spokesmen for all opposition parties said they would reserve judgment until they see the de- |tails of the structure and pow- lers of the new department in |the legislation to be presented at the end of the present debate. WAS 49TH DAY Monday's sitting was th 49th day in the Liberals' 60 days of decision. It also heard: 1. Labor Minister MacEachen announce a nine-point employ- ment and manpower develop- ment program, a package plan aimed at reducing unemploy- ment, promoting technical training and curbing wintertime joblessness. 2. Fisheries Minister Robi- chaud warn that criticism of Canada's delegation to a confer- ence on a new North Pacific fishing treaty is undermining the efforts of the negotiating team to reach agreement with Japan and the United States. 3. State Secretary Pickersgill announce the composite of the 24-member Commons commit- tee on defence, made up of 12 Liberals, eight Conservatives, two Social Crediters and two New Democrats. Former Con- servative defence minister Douglas Harkness, who resigned es Oh ate as winter construction--a speed-up] > © on some government projects to concentrate the work in the high-jobless months of the win- ter. : FEDERAL AID. INCREASED 4. Training of the unemployed --a jump in the federal govern- ment's contribution to the prov- inces for the cost of training unemployed persons, raising the federal share to 90 per cent from |75 per cent. 5. Training employed workers| --an increase to 75 per cent from 50 per cent in the federal grant to the provinces for train- ing in industry, covering basic]: training, apprenticeship and re- training for workers displaced by technological change. 6. Re-employment of older workers--a new program, to be unveiled later, aimed at encour- aging older, chronically-unem- ployed workers to find jobs. 7. Capital assistance for tech- nical training facilities--an ex- tension of the 75-per-cent federal contribution to the provinces for) building technical and voca-) By RELMAN MORIN TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP)-- Governor George Cam Wallace, ready for a defiant face-to-face encounter with the federal gov- ernment, comes to the climax today of his stubborn struggle to block two Negro students from enrolling at the University of Alabama. To the last, he was jut-jawed with defiance. Before retiring Monday night, he told reporters he would stand in the doorway today to prevent the two students, Vivian Malone and James Hood, from register- ing. Yostice department officials Weaver and U.S. Marshall Pey- gave no indication of their plan to bring Miss Malone and Hood onto the campus. They said U.S, District Attorney Macon L. Weaver and U.S, Marshall Pey- ton Norville Jr., had been as- signed té escort the students to the door. Weaver and Norville both are graduates of the university. Nicholas Katzenbach, deputy | Wallace rebuffed a personal appeal from President Kennedy, who wired the governor: "I... urgently ask you to consider the consequences to your state and its fine university if you pl 'n setting an example of defiant conduct and urge you instead to leave these matters in the courts of law where they be- long." ey In reply, Wallace sent the president this telegram: "My presence here guaran- tees peace. This is the opinion of all here familiar with the facts, including the legislature of Alabama and the president of the University of Alabama." The university board of trus- Intemational Typesetting Test Held NEW YORK (AP)--An Inter-| U.S. attorney-general, also was assigned to go with them, ot continental test of automatic) typesetting by computer took! TORONTO (CP)--The Cana-, dian Medical Association plans} to review its official attitude to-| Discussion of attitudes and |over the nuclear arms contro- versy, was not nominated to the tional training schools, to be continued up to a specific ceil-| ing for each province, then re-| ie verting to 50 per cent. The ceil-| British: actress Caron Gard- ings were not announced, | ner breezes past Blackpool, PLAN NEW SERVICE England's famed tower, on a 8. Technological change and| new scooter. Fully automatic BREEZY BRITISH BEAUTY no clutch. It was one of the machines on show at the Inter- national Motor Cycle Show, --(CP Wirephoto from British information Services) manpower development--a new) the scooter has no gears and manpower consultative service} ---------- 4 to be established in the depart-| ment of labor to develop an em-| ployment security program,| provide financial help to em-| ployers and unions for automa-| tion-era research, and aid em-| ployers and provinces to help! workers and their dependents) displaced by industrial change.| 9, Strengthening personnel re-| TORONTO (CP)--The board sources -- bolstering the staff\of governors of the Toronto and streamlining the role in the|stock Exchange discriminated over-all manpower program of | against Wilfred Posluns in spite the national employment -sery-|of his disclosure to them of his ice and various branches of the/financial interests, @ Toronto federal labor department. _ __|lawyer said Monday in Supreme Court. 4-Year Term: E, A. Goodman, Mr, Posiuns'| the board that in dismissing Mr. Posluns as a director and share- Lawyer Raps TSE In Posluns Case who knew that this spread was being taken,' said Mr. Willis- ton. Mr. Goodman said the board) knew Mr. Posluns had not been) aware of the spread taken against Lido by Daly. "The issue as I saw it was not what Mr. Robb had done; it was that Mr. Posluns had done nothing wrong." He said he told the board its jplace Monday between Europe Firefighters jand the United States, However, |plans to transmit the signals by End Service In Grantham ithe satellite Relay I were | changed because of antenna dif- ST, CATHARINES (CP)--The services of a volunteer firefight- ing group will end at the end of the year. A letter from the Grantham Volunteer Firemen's Association said their services had been re- quested less and less _ since Grantham Township amalgam- ated with St, Catharine in 1961. Paid firemen were manning the substations, : R. C. Balcombe, district chief of the volunteers, said it would be in the best interests of all concerned if fully paid men manned the department and carried out the duties. Alderman Robert Johnston said the volunteer fire services |saved the city more than §$100,- principles formed part of a day- solicitor in appearances before Will Stud holder of R. A. Daly, but taking|@¢tions against his client were jnot justified and it did not have long session of the 180-member wards prepaid medical care in| council devoted chiefly to a re- committee by his party. Liberal members include John the face of evidence that the/ view of the Saskatchewan medi- public considers the doctors too rigid on the issue. | Members of the CMA's gen- eral council approved the estab-| lishment of a special study com-| mittee on principles but de- clined to predict outside the closed meeting Monday what form any changes in- policy might take, Although the last CMA state- ment on medical care policy was published only three years ago, the doctors decided that the doctor - government fight over Sa = send ee care plans for limit repai health service elsewhere Mraltest to the need for a clearer state- ment of our philosophy and at- titude," Fourteen points in the 1960 cal care program and discussion | of legislation in Alberta and On-| tario to set up partial medical] care coverage through private! R. Matheson (Leeds), W. H. Me- Millan (Welland), and Robert Temple (Hastings South), Progressive Conservatives: in- cludes Heber Smith (Simcoe North). no action against another Daly director, guilty of impropriety,|the power to take such actions. |000 a year. | Meanwhile, firemen painting their hall have caught the at- the board, said he indicated to Law Books the board had discriminated) The TSE bases its defence on/tention of Richard Burke, busi- against his client. Mr. Goodman was chief wit- ness in a $2,100,000 non-jury suit for damages against the TSE CHATHAM (CP)--Donald Jo-| seph Smith, 24, of Tilbury, 15 miles southwest of here, was |sentenced Monday to four years a denial of all allegations and|jess agent for Local 407 of the | asks dismissal of the action with|protherhood of Painters, Dec- costs. orators and Paperhangers The case goes into its 11th (CLC). insurance plans, | se turne today to de-| The Alberta and Ontario plans|pate on the ihn Pong "appear to be consonant with|posal to establish a municipal our policies of aid to the needy|loan board to provide low-cost and to the encouragement of|financial assistance to munici- multiple carriers of medical] palities for public projects. services insurance (the insur-| After that, the debate resumes ers),"' the council decided. jon the department of industry. Church Discusses Laws On Divorce launched by Mr. Posluns.|day today. George Gardiner, chairman of} --------- jthe exchange's board of gover-) HAS WIDE REPERTOIRE mars, 1 Bins a Getpngany MONTREAL (CP) -- Greek Mr. Goodman stated that aa counsel for the exchange, Allan songstress Beba_ Kiriakidoy Graydon, had said earlier while sings in 13 languages including ih Age all goad ,aere fore "hillbilly American."' An enter. mothing illegal, the board had a/;,; i 7 Hebi th inpoee & Mater stand-| nos gs aie she was nine, Beba ard of conduct. 8 ifferent ensembles for a aie the stage. She has made Mont- COULDN'T BE HIGHER |ral'a temporary home and has "I told him there could be no|been singing in a local Greek Smith was arrested in Van-jhigher standard than the full) restaurant as part of a north couver nine weeks ago when| disclosure made by Mr. Posluas) American tour. for conspiracy to possess stolen car parts. He said he plans to spend his time in Kingston Penitentiary| continuing to study iaw. Smith, also given two-year concurrent. sentences for each of eight other offences, was de- scribed by his counsel, John Bowles, as intelligent, able and personable. Mr. Bowles said Smith reads law books more diligently. than many Jawyers. Firemen are hired to fight fires, not to paint, Mr, Burke said in a letter to city council, read Monday night. The paint job should be given on tende- to {union painters, | Mayor Buchanan said he has | | ficulties at Goonhilly Downs, England. Instead, the signals carrying an Associated Press Story from London were relayed to the United States by cable to a com- puter at Camden, N.J., which changed them to automatic typesetting signals. In this pro- cess the computer adjusted margins and edited the story In small and capital letters. After passing through the computer, the signals were re- layed instantly to Chicago, where the story was set into type at the production managers conference of the American Newspaper Publishers Associa- tion. Since the experimental story --perforated in tape in advance of the test--told of its being transmitted by satellite, plans were abandoned to send it on AP's automatic typesetting cir- cuits in the United States after it moved by cable. Similar stories were sent from ANPA Chicago meeting to the Manc he ster Guardian, Edin. burgh Scotsman and Glasgow Herald in Great Britain. These jalso moved by cable. They were passed through the com- puter at Camden for conversion from teletype to automatic type- setting signals before being re- layed abroad. BOMB INQUEST jheard no complaints from the \firemen and legal advisers told him the city was within its rights, Mr. Burke claimed the city was contravening the In dustrial Standards Act, The firemen receive no extra pay and all the work is done on regular shifts. police were investigating the|of his interest in Lido Invest-| - activities of a suspected inter-;ments and his position with) NAMES GIVEN MONTREAL (CP) -- Fol- lowing are the names, ages and occupations of the 15 per- sons held as material wit- nesses in the bomb death of army night watchman Wil- fred Vincent O'Neill: In Blocking Negroes tees backed Wallace. After donner meeting with him, ¢ board adopted a resoluti which said: ' "The board of trustees , |. hereby declares that the sa presence of Governor Walla with the state law enforcement: officers is desirable under they circumstances to preserve peace and order... ." 3 Tuscaloosa was like an armed. camp as the climactic moment~ approacaed. The atmosphere--* despite appeals from all sides. for law and order--was electric? with anxiety. tts The university campus was= tightly sealed, a State troopers manned. wooden barricades; they® checked credentials of everyone. who approached and kept ar sharp eye on groups that forme n earby. Col, Albert Lingo, state pu lic safety director, said arre: had reached 22 up to the eve of the arrival of the two Negro students, 'Part Of Cable | -- Between US., | England BEACH HAVEN, N.J. (AP) The U.S, end of the first trans- atlantic telephone cable de signed to connect the United States directly with England was installed Sunday. The cable was floated ashore on. ballasts from the British ca- ble-laying ship Alert, anchored ~ a mile off shore, and spliced into an underground cable. i The ship headed back toward England Monday, to lay down | 600 miles of cable before the © American Telephone and Tele graph Company's cable ship Long Lines takes over, During the summer, the Lo Lines will put down about 3, miles of cables across the ocean and connect with another ter- minal cable carried out from the English coast. The $47,000,000 cable is scheduled for service fall, It will be able to car: 128 simultaneous conversati: more than triple the capacity of the first transatlantic tele phone cable opened for service in 1956 between Scotland and. Newfoundland, r iss Reece SE RE ab ag Two Prisoners Back In Custody SUDBURY (CP)~Two oners who escaped from wash industrial farm last w are back in custody, John William Neilson, 23, of © Sarnia was recaptured Mon # on Burwash property. Gordon" Gerald Brager, 32, of Niagara Falls, Ont., was tecaptured > about five miles south of Bur- |) wash, ' Neilson, admitted to Burwash -- national car theft ring. IR, A, Daly." Georges Schoeters, 33, Bel- |in March, was serving an 18- policy statement laid down the) TORONTO (CP)--A national| conditions under which the CMA| health service, nuclear weap-| The movement is "a doctrin- aire anti-communism assuming He has been in jail here since) _INTERP The Lido business was a part-| RETING THE NEWS would support any medicare/ons, the threat of rightist pro-|that anyone working for peace, and ultimately pleaded guilty to! nership formed in 1958 between gium-born naturalized Cana- dian, and economics student at the University of Montreal, month term on three charges ; of breaking and entering and theft after convictions at Sar- a total of nine charges. r, Morton Shulman and Mr, nia plan. CMA requirements in-|paganda and Canada's divorce|for an end to the cold war, for|@ t Crown Attorney Blake Ward) posjuns. It involved put and call cluded provision for doctors to}|aws came under discussion|world government and interna- Canada's largest French-lan- work outside the plan and to de-|Monday at the 89th general as-| tional law, termine how they would be paid} for their services. SHOWS FLEXIBILITY Dr. T. J. Quinton of Shee- brooke, Que., chairman of the! CMA executive committee, said| after Monday's session that "the| public sometimes feels we are) rigid" towards medical care proposals. Appointment of the! study committee under Dr.,| K. R. Trueman of Winnipeg in- dicates the desire of the medical profession' to be flexible, Dr. Quinton suggested. 15-Month Sentence. On Escape Charge | SUDBURY (CP) Struke, alias James Strike, 21,| of Guelph was sentenced Mon-| day to 15-months in Kingston| Penitentiary on charges of es-| caping custody and theft. Struke was charged with es- | sembly of the Church in Canada. "While we should not suggest) that the church commit itself) to any specific health service, | we believe that in principle a} national health service is in har-| mony with the spirit of the gos- pel of Jesus Christ,' said Rev.! William Lawson of Windsor, Ont., chairman of the board of| evangelism and social action. | A report recommended the as- sembly recognize the need for "a complete plan of mdical care... providing due recogni-! tion is given to the rights and) best interests of the medical) Presbyterian gr for social and eco- nomic justice beyond the status quo, must be a 'fellow traveller' for communism,"" Overseas Aid Curb Seen By Jewett OTTAWA (CP)--Pauline Jew- ett, former Carleton University political scientist, said Monday further government aid to pri- Arnold, 4" profession and the plan _is|vately - financed organizations worked out in consultation within the overseas aid field is un-| the recognized medical associa- likely at this time, | fee |. Miss Jewett, Liberal MP for| It stated every person has a Northumberland, told the Com- right to adequate medical care|mons she thought that the gov- because every person has beenjernment, while sympathetic to created in the image of God. the objectives of these organi- said an undetermined number | options and when Mr: Posluns of innocent persons were out| moved to the Daly firm in 1960 more than $2,000 through pur-/he took the Lido account with chases of cars which were/pim. seized by the police since the} Counsel for Mr. Posluns, Wal- investigation began in mid-Feb-|ter Williston, said the Daly di- ruary. ; rectors knew he was a partner Smith's sentencing did notiin Lido and "that was one of leomclude the investigation|the reasons they wanted him." jwhich has brought more than! During a Toronto Stock Ex- |100 witnesses from Ontario,| -hange investigation of the Daly|ban talks to take place in Mos- Michigan and New York state/firm in 1961 in connection with}CoWw next month -- virtually in |to Chatham. the sale of options, a company|the shadow of crucial Soviet | Two other men have chosen | employee discovered that Rob-|bargaining with Communist }county court trials for charges| or Robb, a vice-president of the|Chna -- may prove a turning jof possession of stolen Car/tirm jn charge of stock sales,|point in Soviet relations with the parts. |had charged a Peterborough| West. They are Leo Dupuis, 45, of! druggist commissicon-on the saic| Evidence has piled up in re- of options. He then resold the|cent months that Soviet Pre- ] ¢ options in New York at a profit.|mier Khrushchev is reluctant Tilbury. Dupuis is proprietor of} to make deals with the Western an auto body. shop where bothh ONLY ONE KNEW powers until he has cleaned up Smith and Rivait were once) "'It is clear that Mr. Robbjthe ali - important problem of employed. |was the only director at Daly's|the Soviet Union's future with tea = oe ~ ithe Mao Tse-tung regime. Possible By HAROLD MORRISON |Canadian Press Staff Writer The. Kremlin's agreement to} allow high - level nuclear test! Tilbury, and Clifford Rivait, 25 of Wheatley, 10 miles south of The conclusion reached in United States diplomatic quar- Test-Ban Talk |unilateral ban on nuclear test- ASKS NUCLEAR BAN The assembly called for an in- caping from Burwash Industrial ternational ban on nuclear war-| Farm near here March 22 and/fare, but rejected recommenda-| also with stealing clothing val-|tions that it urge more positive ued over $50, He pleaded not! action. | guilty to both charges. Mr. Lawson asked the as-| He was serv.ng 12 months def-|sembly not to take more defin-| inite and six months indefinite|ite action because his board and for a conviction of assault oc-|the last two general assemblies casioning bodily harm at Cooks-|have been split on the disarma- ville, Ont., near Toronto, March| ment issue. 14, 1962. The 15-month sentence) The board also warned imposed Monday will be con-|against increased rightwing ac- secutive. \tivity in Canada. WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy Periods, Cool Wednesday | | | Forecasts issued by the Tor-|ami, Algoma, Cochrane, west-| VICTORIA (CP)--Miss Verna| similar decision. onto weather office at 5 a.m.jern James Bay: Cloudy and Synopsis: Cold air covers alljcool today with light rain this|the magistrate and a $35 fine| Party Leader T. C. Douglas said \zations, would place priority on| restoring the Canadian contri-| bution to the Colombo plan and; enhancing existing federal aid programs, However, she believed it would become a matter of in-| creasing importance to the gov- ernment whether it should give help to other organizations. The} question would come up when| various voluntary agencies meet| hére next week to assess Cana-| {dian participation in social de-| Privately resolved also to give velopment abroad. Miss Jewett was speaking on a private member's motion that the government consider giving financial support to Canadian University Service Overseas, an organization which sends young! university graduates to fill re- quests for assistance in various types of projects in less-devel- oped countries. | | |New Democrats--while not say-| HAD HONEST FACE E. Elenko drew a smile from| Liberals Backed OTTAWA (CP) -- An opposi- tion MP has pledged publicly not to vote to overthrow tiie mi- nority government but top offi- cials of his party cast doubt on a report that four others are| the Liberals voting support on non-confidence motions Frank Howard (NDP-- Skeena) said in a report to his constituents that 'I do not in- tend to participate in moving or voting for, any so-called want |of confidence motions." | "This course of action is to japply during the next two ses- sions .of this Parliament." An informant said four other| |ing so publicly--have made a However, New Democratic of the province excepting 'the| morning. Partly cloudy and con- for careless driving. She ex-|in Edmonton that the report] Windsor area where its progresstinuing cool tonight and Wed-| plained she caught the bumper) was "absurd on the face of it."| has been halted temporarily by|nesday. Winds north to north-| an eastward moving disturb-\¢ast 15 to 20 today becoming| towed it for a block. The magis.|as a group in the House and ofa small car and unknowingly| He said NDP members will act| By NDP Member | Liberals hold 129 of the Com- mons' 265 seats, the Conserva- tives 95, Social Credit 23 and New Democrats 17, There is one lindependent Social Credit MP, to the three-power nuclear talks Dr. Guy Marcoux. The question of pledging sup- port to the minority government for a period of time was dis-/ cussed in the New Democratic caucus of MPs after which Mr. Douglas stated the official posi- tion--no commitments to the Liberals but give them a chance to bring down good legislation. New Democratic whip Stan- ley Knowles said "anything be- yond Mr. Howard's published Statement is without foundation. The party has made no commitment."" Mr, Howard, absent from the {early part of the session when|American view is to engage the the government survived two votes of confidence, said in a column published June 4 in the Prince Rupert, B.C., News that ance. Overcast skies cover the) light tonight and Wednesday. \trate said she had an honest any suggestions of a pledge| MPs "must stay here in an at- ters was that Khrushchev wants \first of all to settle bis differ- ences with China in talks early next month. that can have an important bearing on war and peace, on the question of whether the Kremlin will take a softer or more firm attitude |towards the West. | Now Khrushchev has agreed --probably on the deputy min- lister level -- which likely will |take place immediately after |the Soviet - Chinese meeting. Without commiting him- \self, Khrushchev appears to |want a door left open so that |he could make some dramatic |move towards the West in case \the debate with China proves |hopeless. WANTS VOICE HEARD At the same time, the United States is anxious to have its voice heard in the Kremlin at the time the crucial Soviet-Chi- nese argument is going on, The |Russians in conversation on ev- Pivot ing in the atmosphere as long as Other countries also do so. Khrushchev to maintain an un- inspected moratorium on atmos- pheric testing, though it still leaves open the continuation of underground explosions. In the past Khrushchev re- jected a _ partial agreement, maintaining there must be a complete ban based on the So- viet offer of three onsite inspec- tions. of Soviet territory annu- ally to check against suspicious explosions, FALLOUT INCREASING Kennedy's unilateral ban may therefore not impress the Krem- lin though it may impress large parts of the world worried over the continued danger of increas- This in effect is a challenge to a guage university; His wife, Jeanne, 25, an X- ray technician; Jacques Giroux, 19, student; Pierre Schneider, 19, an of- fice boy with the CBC; Alain Brouillard, 18, dent; Francois Gagnon, 19, stu- ent; Gabriel Hudon, 20, draughts- man; Roger Tetreault, 22, umem- ployed reporter. formerly with The Gazette and The Cana- dian Press; Richard Bizier, 20, student; Eugenio Pilote, 20, proof- reader at the daily Montreal Le Devoir; Mario Bachand, 20, a stu- dent; / Gilles Pruneau, 19, a clerk; Yves Labonte, 18, clerk; Raymond Villeneuve, 19, student; Denis Lamoureux, 20, stu- dent. Brouillard testified at an in- quest into O'Neill's death that members of Le Frent de Lib- stu- ing fallout, The Kennedy proposal repre-) sents a shift of his test-and-talk said he would not offer an un-| inspected moratorium. | There are indications he is) prepared to make other conces- sions, with the belief a nuclear test ban agreement can lead to settlement of other cold war is- sues, Kennedy had demanded seven on-site inspections annually, He may take less if he can get Khrushchev to arrange satisfac- tory procedures where interna- tional teams would be unham- pered in their investigation of suspicious areas. And so long as the big nuclear powers keep talking, there is less likelihood of more nuclear explosions. eration Quebecois used pseu- donyms, He said he was known as Charlot, Schoeters and Villeneuve as Vincent. Discovered Snake Not Poisonous ANGUS, Ont. (CP)--A snake killed near here Saturday and first believed to be a poisonous Massasauga rattlesnake has been identified as a milk snake. The identification was made by Frederick Marshall of Ever- Brager was serving 12 months © for possession of stolen prope, | erty, false pretence and other ~ charges. He was admitted to © the reformatory May 9 after be-, -- ing convicted at Niagara Falls, Rental Service Color Bar ComplaintSeen > TORONTO (CP)--Dr, Daniel Hill, director of the Ontario government's human rights commission, said Monday he has received a formal com- | plaint of color discrimination | against a Chatham area boat © rental service. Dr. Hill said he will try to" settle the charge through con- © ciliation before ordering a pub- lic hearing into the complaints against. Mitchells Bay Sports- -- men's Club, on Lake St. Clair, 14 miles west of Chatham, Alan Borovoy, executive sec- retary of the Cntario. Labor |policy a year ago. At that time,| gs Patrice, Hudon as Roger |Committee for Human Rights, jrecalling that Russia broke a} |previous moratorium, Kennedy) said Sunday that two Chatham Negroes were refused service Saturday by the owner of the club, Leo Loudenslager. Dr, Hill said he will order a public. inquiry if Mr. Louden- slager is not cleared in the pri- vate meetings which the com- mission will try to arrange, or if Mr. Loudenslager does not ~ agree to adopt a policy of non- discrimination. Mr. Loudenslager has denied the charges. '7 * ® ett, an Ontario department of lands and forests officer. Police in Essa Township and) Frank Dunn, who killed the 18- inch snake on his property on the Nottawasaga River, had identified the reptile as a Mas- sasauga. jery possible front. Agreement to hold the nuclear talks in Moscow is therefore of some} advantage to the West. from five of the members «4jg| tempt to straighten out some of| Kennedy has added an extra} | SHORGAS HEATING & entire Great Lakes area, Forecast Temperatures Windsor, London, Hamilton,,Low tonight, High Wednesday Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni-| Windsor seribesecs 65 agara, Lake Ontario, Lake Hu-|St, Thomas.. 65 ron, Georgian Bay, Haliburton: |London ..... 65 | Cloudy and coo] today with|Kitchener ... 65 chance of a few light showers.|Mount Forest. 60 Partial clearing tonight. Sunny Wingham ... 60 with cloudy periods and contin Hamilton ... 65 uing cool Wednesday. Winds st, Catharines. 60 northerly 10 to 20. |Toronto .. 63 North Bay, Sudbury, Timag-|Peterboroug' 65 | face and he believed her. Trenton seocccccese Killaloe ..ccccccecs Muskoka .sesseses North Bay... 45 40 40 | 40 50 | 40 35 40 35 30 35 ( Kapuskasing ..... White River.....0. Moosonee ...+eee08 | APPLIANCES the. problems confronting this|thrust with a reversal of his| just somebody's pipe dream."| | Deputy Leader Douglas Fisher| Country and the people who are| branded the report "completely|-" " | haywire, silly speculation and'f insupportable." ENSURES MAJORITY The effect of five opposition MPs casting their votes with the Liberals on a non-confidence motion would be to ensure the} government of a majority. The! CLEAN YOUR FURNACE "TODAY FREE TO CUSTOMERS CALL PERRY 723-2442 DAY OR NIGHT 1962 policy, announcing the} United States will maintain a GOOD FOOD BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH Breaktast, Lunch, Dinner .M. Hotel Lancaster Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Ges Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. 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