Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Aug 1963, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY 'A wife has the last word in a dispute - hubby's next word starts a brand new one. She Oshawa Times WEATHER cloudiness with REPORT a few showers and much the same temperature Wednesday. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1963 Authorized es Second Class Mall Ottawa and for payment Pgs fissinnk in Cash. EIGHTEEN PAGES VOL, 92--NO. 201 seenseseae DAVE FELLIN SHOWN IN HOSPITAL Viet Nam Troops Told To Shoot Into Crowds SAIGON -- U.S Ambassador, Brig. - Gen, Ton That Dinh,| In Washingtpn, the state de- Henry Cabot Lodge met with/Saigon's military governor,|partment said Vietnamese mil- South Viet Nam's security boss| moved to prevent mass upris-|jtary leaders had no warning of today after the government,|ings. He ordered security forces! the crackdown. fearing further uprisings, or-jto shoot into "'any group of; In absolving the military, dered troops to shoot into any|troublemakers who violate the} Washington appeared to be plac- illegal gatherings. state of martial law im-|ing the blame on Diem or his Lodge conferred with Ngo|posed Wednesday. Government) prother, Nhu. Dinh Nhu, head of the secret| spokesmen said the military) Washington observers said police and brother of President) was acting under orders from)y.s. strategy appeared to be Ngo Dinh Diem, for more than/ Diem. counting more on friendly mil- two hours, They met at Nhu's} Clearly referring to. the ar-jitary leaders to press the war est, rest of 3,000 university students/against Communist guerrillas * The mew ambassador pre-jas they gathered Sunday for ajar' 'ess on the 'om regime sented his credentials Monday| demonstration, Gen. Dinh asked) .u. it mernds {| w.ys or is to Diem and conferred twice|parents to advise their children| replaced, with the president. He carried|"not to indulge in any illegal] Aqministration sources in a note from President Kennedy|action which may bring about) weshington suggested they hope outlining views of the Vietna-'disastrous consequences." Diem will toss out Nhu and mese crisis, He also banned labor strikes|Nhu's anti-Buddhist wife. The and appealed to the capital's|Nhus are regarded as the force | 2,000,000 people "to remain calm/behind the tough action against LiberalsMay 4 c= seta" University of Saigon faculty | branches in the city were sealed Seek To Shed loft by South Vietnamese troops. Anti-aircraft batteries remained jaround the presidential palace Nuclear Role and at key points in Saigon, ap- parently to guard against any OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada) signed a nuclear custody-and-| possible air fofce revolt, t with the/S2d hundreds of the students) contro} agreement with the), expected to be drafted into! United States less than tWOl the army. e worst seo, bit yA yer eal This, the sources said, was ready indications the fede tha peeramenta way 1 tak: government wants to shed peg a oe a ie cee oe nuclear stow oe "| growing student dissent against! ey pone the crackdown on Buddhists. | Informed sources The sources said the govern- these signposts: ment had contemplated releas:| 1, External Martin has dealt three recent speeches with the| need for more adequate prepar-|dent unrest. ations for United Nations peace-| police and soldiers broke into keeping operations. He has in-|nagodas and arrested hundreds dicated that such UN duties of monks and nuns last Wednes:| may be Canada's major mili-\day in an attempt to halt dem- tary role in future 2. Maj.-Gen, Jean Victor Al-|ment of Diem, a Roman Catho- lard will return from Europe in) }ic, i point to Usually reliable sources here) ~~ lopponents of Diem. The entire diplomatic staff of South Wet Nam's embassy in Washington. resigned Monday to protest against and students." sador to the United States: quit) "repressive measures Buddhists, professors Diem's ambas- n protest last week. TWO MINERS RELEASED ATE OF 3RD UNKNOWN WASHINGTON (AP) -- For. mer president Dwight D. Eisen- hower has halted Senate spon- sors of the limited nuclear test ban treaty with a call for an anti-aggression reservation to the pact. But Democratic leaders got immediate Republican help in an effort 'to comply with Eisen- hower's proposal without having to renegotiate cow-signed treaty. Eisenhower wants the United States to reserve the right use nuclear weapons to halt any aggression involving its vital in- terests. | He endorsed the treaty Mon- iday in a letter to Senator J. W. Fulbright (Dm,. Ark.) chair- man of the Senate foreign rela- tions committee. But the for- mer president said he had one reservation in mind: "The reservation that I sug- gest would provide that in the event of any armed aggression endangering a vital interest of \the United States this nation 2 Miners Freed After 5 Hours VIRGINIATOWN, Ont, (CP) Rescuers working throughout the night early today freed two miners trapped for five hours 3,00 feet down the Kerr-Addison gold mine here under tons of fine rock. One other miner was rescued during the might. Another was thrown clear as wall and ceiling timbers in tunnels caved in. Stanley Pieluck, of nearby Kearns, amd J. R. Paul, of Lar- der Lake, east of here, were resting in hosital today. They have suspected spinal injuries, bruises and cuts. Pieluck was buried deep and was freed more than an hour jafter Paul. Plea For Dignity On Rights March WASHINGTON (AP) -- Lead- Affairs Ministerjing many arrested . Buddhist) ers continue to pledge calm and in at least)monks and nuns but the plans dignity for their massive. civil were postponed because of stu-| richts. march on Washington | Wednesday, But apprehension still hung in the air -- about transportation, about the uncertainty of num- i ' jber, about an unexpected spark jonstrations against the govern-'of violence. The railroad unions have set reported that about 2,000 of the persons around the country who had planned to join in the dem- onstration were having financial difficulties and would not be able to come to the. capital. Police meanwhile, prepared to cope with the massive crowds. Planes, buses and cars would stream into the city for the march. Crowd estimates the Mos-'« Ike Plea Halts Test-Ban Talk | would be the sole judge of the kind and type of weaponry and | equipment it would employ as | well as the timing of their use." | Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana told lreporters that this proposal al- jready is "inherent in the \treaty." | Mansfield said that if it were adopted as a formal resolution it could well kill the. treaty because it would be subject to |negotiation."" to : Roads Needed ' Engineers Told!' (CP)--The presi-||_ TORONTO dent of. the Automotive Safety |Foundation says double-decked| | jroads may be one answer to| > ithe traffic blem in cities, J. O. Maton of Washington| : |told the annual convention of the lInstitute of Traffic Engineers] § Monday that parallel freeways and automated traffic signals are other possible solutions. He claimed that by the year 2000 about 80 per cent of Amer- icans will be city-dwellers com- pared with 70 per cent now. And the average U.S. family will be living at a $13,000-a-year level compared with the present $6, 1250, Mr, Mattson said cities are spreading themselves thinner-- growing sideways while decreas- ng in density. Between 1950 and }1960, urban territory in the United States doubled in area while the urban population grew by only a third in the same pe- riod. Recent studies showed each city-dweller travels an average of seven miles a day, Mr, Matt- son said. "Total travel will double be- jtween now and 1980 and it may ~| double again by the year 2,000." He suggested that although more cities may create rapid- transit systems, a widespread and efficient highway network will be needed for urban and inter - urban transportation to: provide safety as well as speed. Mr. Mattson referred to stu- dies which showed that freeways are twice as safe as conven- tional roads in terms of fatal accidents and five times as safe in total accidents, Earlier E, Royden Colter, city manager in Windsor, Ont., told jthe convention that cities may have to ban downtown parking in order to avoid strangling in their own automobile traffic. Jurisdictional red tape, lack of 'Double Decked | i Pair In Hospital After Rescue HAZLETON, Pa. (AP)--Jok- ng and singing all the way, Henry Throne and David Fel- lin were lifted safely to the sur- face today from more than 300 feet underground where a mine cave-in trapped. them 14 days ago. The two were taken to hospi- tal after being hoisted in safety harness up an 18-inch. escape hole drilled to the shaft where they were confined. The rescue climaxed a drama that caught world-wide atten- tion; a drama mixed with faith, courage, frustrations and the heart-warming stream of good humor that flowed constantly from Throne, 28, and Fellin, 58. But the joy' was tempered with concern for the third trapped miner, Louis Bova, 42, who was last heard from a week ago today. He was sep- arated from them by 25 feet of debris, and four efforts to drill a small life-line hole to him-- like the one which reached Throne and Fellin--have been unsuccessful, 2:07 a.m., a 17-minute trip he 2nd Wor MONTREAL (CP)--The sec- ond - in - command of the 1967 Montreal world's fair relin- quished his post Monday, four days after the resignation of his boss, Commissioner - General Paul Bienvenu. Deputy Commissioner Cecil F. Carsley, 51, said at a press con- ference he was quitting because "the strains and challenges have been greater than I had anticipated." Both Montreal industrialists were appointed last January by the former Progressive Con- servative government to head the Canadian World Exhibition Corporation. Both tendered their resigna- tions July 8 in separate letters to Prime Minister Pearson. In Charlottetown, Mr. Pear- son indicated successors will be named by the end of next week. MUST RESIGN Mr. Carsley, president of Lion Vinegar Company Limited, said the prime minister had asked Official Resigns a country-wide strike for mid- inight Wednesday night if new work rules go into effect then. iIt is a strike that could leave jthousands of weary demonstrat- 'October to study possible organ-| izationa] changes in the army. 3. The militia is playing down Cambodia Breaks him to continue as deputy com- missioner, "I made an appre- money and lack of leadership hamper 'traffic planning, he said, : Hans' Blumenfeld, Toronto planning consultant, told dele- range from 100,000 to 250,000. A. Philip Randolph, president} of the Brotherhood of Railway Sleeping Car Porters and the its nuclear civil defence role and 5. Viet Nam Tie re-emphasizing training in con ventional arms. PHNOM PENH, Cambodia) 4. The defence department is looking into the possibility of a conventional role for some of the RCAF CF-1..4 nuclear bomb- ers in Europe. These planes now are eq ved for nuclear operations only. relations with South Viet Nam dent Ngo Dinh Diem. ;ors | Washington. Congress was set today to) (AP) -- Cambodia today an-|cont nounced it is breaking political) would prevent the strike, stranded and milling in inue work on legislation that The uncertainty about num- director of the march, told the |National Press Club Monday |"we have taken the utmost pre- caution to see that violence will Meee occur." | But, he added: "I will not in protest against the "police-/bers was accented early today|stand here and tell you I know backed dictatorship" of Presi-,when a spokesman for the|there will be no violence. Hu- Imarch headquarters, Sy Posner,'man beings are fallible." gates that calculating machines, given the task of choosing be- tween three different transpor- tation plans for Toronto, had chosen the plan that combined both highway building and ra- pid - transit extension, rather than a plan that heavily stressed either transit or roads. 5. There is no present inten- tion of acquiring more types of nuclear weapons carriers be-| yond the four now in service; } DESPITE PROVINCIAL ISSUE the CF-104, Voodoo jet intercep-! tor, Bomarc anti - aircraft mis-/ sile and Honest John artillery) rocket. Current equipment plans deal with conventional weapons. "c= Pension Plan Unchanged vision in Europe will be part of the new inter - allied nuclear force, Canadians wil! not parti- i selecti ssign- z ' oe ee es schedule with its contribu-'t 7. All government officials} from Prime Minister Pearson OTTAWA (CP) -- The federal |30 was regarded in some quar-jand 70. The old age government intends to go ahead|ters as reason for putting offi/paid to all-at age 70 and as-|ported to have led the federal he federal - provincial confer- tory retirement pensions plan ence. despite the fact two provincial) Introducing the pensions plan|eral pension is | sistance payments at age 65 are is and provincial govern- down have been reticent about|S@neral elections are being heldjin the Commons before the|ments. discussing the question of nu- clear warheads for the two U.S. bases at Harmon Field, Nfid., and Goose Bay, Labrador. Ne- gotiations undertaken by the former Conservative govern- ment on this question have not been resumed by the Liberals. CITY EMERGENCY vincial issue. Monday night that after -- ering a postponement until earl¥| PHONE NUMBERS of the provinces. Part of the plan includes rais- conference opening here Sept. 9.'until the entire plan becomes! The date is acceptable to most/effective early in 1964 an Premier Robarts has called|how provincial portable pen-/month. next month in which the plan/summer recess, Health Minister} The source said that while the eral may become a key federal pro-||aMarsh said it would remov t paigning, jit regards as an essential part |of the Liberal party's program October -- after the two pro-iing the basic old age pension|the introduction next January of vincial elections -- the federal|to $75 a month from the present|!ts over-all pensions plan. government has decided to pro-'$65, but the federal government! The Sept. 9 conference has\°@tly. in September and see} ceed with plans for a pensions/has said this will not be started|been called to brief the proy.|What they have to say about| H inces 'further on details of the|the federal plan before they face|Miriam Maulson, daughter of \federal plan and to. consider|their electorates later in thejthe late Judge H. I. Maulson hared 50-50 between the fed-| | Two lines of thought are re- lgovernment to its decision to |permit no delay in bringing its| |plan into effect. | One is a belief that the fed- plan is _ fundamentally e|federal government is anxious|/sound and attractive to voters the question of higher pension|to remove the rate-setting fac-|despite whatever criticism there A top political source said rates from politica! bidding atitor from election cam lelection time. |may be at the provincial level. | The other is a desire to have the Robarts and Bennett goy- ernments attend the conference United Counties Names Crown Attorney BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- A new Crown Attorney for the United Counties of Durham and Northumberland has been ap- pointed, it was learned today. Bowmanville lawyer Geoffrey F. Bonneycastle will fill the vacancy left by the former Crown Attorney Harry Deyman, now Judge of Peterborough County, The Times was told, Mr. Bonneycastle moved to Bowmanville from Port Hope recently and formed a partner- ship with Miss Atha Hodgins. While in Port Hope, he was a member of the law firm of Bonneville, Fitzgibbon and Bon- neycastie, He was president of the Port Hope PC Association for ahout three months before moving to Bowmanville. Mr. Bonneycastle was born in Winnipeg and is a son of th elate Judge Angus Bonneycastle of the Dauphin Judicial District: He married the former of Minnedosa County, Manitoba. man of Brookline, Id's Fair ciation of the situation and found I could not withdraw my resignation." He had agreed to continue, however, until a successor was named, He declined to elaborate on the "strains and challenges" that had led to his decision. Mr. Bienvenu, 65 - year - old president of Catelli Food Pro. ducts Limited, hinted at a lack of government support and squabbling among fair directors when he announced his resigna- tion Thursday. In Ottawa, Justice Minister Chevrier said he was compelled to accept Mr. Carsley's resigna- tion in the absence of the prime minister 'although with very great regret." It is "imperative to ensure that plans and preparations for the fair be not delayed and that steady progress be maintained so that this fair will be truly a great occasion for Canada." Some fair administrators have expressed fears that further de- lays brought about by the res- ignations might turn the. fair into a fiasco unless the federal government acted promptly. Prepyarations already are be- hind schedule. Mr. Carsley said he thought it would help the fair if the 12- man board of directors were ex- panded to include more mem- bers from outside Quebec--pos- sibly one from each province. Six of the directors are from Quebec. US. Students Leave Cuba MADRID (AP) -- Fifty-four United States students arrived here by plane Monday night en route home from a trip to Ha- vana made in defiance of a U.S. state department ban on travel] to Cuba. They plan to continue to New York Thursday. The group's leader, Levi Laub of New York, declined to talk here about their trip, but said: "We will have plenty to say when we get home. We expect to have a public meeting, prob- ably in the New York Town Hall, in mid-September." A 55th student, Barry Hoff- Mass., left Havana with the group Sunday, but got off the plane in Ber- muda and flew to New York. Throne started up at 1:50 a.m, and reached the surface at described as 'the best ride I ever had." Fellin started at 2:33 a.m. and reached the sur- face at 2:41, His rescue took eight minutes, 15 seconds. IN GOOD SHAPE Although grimy, both men ap- peared in good shape when they reached the surface. H, B. Charmbury, Pennsyl- vania secretary of mines, re- ported that drilling of an es- cape hole to Bova, simiiar to the 18-inch shaft used to free Fellin and Throne, was started at 6:45 a.m. Only a handfu! of workers were at the scene when the drilling of the 17%-inch hole began. Charmbury said a new three- inch lifeline driliing where Bova is believed to be also would be started shorty The men were examined in a first aid tent, then quickly re- moved by two helicopters to the Hazleton State Hospital nine miles away, where a. special ward was prepared for them. In addition to medical examina- tions, authorities planned a se- ries of tests specifically design. ed to give researchers an assist in dealing with survival prob- lems. Throne and Fellin were pro- nounced in excellent shape by physicians who examined them after their 14-day ordeal. Dr, Peter Saras, who exam- ined Throne, and Dr, Anthony Fidulla, personal physician to toward Fellin for the last 10 years, said they were both amazed that the miners survived in cramped quarters in such excel- lent shape. Saras said Throne's blood pressure when he was brought to the surface early today was 100-70, down a little from nor- mal but considered 'very good." Fellin's blood pressure was normal, Saras said he didn't expect Throne to remain in the hos- pital for much longer than 48 hours, He will be given heart and other tests lafer today. KEEP FOR WEEK Fidulla said he planned to keep Fellin in the hospital for about a week just to make cer- tain everything is all right. He said Fellin came through in fine shape, that his mind was - and there was no vomit- ng. "Throne was absolutely in good spirits," said Saras, "He had no complaints except for ® swelling in his right hand which he had bumped on some coal and suffered lacerations." Ira Mills, state commissioaet of hospitals who had arrauged the press conference, said that he was told by Fellin and Throne that they managed to keep warm in their nine-by 14- foot cubicle by breathing on each other's backs and massag- ing each other's legs. Fidulla said Fellin had suf- fered a swelling of the feet due to the coldness in the mine but it was nothing serious, Saras said he asked Throne what he thought about in the mine and Throne replied that in the beginning it was food be- cause for the first six days there was nothing to eat what- soever, Contact was not made with Fellin and Throne until almost six days after the cave in. Then shortly before midnizht on Aug. 18 a six-inch lifeliue hole reached them. Food and other supplies were lowered to them through this hole... WIVES WAIT The wives of both men were waiting for them at the hospi- tal. Although they had kept a constant vigil and visited the rescue operation frequently, it was decided they would wait at the hospital when the finai lift was made, Mrs. Fellin, a Roman Catho- lic, made the sign of the cross, prayed and wept tears of joy when' she received the news that the rescue had been safely accomplished, Ex-Hockey Star Seeks Nomination PORT PERRY (Staff) -- A former hockey star and a high school teacher will seek the Lib- eral nomination for Ontario Rid- ing at tonight's nomination meeting in Port Perry. Robert A. (Bobby) Attersley, ex-Whitby Dunlop hockey great and Sam Hollingsworth, head of the History Department of Dun- barton High School will seek the Liberal nomination. Attersley, 30, is a resident of Whitby and owns the Attersley Tire Service station on King street east. . Born in Oshawa, he played hockey three years on the Gen- erals and a year more with the Guelph Biltmores. He was a member of the World Champion Whitby Dun- lops in 1957. The team also won the Allan Cup title in 1956 and 1958. Mr. Attersley married the for- mer Janet Evans of Columbus and has a daughter Janet, 6, and a son Gordon, 1. HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER Mr. Hollingsworth, 58, lives on a farm in the Ashburn area and has been teaching at Dunbarton High School for one year. He came to the school after teaching at Riverdale Collegiate in Toronto for 16 years. Mr. Hollingsworth has five children, David, 12; Dennis, 11; D'Arcy, 8; Martha, 6; and Paul, 4. He married the former Jean Ross of Toronto: Time of the meeting in Port Perry has been set for 8.15. 5 The federal source indicated) Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck The fact that Ontario's Con-ifor an earlier increase in the|Si0DS @frangements -- such as the government here' is so surelof Ontario County and Magis- servative Premier John Robarts) : : . |Ontario's -- can be integrated J d is seeking a new mandate Sept.|°!4 @8¢ pension, saying Ontario) into jt, Premier Lesage of Que-jof the attractiveness of its plan|trate Harry Jermyn, Ontariojidated his passport on his ar- 25 and British Columbia's So-'s willing to pay its share, of/bec says 'his government has athat it can-date to be a Daniel|/County, were visitors today at/Tival in New' York. jcial Credit Premier W. A. C.jancillary increases to those in/plan which, under present con-|in the lion's den of the federal-|the Court proceedings in Bow-| The others face similar action iBennett ig doing the same Sept.need between the ages of 65 'ditions, cannot be integrated. provincial meeting. manville. lwhen they reach home. A state department agent inval- POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211

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