THOUGHT FOR TODAY He who calls a spade two spades will get a dirty dig from his bridge partner. he Osharn Zimes - ee eee ee eee a a le lh ae a i se RS TO IAIN i lin Se 2 4 WEATHER HEFUni -Clear.and cool tonight. Variable cloudiness Wednesday. Winds becoming light tonight and Wednesday. oy cal A VOL, 92--NO, 212 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1963 Authorized es Second Class Post Office Depertment, Ghee una tar pan at Paes Cash. EIGHTEEN PAGES A YOUNG SCHOOL girl with an arm load of books turns away in tears after Negroes were admitted to ' | STATE GUARD ORDERE TO FORCE INTEGRATIC West End High ingham, Ala., today. (AP Wirephoto) in Birm- Pensions Hog Stage In Ontario Campaign By THE CANADIAN PRESS Democratic Party leader, con- Pensions continued to hog the/tinuing a prolonged swing political spotlight in Ontario/through Northern Ontario, ac- Monday as Premier Robarts/cused both older parties of made a brief detour off thejusing a medical insurance pro- campaign trail for a morning/gram as a political footbali and appearance at a federal-provin-| offering only '"'vague promises." | Clal conference on the subject} Premier Robarts told the | in Ottawa. opening of the Ottawa _confcr- Later in the day he told ajence he is prepared to revom- - press conference he hopes the/mend changes in Ontario's pen- pension question has/sion scheme to make it con- meyer, however, speaking to his largest crowd so far in the campaign, about 800 people at a barbeque in Woodstock, chal- lenged Mr. Robarts to '"'get out of the pension business." "There is nothing in the On- tario pension scheme which has to be saved in order to put the Canada Pension Plan into oper- ation in Ontario," he said. . The two pension plans "are to : iss in 44, Sept 38 gene 'elec |ayetemt 'agreed national em ee TELLS WHAT SAID ~ Bat Liberal Leader Join Wit- termeyer continued his assault om the premier's pension stand, accus' of using "weasel words" at the Ottawa meeting. As he later campaigned through Mr. Wintermeyer's home riding of Waterloo No.ta, the premier spent most of his time telling audiences what he Donald C. MacDonald, New had said in Ottawa. He said misconceptions of his staud have been "fathered by irres- ponsible statements." He has repeatedly during the campaign denied charges by Mr. Wintermeyer that he plans to torpedo the federal pension plan--a pay-as-you-go scheme-- in favor of the provincial plan based on in¥éstments with in- surance companies which was passed at the last legislature. "I am just interested in get- ting a pension scheme that will work," he said Monday. He said the reservations about e federal plan he submitted to No Indication Which Taxes To Increase | OTTAWA (CP) -- Where wil: the government find the $116,- 000,000 it says it will cost to pay for the proposed $10 in- crease in old age pensions this fall? The present $65 monthly pen- th sions paid to everyone at a8elthe Ottawa cobference wate net 70 are drawn from a speciall yresented as oppoaition, 'but 'as eee fund. This 12 made ap|{t the protection of the people of old age security taxes 'on per- eae major concer (0 us not compatible nor economically 4 pd Mr. Wintermeyer went over his parfty's platform on eco- nomic development, education and agriculture, and promised full bargaining rights for civil servants. | NDP Leader MacDonald,| meanwhile, promised in Port Arthur that a comprehensive medical care program for On- tario will be introduced withia a year if his party is elected. Both older parties, he claimed, used the medical care issue as an 'election gimmick." "The Robarts program," ne said "merely offers the major- ity of our people what is already available, from the private in- surance companies or the doc- tor plans, at prices which are beyond the reach of a growing number of our people." Today Mr. .MacDonald wiil carry his Northern Ontario cam- paign to-Atikokan, while Mr. Robarts and Mr. Wintermeyer continue to stump. through heav- sonal incomes, corporation pro-| 'nt ; fits and manufacturers' sales, |_©PPosition,. Leader Winter. ily-populated southwestern On- i'tario. MONTREAL (CP) -- Hal C. Banks, president of the Seafar- ers' International Union (Ind.) was sentenced to a month in jail Monday for contempt of court but won't serve the sentence pending appeal. The conviction is in connec- tion with the SIU's running feud with Upper Lakes Shipping Limited of Toronto. Mr, Justice Andre Sabourin of Quebec Superior Court ruled Monday that the burly union president had failed to do all he could to stop the SIU's viola- tion of a no-picketing injunction in May, 1962. The union picketed an Upper Lakes 'ship in Trois-Rivieres, Que., for two days after the company had obtained a Super- ior Court injunction against "picketing, watching, besetting and intimidation" of its ships at all St. Lawrence River' ports. Judge Sabourin ruled Mr. Banks "'had not taken all rea- sonable steps in his power to prevent the violation of the in- junction." SAID ORDERED STOP ordered picketing stopped im- mediately after being issued the Mr. Banks contended he had ment of the respondent when he heard the local police had stepped in and arrested the pickets." Mr, Banks had contended he transmitted the court's order to Trois-Rivieres through a union officer. Judge Sabourin ruled the 'mere presence" of three other SIU officers in Trois - Rivieres "did not deprive the president of his authority and his initia- tive. "Nothing shows that he dele- gated his powers to anyone in particular or discharged his dut- ies so as to exclude his parti- cipation." He held that while a union president is not necessarily re- sponsible for the illegal acts of his members, he cannot evade the consequences unless he has Jail Term For Banks On Contempt Charge ely inscribed an appeal against the sentence, The &'%"9 feud with Upper Lakes started in 1962 when the company failed to renew its con- tract with the union, instead signing up with the newly- formed Canadian Maritime Un- ion (CLC). Subsequent harassing of Up- per Lakes ships in both Cana- dian and United States Great Lakes ports resulted in the es- tablishment of the Norris ship- ping inquiry by the federal gov- ernment. Viet Nam Troops HAROLD C. BANKS made sure that his instructions are followed. Mr. Banks' counsel immediat- Loggers' Dispute - Report Expected PORT ARTHUR (CP) -- A conciliation board report was expected today in a dispute be- tween the Lumber and Sawmill injunction order. ) However, Judge Sabourin ruled "there is no evidence whatsoever that the respondent (Banks) was at variance with what took place at Trois - Ri- vieres during those two days. "On the contrary, allthe facts show that everybody was: in Workers' Union (CLC) and Mar- athon Corporation of Canada. It is the forerunner to other reports dealing with disputes between the union and Dryden Paper Company Limited and Kalamazoo Vegetable _Parch- ment, Company. q Indications are that the first perfect agreement, though it is easy fo imagine the disappoint- strike deadline may be set for the middle of next week. MARACAIBO, Venezuéla (AP)--With . gifts beginning to} arrive, the proud parents of quintuplet boys pondered today how to support five new sons in their one-bedroom home on §$11- a-day income. The infants, born almost two | months prematurely Saturday, |were reported doing well. They passed their first danger period and are healthy, said Dr. Robinson Suarez Herrera, chief obstetrician at University Hos- pital here. Juan Jose, the third born, had lost weight, less than an ounce. But a medical bulle- Last year they produced an) estimated $691,100,000 and the| old age pensions cost an esti- mated $735,355,336. The deiicit was made good by temporary loans to the fund out of general! tax revenues. Prime Minister Pearson said Monday that Parliament wili be asked to approve both the in- srease and the raising of addi-/ OTTAWA (CP) -- The fed: tional revenues requird by the/eral-provincial pensions confer- fund for the higher pensions ence resumes today in almost A spokesman for the prime} complete harmony. minister said it had not been' The main chord was struck decided just how, within the/Monday when Prime Minister| framework of the act, the in-|/Pearson announced the federal creased revenues would be ob- tained. Health Minister Judy LaMarsh said, however, that the extra money would come froin "designated taxes." The sales tax bore the heav- lest burden of the old age pen sions last year, amounting to $302,200,000 of the $691,100,090 The lightest burden in the old age security fund was borne by 'the three-per-cent corporation tax, which yielded $115,300,000 This was less than half the amount raised in the three-per- cent levy on personal incomes last year--$273,600,000. In the application of the 'hree- per-cent tax on personal in- comes, there is a limitation so that no taxpayer pays more than $90 a year towards the old age security fund. This makes it impossible to calculate precisely what a one- percentage-point increase in the old age security tax on personal incomes would produce. government will move in Par- liament to start a $10 increase in the basic old age pension three months earlier than it had planned A melody was added by Pre- mier Robarts of Ontario an- nouncing his provincial portable pensions plan, already on the statute books and to come into effect next year, will be amended to remove conflicts with the federal government's Canada Pension Plan. The only discordant note in the symphony of complete fed- eral - provincial collaboration was Quebec's determination to introduce its. own retirement pension plan. But Quebec said this would not obstruct the fed- eral plan, and the federal gov- ernment said the two can. work together. Mr, Pearson's announcement, timed for the opening hour of the meeting, said tha* the basic pension increase to $75 a month for everyone at age 70 will be 'CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 'FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 paid for by increasing taxes. The old age security taxes now are three per cent levies on per- |sonal incomes--up to $90 a year |--and on corporation profits and manufacturers' sales. |PAID FROM CHANGE Health Minister Judy La- |Marsh said the pensions boost will be paid from a change in this so - called 3-3-3 formula. Higher rates of old age secur- ity tax on personal incomes and corporation profits appeared |ik- ely. It was.originally intended that the $10 increase would be paid next year out of contributions to the Canada Pension Plan, which the government hopes to start Jan. J Monday's conference sessions were spent examining a 53-page detailed report on the Canada Pension Plan cost and benefits, prepared by federa! government actuaries. It contained compli- cated formulas which will ap- ply to contributors who did not make ful] payments to the fund, either because of an abbreviated period of contributions or be- cause of lower than average in- comes, Basically, the contributor will pay one per cent of his annual income, up (to a specified level, amount, into the pay-as-you-go pensions' fund The -- starting maximum level of pensionable income will be $4,000 a-year, but this may rise to $6,500 by 1990, A person who has made con- tributions at the full rate will draw an annual pension of 30 per cent of the base level at age 70 after a minimum 10 years of contributions, Pension- ers can elect to draw at reduced rates at age 65, and benefits |will be paid to the surviving spouse at age 65. when a pen- sioner dies. and his employer will pay a like! Pension Talk Resumes In Excellent Harmony ther study of the actuarial re- port by the political heads of the delegations and their senior ad- ministrative advisers. Then the jconference plans to discuss the jintegration of provincial plans with the federal proposals. Mr. Robarts, interrupting his campaigning in the current On- tario election contest, attended the conference. for about 30 min- utes. He said the Ontario por- table pensions plan and the fed- eral contributory retirement pensions can be made "comple- mentary and compatible,"' and added: "I am: prepared to recom- mend the amendment of the On- tario plan to conform with such an agreed national system, sub- ject to the protection of Ontario Quints Pass First Dangerous Period tin said all five are in "accept- able condition." Juan Jose weighed three pounds, 1.4 ounces at birth. So did the fourth born, Fernando. Robinson, the first born, weighed three pounds, 15.5 ounces; Otto, second born, three pounds, 4.9 ounces; and Mario, fifth born, four pounds, three ounces. A mixture of modified skimmed milk and malt is be- ing fed to the quintuplets with eyedroppers. The mother, Mrs. Ines Marie Cuervo de Prieto, 34, has left her bed for a short spell on her feet. She and her husband have 15 other children by previous mar- riages, Three live in their one- bedroom home. "With only one bedroom it's going to be a little crowded," she said, but added, "my hus- band and I are very proud." The father earns 46.70 bo- livars ($11) a day as a Creole Petroleum Corporation foreman. two previous marriages. But help was arriving. The government assured the Prietos of its protection. The organiza- tion Friends of University Hos- pital supplied five basketfuls of diapers and clothing. Mrs. Cuervo de Prieto, al- ready made a grandmother by a 17-year-old daughter, said she was in labor only two hours with the quintuplets. "Tt didn't hurt at all," she said. "I didn't have any anes- thetic. I trusted in God and in | the doctors." The boys, born in a 50-min- ute period, were given names of doctors who assisted at the birth, Later Saturday, she an Prieto were married by a priest: workers from double imposts."' YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... School Enrolment : Increase Reported. ... Page 9 Oshawa Riding Enumeration Complete Page 9 City To Replace Parking Meters ..., Page 9 Garden Club Show and the infants were baptized. Nurse Hild Garcia, who is overseeing the babies, said: "They 'are. lazy and -.weak like all premature ones. But they are regular and perfect in every respect." Only two sets of quintuplets |born in the western hemisphere the Dionnes of Canada and the Diligentis of Argentina--are known to have survived in- fancy. There was nothing uncommon about the Prietos' domestic re- lationship. Government statis- tics show that more Venezue- lan children are born to unmar- Results Listed ..... Page 9 Speaker Charges | Inefficiency ........ Page.3 Night Class Enrolment | Today's agenda included fur-| Opens Today ...,... Page 3 jried parents than to married ones, Many Venezuelans consider the legal problems of divorce and marriage too complicated and expensive. He helps support 10 children by|" d Metropolitan Toronto. Nab More Pupils and the playground while the police sent pupils home. Technical school students are considered among the most mil- itant. : Several other schools were oc- cupied by troops but there was less show of force today than Saturday and Monday when po- lice stormed schools and carved pupils off by hundreds in trucks. Meanwhile Ngo Dinh Nhu, powerful brother and adviser to President Ngo Dinh Diem, was reported planning to move out) of the presidential palace here in an atempt to halt U.S. >rit- feism that he has too much in- fluence over his brother. Kennedy Urges Patient Policy WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- dent Kennedy says the United States must pursue a policy of patience in South Viet Nam and avoid a get-tough slash in aid An aid cut, Kennedy said Monday night, might bring about a collapse of the Vietna- mese government of Ngo Dinh Diem and open all of Southeast Asia to the threat of a Commu- nist take-over. The president, in a cowntry- Wide television izterview, con- ceded there was no easy souu- tion to the Vietnamese problem, which has been marked by in- ternal opposition to the Diem regime and the governmeat's widespread arrests of Budd- hists and students. He expressed concern that Americans might "get impa- tient" and urge a U.S. with- drawal from South Viet Nam. SAIGON -- South Vietnamese troops and heavily armed com- bat police today cleared pupils out of several large high schools in Saigon as anti-government unrest continued in schools, _ Most of the children were sent home although police were reported to have taken away about 100 suspected ringleaders, More than 2,000 pupils have been arrested since Saturday, according to informed sources Some are being held for ques- tioning at the Saigon polize headquarters. Most are re- ported to have been taken out of town to detention camps. The student trouble over- shadowed reports of a big vic- tory over Communist guerrilas in the field Monday. A Vietnamese armored unit swept through rice paddies in the Mekong Delta and killed 80 guerrillas, U:S, advisers called it the most significant victory over the Viet Cong in months. Disturbances broke out in several high schools this morn- ing. At the Gia Long, largest girls' high school in Saigon, girls shouted, laughed and banged desks in a two - hour demonstration, while scores of troops sat outside. The girls were finally sent home; Several were reported arrested. The city's principal technical college was occupied early to- day by about 400 paratroopers who sat around in classrooms Toronto Mayor = |public school syst.. 1, opposition. US. Takes Over i Alabama Guard | BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) --|night: to say whether he had The federal government took|been directed to carry out thé over control of the Alabama|governor's executive orders bar- National Guard by presidential|ring integration in the threé order today to enforce public |cities. 4 school imtegration despite defi-| However, official sources ance of Governor George C./close to Wallace said earlier Wallace. that was' the purpose of calling Two Negroes, a 17-year-oldjup the guardsmen. boy and a 16 - year ~ old girl,| There was no word on walked into Murphy High School|whether four Negroes would at Mobile for classes just before|again be permitted to attend 7:30 a.m. to become the first|schools at Huntsville, where nd high school pupils of their race|troopers showed up. Wallace to. desegregate the Alabama|told re porters Monday that Huntsville had not been ignored National Guardsmen who had been drawn up around the school at Wallace's order de- parted a few minutes before the Negroes entered. Wallace called the guard into service shortly after midnight to keep Negroes out of white schools at Birmingham, Mobile and Tuskegee. President Ken- nedy promptly placed the guard under federal jurisdiction to re- move control from the gov- ernor. Wallace, who early today used guardsmen and state troopers to chase federal mar- shals out of the capitol build- ing at Montgomery, declined immediate comment on_ the White House moves bringing the Alabama school, crisis toa showdown. \ TOLD TO 'eS Before directing that the guard be put under federal con- trol Kennedy issued an order calling upon Wallace to "'cease and desist" from his manoeu- vreg to thwart federal court di- rectives for school integration. A similar move preceded deseg- regation of the University. of Alabama in June over Wallace's timetable. He didn't explain. GUARD GOVERNOR Guardsmen began arriving Birmingham within hours the grim-faced Wallace stalked from his Capitol office in Mont- gomery under heavy guard, - For.more than eight hours, he had been closeted with key advisers. He left the office at 1:20 a.m, after ordering guards. men and state police to clear the areas of U.S. marshals. The marshals were waiting to serve Wallace with a restrain- ing order signed by the state's five federal district judges pro- hibiting further interference by the governor. . Coupled with the judges' ac- tion was President Kennedy's warning that whatev-r steps necessary would be taken to en- force the desegregation decres. Thre was no doubt this in- cluded the use of federal troops.. Shortly after 1.a,m,, Finance Minister Seymcre Trammell en ie the capitol iy t "ey uniformed, wearing pistols. { "T have given. instructions \to the federal marshals to leave, the area,"' scid Trammell over a microphone. 'Now you will search the grounds and clear the area. "Governor Wallace gave these orders and I will carry them out." The marshals stood within hearing distance, MOVE AWAY i They stood their ground mo- mentarily, Then as the 25 guardsmen began forming lines, the marshals moved toward the © * * Guardsmen had moved on to the grounds of a high school at Mobile under orders of Wallace before ic -uance of the presiden- tial directive which removed Wallace as their commander. They were withdrawn quickly after the Kennedy order was an- nounced, State Adjutant-General Alfred Harrison had called about 300 guardsmen to duty, replacing state troopers who turned away 20 Negro pupils x white schools in three cities Monday. Harrison said the guardsmen back of the Capitol. activated by Wallace and deac-| Two of them got into a car tivated by the president would|and drove off. The third hid in report to armories in Birming-|Some bushes before he was ham, Mobile and Tuskegee. flushed and chased away. He said other guard umits} By then there were 40 troopers would be on a federal - alert|}on duty around the capitol. basis and remain on their civil-| Later Trammell said the gov. ian jobs unless ordered into ac-|e-.0r would accept service from tion. the marshals today "if that's Harrison refused Monday'the purpose of their being here." Supports Plan For Merger TORONTO (CP) -- A city - suburb amalgamation motion by Controller /jlan Lamport of Metropolitan Toronto and Reeve Norman Goodhead of North rk will be discussed at a Metro Council meeting. Mayor Donald Summerville announced his support for the proposal and said: "My col- leagues are to be commended for bringing this perplexing problem to a head. It's abso- lutely mecessary . . . and pos- sibly the final opportunity for members of Metro Council to express themselves on the amal- gamation issue prior to the Goldenberg commissi hear- ings." ' The royal commission, headed 'by Carl Goldenberg of Mont- real, will inquire into the future, structure ami organization of 12th Socred MP Backing Caouette QUEBEC (CP) -- Lucien Plourde, member of Parliament for Quebec West, Monday night threw his support behind Real Caouette and Le Ralliement des Creditistes. With Mr. Caouette - standing by, Mr. Plourde told about 20 organizers in his Quebec West office he has decided to stand with the former deputy national leader of Social Credit. 'He is the 12th of Social Cre- dit's 23 members of Parlia- ment to join Mr, Caouette, who announced last Wednesday night he will lead a new party--Le Ralliement -- in the House of President Kennedy has a pen in hand as he signs an executive order today in his Vv' e House office, ending the draft for-married men as Commons; long as there afe enough sin- NO DRAFT FOR MARRIED MEN gle ones available to maintain the strength of the armed forces. Attending the cere- mony, fror left, are: Gen. Lewis Hershey, Selective Ser- vice Director;. Norman S. Paul, Assistant Secretary of Defence for fanpower; and William Gorham of the: De- fence Department. ; (AP Wirephoto) and that he was gol by a. e- HH | }