'THOUGHT FOR TODAY One voter says that straw votes only show which way the hot air is blowing. Sa Hang a aR aL ca Sy WEATHER REPORT Sunny~ and warmer Sunday, Clear and cold tonight light winds. VOL. 92--240 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12,1963 TWENTY-TWO PAGES. PM To Phen Kennedy On Takeover Row By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- ister Pearson telephones Presi- dent Kennedy today in a per- sonal bid to cool inflamed Can- ada-United States relations and seek U.S. government co-opera- tion in abolishing labor lawless- ness on the Great Lakes. Informants said Mr. Pearson will phasize to the presid that all Canada--the govern- ment, Parliament and public opinion--is seriously concerned about Washington intervention in Canadian efforts to give its Great Lakes sailors free, demo- cratic unions. The person-to-person talk may propel Washington into making a new offer for a voluntary, un- ion-sponsored trusteeship over the Seafarers' International Un- ion of Canada--thus averting federal trusteeship under spe- Hal Banks Entry 'Error - -Liberal OTTAWA (CP) -- State Sec- retary Pickersgill said in the Commons Friday night an "er- ror of judgment" may have been committed when Seafar- ers' International Union Chief Hal C. Banks was given landed immigrant status in Canada in 1954 He suggested that if the Lib- titees' term was cut to three cial legislation approved Friday by the Commons. The federal trusteeship, un- precedented in its involvement of government in the internal af- fairs of. trade unions, was ap- proved in principle by a 181-to-4 roll-call vote on econd reading, It was then given final Com- mons approval after the trus- years from five. DOOR AJAR But the door to private trus- teeship, an alternative favored by the U.S., still is open by the fact that the legislation will not get Senate approval and royal assent until] next week. The government could keep the door ajar longer since the legislation will not become ef- fective until proclaimed form- ally by a cabinet order. Erik Nielsen (PC -- Yukon) said Banks has a criminal zec- ord "as long as your arm" and read it into the record. He asked Mr. Pickersgill why the government had stopped depor- The Canadian position -has hardened on terms for a pri- vate trusteeship. Both the U.S. government and the AFL-CIO would have to give majority au- thority to Canadian trustees and grant them unassailable powers to reform the SIU and to fire SIU President Hal C. Banks. The AFL-CIO so far has balked at the government- backed stand of the Canadian Labor Congress that two of the three private trustees be Cana- dian, Sources here believe that ei- ther U.S, Labor Secretary Wil- lard Wirtz or AFL-CIO Presi- dent George Meany may try to revive the abortive negotiations to get a private solution to the turbulent lakes problem. The two men Thursday in the situation. Mr. Wirtz blamed the collapse of the talks on a demand by the Ca- nadian Labor Congress for Ca- nadian control of any private trusteeship. Mr. Meany asked AFL-CIO support for the embat- tled SIU in the fight against public trusteeship. Sunny Weather | Across Ontario TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario residents can expect warm tation proceedings in 1954. "You can't just dump human beings into countries that don't want them," the state secre- eral government of the time had been armed with, the hindsight + of subsequent developments, it would not have approved this tary, a former immigration min- ister, replied. Mr. Pickersgill said he doubts whether anyone can be deported to a country that refuses to ac- cept him. Later, Mr. Nielsen asked w southern Ontario sunny weather for a final fling at resort areas to close up sum- mer cottages during the Thanks- giving weekend. The weather office predicted Friday that above-normal tem- peratures and clear skies will prevail throughout the province for the three days. Ontario has enjoyed unusually warm temperatures during. the last few weeks, and weathermen s ay there is no end in sight. Suightly cooler air moved into tures of about 60 normal for the season. Friday night to) degrees tod intervened | he ted two rs ago. mk ee | NEW YORK (AP)---Two com- mercial airliners roared past leach other over the Atlantic locean today to complete a swap of spy suspects--two Russians for two Americans, one of the latter a priest given up for dead 16 years ago, Arriving at Idlewild Airport this morning, after a flight from Moscow by way of London, were Rev. Walter Ciszek, 58, of Shenandoah, Pa., and Marvin W. Makinen, 24, of Ashburn- ham, Mass. : The Roman Catholic Jesuit priest was arrested by the So- viets an espionage charges in 1940. Makeinn, a former Ful- bright Scholar, was. vacationing behind the Iron Curtain when SHIPPERS * TO STOP STRIKE <_----_ Reds Lift On Army Trucks BERLIN (AP)--A U.S: Army convoy held up by the Russians in East Germany for more than two days finally rolled West Berlin today. into The U.S. Army said the troops were cleared through Babelsberg checkpoint 'in ac- cordance with established pro- cedures." That meant the Americans PRIEST, STUDENT AT AIRPORT Reds-U.S. Swap 4 Spy Suspects night the two Russians, Ivan D. Egorov, 44, and wife, Alek- sandra, 39, departed by plane for Moscow by way of Copen- hagen. | The person - for - person ex- {change was announced Friday afternoon when charges against the Soviet couple were dis- missed. in Brooklyn federal court. Father Ciszek was arrested by Soviet authorities 23 years ago on the Polish border and was sentenced to a 25 - year prison term as a spy. In 1947, when his father died and the family estate was probated, Fa- ther Ciszek was declared legally dead. Not a word came from the ot a ae ty fee toe when be letter ved ai v! the eerassette" Grae St: ington, Anatoly F. Other protests were made at Pots-' dam and at the Soviet foreign had won their latest battle with the Russians over the question of whether troops in small con- voys have to dismount to be counted by Soviet guards when passing through Communist Germany from the West to iso- y b vi b lated Berlin. The Western allies insist dismounting is unmeces- sary in small convoys. The Russians opened the way after the. United States pro- tested to the Soviet Union that the action was "entirely unwar- ranted." U.S. State Secretary Dean Rusk deliverd one protest to the Soviet ambassador in Wash- Dobrynin. Soviet' headquarters at ministry in Moscow by US. Ambassador Foy D, Kohler. DIDN'T DISMOUNT The U.S, Army announced + di "the 's did not di sent 144 U.S. infantrymen in 25 from their vehicles for a head count by the Soviets." The convoy of 18 vehicles and 61 men had: been delayed since 9 a.m, Thursday in Communist over, tee-ay, fey should be na i Block at Babelsberg, the Soviet check- point 14% miles from West Ber- lin. Again the American officers refused to tismount. The Soviet blocked the high- way with two armored person- nel carriers and surrounded the ready troops in another 10 ar- mored vehicles. TROOPS SENT Friday the Berlin command ehicles to Babelsberg to stand y the convoy. The second con- oy was cleared by the Soviets, ut stayed at the checkpoint. The 205 troops prepared for a long stay while the issue was fought out at the diplomatic level. Release of the convoy came suddenly. The 'first reporters knew of it was when they spot- ted the lead vehicles coming around the bend to the allied checkpoint at Dreilinden, on the West Berlin city limits. In Washington, U.S. leaders hoped that firmness, coupled with, diplomacy, would end the confrontation, which came & a surprise after a period of rela- tive calm in Soviet-U.S. rela- \tions over Berlin. President Kennedy met twice Friday with his advisers and protested to the Soviets "this entirely unwarranted" harass- Before Ship By GEORGE FRAJKOR MONTREAL (CP) -- Striking longshoremen voted today by secret ballot to accept strike- settlement proposals advanced by federal mediator Judge Rene Lippe. Officials emerging from the voting hall said acceptance was by a margin of about four to one. The exact figure was not im- mediately announced, The same proposals accepted by the longshoremen now will be considered by the Shipping Federation of Canada, repre- sentatives of the ship owners. Judge Lippe said the feder- ation is to meet at noon, 'As the longshoremen left the Centre Maisonneuve gymna- sium, where the balloting was held, one of. them said there were 1,212 ballots cast and that a little more than 900 were in favor of accepting the propos- als. MENTION DOUBLECROSS Newspaper men heard a num- ber of the longshoremen mut- tering that they had been "double - crossed" and '"'be- trayed." They said there should have been more than 1,212 bal- lots cast. Newspaper men reckoned! there were more than that num-| ber in the gymnasium but they had no knowledge of any pos- ment, sible abstentions or spoiled bal- lots. Butler Has Lead Accepted Proposals Owners Officials of the: Interna President Thomas (Teddy) Gleason of New York said, "I'm glad this is over." Secretary - Treasurer Adrien Lemoine of Local 375--the big local comprised of stevedores-- said ILA members in Quebec and Trois-Rivieres had already agreed to accept the proposals. Total number of members in those ports has been estimated at 600 or 700. There are two other locals in Montréal, smaller ones com- prising the checkers' and the ship - liners, Their total is roughly 500, } MAY CHANGE MINDS The checkers previously had decided to reject the proposals unless the new contract were put on a two-year basis insteat of three-year basis, but it was also reported unofficially they were ready to go along with thé vote of the big local--the steve- dores--which numbers around 2,200 members. There was no immediate in- dication when the shipping fed- eration would announce its ac- tion on the proposals, The feds eration represents 38 -carriers.. The strikers last Thursday turned down proposals by Judge Rene Lippe. Since then the posals have been tional Francis in Reading, Pa. The letter was addressed to Mother Mary Evangeline, Father Cis- zek's sister. She in turn conveyed the ' First. the Russians held the convoy 15 bours at Marienborn, the west end of the 110-mile stretch of Autobahn to Berlin. The U.S. officers refused to or- announcement by Macmillan of BLACKPOOL, England (CP) his intention to retire soon. The ruling-Conservative party Fear 2nd Landslide Douglas said it. has been sug- gested that deportation of Mr. Banks would solve the labor problems on the Great Lakes. "If we sent Hal Banks out to- morrow, Paul Hall (head of the American SIU) would have an- other of his goons in by Mon- day morning." By GERALD MILLER BELLUNO, Italy (AP) -- The vast Vaiont dam disaster area was sealed off today as. heli- copters sprayed chlorine disin- fectant to prevent the outbreak of epidemics. Local officials warned of the possibilities of another massive landslide, similar to the one that plunged into the dam from Mount Toc last Wednesday and sent a c de of water down Rebel Forces Draw Back In Algeria ALGIERS (AP)--Rebel Ber- ber tribesmen retreated deeper into the Kabylie Mountains to- day before superior government forces, but they vowed to wage a relentless guerrilla war. The Berbers gave ground in the second day of combat as a 10-day war of insults with Presi- dent Ahmed. Ben Bella's regime gave way to actual shooting Friday. With tanks, b as di 1 the alpine valley, causing an es- timated 3,000 deaths. Since Wednesday, rocks and earth have tumbled down Mount Toc in small landslides, jkeeping fears of new major javalanches alive. Rescue workers continued dig- ging mass graves for the 1,700 bodies: recovered in what has desolated Alpine valley, At Italy Flood Site catastrophic flood from the ar- tificial lake. ORDERS INVESTIGATION The government ordered an investigation and there was a clamor for a parliamentary in- vestigation that likely would have repercussions in Italy's next government, expected to be launched next month. Mass graves were dug hur- riedly three miles from Langa- rone to head off the possibilities of an epidemic. All persons in the area were ordered inocu- lated. Squads throwers moved armed with stroying carcasses of farm ani- mals, Adding to the urgency was the fear among Belluno officials that another landslide could oc- cur and send another wall of |water over the 873-foot dam, the third highest in the world. The jdam was slightly damaged in last Wednesday's tragedy and millions of tons of water still remain in it. |NATION MOURNS | The nation was in deep }mourning but expressions. of anger over the _ catastrophe mounted throughout the coun- try. | Mauro Scoccimarro, president flamejof a Communist group in the} through the/Italian Senate, said there was} de- | evidence that engineers at the }dam had telephoned _ national [police to warn of trouble an hour before the disaster. been recorded as modern Italys worst natural disaster. Another 1,300 persons are be- lieved to be buried under the sea of mud that marks an area once dotted by picturesque vil- lages. While thousands of Italian army troops and volunteers dug feverishly, legislators and sur- vivors charged that authorities had failed to heed warnings that landslides could unleash a and recoilless canon, the gov- ernment troops blasted through a Berber road block at Fort Na- tional and took Michelet, with a population of 4,000 and two other towns. Just before the retreat, rebel chieftain Hocine Ait Ahmed told a rally in Michelet that his men would give Ben Bella's army no rest, Draped with machine-gun ammunition belts, he called for an all-out war against the gov- ernment. The rebel command was re- ported to have set up head- quarters in a mountain cave after the battle. A spokesman said contact had been lost with most of the Berber units. But he promised that the rebels would ambush government troops at every opportunity. Three government soldiers were killed and _ several wounded by Berber gunfire dur- ing the advance. Rebel casualties known although they were lieved heavier. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 were not) be- Woodworkers OK Contract To End Strike HANOVER, Ont, (CP)--This community of 4,500 will cele- brate one of its happiest Thanksgivings' as a result of Friday night's union ratifica- tion of a 30-month work con- tract to end a 4%4-month vio- lence-miarred strike at the Han- over Kitchens (Canada) Limited plant here. The contract settlement, reached during union-manage-| ment negotiations this week in Plant's 65 striking empioyees at a closed meeting. "It's one of Thanksgivings we've ever had," 'said Mayor Mrs, William Bue- glas. "Everything looks good, There's an entirely different feeling in the town." "This contract gave me the best satisfaction I've had in 15 years," commented H, Landon Ladd, eastern Canadian direc- tor of the International Wood- FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 ers were certified Feb. 5 as an | local. workers of America. The strik- IWA Toronto, was approved by the| | the happiest} © Fordham University in New York. Mrs. Nhu addressed a crowd of 4,000 at the Roman Catholic institution. Several nuns and priests. were in the student crowd to hear MADAME NHU QUERIED Mrs. Ngo Dinh Nhu of South Viet Nam talks with student Daniel Shedrick during her appearance yesterda y at '|Tuesday by a team of Tulane . |University surgeons and physi- Nhu, who is a Roman Catho- lic. Shedrick introduced the guest speaker, He is co-chair- man of Fordham College sen- ior organization which pre- sents timely controversial speakers before the whole un- dergraduate student body. _, |kidneys to a. young woman and _|she is doing fine--so far. news to another family mem- ber, Sister Conrad, also a mem- ber of the Bernadette order. An- other sister of Father Ciszek, Helen Gerhardt, lives in Wash- der their men to dismount, convoy But there was another snag Friday the its Eventually continued on way. ington, D.C. Following receipt of the letter, the family got in touch with the state department. Last August relatives were informed by At- torney-General Robert Kennedy | that the priest's release was ex- |pected, | Makinen was on vacation in the Soviet Union after a scholar- ship year at the Free University in West Berlin, He was ar- rested in Kiev July 27, 1961, for assertedly photographing mili- tary objectives. He was sen- tenced to two years in prison jplus six years in 2 corrective \labor camp. The Egorovs were arrested last July 2 in their Flushing, N.Y., apartment. A_ federal grand jury indicted them on spy charges just two days ago. Egorov, employed by the United Nations secretariat, claimed diplomatic immunity. This con- tention was rejected and they aga ordered to stand trial Nov. Woman Alive With Kidneys From Monkey NEW ORLEANS (CP) -- Sur- geons announced Friday they have transplanted: a monkey's The operation was the first of its kind on record, It was aone cians. The patient was reported conscious and resting comfort- ably. f If successful. the. transplant poses enormous medical poten- tial, Even ailing hearts might be helped by "booster" hearts from an animal, Dr. Keith Reemtsma, spokes- man for the team, declined to speculate on the future, except to warn against expecting quick results. The major barrier to success was the body's "immune re- sponse,"' in which it rejects any tissue not its own, except in the rare cases of transplants involv- ing identical twins, Reemtsma said the patient can worth of Canadian goods duty- free, the Senator said, but a Canadian must pay duty to his government on purchases in the U.S. totalling more than $25. members of urged the state department to seek a $100 duty-free limit from Canada. Canada Rejects US. Bid For Duty-Freedom WASIHNGTON (AP) -- Can- ada has rejected overtures by the United States to boost its duty-free allowance for Cana- dian citizens visiting the U.S. But the United States state de- partment says it will continue to press for changes in Can- ada's regulations. Senator Kenneth B. Keating (Rep. N.Y.) made public Friday a letter from Acting State Sec- retary George Ball who said Canada gave an unsatisfactory|convention shaped up for later answer to the U.S. request atjin the day when he was to a recent meeting of the joint Canada - U.S. trade and economic affairs. committee on Keating told the Senate he was disappointed by what he termed Canada's and unyielding position recalcitrant use every means 'S. he C ms of the i in their regulations." U.S. citizens visiting Canada return home with $100 Keating and other New York Congress have In his letter, Ball said the Ca- nadian delegation to the Sept. 20-21 meeting contended that U.S. visitors do not find Cana- dian merchandise as attractive as Canadians find U.S. mer- chandise. "As a consequence, it was ar- gued, the low Canadian allow- ance did not, in the majority of cases, have great festrictive effect," Ball wrote. "This is not, of course, swer."" Ball said the issue will be raised again at the next meeting of the joint commis- 8 a satisfac an- ion in 1964, was given a chemical agent known as imuran 'and some steroid drugs in an effort to make the body accept the for- eign tissue. The woman, whose name and age were withheld, entered hos- ita] with uremic poisoning. Her kidneys were unable to (AP Wirephoto) 'te: clean out the waste in her sys- m, NO TIMES ON THANKSGIVING There will be no publica- tion of The Oshawa Times on Monday, which is Thanksgiving Day. Please drive carefully. today prepared to wind up its annual convention here " R. A: Butler apparently still lead- ing in the race to succeed Har- old Macmillan as prime minis- ter. However, there were that Science Minister Lord Hail- sham had narrowed the early, lead established by Butler, act- ing prime minister now head- ing the government while Mac- millan is in hospital in London. Hailsham today received a deafening ovation when he step- ped to the rostrum during a conference debate, Cheers and the ringing of a handbell lasted for more than a minute. Some thought Foreign Secre- tary Lord Home's stock might be rising as that of Chancellor of the Exchequer Reginald Maudling fell. Home was seen as possible compromise choice favorable to all sections of the party, Butler's big moment of the address a wind-up rally in place of Macmillan, sidelined by the DEPENDS ON SPEECH If the speech gets a good reaction from party and the country, it could greatly boost Butler's chances of a "perman- ent lease" on London's 10 Down- ing Street, official residence' of British prime ministers. If is flops, Hailsham's pros- pects might soar. Hailsham, al- ready popular with the party's rank and file, was thought to be winning adherents in the cabinet as well. However, rank-and-file Con- servativé members of Parlia- ment still leaned toward Butler or Maudling, though the latter's convention speech Friday did not go over with a high-powered bang and his stock slumped, But Home got a warm, pro- longed standing ovation from the 4,000 delegates--which ap- parently surprised the party hierarchy. Macmillan was reported to be making steady progress follow- ing his operation. He was de- laying his actual resignation until well enough to visit Buck- successful prostate gland opera- 'tion Thursday which led to the Starting next Jan. 1 the pro- posals provide for time-and-a- half pay for Saturday work and double time for work between midnight and 5 a.m. They also provide for estab- hment of a federal govern- ment. inquiry into operation of the pension plan. There were other fringe bene- fits in the proposals. One was that the longshoremen would pay four per cent of their in- come instead of eight cents an hour as at present to vacation Bay. SETS MINIM" 'MS A minmum working period of four hours was included in the proposals, There is no mini- mum under the old contract. Also, if a man-is called and his work is cancelled he would get a.minimum of two hours' time. If he is called and has to wait, the minimum is four hours. If he has to quit work because of bad weather, the minimum again is four hours, If the shipping federation ac- cepts the proposals there will be an end to the delay to ship- ingham Palace in London to talk with the Queen. ment of wheat Canada sold to Russia. A WORD WITH HIS SUCCESSOR Retiring West German chancellor Konrad Adenauer, right, talks with his successor, % Ludwig Erhard last night in Bonn during reception of farewell for the parting chan- Ys cellor, Affair was given by the cabinet at the Palais Schaum- burg. (AP Wixephoto)