Community Chest THOUGHT FOR TODAY A master of ceremonies is a talkative fellow who, starts the bull rolling. Drive Calls For F Oye Oshawa Zines inal Pus WEATHER REPORT Sunny Saturda, periods and a Winds at 15. y with cloudy little warmer. VOL. 92 -- NO. 268 Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1963 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash, THIRTY-SIX PAGES CAR'S INTERIOR DEMOLISHED BY IMPACT Oshawa Youth Dies In Crash An 18-year-old youth became Oshawa's third fatality of the year when two cars collided at} Rossland road and Simcoe|years ago. street early today. |ployed at General Motors for| Dead is Ronald Gordon Port-|less than two years. | er, 130 Taunton road east, a} A son of Mr. and Mrs. Ross| General Motors employee. |G. Porter, he attended Queen| He was a passenger in the|Elizabeth Public School and the rear seat of a car which was|O'Neill Collegiate and Vocation- coe on Simcoe street,/al Institute. As a boy, he was an Harbron, Yarmouth County, N.S., June 17, 1945, and came/ to Oshawa with his family 12 NHA Act Extension Sought By Mayors 5; OTTAWA (CP) --The. Cara- dian Federation of Mayors and | Municipalities called today for closer working relations among federal, provincial and munici- |pal governments to further a broad program of community |development. In a brief presented to the| federal cabinet by a delegation) jof 42 Canadian mayors, the| lfederation said -rapid urban growth and development has caused critical problems in housing, urban renewal, public transportation and recreational | facilities Among the federation's pro-) posals for joint action by fed-| eral and provincial governments) were: | | 1. A 10-year program to re-| place or rehabilitate all sub- standard housing across Can- ada, in co-operation with the) |municipalities. The federation Man Charsed With Murder Of Baker Girl BARRIE (CP) John Me- was charged Thursday with cap-|of the National Housing Act has ital murder in the death last| yielded no striking results in the year of 10-year-old Thomasinaljast seven years. The federal government had set aside less than $30,000,000 for slum clar- ance in that period "and even when these projects have been completed, fewer than 5,000 families will have - benefitted from federally-sponsored slum clearance projects." 2. Financial assistance to mu- nicipalities for public transport- ation facilities. Municipal trans- portation systems, the brief said "must be regarded not only as an integral part, but a major part, of the transportation net- works of the region, the province and the nation." 3. Regional programs of eco- nomic development 'to seek basic solutions for chronic un- employment... and assure an increasing rate of economic growth in every part of Can- jada." 4, Provision for rapidly-in- creasing needs for open space He had been em-|Donald, 40, of Newmarket, Ont.|<aiq the redevelopment section|for recreation, both within ur- ban areas and within easy reach of them, 5. Financial assistance to mu- Baker of Beeton, 20 miles south of here McDonald was charged follow- ing the discovery of Thoma- sina's remains Thursday in active baseball and hockey of the' car, Walter|player 'onthe city minor teams. Besides his parents, Ronald is- survived . bya..sister, Mrs.' Eric Scriver (Alice), of Port 'Perry, and two brothers, Ross |G. Porter, Jr., of Oshawa, and Eugene Porter, of Orono, He also leaves his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Irven Porter, of Oshawa. A memorial service will be held in the Armstrong Funeral Chapel, Monday, Noy. 18, at 2 p.m. Rev. N. F. Swackhammer will conduct the service. Inter- ment will be in Oshawa Union Cemetery. Friends are asked jnot to call at the funeral home until Saturday evening. Driver Parks, RR 2, Oshawa, also a General Motors employee, escaped injury. Police described the death car as "'a total wreck." Two other passengers in the Parks car were taken to Osh- awa General Hospital by City ambulance. Carot Raderford, RR 1, Oshawa, is in hospital with a severe head. laceration and possible knee injuries. Douglas Cameron, Simcoe street north, was discharged after treatment for head cuts. Driver of the second vehicle involved, Mrs. Veronica Canuch, 372 Rossland rogd west, suffered shoulder injuries, but was discharged after treatment at hospital. Police said Mrs. Canuch, who was alone, was travelling west on Rossland road. Ronald Porter was born in 4 fs e press : 'day when he said that the ar-|changes in U.S. foreign policy,| rest of the 52-year-old profes-jincluding abandonment of plans| bushland near Caledon, 20 miles from the Beeton fai parents, * W. M. Thompson, Crown a torney for Simcoe County, said the charge was filed formally here Thursday in the form of "informations." McDonald was to appear in court here today for arraign- ment, Mr. Thompson said he expected preliminary hearing of the charge would begin in De- cember. McDonald was taken from jail in Hamilton on court order and accompanied police on their search of the Caledon area WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S.-| Soviet relations are in a deep lfreeze and will stay there un- jless: Russia frees Frederick C.} |Barghoorn, the Yale scholar ar-jremarks and recent anti-Amer-|bill's jrested on espionage charges. Teacher's Arrest Freezes Relations Other major incidences were the Russian blocking of Allied convoys on the road to Ber- lin, Khrushchev's _ belligerent ae Wheat Deal Hurts WASHINGTON '(AP)--A bit- ter dispute over proposed grain sales to the Soviet bloc is hold- ing up Senate passage of Pres- ident Kennedy's badly mauled foreign aid bill. The row erupted Thursday night, the Senate's third night session this week, just when a final vote on the $3,702,365,000 jauthorization appeared near af- ter 14 days of debate. It broke Foreign' Aid Bill" wheat sale to R:ssia and other deals under negotiation with Communist-bloc countries. Until the figh' broke out over the grain sale issue, the bill, slashed by $827,250,000 and so riddied with amendments. that Kennedy made an angry protest at his press conference Thurs- day, appeared on the verge of fina' passage. equate level of education for all children, regardless of residence or economic circumstances." 6. Increased capital grants for hospital construction. 7. Adequate and permanent means of providing loans to mu- nicipalities for financing of long- term capital works projects. 'EXTEND NHA ACT' The federal government was asked to extend the National Housing Act to provide federal hoans for the purchase of exist- ing housing, as it now does for the construction of new housing. The act could also be amended to accelerate the con- struction of housing and hostel accommodation for the aged. The federation asked for in- creased federal contributions to the winter works program, and extended time limits for com- pletion of projects. It was felt the central gov- ernment should share the cost of all labor, including the salar- ies of regular employees neces- sarily used on winter works projects, and the cost of materi- als. The federation recommended that the federal government. as- sist. provincial and govern ments in establis "new towns" or "Satellite com- munities" on an experimental basis in various parts of Can- ada over the next five years. The federal government also was asked to remove its ceiling of $500,000 for each project in providing money for the elimi- nation of railway level cross- ings, to cover the entire cost of acquiring and clearing land for redevelopment and to help pay for the extensions of sewers and other utilities in redevelopment aras. cut over an amendment by Sen- ator Karl E. Mune (Rep. S.D.) te prohibit the Export-Import Bank from guaranteeing pay- tents for private crain sales to Communist countries. After turbulent exchanges, Democratic Leader Mike Mans- field of Montana offered a mo- tion to table and thus kill the amendment, He was defeated 46 \to 40. Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, |who has worked shoulder - to - ishoulder with Mansfield for the passage, failed to vote jican articles in Moscow's press.|with him. President Kennedy expressed! After the test ban pact Mos-| Opponents of the amendment the administration view at his} conference Thurs-| sor has "badly damaged" the atmosphere between the two countries and declared: "I want to get Professor Barghoorn out of prison." cow was hoping for sweeping \to create a nuclear force for the |Atlantic Alliance, |COEXIST RUSSIAN STYLE In other words, U.S. officials The Yale political scientist's|feel that Khrushchev was ex- arrest marks the low point in a|Pecting the United States to ac- ; gradual deterioration of U.S.-So- cept coexistence on his terms. argued it would kill projected plans for a $250,000,000 surplus Thieves Leave Nitro Bundl Nitro bundle | BROCKVILLE (CP)--Enough nitro-glycerine to blow up sev- eral city blocks was left behind » viet relations since the agree- "; nent reached in Moscow on the} Speculation is that the pro-|py thieves who broke into the fessor was picked up in order|w. R. McRae Tobacco Com- WILLIAMSTON, N.C. (AP)-- Fifteen white clergymen from the north, their leaders carry- ing wooden crosses, braved an angry white crowd and led an anti - segregation march here Thursday. They were jailed and started a hunger strike. In the first of two demonstra- tions in this farming town of 6,000, the northerners and 54 Ne- groes, including 22 under 16 years of age, were arrested. Twenty - four hesitant Negro teen-agers then marched on the court house but they dispersed and there were no arrests. The clergymen comprise the newly - formed Massachusetts unit of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and said they had come here at the re- te 'RONALD GORDON PORTER hat the Soviet Union would have an American to trade for Igor A. Ivanov, Russian trad- ing corporation employee ar- imited nuclear test-ban treaty. The Barghoorn case is' one of a series of signs that Mos-| cow is getting impatient be-| HELP The Chest CLIMB 261,800 ~ 250,000 _ __ 225,800 _ 200,000 _ 175,000 ~ 150,000 125,000 100,000 75,000 _| 50,000 25,000 Start. | cause the test-ban pact failed to rested Oct. 28 in New Jersey and waiting trial on espionage \charges. bring the results the Russians evidently hoped 'or. SHARING OF CENTRAL RULE PROBED VATICAN CITY (AP) Disposition of the petition is Sources at the Vatican ecumen-|up to the four moderators, They ical council] sa, 10 cardinals | can put it before all 2,300 coun- an" more than 300 bishops have|-.! fathers for a vote, pass it petitioned Pope Paul to spell/di'ectly to the Pope or turn it out how he want- bishops tojover to a special commission share with him in the central|' r study ar* amending. If the ;government of the Roman Cath-'latter 'is done, -afterward it lolic Church, * ould go direct to the Pop or «he petition was reported to|the council for a vote have presente¢ to the ecumen-| ical council's moderators, who| ASKS. REFORM are personal representatives of; In a Sept. 21 address to the the Pope, in an effort to settle; Vatican cura Pope Paul called a major dispute in the assem-|for reform of that. central body bly of. church administrators. He The petitioners want the pon-|;i? he felt sure the cura would tiff to explain references toinot object if the ecumenical papal-episcopal power and re- council shouid desire to see dio- |fe rm of the Vatican curia in|cesan bishops.-- from outside) ological |Rome--"'associated in a certainjand in the practical schema two September speeches. |quest of Golden Frinks, Negro jleader of the conference in this area. Frinks said the invitation was endorsed by Rev. Martin |pany bulding today. Police said they fled with $41 jfrom the cash register after be- jing scared off by a burglar|Lyther King, head of the con- alarm, The alarm was tripped/ference, and was in the nature when they tried to cut off serv-jof an '"'emergency call." ice wires ' Negroes first began demon- Bishops Query Pope way and for certain questions|Bishops and Diocesan Govern-| |in the study and responsibility|ment, now before the council-- ecclesiastical government") arp divisions have emerged with the pontiff. lon how bishops are to share In his Sept. 2° discourse open-|papal authority and even ing the council's second session,| whether they should share it. the Pope said the council would) Jn test votes two weeks ago provide: doctrinal and practical maine. & 445-1 nar 'standards for giving him "more the sprciabtes » DY @ O-tO-) Margin, help and support, in ways to be | Showed it overwhelmingly fa- determined" for greater collab-|vored the 'collegial' or sharing oration wit) his bishops. jconcept, But conservative pre- | In neither speech did the!jates have continued to argue Pope go into specific details. lagainst it OPINION DIVIDED Sources said the - petition During "ecent weeks of coun-)"anded to the council moder- . 1 debate on the powers ofjators carried signatures from bishops--as. outlined in the the-|many regions, particu larly '*hema De Hockesia | Patin America, Africa, India, Canada and central Europe. White Clergymen On Hunger Strike strations here last June, seek- ing desegregation of the town's municipal .swimming pool and most downtown facilities of pub- lic accommodation. More than 250 persons have been arrested Since the start of d tra- nicipalities "for assuring an ad-|' MAGISTRATE ILL Taken ill during today's ses- sion of Oshawa court, Magis- trate Frank Ebbs was re- moved to the Oshawa Clinic for examination. He complain- ed of feeling faint during a hastily-called adjournment of the session, Justice of the Peace, Harry Fayle termin- ated today's session by set- ting over remaining cases. Santa Claus Is Disbarred MONTREAL (CP) -- Trajan Constantin, one of a team of de- fence lawyers for a member of the Santa Claus gang who killed two policemen in a suburban St. Laurent bank holdup last De- « uber, has been disbarred. The council of the Bar of Montréal announced Thursday that it had found Mr. Constan- NEW YORK (CP)--President| Kennedy said today his pro- posed $11,000,000,000 t» | would generate about $30,000,- 000,000 in consumer demand for goods and services and create millions of jobs for workers in the. United States. The president, addressing the AFL - CIO national convention, agreed with the giant labor or- ganization's delegates that unm employment is the chief domes- tic problem in the U.S., then added: "If we can obtain the prompt passage of the pending $11,000,- 000,000 tax reduction bill we will be sailing by next April on the winds of the longest and strong- est peacetime expansion in our nation's economic history."' But Kennedy avoided the question of reducing the work week, which he has opposed as too costly a measure to solve unemployment and automation problems. SEEK SHORTER WEEK Kennedy spoke before the na- tional convention of the 13,500,- 000-member organization in the wake of a call by AFL - CIO President George Meany for a shorter work week as a a part of strong economic medi- é to cure unemploy- mem. ' " Meany said' 'the "American Federation of Labor-Congress:of Industrial Organizations wants the tax cut, along with other federal measures designed to create jobs. But he added that unemployment is the "curse" of automation which threatens a national catastrophe and the only solution is to cut the work week to 35 hours or less. Kennedy said today: "We urgently need a tax cut tin guilty of "an act derogatory to the exercise of the profes- sion." | The lawyer has been missing) and a warrant has been out for his arrest since the hearing of an appeal was called to review a contempt - of - court sen- tence imposed fellowing the trial of Georges Marcotte, con- victed of murder in the Santa Claus slayings. Mr. Constantin launched a $100,000 damage suit against "judge, prosecutor and bank bandit" during the Marcotte trial after Crown witness Jean- Paul Fourmnel, also charged in Jurder, d Mr. tions, SHOUT THREATS White spectators, some yelling threats, lined the streets for three blocks near the court- house for the first march. There was no violence as more than 50 policemen, including 28 state troopers, patrolled the down- town area. Rev. Harvey Coxe, a profes- sor at Andover-Newton theolog- ical seminary in Massachusetts, and Rev. David King, minister of a Congregational Christian Church in Amherst, Mass., led the march, carrying four - foot crosses. The other ministers followed, each walking hand-in-hand with a Negro girl. Negro demon- strators lined up behind them. They were met by Sheriff Ray- mond Rawls, who ordered the procession to the upstairs court- room. The marchers were booked on charges of unlawful assembly, parading without a permit, and of obstructing traffic. The New Englanders refused to post bonds of $500. All refused their evening meal. Rev. Paul Chap- man of Staughton, Mass., said some of the northerners would fast until their hearing Dec. 6, "as an act of protest and pen- ance."' the double nh. F ; Constantin of Having once pushed him and another man into committing two bank hold- ups to raise funds for a restau- rant purchase, He was fined $1,500 for con- te.upt of court. He disappeared before his appeal could be heard. Leave North Africa Alone, Selassie Warns ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP)--Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia warned today against the danger of foreign in- tervention in turbulent North Africa and expressed hope for peace between Algeria and Mo- rocco, The emperor opened a special conference of foreign ministers of 32 African states called to seek a solution to the Moroccan- Algerian frontier dispute. It is ithe major test for the six-month- old Organization of African Unity, formed in the same Af- rica hall in Addis Ababa. "Any misunderstanding which Gunman Snatches $11,500 Payroll OTTAWA (CP)--A lone gun- man today held up employees of the Sun Tube Company of Canada Limited here, stealing the firm's entire payroll of $11,- 500. The gunman, dressed in coveralls, gained admittance by saying he was a telephone _re- pairman. Once inside, he pulled the gun and asked for the pay- roll, arises the brotherly members of this organization must essefitially be considered eign hand can be allowed to play amy role Haile Selassie said. "With God's help, we can find a solution if all of us have a family affair in which no for-| " whatsoever,"| Oakville Firm Hit By Masked Bandits | OAKVILLE (CP) -- Two masked bandits held up a serv- ice station on Highway 2 near here today and escaped with an undetermined amount of money. Station attendant Carl Byers, 20, said the bandits forced him into a back room at knife point and then rifled the till. now as insurance against reces- sion... we need that cut... where it will do the most good-- the percentage cuts in tax lia- bilities in the lower brackets are three times as large as these in the, upper brackets." The tax cuts would proyide 2,000,000 to 3,000,000 new jobs, he said. He added, however, that tax cuts and more jobs are not the complete answer. 'We can take real pride in a $600,000,000,000 economy and 70,000,000 jobs only when they are underwrit- ing to the fullest extent the measures we need to improve our schools, rebuild our cities, counsel our youth, assure our health and care for our and infirm." The _ convention Thursday gave a cool reception to unem- ployment solutions proposed by Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York, candidate for the Republican presidential ; 'Big Daddy' TORONTO (CP)--Fred Gardi> ner, former Metropolitan Tor- onto chairman, today called for sweeping reform of the metro government. into a five borough system, instead of 13. His move followed a state- ment by a United States polit- ical scientist that the once-pow- erful Metro machine now is buried in " jalism . . . and deep trouble." Prof. Frank Smallwood of Dartmouth College, N.H., in an 18,000-word study delive: in Toronto, said Mr. Gardiner's retirement "left a void that has threatened. to dermi the tro operation." ; Mr. Gardiner, known as Big Daddy, blasted present counci:- lors for squabbling and called for a new spirit of unity, a common goodwill and an open heart." He made no reference to any} particular nation in mentioning foreign intervention. Morocco) has accused the United Arab} Republic and Cuba of sending arms and volunteers to Algeria | VULCANO Smoke clouds mushroom high into the air as under- water volcanic craters vi0- lenty erupt off Iceland's south coast today. Darker mass at base of picture is volcanic ERUPTS - pumice thrown from the cra- ters. This pumice erupted as high as 300 feet. (AP Wire- photo via cable from Reyk- javik) Metro Reform --- subsequent success of the mie- : ; PASSAGE OF TAX CUT PRESSED BY KENNEDY 'Tax Reduction Would Up Jobs 'd ¥