Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Feb 1964, p. 1

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A lowbrow is a person "who thinks the brains of an egghead are addled, She Oshawa Cimes Weather Report Wet snow or rain-tonight chan- ging to scattered snowflurries Thursday morning, Clearing Thursday evening, THIRTY PAGES Authorized 3 Second Claas Mall Pos Ottewa ond for payment of eked t Office Department une Pos in A tage DAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1964 QSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDi STEELWORKERS BID Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy . 93---NO, 36 For Cyprus NICOSIA, Cyprus--U.S. Un- dersecretary of State George Ball and British envoy Cyril Pickard called on President Makarios today to present the latest U.S.-British plan to send an international peace-keeping force to Cyprus. The conference took place as fighting between Greek- and Turkish - Cypriot communities flared anew in the south coastal city of Limassol, 38 miles south- west of Nicosia, At least one Greek-Cypriot policeman was killed, a palace spokesman said, An official account of the in- cident said the policeman was killed and another was wounded as Turkish - Cypriots tried to HOME'S MOODS The camera caught British Prime Minister Sir Alec Doug- las-Home in these varied poses as the British leader waited for his turn to speak at the Diamond Jubilee din ner of the Empire Club of Canada in Toronto Tuesday night --CP Wirephote lthe ancient crusader fortress jthat overloo's the port; and riots, Ball declined to make any comment after his meeting with Makarios, A spokesman for. Makarios said the talks will decide whether the Greek-Cypriot pres ident will take the case to the | United Nations, If the talks are considered unsatisfactory, a Specia} Greek-Cypriot delega tion will probably be sent UN headquarters in New York later this week, Ball told reporters he hoped, | to have full discussions with) |Makarios and Vice - President/ |Fazil Kutchuk, a Turkish-Cyp-| riot | "There's a problem to be solved, and it's hoped it will be isolved,"' he said There were no signs of anti- American demonstrations in Ni- jcosia and Greek-Cypriot offi- icials insisted they expected none, Clashes between Greek police and students marked -- Ball's stopover at Athens Monday as jdemonstrators demanding union between Cyprus and Greece jtried to march on the U.S. and British embassies. | Britain was one target be- jcause its troops now police an} juneasy truce between the war-/ jting communities, The United) States was the other because it! has offered to help with the po- lice work. As President Johnson's troubleshooter, Bal! is expected take over Berengaria Castle, © Sy were repulsed by Greek - Cyp> 4° 'Geneva Defection Sparks Red Fury to ? - ; eA aa x UNCH NEAR MURDER SITE Melvin Belli, right, chief de- fence attorney for Jack Ruby, eats a sandwich as he and other members of the de- fence staff lunched at- the small park near where Pres- ident Kennedy was assassin- ated, At left is Joe H, Tona- hill, one of Ruby's attorneys BISHOP TELLS COMMITTEE Charity Hurt By Tax On Churches TORONTO (CP)--For "sound|contribution to the common economic reasons', churches good. and other charitable institutions, 'Officials \ In the background is the Texas School Book Deposi- tory building where the rifle used to shoot Kennedy was found on the sixth floor, Ruby is charged with slaying Lee Lee Harvey Oswald, the man accused of assassinating Ken- nedy. (AP Wirephoto) {toa press conferenae saying it/having spirited Nossenko away, jwas "extremely surprising that) but merely spoke of 'foreign in- pop /despite all the seriousness of the |telligence agencies," should be GENEVA -- Soviet disarma- ment negotiator Semyon Tsar-| apkin charged today that "pro-| vocative activity' by Western} lintelligence agencies led to the/mand that the Swiss take steps defection of Yuri I, Nossenko,| jan expert on his delegation. He|high-ranking Swiss official in demanded that the Swiss return him The U.S, state department an-| nounced Monday that Nossenko, | identified as an officer of the top Soviet security agency KGB, had requested political asylum in the United States, The 36- year-old agent vanished eight days ago Tsarapkin read a statement situation, Swiss, authorities manifested a clear lack of de- sire to grant assistance to So-| viet authorities to find Nos- senko, "Moreover, if Nossenko is really in the hands of the United! States authorities this can only mean Swiss authorities not only do not provide participants at international conferences with elementary security, but also @l- to outline the latest U.S.-Brit-|snould be exempt from property|aware of the sound economic! low provocative activities of for- ish proposal for an interna-| tional peace force for Cyprus) to Makarios and Kutchuk. British officials in London) said the revised plan gives the United Nations a voice but no | tax, the Roman Catholic bish-|reasons for exempting the prop-| ops of Ontario said today. erty of churches and _ institu: In a brief to the Ontario com-|tions from taxation,"' it said. mittee on taxation, the group"'The practice of such exemp- said such a tax "would destroy|tions is universal in Great Brit- private initiative in charitable|ain, the United States and Can- vote on peace-keeping opera-|enterprises and education, could] ada." tione and abandons a previous condition raised North Atlantic alliance. | Makariog turned down the original plan because of the|py Rev, Gordon George of Tor-|in the income-creating proces dominant role it gave NATO and insisted that any interna-/ tional force on Cyprus be un-! der control of the UN Security Council, The United States and Brit- ain have sought to keep the Se- curity Council out of the dispute since it would then come under the threat of a Soviet veto. /Moscow has assailed the pro- iposed use of NATO forces in yprus | By dropping reference to NATO, the amended plan opens the way for neutral or Com jmonwealth countries outside |NATO to contribute to the peace force British sources at UN head- jquarters in New York said Can- Nada, The Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark and Norway have agreed to join the United States and Britain in setting up 'the peace force. France has re- fused to take part Hospital Death Inquest Ordered TORONTO (CP)--An_ inquest he'd Feb. 4 into the F Patricia Morgan, 32 who died in a Toronto hospital { with a surgical clamp in body--18 days after an be of ation thaty-the force be/privaie, non-profit. schools and from partners in the| add to the annual education bill| providing services having a sub t reduce or restrict the growth of} It said churches, religious and | educational institutions, while eign intelligence agents on their territory." DEMANDS RETURN Tsarapkin said he haped Swiss authorities would "undertake ali necessary.measures and utilize their sovereign rights to return Nassenko to his of work, to his family and ed tat + 4 ed) of Ontario." jstantial social and ec The S0-page brief, prepared/Value, are not directly involv T pkin read his in Russian and refused to make s,any comment or answer ques- Indonesia. | Takes Over Unilever Firm | JAKARTA, Indonesia (Reut- ers)--The Anglo-Dutch Unilever! Company now is under control) of the Indonesian peoples indus- try ministry, it .was officially! announced today | The announcement said the ministry decided to take control of the company after its work-) ers attempted to take over last month It added the ministry ap- pealed to the workers to go back to work as usual so pro duction could be maintained, When British - managed rub- ber, copra and tea plantations were put under "direct control" of the Indonesian government 3, reliable sources said the appointment of supervisory jteams would not immediately jaffect the British management's) frunning of them, | Most British and partly Brit- ish plantation holdings in Indo- nesia now are under a degree of government su, 'vision fol- F jeune takeover attempts last) Ge month by a Communist-domi- n. ranco nated workers association. | MADRID, Spain (AP)--Prince, The Seizure bids came in the 'Carlos of Bourbon-Parma went) wake of demonstrations against to Geneva on temporary duty from security headquarters in Moscow, Asked about Tsarapkin's de to return Nossenko to Geneva a Bern said privately: "Delegates at the disarma- ment conference are free to come and go as they please, We are not their nurses," Tsarapkin's statement = con- tained no direct criticism of Nos- senko or of the United States. Western officials said Tsarap- kin did not even accuse the U.S, Central Intelligence Agency of Throne Heir Meets With jMil and Smelter Workers) ternational Nickel Compan FOR UNION MERGER | | Seek Talks With Mine, Mill Union: |workers to discuss terms of af filiation," Mr. Sefton said, Mr. Sefton was referring to. statement Mr, Hague made oat a Steelworkers' conference in Tucson, Ariz, earlier this month that although Mine-Mill jhas rejected previous moves to jwards affiliation,. the door was still open, LONG BATTLE The' two unions have be warring against each for t right to represent workers mining, smelting and refinin industries in the United States and Canada for many years. Their most bitter conflict was Sudbury, where the Steel TORONTO (CP) -- The International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind,) said today it will con- sider affiliation with the United Steelworkers of America (CLC) if its arch- rival stops raiding « Mine- Mill membership. The union executive, re- plying to an 'offer today by the Steelworkers for talks on affiliation, said in a statement that Steel- workers' '"'raiding activities are costing workers in steel plants millions of dollars of dues payments." TORONTO (CP)--The United jn |Steetworkers of America (CLC) workers, after a has invited its arch-rival, the jega) struggle, Jast year wrested |International Union of Mine|pargaining rights for 17,000 In- (ind.), to start affiliation talks.|Canada workers 4. Larry Sefton, director of) Mill, Steelworkers District 6, issued) 'Relations between our two the invitation today in an open ynions hitherto have been at- letter to Kenneth Smith, na-jtended by bitter rivalry and jonal Mine-Mill president, seeming unbridgeable . dif- "Recognizng that these fast/ference," Mr, Sefton said, "To shifting times call for one/let these continue to divide us strong, united union in the/is to allow events of past years (mining, smelting and refin-|to impede our future in a new ing) industry, I wholeheartedly/age, the era of automation." second our international vice-|. wr, Sefton sald he felt the president Howard R. Hague's|welfare of all nonferrous work- from invitation to your organization\ers "surmounts all other con- 'to begin talks with the Steel-| siderations." |weld their forces and '"mount.a mighty drive to. "| He said the two 'unions must ACTION jto Pardo Palace today for a Britain's role in formation: of Franco that may have a bear-/here as an extension of British ing on the restoration of the "neo-colonialism." The fiance of Princess Irene! of Holland flew back to Madrid) where the royal . engagement!" j|was announced, ' | Carlos's visit--one that he re- lquested an appointment with meeting with Gen. Francisco|Malaysian federation, branded monarchy some day. ~ Tuesday from The Hague, MAY TAKE LEGAL Two versions circulated abou Franco to tell him personally Company Warns 'to anti-union mining tycoons who have for far too been free to exploit their workers." "While 'our unions are locked | jin. bitter conflict, the mining, onto, said the "privileged posi- | tion" of churches and charita- ble and educational institutions) ,, rests for its validity on their ihe |RECEIVE SUPPORT "These services are provided a loss which is defrayed by charitable contributions of |those who supply or support them,"' it added. It said a 'further misappre- hension that is often publicized" | jis that tax-exempt properties de- jprive a municipality and its cit- 'Strangling Try tions, Tsarapkin's statement ind eated that he expects the Swiss to call on the United States to) return Nossenko to Geneva and} deliver him to ite Soviet dele- _-- Carlos is a potential contender Since he presumably had ac-/for the throne should Franco de- cess to secret Soviet disanma-jcide to activate the monarchy ment and defence information,/ynder: terms of a 1947 plebis Nossenko is a great prize for! cite, j./0f the engagement, the other ithat he wished to talk about his} political future as the heir of one of the royal houses. | | 70 Employees HAMILTON (CP)--Legal ac- Son of the head of the Carlist)tion against the United Electri-/heads of other workers, wing of the Spanish royal house,| cal Workers of North America| may be taken if a work stop- page, involving about 70 work- ers at Canadian Westinghouse Limited continues, This was announced today by |smelting and refining Industry jis reaping record profits," Mr, Sefton said, | Malaysia, Philippines jare then transported over the ONE SUSPENDED One worker refused to per- form this work Monday and was suspended, Mr. Ball said. When the suspension was pro- Foiled By Boston Woman CAMBRIDGE, Mass, (AP) -- Another strangling attempt was reported Tuesday night to in- vestigators of the 11 unsolved women stranglings in eastern Massachusetts, Mrs. Carole Ferdinand, 25, told police she answered her door, thinking it was her hus- band, and saw a man holding a woman's stocking wrapped around his hand, She said the man, wearing a leather jacket, goggles or heavy glasses and a fur hat with flaps, fled when she screamed and slammed the door in his face Police found a nylon stocking in the hallway of the apartment house where it apparently had been dropped by the intruder in izens of revenues to which they are entitled "The exemptions are not in fact a grant or concession of the municipality at all," Western intelligence agencies. The US said Nossenko told U.S. officials Fewer Jobless In Mid-January OTTAWA (CP)--An estimated 466,000 persons in Candda were unemployed in mid January, 75,000 fewer than a year ear- lier, the labor department and bureau of statistics said today in a joint report The January unemployment total was 120,000 higher than in December, but the increase was his flight Mrs, Ferdinand's 27-yar-old jhusband, .Thomas, was oul walk ing the family's dog. described as "normal for this time of year.' The rise was largely among men % to 64 years of age 'LIKE KNIFE THROUGH CAKE' SAYS SKIPPER Ships Death Described SYDNEY Australia ships were moving a top speed when th» 20.000 carrier Me!bourne rammed the destrover Voyager Mond night and broke her in half Melbourne's skipper said today "Melbourne hit Voyage amidships. cutting throug like 'a knife through cake," Capt. R. J. Robertson. *l was a crunching noise--it minded. me of those noises you hear on TV movies." Robertson described Aust lia's worst peacetime nava aster after the Melbourne Australian Navy's flagship limped into pert with 159 239 survivors from the des Bot here collisior °o a di ton the of The carrier's bow div damaged \ y spokesman held little hope for 79 Vovager crew mem- listed missing, but a h is continuing. There are east three known dead, in- destroyer's 'com- Duncan H. Stev Sydney Ss was on the Voyager's when she was struck. by trier during night man 20 miles off the Aus tralian coast, 120 miles south of Sydney BOW SINKS QUICKLY The bow section of the 3,500. destroyer sank within 10 minutes. The stern remained afloat for three hours. The des troyer was a marvel of mod- ern electronics -- literally a oyer was b be ne aS ton CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS pushbutton ship whose guns and steering could work auto- » atically with radar. Robertson, on the bridge of POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 ¢ the carrier at the time, told re. sorters there was no moon but the sea was calm and cond tions generally good for the 'manoeuvres. The destroyer wag assigned to pick up any flyers;did a "magnificent job" in the who might crash at sea while rescue operations trying to land on the carrier "I'm sure that all living sur- "We had been engaged in vivers were picked up," he night - flying exercises which said require the carrier to' move as fe a i fast' as possible," Robertson D. JING IMPOSSIBLE said An Australian naval officer Roth ships were blacked out S@d there was no hope of send except for the port and star. 8 divers down to the Voyager board and red masthead lights Which was lying in about 950 when the carrier smashed into feet of water the smaller A\ithough Rebertsen declined "Voyager split clean to disclose the speeds, the Mel- halves," Robertson said bourne is reported capable of 22 halves slid down our sides. knots. and the Voyager could make 30 knots. The Melbourne SLIDES UNDER SHIP suffered no casualties in the col 'Voyager' slid easily under lision our béw. Melbourne did not Prime even rise when. she hit Menzies has called for a public "I ordered engines astern (re- investigation headed by a jur versing propellers) and we ist rather than the usual naval drifted away from the two sec- inquiry tions of the Voyager . Among the missing Voyager Robertson said the reste op-|'crew members are four young eration swung into action|midcshipmen who were grad- quickly and Métbourne's uated from the Royal Austra- Loats: were low: lian Naval -Colle Jervis er te pick up survivors last sstrover He said he from nermalily carried a crew of 34 Nowra naval airstrip and mine-|but three men were not with sweepers and crash launches'the ship on the manoeuvres. vessel in The Minister Sir Robert all immediately a ) sav copters As a percentage of the esti mated labor force, the January jobless rate was seven per cent, compared with 8.3 per cent in January, 1963; and 8.5 per cent in January, 1962, Seasonally ad- justed, the January unemploy- ment rate was 4.9 per cent, un- changed from December. The job picture in brief, with estimates in thousands Jan, Dec, Jan, 1964 1963 1963 6,697 6,774 6,407 Employed 6,231 6,428 5,956 Unemployed 466 M6 OMI The monthly report is based on a survey of 35,000 households across Canada for the week ended Jan, 18, Since figures are Labor Force }based on a sample cross-section of the population, they are es- timates and noi precise totals, The labor force and total em ployment both declined between December and January--mainly as a result of seasonal reduc- tions in outdoor activities and the release of temporary help hired for the Christmas season, the report said In non-farm industries, em- ployment showed a net decline of 189.000 described: as "about average for the period." The drop in farm employment was the smallest in several years Although there were the an- ticipated month-to-month drops in the labor force and employ ment, the year-to-year compar- ison showed more workers on the job--with nonfarm employ- ment 240.000 to 5,658,000 and agricultural work up 35.000 to 573,000 The st Increases over the year were in service, manufac- turing and trade Employment was up consid- erably from the previous year in all regions except the Atlantic area, where it was: virtually un changed. The increases changed rom 4.4 per cent in Ontario to 6.7 pe in British Colum bia. The. national increase was 14.6 per cent, cent Joined by her parents, Queen e US. state department juliana and Prince Consort/in a telegram to Labor Minis- press officer, Richard I, Philips! Rernhard, and her sister, Crown| ter Rowntree Princess Beatrix, Irene intro it said. 'he was a KGB staff officer sent! duced her fiance to Dutch cabi-| Vice-President J. W. Henley de- net members and their wives at The Hague Tuesday, Pre- mier Victor Marijnen led in a champagne toast to the health and prosperity of the couple To resolve a_ constitutional crisis, the 24 - year - old Irene gave up her rights as second lbehind Beatrix in. the line of succession to the throne, Last year, Irene abandoned the tra ditional Protestantism of house of Orange to become a Roman Catholic. Thieves Grab the .;company had been conducting tested by his fellow workers, the whole shift was suspended, he claimed Subsequently two other shifts jtried to arrange a meeting with the company management but were also suspended, according jot Mr. Ball, a oe vice-president in 1" change of personnel, invited the Py Raper ybe oPamms claimed) minister to send inspectors to 4 : the plant to check the work John Bail, president of Local) practices, 504, UE,W said three shifts of) He claimed the one employee |workers have been suspended) who was suspended was re- by the company since last Mon-| quired to operate a forklift truck day night, and not a crane, This worker The union in a telegram tojhad performed that duty before the minister stated that the|and was well qualified to do that type of work, he said unsafe practices by forcing) His suspension resulted from junqualified employees to hook)a flat refusal to do the job, Mr. heavy objects to cranes, which/Henley claimed. the Westinghouse management In the telegram company jnied' union. charges of unsafe jwork practices at the plant, which allegedly sparked a walk- out ' Relations Set (AP)--Malaysia and the Philip- pines announced today they have agreed to consider estad- lishing relations at the consular level. The agreement was disclosed as Malaysia's Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman and the Philippines' President Diosdado Macapagal concluded three days of talks on ending the Ma- laysia crisis, The Philippines refused to grant diplomatic rec- ognition to Malaysia, The two leaders said they would welcome a summit meet- ing with Indonesia's President Sukarno after tion of preliminary talks on the minis- iterial level, $750,000 On Rare Stamps LONDON (Reuters) -- Rare stamps worth about £250,000 : ($750,000) were stolen from a ga. dealer in London's West End § district during the night by a F- "highly organized professional "> gang," . "The thieves will want to get © them out of the country as soon | as possible," said the firm's managing director, Allan Ley- erton, "I believe the robbery is the work of a highly organized pro- fessional gang," he added. Among the 2,000,000 to 3,000,- 000 stamps missing was a pair of Canadian Seaway inverted centres worth about £700 (§2,- 109) apiece Even more valuable was a sheet of 106 New Zealand cen- tenary railroad stamps, worth about £9,000. Newsmen Witness U.S. Bomber Crash FORT WALTON BEACH, Fla (AP)--Two -hundred newspaper men and foreign military per- sonnel saw a United States B-26 bomber crash in flames Tues- day night during a, demonstra- tion at Elgin Air FE Base, The crew of two perished Witnesses said the bomber had just completed a strafing run with its .50-calibre machine guns blazing and was pulling up 'when the right wing fell off, Pape have his Paul 6th. kneels to forehead dabbed with ashes as he ushers in the Lenten season with an Ash Wednesday ceremony in i POPE USHERS IN LENTEN SEASON Rome the places the ashes on Pope's 'forehead. (AP cable from his private ¢ ape! in the Apos- tolic Palace at Vatican City, Luigi Cardinal Tragtia, left, papal Pro-Vicar of the City of & Wirephoto Rome) via »

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