Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Sep 1964, p. 1

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Thought For Today Home: The place where the' . : college student down for vaca- tion isn't. Price Not Over 3 10 Cents per Copy tL. 93 -- NO, 219 ° OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1964 Oshawa Cimes Authorized as Second Class Mail P Ottawa and for Poyment Weather Report Warmer Friday. Sunny with cloudy intervals. 'ost Office Department of Postage in Cash. Winds light. TWENTY-FOUR PAGES DETROIT (AP) -- Contract negotiations between Ford and the United Auto Workers Un- ion entered the crisis stage to- day with a strike deadline only one day away. Bargainers were prepared to go around the clock if neces- sary to avoid a walkout of some 125,000 UAW members at Ford plants. In announcing that a strike deadline had been set for 11 a.m, Friday, UAW - President Walter Reuther told reporters that the two sides still were far apart on the non-economic is- sues of relief time and produc- tion standards. There also was disagreement on the question of wage inequities, he said. Reuther indicated, however, that the union was ready to ac- cept most of Ford's economic offer, which paralleled the set- tlement reached at Chrysler last week. Potential strike U.K. Tories Favor Own Deterrent LONDON (Reuters)--The rul- ing Conservative party today said Britain must in the last resort have independently-con- trolled nuclear power to deter an aggressor, The party's election platform, issued today, said: "We possess this power today. Only under a Conservative government will we possess it in the future." The first and major empha- sis of the platform, underlined in a personal foreword by Prime Minister Sir Alec Doug- las-Home, was on defence and foreign policy. Political sources trouble was DELUXE RIDE FOR BUTTERFLY annia, B.C., 25 miles north of took the butterfly with him Mpporsmigal te esg ' Re oy Be when he returned to Toronto its wing asking tha e sen , * to the department of zoology by air. It {s. believed the but at University of Toronto. terfly may have flown from Toronto to California, thengto Smith, in Vancouver in con- ) : nection with a labor dispute, Britannia. --CP Wirephoto Ken Smith, president of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.), gave a Monarch butter- fly a deluxe ride to Toronto from Vancouver this week. The butterfly, caught at Brit- SEVEN IN RUNNING Leader Candidates Race Down Stretch In an interview with Pierre Berton, shown on some televi- sion stations Wednesday night,|said this indicated the deter- Mr. Templeton said he expects|mination of the government nesday, saying that 234 of the|to become premier of Ontario.|party to keep Britain's inde- expected 1,200 delegates were|The interview was recorded on pendent nuclear deterrent up committed to vote for him. He|tape a day after his defeat in/front as an election issue in the said this figure was given to} Riverdale. |Oct. 15 general election. him by the "draft Templeton"! 4s more than 1,200 delegates; "The only effective defence is committee formed after his pegan assembling here for the|the certainty in the mind of withdrawal. |convention starting tonight, the;any enemy that there is no "My feeling is that if that) candidates regarded as the ones| prize he could ever win by our many delegates insist that you|to beat were Mr. Nixon, 36,/defeat which could compensate must run, you can't deny them|member of the legislature forjhim for the destruction he the right to expres their will,"!Brant, and Mr. Thompson, 39,)would suffer in process," Dover-|the platform said. The platform attacked oppo- Eddie sition Labor party defence. pol- mayor|icy, and declared: "Nuclear bdication is the only policy on hich they can. unite." jwotes behind Kenneth Waters, the. Conservative candidate. Mr, Templeton jumped back into the leadership race Wed-| TORONTO (CP)--Thei tahk /of choosing.a. new- leader begins today for an uncertain group of Ontario Liberals, out of power in the province for 21 years and with no hope of gain- ing victory until the next gen- eral election. expected three years hence, ' They will pick their man from among seven candidates, including Charles 'Templeton, who re-entered the race Wed- nesday after having announced last Friday that he was quit- ting, and Robert Nixon, son of|he said after a meeting with the|member. for Toronto Ontario's last Liberal Lab gwen fee mage = his home at! court. Harry Nixon, who reigned from) nearby Clarkson. | , PEs May 18, to Aug. 17, 1943. Other candidates said they| «omens ed hy Mr. Templeton was beaten by) Were happy to see Mr. Temple-| 4+ Owen Sound; Joseph Gould|2 Harold. Wilson's Labor party! Union-Ford Talks Enter Crisis Stage brewing at Chrysler also, de- spite the national agreement covering most of the UAW as- sembly line workers. There was still the possibility of a walkout at a few plants where local grievances had not been resolved. SET DEADLINE In addition, a strike deadline of 11-a.m. Friday has been se in contract negotiations for some 7,000 white collar workers in office, clerical and engineer- ing jobs. Last week's Chrysler settle- ment--which is expected to set the pattern for the entire auto industry -- included an early retirement incentive program, longer vacations, added _holi- days and assumption by the company of all medical and hospital insurance payments. The retirement program calls for a pension of up to $400 a month for workers retiring at age 60 after 30 years' service. When the worker reached 65, jpayments would drop off to a |lower rate, but some of the slack would be taken by social security. Both Reuther and Ford said they believed there was still time to reach a settlement be- fore the strike deadline. Ford was hit by a wildcat walkout Tuesday at its huge Rouge manufacturing complex. The strike angered Reuther be- cause it resulted in a five-hour breakoff of negotiations just as they were reaching a critical Stage. | | OTTAWA (CP) -- Unemploy- jment in Canada was estimated jat 247,000 in mid-August, down 118,000 from July and 23,000 lower than in mid-August last year. The latest jobless total equalled 3.4 per cent of the la- bor force, the lowest mid-Au- gust unemployment rate since the boom year of 1957. Regionally, the jobless rate ranged from a low of 1.9 per cent on the Prai:fes to five per cent in Quebec. It was 4.6 per cent in the Atlantic provinces, 2.6 per cent in Ontario and 3.9 per. cent in British Columbia. The figures were prepared jointly by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics and the labor de- partment, using results of a sample survey of 35,000 Cana- dian households in the week ended Aug. 22. The job picture in brief, with| estimates in thousands: | Aug. July Aug: 1964 1964 1963 7,204 7,232 7,016 Employed 6,957 6,967 6,746 Unemployed 247-265 20) TEEN-AGERS WORK Labor Force FIREMEN COOL FLAMING MUSIC Round and round went the turntable and hotter. and hotter came the music from the record player in a Hortop street home yesterday. But, when smoke began to fill the living room and the motor burst into flame, every- one thought it was hot enough. Firefighters were called to cool the flaming record player. There was no other damage to the home. The report said the drop in| unemployment between July and August was concentrated among teen-agers who left the labor market "in significant numbers" in August. Employment changed litt le from a month earlier, But over the year it was up 211,000, about 3.1 per cent. Non-farm employment rose by 271,000 or 4.5 per cent. The report said the largest gains in employment were in the service industries, manufac- turing, and trade. Construction lemployment was: some what lower than a year earlier. OTTAWA. (CP) -- The Com mons flag committee, 15 MPs charged with taking the. heat off an explosive national issue, meets 'today for the first time. One of the first actions of the seven Liberals, five Progres- sive Conservatives, one New | 'and one Creditiste is expected to be to call on Herman M. Batten, 55 - year ~ old former high school principal, to pre- side as chairman. Mr. Batten, Liberal MP for the Newfound- land constituency of Humber- St. George's, is the chairman of house committees whose ju- dicious rulings, delivered in im- peccable English, have won him respect on all sides in the Commons. He says he believes the com: mittee can come up with an ac- ceptable solution to the flag is- sue which deadlocked the House for weeks. Anyone who mentions the word "instructions" in the sense that the government has issued any to him gets fixed firmly with a steady eye as Mr. Batten says with emphasis: "If any attempt is made to Democrat, one Social Crediter| 15 MPs Sit On Hot Issue have anything iv do with it. No- body has tried to instruct me." | Several committee members |estimate it will take two or |three meetings before the com- |mittee gets into the real work \of finding an acceptable flag | design. Such preliminary steps as electing a chairman and vice- chairman come first. As a special committee it will have to decide what its rules of pro- cedure are -- these are pro- vided by the Commons for standing committees but not special committees. With more than 4,000 flag de- signs already available, and the expectation of hundreds more in receiving written rep- resentations, the committee will have to figure out how to nar- row them down to more man- jageable numbers . Another expected problem surrounds the fact that the committee is to hold most of its sessions behind closed doors. This was agreed on by the party leaders when they de- cided to get the flag issue out of the Commons and into a | igive me instructions, I won't! committee. Statistics Record Jobless Decrease t| Water, Mud Hit Farm employment in August was estimated at 714,000, down 60,000 from August, 1963. ESTIMATES DURATION Of the total unemployed, the report .estimated that 181,000 had been jobless for three months or less. The other 66,- 000 had been seeking work for four months or more. The jobless rate, as a propor- tion_of the labor force, fell to 3.4 per.cent in mid - August from 3.7 in July. In August last year it was 3.8. Ontario _ had _an__ estimated 2,578,000 employed in mid-Au- gust, up 102,000 from. August last year. Unemployment fell in the same period by 4,000 to 68,000. The unemployment rate edged down to 2.6 per cent from 2.8 in August last year. Logging Camps CAMPBELL RIVER, B.C. (CP)--Torrents of water and mud crashed through two coastal logging camps Wednes- day, carrying most of both camps into the sea. Four persons are presumed dead, Some survivors were evacu- ated by seaplane, boat and hel- icopter, and others walked to a nearby camp shortly before a bridge floated away. behind them. Several persons are in hospital at this. Vancouver Is- land town across the Strait of Georgia from the slide areas, The worst slide occurred at the Cattermole timber camp on Ramsay Arm, 150 miles north- west of Vancouver, where a churning wall of mud 50 feet thick in some places and 1,000 feet wide broke loose. One man was pulled alive from the mud, but timekeeper Harold Bell, about 45, cook's assistant Norman Cooper, 49, and Mrs. Ted Inkpen, 48, gfe of a camp mechanic, were miss- ing. On. the other side of the mountain, at Canadian Collier- ies' No, 3 camp on Bute Inlet, Tom Chipenoff was believed drowned when a wharf was washed away. Two inches of rain in 12 hours weakened a_ logged-off area overhanging the Ramsay Arm camp. The slide began at about the 1,500-foot level and gath- ered logs, trees and rocks as it went. Promises Divide Nation Says Dief CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) -- Opposition Leader Diefenbaker said Wednesday night the prom- ises made by Prime Minister Pearson during the last federal election campaign have divided Canada. Mr. Diefenbaker told the Prince Edward Island Progres- sive Conservative Association: "It's an awful thing that we should be discussing in Parlia- ment whether or not the Queen will be safe in Canada. When we were in power, this wouldn't have happened." CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS [BOARDS JET Ringed by special service- men, Mr. Johnson made a polit- ical detour to shake the bands of American school children be- fore the motorcade returned to Vancouver and he boarded his presidential jet for Seattle. The Peace Arch ceremony followed: another in Ottawa in which the instruments of ratifi- it be observed in good faith by the government and people of the United States of America." jcation were exchanged by Ex-|PRAISES TREATY | ternal Affairs Minister Martin| and U.S. Ambassador Walton) POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 James Renwick of the New) '0n a Teg ot but they| (Toronto Bracondale); and Vic-|W Democratic Party in a byelec-|Conceded him little chance in)t9, Copps, mayor of Hamilton. e last Thursday. The for his defeat in Riverdale. Mr. ; ae ; ' ing las ursday, The former vention gets under way Friday|last week, that a Labor govern si a Riverde victor 5 ; [cropping stone to the eadccehig\dates. Mr. 'Thompson is ex-|tion of the 1962 Nassau agree- | » pari : pected to be nominated by|ment under which the United J d U hold of the party. 2] u ges Pp best decision that he coald| Minister whose riding of Tor-jply Britain with Polaris mis- | unity of the party," his. cae theads, said on hearing of Mr. Temple- Act Challense Templeton's likelihood of win- Ps | don't think his chances are : A three-judge federal panel to-| Andrew Thom T M : | sas mmr," May Become Final One commodations section of the|q* the pre - convention favor- SE MBOnAE Be applied toa Birm-'we have always felt competi-/third sessiow of the Vatican/Bombay, India. ir*>+am restaurant. tion was good for the leader-|ecumenicat council may be ex-! But the sources said only 500 their concern over the spread/that. He is a gallant fighter." vember closing to become the} to Bombay, and the. absence of a temporary restraining. order|I'ament for Renfrew South and! reliable sources Said today. |disrupt continued council work General Nicholas Katenbach,|see how Mr. Templeton could,eyer, this will depend on how! The council-fathers were told the act. a that 'here was a winner.' but! council. prelates get in their dis-| In Washington, a justice de-|he lost. He gambled all in Riv- cussion and voting by the third session, that they must department will appeal the de-| and he crapped out." The directors of the council|"0 time disposing of the 13 said it will ask a stay of the Wi d headed by an Italian arch-, "em. the three-judge court, pending In Ows pane] of five cardinals and] high court. | the idea of keeping the council] The ruling, filed in U.S. Dis-} in session if it appears that the| nection 'with a suit brought by| TORONTO (CP)--Windows in| ished before Christmas. } co-owners of Ollie's barbecue. |Printers were smashed over-|a closing date in November be-! The McClungs challenged the night Wednesday while Local §1)/cause an international euchar-- VANCOUVER (CP) -- Prime asked for the temporary in-|Cal Union (CLC) picketed the/Catholic spiritual meeting held/dent Johnson made. the Colum- | All three printers' homes are ne ' ; USS. District Judges Seybourn|in : nesday in a symbolic cere- in suburban Scarborough, and Mi i t mony washed by rain. Birmingham and Circuit Judge!at the Toronto daily newspaper, In en y i |The Sint che OF the three! side United States borders as Ala., heard the case Sept. 1 andjqailie. being. picketed by the. Is E d held it under advisement until/yTy. 4 oF ies xpecte hours. It rained both at an air- port welcome _and at the for- of Star printer Frank Scholes'| Jozsef Cardinal Mindszenty is( 12), Proclamation of the treaty |him and his son, also a printer,| gary before the end of the cur- of here on' the international traitors for returning to work.| rent session of the Vatican ecu- . Three other union men, passed| menical council in November, a} The president spoke for seven minutes to a crowd of 10,000 bors. They read: "'If they each\ said Weédnesday. |Squeezed .in front of the tower- paid to Judas they would be|year - old Hungarian cardinal straddles the 49th parallel. | overpaid. We printers. are|would probably stay. in Buda- 4 ashamed of them both. What) pest for a. short time because 'Teaty and said: tion in Toronto Riverdale rid-|the leadership race because of! 4 14131 business of the con-\said in its platform, published evangelist placed third, a ad Pe ri had put great stress) "4 tne nomination of candi-ment would propose renegotia: | "I think that this was the! Walter Gordon, federal finance|States has promised to sup- sos . make as far .as preserving the onto Davenport coincides with|siles without their nuclear war- Civil Rights Mr Nixon 6 o ton's announcement. But of Mr.| Thi d V . S s Temyton ccinore ov' Turd Vatican session BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) --| very good," day ruled that the public ac- along with Mr. Nixor. as one| U.S. Civil Rights Act is uncon-|jtes, commented:'I would. say! VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The|city, is to open Nov. 28 in The judees, who expressed|ship race and I sti!l maintain|tended past its scheduled No- bishops have signed up to go of congressional powers, issued Joe Greene, member of Par-| final session of the assembly,|500 bishops would not seriously against acting U.S. Attorney-; also a candidate, said he did not'. The sources stressed how- by the remaining 2,000 bishops. prohibiting him from enforcing| possibly win. "His pitch was} f, » 25 F 'atholic| .,. ar the 2,500 Roman Catholic this week, as they started their partment spokesman said the erdale on one throw of the dice scheduled Nov. 20 closing date.|Speed up their work and waste cision to the 'Supreme Court. He| = = the general secretariat|Shemata, or topics, still before th restraining order granted by bishop, the 'council moderating} disposition of the case by the| S a h d Pope Paul--were said to favor} WASHED BY RAIN trict Court here, was in con-| e remaining work can be fin-| | Ollie McClung Sr. and his son, {the homes of two employed! The third session was given} constitutionality of the law and|°% the International Typographi-|istic congress, a major Roman|Minister Pearson and Presi- junction. jhome of a third printer. jevery four years in a different/pia River treaty official Wed- Lynne and H. H. Grooms Of|aj! three have returned to work i *s fi i The president's first trip out- Walter Gewin of Tuscaloosa, | | chief executive took three poday. Five pickets marched in front) yaTICAN CITY. (Reuters)-- |home, carrying placards calling) expected in Rome from Hun- at Douglas; Be. 20 sone ae border, jout the pamphlets to neigh-|high Roman Catholic source received the 30 pieces of silver| The source declared the 72-|98 white Peace Arch, which (do you think, neighbor?" ihe is "not well." He formally proclaimed the|Great {flight le "From this day forward let'ment Jetstar over the Colum-jto a telegram announcing the Butterworth. | The president and prime min- ister arrived here together.from| Falls, Mont., after a in. a_ transport Tether: Symbolic Treaty Ceremony bia River basin, They saw the sites of three storage dams {worth $447,800,000 that British |Columbia will build under the terms of the treaty. The Dun- can Dam site ha been marked with 50-foot splashes of lime. The prime minister threw away his prepared text at the Peace Arch, saying: | "I was going to make speech but the, best I can do is cut this speech short so we can get in out of the rain." | He termed the treaty signing "an important accomplishment not only of great material ben- efit to the two peoples but an illustration of their friendship and neighborly co-operation." Johnson, made wry reference | ®|WILL DEVELOP FAST tem poles as mementos of B.C. payment in New York Wednes- day of $253,929,534.25 in U.S. funds to Canada for Canada's share of downstream power benefits. "I was shocked when I heard that telegram," he said, men- tioning the figure again. "The Canadians went for that last 25 cents." Premier W: A. C, Bennett, whose B.C. government Wed- nesday received a cheque for $273,291,661.24 in Canadian funds from the federal govern- ment as part of the same fi- nancial transaction, promise to develop the Columbia "swiftly and diligently." He also sent the national leaders away bearirig stubby carved to- UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- Cyprus-has agreed to permit United Nations troops to re- main on its territory until Christmas, but has challenged some of the terms of continu- ation set by Secretary-General U Thant. The Cypriot position was put before the Security Council Wednesday as it opened debate on Thant's request to extend the life of the force from Sept. 26 to Dec. 26. The council also heard Thant announce the name of the new UN mediator to seek a political settlement between Greek and Turkish communities on the is- land. He is Galo Plaza, 58-year- old former president of Ecua- dor who has been serving as Thant's personal representative in Cyprus. Plaza succeeds Finnish diplo- mat Sakari Tuomioja, who died in Geneva Sept. 9. The Security Council is ex- pected to approve continuation of the Cyprus force, possibly Friday or Monday. But there' is no indication that it will lay down rougher terms of refer- ence for the force or spell out how it is to be financed. Thant advised the council last week that there was a "'serious need" for clarification of the powers of the 6,160-man force. He indicated that if the force remains in Cyprus, he will is- sue new guidelines to its com- mander in three main areas: 1. °The force should have "such unrestricted freedom of movement as may considered essential 'by the force com- UN Convoy Brings Food NICOSIA (AP) -- A United Nations convoy delivered six tons of Turkish food to the de- fiant Turkish-Cypriots in the northwest village of Kokkina Wednesday. Three Finnish UN trucks guarded by armored cars rolled into the village--on the verge of starvation three days ago -- past a nine-ton hea, of food donated by the Greek-Cypriot government of President Maka- rios. The government supplies were dumped on the edge o the road by UN personnel Tues- day night when armed villagers refused to accept them and halted the UN convoy at gun- point. CYPRUS PERMIT TROOPS TO STA Thant Stresses Need -- For New Guidelines mander" to carry out its fune- tions. x 2. The force would be "'reas- onably entitled to remove posi- tions and fortified installations where these endanger the peace. ..." 3. The commander could de- mand that opposing forces "be separated to reasonable dis- tances to create buffer ones, in which armed forces would be prohibited." Canada, largest contributor to the force with a contingent of 1,130 men, is known to have pressed Thant for stronger terms of reference. Cypriot Foreign Minister Spy- ros Kyprianou said that regard- ing unrestricted freedom of movement, his government had done its utmost to solve this problem despite sensitive issues of security involved. He said a solution to the problem already. had been found, Indonesian Guerillas Rounded Up KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) Malaysian government officials appeared confident today 'that Indonesian guerrillas -in. Ma- laya are on the verge of being wiped. out. ty at ped Razak, Malaysian eputy e G M a ta Pret eo where the. if 0 guerrillas were easy Yo be, was much improved. ne "Most of the guerrillas have been rounded up," he said. Earlier it was reported that British Gurkha troops continued to close in on a spot believed to be the main. base of the month-old Indonesian offensive in south Malaya. At Jakarta, Rear - Admiral Martadinata, Indonesian naval chief of staff, has warned that a British strike against any part 'of Indonesia would mean ar, Addressing submariners. Wed- nesday at Surabaya, East Java, Matadinata said movements to- ward freedom in some parts of the world could not be stopped by any kind of weapons and -- should accept this real- ity. Last week Britain announced that it would carry the fight to Indonesia itself if further Indo- nesian aggression occurred in Malaysia. Dr. Murray Newman, cura- tor of Vancouver's aquarium, feeds Moby Doll, a captive killer whale. The whale takes FRIENDLY KILLER the cod fish so' gently she barely disturbs the water of her pen. --(CP Wirephoto) -

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