Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Oct 1964, p. 1

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The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, VOL. 93 --- NO. 247 Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy | he Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1964 % Authorized os Second Class Mail Ottawa ond for payment of Postage Weather Report Cloudy And Colder Thursday. Brief Period Of Snow Likely Tonight. Low-32; High-45. Post Office Department in Cash, THIRTY-TWO PAGES Royal Report Raps Separatists QUEBEC (CP) -- Acting At- torney-General Claude Wagner, ina report to Premier Jean Le- sage, says separatists, univer- sity students, thugs from Mont-| real and a small group of re-| porters caused most of the trouble when Queen Elizabeth visited Quebec City Oct. 10-11. He said in the seven-page re- port resulting from an investi-| gation into alleged police bru- tality that separatists made it} clear weeks before the visit tnat they intended to make trouble, | and that Frnch-speaking Ca- nadian groups like the 300,000-| member St. Jean Baptiste So- ciety "created an atmosphere} conducive to extremism" with their pre-visit statements. Premier Lesage told a press) conference at the Montreal In-| ternational Airport before he} Visit | | | | | | | Armed provincial. police pa-| trolled the halls outside, an | usual measure, checking press cards and turning away several! students. | Mr. Wagner said no one has! brought him evidence that "one) drop of blood was shed" during) the 38 hours the Queen was! here, despite what he termed "exaggerated and imaginative" | news reports. NO FRENCH BLOOD "Contrary to the predictions, not a drop of French-Canadian} blood was shed in the strects of Quebec." Police had the difficult job of dispersing unlawful meetings, | finding and isolating agitators and 'foreseeing and preventing) @ E a ' : unpleasant scenes which might oii ' : ; , » | have degenerated into trag- : , i scheduled a membership end of the national jagainst General Motors. Cor- FRANCE HINTS DETROIT (AP)--The United} Auto Workers Union today vote signal the strike Sunday that could poration. Walter P. Reuther, president troit agreement in principle on a new three-year contract. outs '"'the height of irresponsi- bility" and broke off negotia- ! Vote Could Signal fF End Of GM Strike | AMC. vice-president Edward L. Cushman termed the walk- tidéns on a new contract for AMC's Kelvinator division at >. <3 Deadlocked ~~, In Brussels é~, In Brusse Oe PARIS (Reuters)--President } Charles de Gaulle said today Franee might leave the Euro- pean Common Market "if the Common Market for agricul- ture isnot organized as. was of the United Auto Workers, said today that the GM council i lof the UAW in Detroit Frilay | will recommend either ratifica-| tion or rejection of the UAW national agreement. left for a three-week trip to Eu-|edy." are rope that the press prepared| It was admissible that some the ground for the Quebec City|unnecessary moves might have royal visit incidents. jbeen made "by officers who "The greatest danger for|!acked judgment or could no Quebec, as elsewhere in all|longer keep cool, exposed as countries, is yellow journal-|they were to insults and sar- : casm from agitators and con- sidering most of them had been} on duty. 20 hours." | Mr. Wagner noted in the re-| port that Laval students had} shouted '"'Gestapo" at police| and spat in their direction on the university campus. | A reporter at the legislature had been told to get out after) making a remark of "'inconceiv-| ism," he said. PROTECTED QUEEN The premier said the thou- sands of police on duty during the royal visit protected .the Queen. "As for my own safety---- couldn't have cared less," he said. In Quebec City, Mr. Wagner read the report to about 30 re-| porters, and a few Laval Uni-) versity students representing the campus weekly, ata press conference held in the private bills committee chamber of the Quebec legislature. Blast Wounds OPP Constable } able grossness" about the} Queen. Marc Scheifler, 28, described} inthe report as "a_self-styled| journalist" and correspondent} for the Communist review Rev-} olution in' Paris, had been ar-| rested after inciting youths to demonstrate. "He appeared to police min- gling with the crowd as an agi- tator in quest of provocation." Mr: Wagner said he had| | jealled upon all reporters who | were M COLDWATER, Ont. (CP)--Aj/roughness' and asked for full) and, with 10 new appoiritmel 'self-styled victims of FIND WINE CELLAR-NOT BOOTLEGGER A workman rips at a wine cellar in the former home. of Rocco Perri; Hamilton's in- in 1044, is believed encased in for clues. famous prohibition-era boot- legger. Rocco, who vanished cement in Hamilton Bay. Po- lice are searching the home --CP Wirephoto PM Hits Whitehall With Big Upheaval LONDON (CP)--Prime Min-| namic first 100 days 'of power) negotiations Tuesday night indi-| ble appeared to be subsiding on|passed 19 secondary clauses of hit| but his whirlwind activity since|cates the government's deter-| the auto labor front as the GM|the bill amid intense haggling ister Harold Wilson has | A telegram directed all GM UAW units to meet Sunday to} j vote on local agreements where \they are completed, as well as on the national agreement. The union executives said that if the national agreement is approved local unions and} units which have ratified local) settlements will return to work} immediately. Local units lacking at-the- plant: settlements will vote on whether to return to work or stay out until-an agreement is} | reached. | NEW TROUBLE | Earlier, a rash of new trou-| Whitehall with its biggest up-|taking over from the Tories|mination to be decisive and it|strike went into its 26th day. heaval in many years. Wilson has appointed 78 min- isters to his Labor government ure'of turmoil at Whitehall. ' Minitries are being - split Up; The employers have offered | 'ana rearranged, creating an at-jthe dockers an increase of 12 {spite | Friday has surprised even close; might also give a hint of the |associates and caused a meas-| government's bro ad strategy on the wages front. bes w= ae Bente ah As grab ar Mig g -- expected today, his administra- momere of excitement and ' bolic . é ically ger | Confusion. and chest earl ytoday as he|handling, and five others stated| U0 will be numerically larger | con'us aux chased two youths suspected of'/they had seen other reporters than that of Conservative Sir) Apart from Britain's eco- stealing firearms through dense| being pushed about. | Alec Douglas-Home. nomic problems, the biggest im- swamp near this village 15; "It is remarkable none of the; Wilson had promised a dy-|mediate crisis facing Wlison shillings sixpence (about. $1.87) } a week for time workers and 314 per cent for piece workers. A| jtypical wage at present is $50 a week. There was a wildcat walkout} Tuesday at American Motors| Corporation' plants in Mil-| waukee and Kenosha, Wis., de-| vebal agreement on a new ,national-level, - profit-shar- | ing ¢ontract. Scarcely 24 hours before the Wisconsin walkouts, AMC and 'the UAW had announced in De-|production departments, miles northeast of Orillia. eye - witnesses could say) -------- ~|was a threatened dock strike Police said the blast struck|whether there had been provo-| Const. R. G. Connors, ripping) cation." open his right hand. A heavy parka and regulation tunic ab- sorbed the blast in the region) of his chest. | Const. Connors was in satis-| factory condition in a Toronto personal study, made| His 'coldly, objectively and impar- tially, now that the hysteria has passed,' and based upon films and reports i and from police journalists, indicated to him) CPR Directed | that could do tremendous dam- age to the export trade--pre- cisely the area in which the prime minister is trying to im-| prove the country's position. CALLS TALKS | Defer Cutbacks OTTAWA (CP)--The board of hospital after doctors operated | that three reporters had "a hos-|transport commissioners has di- on his hand. The chest injuries were described as "minor". Police arrested two youths and took them to Toronto. They | said charges were pending. | tile and provocative -- bearing that led them, not to be mat-} tyred or bludgeoned, but to be pushed back with several light blows of a baton." Downgrade Nikita Campaign Halted COPENHAGEN (AP) -- Den- mark's Communist newspaper says the Soviet Union's new leaders have halted their cam- paign to downgrade Nikita Khrushchev because of the ad- versé reaction from most Eu- ropean Communist parties Peter Schaeffer, Moscow cor- respondent. of the Danish 'par- ty's Land og Folk, said "To Soviet circles it has been a surprise that this critical at- titude was expressed publicly coupled with demands for an explanation of the background and the methods of the recent shift of leaders," Parents Charged Abandoning Child CORNWALL (CP) Police said the parents of a 13-year- old girl whose baby was found hidden in a barn eight hours after birth Monday have been charged with abandoning a child under 10 years They laid the charge finding the baby, a boy, wrapped in newspapers in a car in a barn on the parents' farm near Lancaster, a rural community 10 miles east | of here. The parents, names were not released, ex pected to appear in court next Tuesday } after whose were Stig Bringert, Moscow corre- spondent of Copenhagen's lib- eral newspaper Politiken, re- ported that Khrushchev and his wife, Nina, have been installed) a REPUTED MAFIA CHIEF... Gunmen Kidnap under virtual house arrest in a} four - room apartment "from| where he can see the Kremlin! towers." : "Khrushchev is- said to have received a pension of 1,000 ru- bles a month--which is 300 ru- bles more than he himself gave former foreign minister Molo- tov," Bringert said. UNITY CALL As Communist s pokes men outside the Soviet Union openly criticized the manner in which Khrushchey was dumped, the Kremlin issued an urgent call for Communist unity "The unity and cohesion of the international Communist movement must be stréngth- ened," Moscow Radio said. The Norwegian Communist organ Friheten said that if Khrushchey made mistakes, his successors must share responsi- bility. Luigi Longo, chief of Italy's Communist party, told a rally| in Milan Sunday: "The way in which comrade Khrushchey has been replaced leaves us worried and critical." Israel's party paid tribute to Khrushchev's. leadership and lasked Moscow for 'more in- formation'. on his ouster. Ray Gunter, the new. labor OF FIVE BLIN CALTANISSETTA, Sicily (AP)--In a darkened clinic room with only one lamp rected the CPR to defer its pro-| minister, today cailed together| burning, Dr. Luigi Picardo posed elimination of 16 passen: ger trains in central. Canada pending a hearing. The board announced its de-| cision today following a closed meeting Tuesday where pro- tests against the proposed cut- backs were heard. The CPR had announced its intention to drop Trains 31 and} 32 between Montreal and Farn- ham, Que., as part of a through! chosen mayor of Peterborough chino, 11, service to Boston; Trains 132- 133-137-138 between both sides in tne docks dispute. Gunter's swift response to aj breakdown of company - union} | youngest, New Peterborough Mayor Is Chosen | PETERBOROUGH (CP) | Ald. W. Gordon Powell was Tuesday night by his fellow Tuesday took the bandages off the eyes of five brothers blind since birth. Cologero Rotolo, 4, the stared in amaze- ment, then cried out La Cara- vata, and reached out timidly to touch the doctor's necktie. Giuseppe, 9, who saw his mother for the first time, sobbed only "mamma!"' One after another, Gioac- Carmello, 13, and Paolo, 15, sat up and blinked Montreal) aldermen. He will complete the! at the light in the far corner and Ottawa by the north 'shore; | remaining two months and two| of the room. Each one could and 10 local trains between Pe- terborough, Havelock and Tor- onto. } weeks in the one-year tenm of office held by the late Clarence see. OPERATION SAVES SIGHT D BROTHERS "It was an enormous re- lief,"' said the doctor who had operated to remove cataracts which had left each of the brothers. blind from birth. "T was afraid that with one. | or two of them the operation might be less successful. Psy- | chologically it would have | been a terrible blow to one | alone to be left blind." | Friends of the Rotolo fam- | fly in the village of Campo- | bello di Licata took up a sub- | scription to send the boys to the clinic, but Picardo and two 'assisting physicians "re- fused the money and oper- ated free. | W. Boorman. NEW YORK (AP) -- Joseph] (Joe Bananas) Bonanno, a re- puted Cosa Nos tra chieftain scheduled to appear before a federal grand jury today, was kidnapped on Park Avenue this morning by two gunmen, police said. "The boss wants to see you," one of the gunmen was re- ported to have told Bonanno Bonanno's lawyer said: he started after the men, but stopped when one fired a shot at him: At the U.S. Senate crime committee's hearings in Wash- ington last yee underworld informer Joseph alachi iden- tified Bonanno as a leading fig- ure in the Cosa Nostra, also known as The Syndicate or the MSifia, Valachi testified. that Bonanno bossed: one' of the five Cosa Nostra "families" or gangs in metropolitan New York A reported 30 members of his 'family' are scheduled to tes- tify in the federal grand jury's investigation. Bonanno was un- der subpoena to appear. The nature of the investigation has not been disclosed, Bonanno, 59, a Sicilian-born immigrant who entered the United States 'illegally in 1924, had just arrived in a taxicab with two lawyers when the gun- men appeared. The cab had pulled up in front of the Park Avnue apartment building of one of the lawyers, William P. Maloney, Police and other sources at the scene gave this account: First out of the cab was law- yer Joseph P. Allen, 'who. walked into the building, Ma- loney, Bonanno's lawyer, was} next, but as he approached the} doorway he heard a JOSEPH BONANNO It was raining and each of voice sdy,|the gunmen wore raincoats and "come on, Joe, the boss wants!carried pistols. to see you." Maloney saw them pulling ... SCHEDULED TO TESTIFY Grand Rapids, Mich. Third-shift maintenance and repair crews reported at mid- night Tuesday night in Milwau- | kee, and about 1,000 employees in Kenosha. CHARLES DE GAULLE MPs HAGGLE, HORSETRADE | Redistribution Bill Is Tied Up In Knots OTTAWA (CP) -- The far- reaching redistribution bill still is tied up in knots in the Com- mons, six. months after it re- ceived approval in principle. Sitting in committee of the whole all day Tuesday, MPs and 'horsetrading. They agreed to put off until later, likely next week, show- down votes on six key clauses that aroused sharp disagree- ments in earli¢r debates. Mr. MacEachen met Opposi- tion Leader Diefenbaker in the latter's office Tuesday-moming and scheduled more meetings with opposition spokesmen in an effort to reach inter - party agreements on the contentious clauses. In Tuesday's debate, the min- ister introduced several amend- ments at the request of opposi- tion MPs and dropped a few that ran into stiff opposition. The House is to spend the rest} of this week discussing 1964-65) spending estimates, beginning| with the veterans and defence The redistribution measure, | given s and .shelved throughout | summer, would result in new} boundaries for most federal con-| stituencies in Canada, in line! with population shifts during the| 1951-61 period, For the first time since Con- federation, redistribution would be taken out of the politicians' | hands and turned over to 10 ap- pointed commissions--one for each province. The parties have failed to agree so far On who should ap-| point the commissions. and how| agreed," Information Minister Alain Peyrefitte told reporters after a cabinet meeting that Agricul- ture: Minister Edgar Pisani reported to the cabinet on the , deadlocked talks in Brussels among the farm ministers of the six Common Market coun. \tries, The talks were blocked larg- ely by West German resistance to common grain prices. Pisani returned here from Brussels Tuesday night. Peyrefitte said France ex- pressed "'in the most categor- ical way its resolve to make the common agricultural mar- jket_ the corer stone of the | building of Europe." | "It is not possible to negoti- jate successfully with the United States unless the European |Economic Community is prop- lerly organized, arid this ~ |be unless agriculture is organ- jizéd," he said. | De Gaulle would "hurt him- |self"' if he takes France out of the Common Market over the Boy Kills Mom With Hatchet |sssitc'myis in: gu BUFFALO (AP)--A 19-year-/man agriculture ministry. their home in the nearby town) of Clarence, police said. Police reported that after the| slaying of 41-year-old Mrs. Anna Simril her son, Christopher, telephoned his father, Vernon, at work and said: | 2 | "I killed my mother." | Police said no motive had! been established for the slay-| ing. | second-degree murder. | econd reading April 13/014 boy beat his mother to death| app tas the| Tuesday with a hatchet behind| EADY SEs He said the agricultural com- mon market was "already set up to a large extent." "France's agricultural ex- ports have risen by a gigantic amount... and if de Gaulle acts from an economic point of view he will not carry out this -- This will only hurt him- self. . "But it is possible that eco- nomic considerations are not | Christopher was charged with|the main ones for de Gaulle," the spokesman added. much of a population gap should| be tolerated between urban ~ NEWS FLASHES rural ridings. Labor Minister MacEachen, who has a reputation for get-| ting along with opposition MPs, took over Tuesday as bill's sponsor in the absence of Trans- port Minister Pickersgill, recup-| erating at home from a bout} with influenza. | | | | | 'Joe Bananas' Bonanno along the avenue to-! ward 36th Street. He said he shouted: "Hey, where are you! going? He's my client." "Get back and behave your-| self," ~ But Maloney continued to fol- low them. once. Maloney ran to the corner and saw a late-model car speed-| ing off. Maloney said later in an in- terview that Bonanno struggled c t with the two gunmen, They took| curred in the 1920s when he was| him along the sidewalk to the|accused of transporting ma- corner, Maloney said, and as/|¢ one gunman responded.|spiracy charges as a result. B "T told you to get out!" thejtria) of 23 of the underworld gunman shouted, and fired delegates was to have opened : | Oct, 26, 1959. Twenty were con- victed. He was among the gangland hierarchy who police found at the Apalachin, N.Y., under- world convention in 1957. He was one of 27 indicted on con- | | | | A heart attack felled him 'in rooklyn the day before the| Appeals -ourts subsequently he convictions. through the | voided all) Bonanno's first arrest oc-| shine-guns to the Al Capone the car drove off Bonanno was! sang in Chicago. still struggling. Bonanno, who. divides time between Tucson, and: New. York, has been de- scribed by the FBI as one of|c the Mafia's. most feared chief-|self as being in the cheese busi- 'tains, 'y his | States Ariz.,|from came 1938 he left the United and legally re-entered Canada. In 1945 he be-| 'a naturalized American} ritizen. He has described Yim- In | | ness. | Bomb Scare Halts LONDON (Reuters) -- Th Plane Trip e pilot of a Boeing 707 jet airliner with Ceylon's prime minister, Mrs. Sirimavo Ban- daranaike, aboard was ordere d to return to the terminal shortly before taking off from London Airport today be- cause Of a bomb scare. Charlotte's Relative Enters Race OTTAWA (CP) -- Frank Ryan, president of radio station CFRA and brother-in-law of Mayor Charlotte Whit- ton, announced today he will city's chief executive in the seek to replace her as the Dec. 7 civic election. He is the fourth mayoralty candidate. Plain Citizens Pay Last Respects _. NEW YORK (AP) -- Plain citizens and public figures joined today in paying last respects to former president Herbert Hoover of the United Episcopal Anglican Church. 48 hours, guarded by an hono services, Urge Stand On Wo States at St. Bartholomew's His body will lie in state for r detail from all the armed rld Issues VATICAN. CITY (AP) -- Speakers at the Vatican ecu- menical council said today t he Roman Catholic Church must pay more attention to the problems of world hum ger, poverty, juvenile violence NEW YORK (CP) -- Ro and commercialized sex. U.S. Investors Told Quebec Sound bert Winters; chairman of British Newfoundland Corporation, said today United States investors have nothing to fear from conditions in Quebec. "Basically the heart and core of Quebec are sound and the growth of nationalist feelin g there need not be a deter- rent to anybody comtemplating an investment in the rich resources or business opportunities in that pr Mr. - Winters. ovince," said On The Road To GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST Quota Of $275,000 >... $9500 | | | | $128,000 | | | $158,000 | | | $17%,000| | | | $208,000 | | | s224 0001 | | | $250,000| | | | $278,000

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