Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Dec 1964, p. 1

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The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and' neighboring centres, VOL. 93 -- NO. 283 t She Oshawa Times Authortend. 3 os ya Closs Mell; gar! Office reine Ottowa . payment Postage OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY,. DECEMBER 2, 1964 i Weather Report > Light Snow Today And Tomorrow But Not So Cold. High-32. Low-28. € / THIRTY-SIX: PAGES GM STRIKERS WARMED UP NEAR BOND STREET GATE LAST NIGHT PARKING LOT EXIT SIGN PROVIDED STRIKE PROP TODAY LAST-MINUTE POSTPONEMENT UN Avoids Head-On Clash Over Debts | UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- fhe UN General Assembly marked the opening of its fall session Tuesday with a dra- matic fast-minute postponement of an East-West collision over assessments. - The nt, in ote the gravest the ab isa has fecsd' in in years, provided at ieast anower to work on the long- ead over een of agreement were to t to eas Russia's Foreign Minister/the Andrei Gromyko scheduled talks with U.S, State Secretary Dean Rusk. Gromyko was also to meet with Canada's External Affairs Minister Paul Martin, who said before Tuesday's post, genera] debate, expected to last at least until Christmas. Only those issues which can be agreed on unanimously will be brought up during that time --so the question of whether or not the Russians can vote will not arise. The assembly immediately went 'atead on that basis, naming Alex Quaison-Sackey of and|been needed. 'NEWS HIGHLIGHTS insurance companies' methods of their rating systems. one that emerged, but providing for an adjournment from Christ- mas until February. | Western sources said both} sides had made significant con- cessions. But they said there | did not appear to be much hope that any. move to take away | the Soviet vote would have re-| ceived the two-thirds assembly | vote that probably would have| ties in the Commons met for Ghana as.its new president formally. aime ' ig up for weeks deadline of the assembly opening drew near. When the first item on the agenda was passed with no member demanding a formal vote, a distinct murmur of re- lief swept through the packed that Canada would go "down to the wire" in demanding re- 'moval of the Soviet vote if a showdown came. AVOIDS VOTES The postponement formula, worked out by Secretary-Gen- eral U Thant along with repre- sentatives of the Big Four and a handful of others, provided that no forma! votes will be y & Only one day earlier the So- viet Union had been publicly in- sisting that the assembly "should start and continue with its work in accordance with normal procedures." SEEMED RULED OUT That had appeared to rule out any arrangement such as the one that eventually was agreed on. The U.S. meanwhile was taken during the assembly's backing a plan similar to the has such power. At. isse-in the crisis is the uestior bees or not the y has the power Ao in-/ nt Union The Sevie J > ae aa atu. suite : . insists that -- 'i-member' Security Council Most other countries contend that the assembly can act if the Security Council is unable to do so because of a veto. assistants. TORONTO (CP) -- More: deputy returning officers and their minds and the civic elections Dec. 7. Insurance Man Attacks NDP Chief TORONTO (CP) -- Charles Holman, a spokesman for All-state Insurance, says Donald MacDonald's attacks on are based on incomprehension Leaders Discuss Question Periods OTTAWA (CP) -- House leaders of four of the five par- an hour today to discuss how question periods can be revived in the Commons during the flag debate. Two Quebec Byelections To Be Held QUEBEC (CP)--Premier provincial byelections will be in the ridings of St. Maurice Bribery Hearings For Mid-December?| Lesage today announced two held Jan, 18 to fill vacancies and Terrebonne. Dec. 15 into charges ois ard. earrcion hy ministerial Want Nothing T To Do With Elections than 300. persons appointed as poll clerks. here have changed withdrawn their names just five days before Mine Inquiry In January -- TORONTO (CP) -- A royal commission investigating trad- ing in stocks of Windfall Oils and Mines Ltd. and other com- panies with holdings in the Tim- mins area will start public sit- tings early in January. The sittings, under Mr. Jus; tice Arthur Kelly of the Ontario Supreme Court, are expected to last about two months. Some will be held in Timmins. The sittings had been ex- be done. pected to start last week, but were delayed because of the mass of investigating work to UAW Team Back Here Over Strike Mafia Questions Asked In House OTTAWA (CP)--The. govern- ment was asked today to give the Commons details about the deportation of a Mafia figure last March and\about corres- pondence between the immigra- tion department and the On- tario Police Commission inves- tigating organized crime. The department already had indicated that after a lapse of three months it replied to quer- ies by the commission and the Ontario attorney-general about the deported man, Questions were filed by two New Democratic lawyers--An- drew Brewin (Toronto Green- wood) and Reid Scott (Toronto Danforth) -- who were counsel for their party during an On- tario royal commission probe of crime. Their written questions, filed with Commons officers today, followed a statement by Oppo- sition Leader Diefenbaker that he will question the government in the House about the police commission saying no replies were made to commission let- ters about the presence in Can- ada of immigrants with crimi- nal backgrounds, REEL GROUP DISORGANIZED The Soviet Union owes some $52,000,000 towards The Congo and Middle East forces; amount equal to two years' bee sessments for that country vr thus enough to bring it und Article. 19 of the charter. The| article provides that a country that far in debt "shall have no Litcesicll 2 ala Syria, Israel Feudin' Again | = PC Chief Favreau OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition ---- |Leader Diefenbaker said Tues- |day he will ask the government in the Commons about state- jments by the Ontario Police Commission that Justice Minis- ter Favreau made no reply to jeommission letters about the To Put On Spot Security Scourge Sees 12 U.K. Scientists Axed LONDON (AP)--Twelve Brit- [Britain's top nuclear scientists, ish nuclear scientists and goy-|Klaus Fuchs, had been giving ernment officials' have been re- jatomic secrets to the Russians. moved from their jobs for secu-| Fuchs, German - born, was rity ,reasons since the Fuchs| [jailed. Freed in 1959, he went tes Poise uitccet Maral, Uve tm East Germany. Wilson disclosed: Tuesday. bo mig reckoned the jntor- Wilson toll the House of Com: mation from Fuchs enabled the uaans {> perfect a nuclear mons the men had been moved! on a year earlier than th "in the interests of security" | ¥°aP er MRR ney either because they had rela- lordinarily would have. tives behind the Iron Curtain or| The same year another scien- were foreign-born, or for both} tist working on_ top-secret reasons. jatomic: studies here, Italian- Fourteen years ago Britain|born Professor Bruno Ponte- TEL AVIV (AP)--Syrian and Israeli troops exchanged fire early today for the second straight day in the Noukheile area, scene of a heavy battle last month. An Israeii Army spokesman said a Syrian position opened fire with machine -. guns and rifles on an Israeli border pa- trol inside Israeli territory and on a covering force nearby. The Israelis returned the fire and did not suffer any casual- ties, the spokesman said. Syria charged Israel with "re- newed aggression" as a result of Tuesday's incident. A gov- ernment spokessman in Damas- cus said his country's UN dele- gation would bring "this new Israeli aggression" to the at- tention of the Security Council. The council Monday night suspended its debate on Israeli- Syrian border tension following and its Western allies were|corvo, defected to the Soviet rocked by the Tews that one of: 'Union. THE TIMES CIVIC ELECTION presence in Canada of persons with criminal backgrounds. Mr. Diefenbaker quoted the following from the Jan. 31 re- port of the Ontario Police Com- mission investigation into or- ganized crime: 'We were concerned to find Several immigrants living in Ontario with undesirable repu- tations and backgrounds of a criminal nature and we wrote twice to the federal minister of; citizenship and immigration to obtain some information regard- +|"8 this, The immigration: department 'When our letters were notlissued a statement late Tues- acknowledged, we asked the at- day night 'saying that a letter torney-general to write on Giz) was sent to Fred Cass, then On- behalf but he too received no|tario attorney general, Feb. 15, answet.' 1964, apologizing. for the delay. Mr, Favreau was appointe1|The letter was sent by Mr. Fav- justice minister Feb. 3, 1964,;reau saying that his successor and was citizenship minister at/as immigration minister,. Rene JOHN DIEFENBAKER + » » What about those letters? air and jand clashes Nov. 13 the time referred to by the po-|Tremblay, had the details, the lice commission. Idepartment said, FORUM Does Oshawa Need City Man nager? The Director of Opera- tions now supervises the board of works yard, city engineering and parks, property and recreation de- partment. Do you favor expansion of such responsibilities toward a City Manager form of government? This is the third question put to aldermanic candi- dates in the Oshawa Times Civic Election Forum. The Forum presents the views of aldermanic candidates on the key issues of the Dec. 7 elections, Each day for six days the Times presents the answers of the candidates to A question relating to city government SEE -- DOES OSHAWA . (Continued on Page 9) ALD, CEPHAS GAY DOUGLAS GOWER Republic" in Stanleyville is dead, but the revolt in the northeastern Congo refuses to lie down. Disorganized, its lines of com- munication shattered by seizure of the rebel capital, its leaders hiding or in flight, the Com- munist - backed insurrection is tibeing driven into the dark rain: forests and impenetrable bush. Premier Moise Tshombe's mercenary fighters from South Africa, Rhodesia and Belgium go in shooting when they cap- ture towns and rescue white hostages, but the rebels close in behind them as their armed columns roll out. For the South African mer- cenary commander, Maj. Mich- _ jael. Hoare, the difficulty of get- ting to grips with his enemy raises the prospects of a long dirty war. "A military. solution is not enough, there must be some sort of political solution as well," says the 46 - year - old Dublin-born veteran of war be- hind the Japanese lines in PARIS (Reuters)--The seven- nation Western European Union assembly voted today to expand the American concept of a pro- posed nuclear multilateral force. The assembly voted to sup- port the British-backed plan for an "Atlantic nuclear force," in contrast to the American idea of a multilateral force of 25 sur- face ships equipped with Pola- ris missiles. British sources here said Prime Minister Harold Wilson's governmen. planned to place the British V-bomber force and the TSR-2 aircraft and Polaris submarines now being built in Britain in the proposed Atlantic nuclear force. The vote by the assembly, V'hitss Move In Rebels Cut Out The rebel "Congolese People's;Burma and in Tshombe's séc- European Countries OK Atlantic Nuclear Force were among those who opposed goes before the WEU ministe- essionist Katanga. Some foreign military obser- vers believe it will be months, possibly years, before it is safe to travel through the rebel area without a strong military es- cort. MURDER CASE ACCUSED FREED TROIS - RIVIERES, Que. (CP) -- Marcel Deziel of Charette, Que., accused in a murder case going back 20 years, was acquitted Tuesday. Deziel's lawyer defended him on the grounds that he was not of sound mind when the ski-bludgeoning of Mont- real fur merchant Abraham Meyer Charron took place in 1944. The delay from the death to the trial was because of Deziel's detention as men- tally unfit in Montreal's Bordeaux Jail for most of the period. patrolled gates to General United Auto Workers nego- tiating team returned to Oshawa this afternoon for an emergency union meeting as_ picketers Motors plants here. George Burt, Canadian direc- tor of the UAW, left near-dead- line negotiations with General Motors of Canada Limited offi- cials to confer with the com- mittee left in charge of union affairs in Oshawa. He was ac- companied by Albert (Abe) Tay- lor, president of UAW Local 222 and other negotiators. The union had set the strike date for 11 a.m, Thursday, how- ever, Mr. Burt has termed the walkout which started shortly after 9 p.m. Tuesday as "'legal", Meanwhile, in a telephone in- terview from Toronto, GM spokesmen said negotiations were proceeding at a normal pace and that an effort was.be- ing made to."clean up the local issues'. Police stood by this morning into the plant past picket lines, but there were no incidents. A company. spokesman in Osh- cross the picket. lines at the every eight office workers in the main office showed up for work. the GM switchboard, A union spokesman said' the workers could have legally struck the plant Noy. 27, seven days after the conciliation board hearing. He said the workers' actions here was a violation of the constitution of their inter- as supervisory personnel drove}, awa said office workers did not! south plant and about one out of One man attempted 'to operate Picketers Patrol GM Plants Talks In Toronto Halted walked off their jobs and walke ed through the rest of the plant yelling "'C'mon guys, let's go." Within a few minutes there was not enough employees. left .in the plant to keep the line o ating so the other wor! were let out. About 30 to 40 men' began picketing the south plant gates immediately: after. -Jast '3 walkout. Old tires were convehi-+ ently on hand to burn to keep the picketers warm. A report from The Canadian Press says unconfirmed re- ports from the Toronto meeting say GM has offered a 2.8: per cent wage increase but. that union spokesmen claim | this would. stil! leave. Canadian wages far below GM workers ia. the United States. The. workers are . seeking wage parity with the U.S, aute- jworkers. The Toronto. negotia- tions involve about 23,000, work ers at GM pie in --s 'oronto, London,' W. St. Catharines. LIMA (Reuters)--A man. leged to be a he nn bodied Victor Raul Ha Dela Torre, 'leader of Peru paaeetticn Aprista , was a ly. injured. when hom made bomb exploded in national union. Night-shift workers met last night in the UAW hall following the walkout which occurred about 9 p.m. They said that the company attempted to speed up the line in the chassis department by an extra four jobs an hour. About 50 chassis department employees are believed to have --_ a party spokesman said The spokesman said the man was identified as Juan Lopez, a member of. the Peruvian Com+ munist party. He was allegédly trying os 2 approach the 69 - year - Aprista leader as he was enter- ing party headquarters in- the centre of Lima, Dela Torre escaped unhurt. six European. Common Market couniries and Britain, came after a two-day debate. The assembly called on mem- ber governments to 'support the principJe of an Atlantic nuclear force on a multilateral basis, allowing for mixed-manned par-| ticipation.' The vote was 37 in favor, nine against and 15 abstentions. The French Gaullist members. the recommendation, which now rial council, Earlier, the assembly ap- proved by a show of hands an amendment which changed -the wording of the original recom- mendation from "multilateral force (MLF)" to an {Atlantic which groups members of the nuclear force (ANF)." THE TIME Number of. Bus Passengers Marlies Beat Generals--Page Ann Landers--16 City News--I3 Classified--30, 31, 32 Comics---28 District Reports--7 Editorial--4 Financial--33 GEORGE MARTIN ' Reserve Judgment On $80,000 Damage Action--Page 5 Obits--33 Sports--10, 11 Television--28 Whitby Women's--14, 15, 16 Weather--2 S today... Decreases--Page 13 10 Theatre--7 News--5 OPEN FOR REPAIRS Ringo Starr, 'the Beatles' reported a. success, He'll be pS a ag opens wide to show out of action, and out of the where he was to give up his Tiled foneia: Tee 'gacatien other fellows' hair for 10 days, --(AP Wirephoto via cable { performed at Univérsity Col- lege Hospital -- was today from' London) "

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