The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, VOL; 93 -- NO. 284 Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1964 She Oshawa Cimes Weather Report Cloudy With Wet Snow Today And To- morrow. Little Temperature Change. High-30, Low-18. Authorized as Second Class Mall Poet Office Department o awa' and. for payment Postage in. Cash, y TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES 4 A "BULL" WITH FIRST SHOT First shot on his first hunt bagged Stan Fudge's first moose. Fudge, hunting south of Timmins with Ken Durno, Alvin Scott and Vie George, bagged the 700-pound bull deep in the bush in the Mathe- son area, and after. gutting and cleaning it, took two days to drag. the remains out of seven miles of bush. They hired a tractor to take the animal out and brought it to Oshawa in a_ pickup. track. Fudge has it displayed proud- ly in front of his King street west store, but will later divide it up among his hunt- | ing companions, He used a modified Army Lee-Enfield .303 with sports. ammunition for the shot. ! | Judy, NO SIGN OF CREW HALIFAX (CP)--RCAF res- cue headquarters said today the missing lobster boat, Jean and has been found over- turned in choppy seas off the ; |southwestern tip of Nova Scotia. There was no sign of two fish- ermen who were aboard. The 38-foot boat, missing since Tuesday, was found by the ocean-going escort Cap de la Madeleine on Roseway Bank. |' Aboard were Philman Quin- lan and James Smith, both of Stoney Island, N.S. Meanwhile, two grounded ships, one Norwegian and the other Greek, were waiting to be refloated off Prince Edward Is- land and a Liberian freighter which. went aground northeast of Halifax was declared a total loss by its captain. Wind gusts were reported at more than 100 miles an hour Lobster Boat Overturned tide Wednesday night failed. Part of her fuel cargo may be dumped into a smaller tanker. Farther west on the Prince Edward Island coast, the 5,500- ton Greek freighter Agios Nic- oloas IH, with 28 men on board, awaited the tug Foundation Val- iant which was steaming to the area, The Nicoloas was re- ported in no immediate danger. The powerful tug had «been dispatched.from the area where the 2,828-ton Liberian freighter Fury grounded at Barachios Point, 95 miles east of Halifax. Capt. George Pateras, skip- per of the Fury--the former Ca- nadian vessel Novaport -- said his ship would likely be a total loss. He and his 17-man Greek crew walked asnure Wednesday after a cold night on the ship, driven aground Tuesday by 90- mile-an-hour winds at the mouth in the wake of a storm that} dumped nearly two feet of snow} on New Brunswick Tuesday, | isolated several communities | jand wrecked lobster traps) jaround Nova Scotia. | | New efforts to refloat the |grounded 12,744-ton Nerweniaa| ltanker Belfast were to be re- |newed in Charlottetown harbor itoday after attempts at "high of the St. Mary's River. In Nova Scotia's Minas Basin, a large inlet off the Bay of Fundy, the 2,285-ton West Ger- man ship Elisabeth Schulte was riding out stiff winds off Cape Blomidon. She developed a 20-degree list when her lead _ concentrate cargo loaded at Walton, N.S., shifted. S More Found Dead As Rebels Retreat - LEOPOLDVILLE (CP) -- A mercenary-led government col- amn penetrafed further into the northeast Congo today in pur- suit of rebels believed holding 500 whites as hostages. They found five more dead Euro- peans, The rebels fled to Watsa, mear the Sudanese border, as a government force of 30 mercen- aries and 200 Congolese soldiers neared Bunia, 350 miles east of Stanleyville. Bunia had a white population of 250, most of them Greeks, but the Congolese Army found only two Roman Catholic priests there. The rebels were believed to have taken the other whites with them to join hostages al- ready at Watsa. among the whites freed in Poko. At Mambasa, south of Paulis, the mercenaries said that two Belgians, a Frenchman, a Ger- man and an unidentified mis- sionary were found slaughtered. The rebels are .known to. have killed 85 other whites including two Canadian missionaries, Bel- gian paratroops rescued about 2,000 others in airdrops at Paulis and Stanleyville. Rebels at. Stanleyville were reported entrenched on the west bank of the Congo River across from the European quar- ter. Reliable sources. said govern- ment forces combed the Afri- said they believe Brown, hisjcan quarter of Stanleyville and wife and their four children are rounded, up 10,000 Congolese who were being held in a soccer stadium for 'interrogation. The sources said the position in the city seemed to be much more secure despite continued mortar fire by the rebels. BURN BODIES Observers who returned from Stanleyville said thé bodies of | dead insurgents littering the streets were being burned. Congolese Premier Moise Tshombe, who returned 'to Leo- poldville today from Paris, said the rebels already had killed 6,000 Congolese, a 'figure which was taken to refer to those slain in the Stanleyville and Paulis areas. Reports of the Congolese ad- vance through rebel territory were fragmentary. Latest word said the government column was headed toward. Paulis, southwest of Watsa, after pass- ing through Poko and Zobia. It was not known here whether the mercenaries have rescued British Protestant mis- sionary Aubrey Brown, his Ca- nadian wife and their four chil- dren, who were last reported at NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Police Seek Cigarette Thieves QUEBEC (CP) -- Police today continued their efforts to track down four men who escaped Wednesday with a truck containing a $100,000 load of cigarettes. The. driver of the truck, Gaston Duclos of Charny, Que., told police an automobile struck the back of got out to check for damage men. the Poko Mission station. BELIEVE RESCUED However, a' small planecload of refugees from Poko was re- ported by Reuters news agenty| to have reached Stanleyville and| OTTAWA (CP) -- Median his truck lightly and when he he was accosted by the' four 'University-Lecturers Make More Money, salaries of full-time teaching staff at 17 selected universities and colleges showed higher percentage increases from 1963-64 to 1964-65 than for the two British embassy officials here| previous years, the bureau of statistics reported today SASKATOON (CP)--A nay tional flag design, with a red herring in it was placed -be- fore the Saskatchewan Farm- ers' Union convention Wed- nesday. as a joke, but when laughing delegates roared | their approval it was sec- | onded as a regular flag mo- "FISHY" FLAG TURNS OUT TO. BE NO RED HERRING detail later this week. tion and will be discussed in "The Canadian people can proudly go forward under this flag in the sure knowledge that everything is fishy,"' said Frank Cushon of Oxbow, Sask. | | OTTAWA (CP)--A decision on whether or not to interfere with. jthe scheduled Friday execution lof convicted murderer Georges |Marcotte has been postponed until today, Justice Minister |Favreau announced' Wednesday night. The minister had announced learlier Wednesday he would |make the announcement at 10 p.m, EST Wednesday. The cabinet decided Wednes- day it would not interfere with jthe hanging, but Marcotte's law- |yer said he had placed new evi- }dence before the justice minis- |ter. Mr. Favreau said he would jconsider whether the evidence |was sufficient to warrant a rec- |ommendation to the cabinet to| ° jalter its decision. But his executive assistant, Gerry Ouellette, said the deci- jsion would be announced at |12:30 p.m. today, after a 9:30 |a.m. cabinet. meeting. Earlier, the office of Solicitor- ' Marcotte's Life Still Hangs In The Balance : {lie retirement scheme as long |benefits comparable to those of GEORGE MARCOTTE General Watson MacNaught said in a statement there would be no interference in the sched- uled Friday morning hanging at Montreal's Bordeaux Jail. 'THE TIMES CIVIC ELECTION FORUM Administration Changes Needed? | What major changes do you advocate in civic administra- tion? This is the fourth question. put to aldermanic candidates in The Oshawa Times Civic Election Forum. The Forum presents the views of alder- manic candidates on the key issues of the Dec. 7 elections. Each day for six days, The Times will present the an- swers of the candidates to a question relating to city gov- emment. Tomorrow, the views of aldermanic candidates on the proposed Ward system for Oshawa will be published. Following, in alphabetical order, are the replies to the question of proposed major changes advocated in civic administration See--Are Administration (Continued On Page 2) ALD, C. G. PILKEY ALD, ALICE REARDON MRS, MARGARET SHAW WRITES FOR T Canada's four-time world curling' champion, Ernie Richardson, today begins writing for readers of The Oshawa Times. With interest in.the roarin' game rapidly increasing in Oshawa. Whitby and Bow- manville, The Times had made arrangements for the famous skip to present a specia! series of instruc- tion: columns. One will ap- pear each Thursday on the sports page. Richardson has announced he will seek his fifth Cana- dian aad world curling titles this season. Curling out of Regina, Richardson made news first by capturing his first Canadian bonspiel play- down in but his second year of competitive curling. He has been making curling headlines ever since. In his column, Curling Capsules. he will pass on tips on strategy and tech- niques which have enabled him to compile an enviable IMES CURLERS RICHARDSON IN TIMES « » » Tips Every Thursday record in spiels throughout and abroad. competitive Canada FIVE PLANTS STRUCK, 23,500 WORKERS IDLED CANADA'S CHAMPION SKIP Pickets O Members of the United Auto Workers today struck four Gen- eral Motors plants, joining auto- mobile assembly workers who went on strike prematurely in Oshawa yesterday. The strike idles about 23,500 workers, more f|than 17,300 of them in Oshawa. Company and union negotia- tors continued talks in Toronto. In Oshawa, a company spokes- man said that salaried employ- ees at North and South plants have been allowed to cross any picket lines to the offices. "There is no conflict at all," he said, "'although a picket line on the South Plant' Parts building is holding up = pay cheques for the striking work- ers." He said that the pickets will not allow the delivery of cheques from the data process- ing department .in the parts building to the payroll office. "The men were to have been paid at noon Friday," he stated, MOSCOW (AP) --' Leonid I. Brezhnev, the Soviet Commu- nist party chiéftain, denounced today tho Western paratroop landing in 'The Congo and also said the Soviet: Union is. ready to help North Viel Nam. « But, in reiterating stands al- ready taken by the Kremlin, 'Brezhnev withheld any specific pledge of direct Soviet inter- vention in either area. He called the paratroop land- Red Boss Says Will Aid Viet example, of. imperialist piracy" and said. .Western aims there are doomed to failure. On Viet. Nam, he. repeated the words of an 'authorized statement" made a week ago by Tass news agency: "The Soviet Union cannot re- main indiffe to the fate of a sister socialist country and is prepared fo render the neces- sary assistance to her." There was no elaboration by either ing in The Congo a "surprising Tass or Brezhnev. TORY MPP: Ontario TORONTO (CP) -- A promi- nent Conservative member . of the legislature said today On- tario probably will operate its own pension plan with benefits superior to those which would be provided by the Canada Pen- sion Plan. Allan Lawrence, a_ lawyer who represents the Toronto rid- ing of St. George, said the pos- sibility was very distinct that Ontario, like Quebec, will choose to opt out of the Canada Pension Plan. Legislation now before Parlia- ment provides that any prov- 'ince may operate its own pub- as the provincial plan offers the federal plan. However, Mr, Lawrence said Ontario residents probably will Pension Plan Better Than Canada-Wide get a pension deal not only com- parable but much better, "I know that serious consid- eration is being given at Queen's Park for the possible provision in a provincial plan of benefits that the federal plan could not provide," he said. Mr. Lawrence made his re- marks while acting as modera- tor for a college discussion group sponsored by the Univer- sity of Toronto Progressive Con- servative Club. His comments pertaining to pensions were issued to the press in advance. Laurence Coward, chairman of the Ontario Pension Commis- sion, said in an interview there would be literally dozens of ways in which the federal plan could be changed. Dragged BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) -- Police today waded into some 800 students at the University of California who staged an_ all- night sit-in inside the campus administration building today, made arrests and dragged limp students to waiting buses for a trip to prison. Hundreds of students and fa- culty members of the 27,000- student campus packed the area as police, as many as four "Limp" Students To Jail to a student, dragged the dem- onstrators through a thick cor- don of police encircling Sproul Hall. , The action followed an early- morning statement by Gov- ernor Edmund G. Brown call- ing for arrests to uphold "the rule of law in California." The first person arrested ear- lier was Robert Treuhaft, the husband of Jessica Mitford, au- thor of The American Way of Death. THE TIME New Curling Column Starts Ann Landers--17 City News--13 Classifieds--24, 25, 26 Comics--23 District Reports--19 Editorial--4 Financial--26 ALEX SHESTOWSKY Labor Council Holds Civic Forum--Page 13 Railway Crossing Fatality Ruled Accidental--Page 5 Obits--27 Television--23 Theatre--19 Whitby News--5, 6 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17 Weather--2 S today... Today--Page 9 Sports--8, 9, 10, 11 "but the data processing staff has been kept out of the office since Thursday night and their work -has been held up. "The matter is being negotiat- ed in Toronto between the com- pany and union," he said. A GM spokesman in Toronto. said that local agreement meet- ings were being held' this morn- ing; "although the master agreement committee 'has not met with the company since Tuesday". Russell McNeil; secretary- day. that the strike E. H. Walker, president of General Motors of Canada Ltd., in a prepared statement said: "The strike against the Cana- dian companies of GM called by the United Auto Workers is completely unnecessary and un- justified If prolonged, it will have serous consequences for our employees and their fam- ilies, for our dealers and sup- pliers and their employees, for our plant communities and for the public and the economy 'at large. "The pruposals made by GM are the most generous and for- ward looking ever offered by a Canadian automotive company. "These proposals include, sub- stantial wage increases, and greatly improved retirement benefits, for our 23,000 Canadian employees "We stand ready. to continue negotiaticns at any time in an effort to resolve our differences so all of us can get back to work," George Burt, UAW Canadian director said in a statement re- leased today: "The UAW is prepared to con- tinue without interruption the negotiations for a contract re- newal at the five Ontario plants of General Motors. Progress was made in talks this morning on local union issues, both be- fore and after the 11 a.m. strike deadline, "We are hoping to be able to meet the company soon on mas- ter contract negotiations,' he treasurer of Local- 222, said to-|go involved master contracts for the plants, more than 17,300 workers. "We!These continued. Local Negotiations Continue, Master Pact Talks Hoped Soon : rganized, Lines Quiet Here have pickets at each of the gates of GM," he said, "there are almost 30 entrances and we have them sealed up. "We are pretty well organ- ized," he added, 'and each striker will be on picket duty every second day. We will have a shift change every four hours and picketing will go on 24 hours a day, seven days'a week, until the strike is settled. The unton, seeking an ite. proved contract to replace one that expired Oct. 31, today pulled out 6,275 workers at Mce Kinnon Industries, St. Cathas rines, a subsidiary of GM"¢ United States corporation; 1,150 at the GM transmission division in Windsor; 650 at General Mo- tors Diesel Limited in London and 1,000 at Frigidaire in Tor- onto. About 14,500- at Oshawa = jumped the 11 a.m. strike at Oshawa on the claim that the company attempted a work speedup. Later, the union lead- ership accepted their walkout, All today's walkouts were without carly incidents.. Union- company arrangements per- mitted continuance of work by maintenance, supervisory and office employees. oF aaah In: Teronto+where com union negotiations had' this »wéek -a¢-the strike dead line approached -- the 'walkout time found GM ) issues: ne- tiated in conjunction with a to Oshawa where he spent most of the afternoon meeting with the strikers. The Oshawa strike, approved later by the union leadership, was sparked by a company speed-up on the assembly line, the union said. The company closed the en- tire assembly operation aft about 9 p.m. Tuesday and sent 4,000 night-shift workers home, Wednesday morning, picket lines appeared: at the north and south divisions of the Oshawa plant and up to 40 union mem- bers picketed at each plant gate, About 800 members of Local 222 packed 'the 'union hall early in the afternoon and another 75 waited outside. The wunion's previous thrée- year contract ended Oct. 31. In bargaining for a new agree. ment, the UAW has demanded wage parity with GM workers in the United States. This would give its members the recent U.S. increase-of 2.5 and 2.8 per cent in the secoiid and third years of an agreement plus--according to union se 4 lations--an additional 40 ¢ to $1 an hour. Contract negotiations between the UAW and Ford Motor Com- pany of Canada and Chrysler Canada Limited are still con- tinuing. Mr. Burt has said that Ford and Chrysler workers would Mot leave their jobs if the GM workers struck. ® added. "To this moment, the offer of GM to the Canadian workers is well below the value of the UAW-GM settlement in the U.S., and in addition, does not meet the special needs of Canadian workers in several important areas. We believe, however, that there is no problem before us that cannot be worked out satisfactorily by intensive nego- tiations between two parties de- siring a settlement as early as possible," Mr. Burt said. Top-leve: negotiators dealing wiht the master contracts had not met since talks were inter- rupted when UAW Canadian di- rector George Burt and others went to Oshawa to look into the premature 'work stoppage Wed- nesday. However, a union spokesman said the UAW was hoping to re- sume the main talks, and a meeting of its master negotiat- ing committee with this in view was scheduled for 1 p.m. today. Talks were disrupted Wednes- day after a premature strike by the 14,500 workers at GM's atuo-making plant in Oshawa. |nadian regional director, went George Burt, the union's Ca- 2 Convicted Of Espionage NEWARK, .N.J.. (AP) -- A Russian chauffeur and an American electronics engineer were convicted Wednesday night of conspiracy to commit espionage for the Soviet Union, The verdict could mean death, Their penalty will be decided by U.S. District Court Judge An- thony T. Augelli, who presided over the 36-day trial. A federal jury of eight women and four men deliberated 9% hours before returning the vere dict against the American, John W. Butenko, 39, arid his co-de- fendant, Igor A. Ivanov, 34. Butenko and Ivanov were con- victed of conspiring to relay se+ cret air force information to Russia and of conspiring to vio- late the law. requiring foreign agents to register with the state department. Butenko also was convicted of acting as an un» registered agent for the foreigt power--Russia,