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Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Oct 1962, p. 1

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} { ' pucung it off. | Your Community THOUGHT FOR TODAY You're never too old to learn, which may be why we all keep No hest--For A B shawa Cimes megane aan deen 3 aaa ED etter Community WEATHER REPORT Overcast with rain tonight and Sunday morning, likely ending Sunday afternoon. VOL. 91 -- NO, 245 @ Rout, 17, of 325 Simcoe street creek, * were. passengers, _, Robertson's body was = | underneath. CHARLES ROBERTSON F travelling west on Mill street, DEATH CAR AT SCENE OF CRASH 'Oshawa Man Dies In Creek One man was killed and two injured when a_ car plunged down a 16-foot bank into the -- creek early this morn- ing. Dead is Charles Denzil Rob- ertson, 20, of 471 Simcoe street south: Admitted to Oshawa General with lacerations to the scalp was Raymond Ross Essery, 17, of 293 Pacific avenue. Frank south, was released from hospi- _ tal after being treated. He had : suffered lacerations to the right | side of his forehead and abra- sions to his right thigh. The occurred at the street bridge across the Essery was driv- (Juanita) Eleanor Robertson, of RCAF OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1962 Authorized es Second Class Mail Post Office Payment Ottawa and for of Postage in TWENTY PAGES --Oshawa Times Photo Crash taining wall of the bridge and rolled into the creek. CAR DEMOLISHED Essery was in satisfactory condition this morning, a hospi- tal spokesman said. Robertson was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Robertson. He was born in Oshawa Jan, 2, 1942, After living in Kirkfield, Ont., for some time he moved back to Oshawa with his family six years ago and lived here ever since. He was employed at the Gen- eral Motors Company of Can- ada for four years. He was a member of the Holy Cross VATICAN CITY (CP) -- Five Canadians were included today im the first list of 112 church- men elected to working commis- sions of the second Vatican coun- ci. They are Paul-Emile Cardinal Leger, Archbishop of Montreal, a man well known in the Ro- man church both inside and out- side Canada for his progressive views; Most Rev. Maurice Roy, Archbishop of Quebec, re- garded as a moderate in church affairs; Most. Rev. Joseph Al- bertus Martin, Bishop of Nico- let, Que.; Most. Rev, Marie-Jo- seph Lemieux, Archbishop of Ot- tawa; and Most Rev. Philip Po- cock, Archbishop coadjutor of Toronto. Archbishop Roy is the primate of the Roman Catholic Church in Canada. Along with Cardinal Leger, he was elected to the commission on theology. Archbishop Lemieux, formerly Bishop of Gravelbourg, Sask., and long resid of Sendai, Ja- was elécted to the commission dealing with administration of dioceses. Archbishop Pocock was 'elected to the commission deal- ing with discipline of the clergy. He is a former Archbishop of Winnipeg and former Bishop of Saskatoon. He has recently initiated a 5 Canadians Named For RC Commissions seminaries, studies and catholic schools. Thus the Canadian record of having five of the 14 candidates elected to te seven commissi 80 far constituted compares fav- orably with the achievement at the last ecumenical council in 1869-70. Then there were four commissi and two Cana- widespread program of liturgi- ical reform for his Toronto dio- cese. The Canadian representation is considered a large one, since only a total of 14 Canadian names were put forward for con- sideration by the council fathers. Counting has been completed for seven commissions: Theol- ogy, liturgy, si bish dians--the archbishops of Tor- onto and Montreal--won places. Elections to the commissions are important. These groups will do the real day-to-day, detailed work of the conference, with five Canadians on the commissions, other Ca- nadian prelatés obviously will be kept closely in the picture. Perh the known and diocesan government, orien- tal churches, discipline of the clergy and Christian peoples, and apostolate of the laity and mass communications. Names of the 16 elected to each of these commissions were announced. Counti of ballots was con- pan, is a member of the Dom- inican Order. He is chancellor of the University of Ottawa. He tinuing for three other commis- sions: Discipline of the sacra- ments, faith and morals, and PLANE DOOR OPENS . Church: Surviving are, besides Mr. Robertsor.'s parents, four gis ters, Mrs, onald Powers of Oshawa, Miss + right side in the creek. When the police and bystanders lifted the car back onto its wheels, found Apparently the car had been | when the driver lost control. It went over the north curb and sidewalk, police said, clipped oit a k, Nova Scotia, Miss Amelia Robertson and Miss Pauline Robertson, both of Osh- awa. The remains are at the Arm- strong Funeral Home. A high requiem mass will be sung at the Holy Cross Church Tuesday, Oct. 23, at 9 a.m. Interment will be in St. Gregory's Cemetery. Friends are asked not to call a hydro pole, knocked down two guard posts, slid down the re- at the funeral home before Sun- day. Mystery Pickets Tie Up Projects In B.C. VANCOUVER (CP) -- Mys-|the $2,200,000 addition to the tery pickets, who parade in si-| Vancouver Vocational Institute lence and anonymity, have #f€d|and 100 men went home. up three construction projects in British Columbia in the last|or the delays would continue," month, They decline to identify them-|tor on the job. selves on their union and no un- ion will admit responsibility for|ently over my purchasing agent them. Twice there have been two men, once three. And always their read: "Non-union men are working) "ion leaders, on this job." They first appeared outsi HELP The Chest CLIMB $236,000 ------ $200,000 ---- $175,000 $150,000 $125,000 $100,000 $75,000 $50,000 $25,000 Start LLL TE placards de|Cial government said the gov- "I was told to hire teamsters said A, R. Grimwood, contrac- "The grievance was appar- occasionally driving a truck." DELAY LASTS A WEEK The delay, which Grimwond blamed on '"'a small group" of aweek, A spokesman for the provin- =jernment could do nothing to prevent such picketing. He said the contractor should have obtained an injunction to remove the pickets. Then, any refusal to go to work would have become illegal. Larry Anderson, business agent for local.52 of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America (CLC), said the school walkout arose from a Teamsters' grievance. He de- clined to say who paid the pickets. All. unions on the job were affiliated into the Build- ing Trades Council. "Picketing is illegal in B.C. unless there is a strike," said Anderson. There was no strike at. the building. However, you can be sure the signs carried by the pickets were painted by union painters," Provitice, Vancouver's morning newspaper, com- mented editorially: "Apparently it is possible to put 100 or more men out of work without assuming any re- sponsibility. . . . When unions complain about the imposition of 'restrictive labor legislation' they should look to such inci- dents as this for the cause." Silent marchers next ap- charged with unlawfully at- tempting to persuade employ- ees not to enter their employ- er's place of operations. Later the charges were dropped when the men promised it wouldn't happen again. Said Ralph Giesler, superin- tendent for Peter Kiewit Sons Company of Canada Limited, primary contractor on the proj- ect: "Why the pickets were there, I don't know." HALT CONSTRUCTION The latest incident occurred at an apartment block site in western Vancouver. About 35 men had declined to cross the picket line. Again the Province c¢om- mented editorially, stating that Vancouverites could waken one day to a silent city. "All the ingredients for Van- couver's silent mornings are there--the obedient workmen, the willing placard-bearers, the mysterious direction. "All that is needed to crip- ple the city is application of the same principle on a. wider scale. "It could come from a single union, many unions, a madman, a foreign country or mars. be there. The mystery pickets have already proved it." YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Realtors Plan civie Di Treasury Report .... Page 9 Youth Jailed for Assault -- at the Fulton Airport in mloops, where 74 men lef: the job. The contractor had Cyrus Mc- Coristone and Stewart Traineer! Grads Honored Whitby High School Awards diethylamide, a drug designed v "But the civic standstill could| © Air Stewardess Falls To WINDSOR LOCKS, Conn. (AP)--The pretty stewardess was announcing the landing at Bradley Field when a tremen- dous blast of air roared through the plane. Heads turned but all that could be seen was the rear door flapping from one hinge. She was gone, swept out into the night. Two hours later Friday night, the body of Francoise de Mo- riere, 29, was found in a field 1,500 feet below. Charles Mack, 36, of Spring- field, Mass., had been sitting next to Miss de Moriere on the second leg of Allegheny Air- lines' flight 928 from Washing- ton to Providence, R.I. Between Philadelphia and Windsor Locks, site of Bradley Field, the wind began scream- ing through a gap that opened around the rear door, Mack said. Miss de Moriere, a native of Mental Illness Drug Removed From Market OTTAWA (CP)--Lysergic acid i to treat mental illnesses, has been withdrawn from distribution by its Canadian manufacturer at the request of federal authori- ties, it was disclosed today. Dr, C. A. Morrell, director of the food and drug directorate, said in an interview the Europ- ean-developed drug, which has been experimented with for about a dozen years, was cir- used improperly and of being people "taking it for kicks." His branch to ask for its withdrawal from circulation because "we were not sure its value outweighs the |posaible dangers to the ic," 8 public, of the-use of LSD is also included in amendments sooee Page ima poe and Drug Act now Parliament. So is thalid- jomide, blamed for numbers of at Banquet ...... sia Page3 deformed babies born in Canada Death Paris and a veteran of two years' service with Allegheny, went forward and brought back co-pilot Thomas Hawkins. To- gether they stuffed pillow cases around the loose door, Mack said, adding: "The noise stopped, She sat down again and we chatted, A little while later, she said 'Ex- cuse me, I have to announce our descent.' "' The terrific blast of air ended Miss de Moriere's announce- ment, A second stewardess, Kathy Lacey, 20, of Washington, was in a lavatory when the door blew open. The rush of air ripped off the lavatory door, but two men passengers grab- bed Miss Lacey and. saved her from being pulled out of the plane. Officials of the. Civil Aeronau- tics Board and the Federa! Aviation Agency were to begin investigating the incident to- day. The loose outside door had reported to Bradley Field at about 10 p.m. ADT by pilot Harold Gould, 38, of Alexandria, Va. Two minutes later, Gould radioed back that the door had gone and Miss de Moriere had been "ejected." After landing the twin-engined plane with all 47 passengers safe and sound, Gould helped state' police plot his approach course in an effort to pinpoint abroad among the Canadians is Cardinal Leger, brother of the Canadian ambassador in Rome, Jules Leger. In the last three or four years the views of Cardinal Leger, as made known in pastoral letters, have attracted attention outside Canada. He has dealt with rela- tions between the hierarchy and the laity, with a seca "va ishops 'a council, one of the main tend- encies is to seek to avoid at.all on unity that might frighten off other faiths. Several leading prelates, in in- formal discussions, have been urging that the secretariat on Christian unity, set up by the Vatican three years ago, should be kept in being after the coun- cil ends to keep the "dialogue" going among the churches. Another idea is that the cen- tral commission of the council be maintained after the conference to deal with any ex- It is believed Cardinal Leger is among the council fathers favoring this approach. Perhaps the 'most outspoken, however, is 81-year-old Cardinal Bea, Ger- man member of the Roman cu- ria, who is thought to have spe- cial influence with Pope John. Archbishop Roy is well knowri for his work as chief Roman Ca- tholic chaplain®to the Canadian armed forces. Russia Launches Research Satellite LONDON (Reuters) -- Rus- sia today successfully launched an unmanned space reséarch satellite, the Cosmos XI, Mos- cow radio announced, All systems on board the satellite, the second launched the spot where the stewardess had fallen. by the R this week, are functioning normally, the radio said, costs any final arbitraty stand] f area along the Polish-Russian rontier. The illness, Tay- Sachs, has struck the nervous systems of children, many of whose parents trace their an- cestry back to the same bor- der provinces. The hospital, with 17 victims in its Tay-Sach ward, is pressing a- concen- trated effort to find a key to the disease's cure. © --AP Wirephoto Sterner JFK Push Seen For Tariffs WASHINGTON (CP) -- Presi- dent Kennedy's gentle urging that Canada remove her special tariff restrictions likely will be followed by some sterner stuff later this month, it was learned today, In accepting Prime Minister Diefenbaker's proposal for a free world ministerial confer- ence on trade, Kennedy said he was glad to see some of the special Canadian import sur- charges removed and looked for- ward to removal of the re- moval of the remainder to "help us all move forward in our attack on trade barriers." This reference in Kennedy's reply, made public Friday, was to the June 24 Canadian import surcharges of five to 15 per cent imposed as part of an austerity program to strengthen the Ca- nadian dollar. aiheavy" attacks in the disputed RED CHINESE CAPTURE INDIAN BORDER TO Indians Fought. 'To Last NEW DELHI (Reuters)--Com- munist Chinese troops today captured Khinzemane on India's northeast frontier after Indian troops fought "to the last round," the defence ministry said, The announcement came hours after Defence Minister V. K. Krishna Menon said Chinese troops had launched "very northeastern frontier agency area. and the Ladakh area of Kashmir. lusé |news agency said. Menon said the Chinese "'at- tacked in large number all our *orward posts in the Khinzemane ind Dhola area'"' and that "very eavy" fighting was going on rith '"'very large forces of Chi- ese thrown into the attack." The defence ministry said an adian helicopter being used to 'vacuate casualties from the ighting in the northeast had veen shot down by the Chinese. Red China earlier had ac- used India of opening attacks n both ends of the disputed yorder--the Ladakh area in the west and the North-east Fron- tier Agency about 900 miles to Round Menon said the Chinese had concentrated very large forces in the eastern area "and they are all being thrown into the attack." He said the attack came after a bombardment with heavy mortars and ma- chine-guns. 'a Menon refused to estimate the numbers involved in the fighting, but informed sources have spoken of thousands on each side in 'the area, At the same time, the Chi- nese attacked Indian posts in the Chip Chap River Valley of Ladakh and heavy fighting also is going on there, Menon said. ," he said, Today they attacked "very heavily as far as personnel and weapons are concerned." He said the Chinese had con- centrated "very large forces in that area in our territory, that is' between the ridge which is the McMahon line and the river and also ammunition and weap. ons." The Northeast Frontier the southeast. Menon asserted Peking's charge was.a coverup oe Chin tions, , the Communist New China Menon said the Chinese on- slaught in the northeast opened ing still continued at 11 a.m. Calling the Chinese attacks premeditated and _ concerted, Agency fighting is confined to a. narrow A position preparation for an Indian at- at'5 a.m. and very heavy fight-| tack Before Menon's announce. ment, Indian officials declined to comment on the Peking re- BULLETIN James Powers, 807 Col- borne street east, was ad- mitted to Oshawa General Hospital this. afternoon, with gunshot wounds in his ab- domen. Emergency depart- ment officials report him in satisfactory condition. Pow- ers was apparently shot ac- cidently by hunters. Police Constable Michael Mallon, of OPP Whitby, is investi- gating. ports of a large-scale Indian attack. Menon reported Indian supply by Chinese ground fire on both fronts today, but all had re- turned to base, & Referring to Peking's report on Indian attacks in the north- east and in Ladakh, the defence minister said: "The -report they put out ap- pears to be even prior to their launching their attacks." He said the Chinese report "clearly is to cover their own aggres- Friday night. sive moves." HALIFAX (CP) -- A commit. tee on human rights aimed at improving the lot of Nova Sco- tia's Negroes has been created by the provincial government, Premier Stanfield announced Spokesman for the province's 13,000 Negroes immediately wel- comed it as a progressive step. The Negroes, their links with the province extending back to the 1700s, 'live in small groups in widely-spread parts of the province. Most cities and towns po Nae wich after it was pre-| as a sorccccocccces Page Silizer, pregnancy tranquil-| When . truck driver Bill Seibel, 45, of on his Regina stepped for a railway sei et AREOLA NARROW crossing in Regina Friday, more than half a ton of steel Pipe crashed through the truck ESCAPE FOR DRIVER cab, hitting him, but not in- juring him. A coating of frost on the plastic . covered steel s four-inch pipe was blamed. --CP Wirephoto Move To Help N.S. Negroes have Negro communities of be- tween 10 and 100 families, but the heaviest concentrations are around Halifax, Truro, New Glasgow and in the Annapolis Valley. The premier said the com- mittee will be assigned to de- fine objectives and co-ordinate the efforts of various govern- ment departments -which have been. working among the Ne- groes for some time. PRAISES IDEA Commented Rev. H. C, Corn- ish of Zion Baptist Church in Truro: "It is something that will bring about a better un- derstanding between the races. When the government takes a stand it more or less puts a stamp Of approval on 4 pro- gram such as this and its mo- Rev. Charles L. Coleman of Cornwallis' Street Baptist Church, Halifax, said the "idea is good 'but there are some '|points of discrimination such as employment and housing which will be hard to get at." Provincial secretary W. S. Kennedy Jones was named committee chairman. Members are the prémier in his capacity as education minister, Labor Minister Layton Fergusson and six senior civil servants. Mr. Stanfield said world-wide concern about racial problems has focused public interest on the situation in Nova Scotia, where more than half Canada's Negroes live. He indicated there were signs the lot of the Negro is improv- ing. An increasing number of firms offered a wider: range of jobs. Negroes were getting jobs where they dealt with the pub- lic. ' mentum is bound to increase." - *

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