Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Jan 1963, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THOUGHT FOR TODAY It's more blessed to give than to receive, and what's more, it's deductible. She Oshawa Gime WEATHER REPORT Very cold today. Increasing cloudiness tonight with chance of a brief period of snow Tues- day. VOL. 92 -- NO. 23 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JANUARY 28, 1963 Authorized Ottawa SIXTEEN PAGES Ont. Storm Condition End Seen By THE CANADIAN PRESS Heavy blizzard and near-bliz- zard conditions in Ontario, Que- bec and the Maritime provinces were to end early today except in the extreme east where a wind and snow storm moved to- wards Newfoundland. The weather reached its most serious proportions in the Lon- don-Windsor areas of Ontario, Quebec City and northern New Brunswick. It tied up all railway trafke and some automobile travel in Quebec City,. and Halifax, At Saint John, N.B., only three city buses were operating. In Bruce and Huron counties of western Ontario, traffic was almost at a standstill and schools were closed today. Schools were expected to stay closed in many New Brunswick centres also. TEMPERATURES DROP As the snow and driving wind subsided overnight, frigid and colder temperatures moved in Halifax, which had a record 48 degree high temperature Sun- day, expected only a 22-degree high today. Most of Ontario, Quebec and the Maritimes ex- pected highs of 10 to 20 degrees. On the West Coast, highs in the 30s were expected. Winnipeg, which yesterday achieved one degree above zero, its first above-zero temperature in 16 days, looked for five de- grees above. In Saskatchewan, temperatures were expected to rise to only five degrees below Storms, Cold Still Plaguing Areas In US. the second time this century. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS after a weekend of wild weather in northeast regions. A blustery snowstorm which hammered New York State and New England over the week. end tapered off after dumping up to 18 inches of snow in some areas, The storm swept into the lower Great Lakes region and along the western slopes of the Appalachians. Heavy snow fell in some areas and strong, west- erly winds caused considerable blowing and drifting. No immediate break in the}, prolonged spell of cold weather was in sight. The number of} weather - related deaths since last mid-week rose to 162. It was below zero again this morning in most of the upper|t Great Lakes region, the Ohio Northern Plains. The core of the} arctic air was over the Missi-| t! ssippi Valley from St, Louis to} i Duluth, Minn. f central Greece, along Italy's Ad- riatic coast and as far south as Bari, and all across Hungary. ported in cities along Italy's northeast coast. Lake Traimeno, ae ae a at "s. igmowsterms-and. unse 8 ae Tot Evesteek (9 sevy *eold plagued broad sections comes ger nn ain ete et po: gage ey per ea pele A have been isolated by snow for the last week. HIGHWAYS BLOCKED many highways. but temperatures still ranged down to 24 degrees. Netherlands with the tempera- overnight low was 23 degrees. Ice still blocked the rhine and other rivers although tempera- around freezing point during the Valley and westward across the/day. zero, Alberta's forecast high was zero. In the Toronto-Hamilton-Nia- gara areas, clear skies were expected: today, as Sunday's snowflurries ended, Snow fell most of Sunday in all but North- ern Ontario. It brought seven inches to the Ottawa Valley. Temperatures. of zero to 20 above were expected today in all but the north where over- pected to modify to the zero mark or slightly better. West winds of at least 15 miles an hour. were forecast for all Ontario and Quebec. This could cause serious snow drifting. Cold Grips Southeast Europe LONDON (AP)--Winter's fury continued to lash southeastern Europe today, but elsewhere milder weather brought relief. However, freezin£ tempera- tures at night turned partly- thawed snow into ice and made highways more hazardous again. The latest unofficial toll of deaths attributed to the arc- tic weather rose to more than 400. night sub-zero readings were ex.) } some) South Carolina Highway Pa- trol officer checks the identi- fication cards of students as they enter the campus of Clemson College where Negro be Harvey Gautt will register later today. South Carolina is the last state in the union to integrate it's public school system, In the background is "PLAN TO ENROL NEGRO Tillman Hall, the college ad- ministration building where Gautt will enroll this after- noon. (AP Wirephoto). Fresh snow was reported in Seven inches of snow were re- outh of Florence, froze over for The Greek Air Force para- Hungarian authorities reported nearly 29,000,000 cubic yards of snow have fallen on Budapest--twice the normal av- erage. Northern and northeast- ern winds piled up snow drifts over most of Hungary, blocking Milan and Rome were sunny The thaw returned to The ure expected to reach 37. Milder weather continued hroughout Germany, but t he ures were expected to rise to Temperatures moderated BRUSSELS, (AP)--Five con- tinental friends of Britain fought an 11th hour battle to- day to keep alive the British application for Common Market membership and thereby pre- vent French domination of West- ern Europe. The ministers of West .Ger- many, Italy, Belgium, The Neth erlands and Luxembourg said 'privately they knew they were' playing for tremendous stakes. They felt the future of the Common Market, the solidarity of the Western alliance and the Work On Compromise are convinced that French Pres- ident de Gaulle envisages a Western Europe permeated with sour mistrust of the English- speaking peoples and organized as a third force capable of reaching an accommodation of its own with the Soviet Union. In ee es key is- sue is wi B can | into the Market: i formants said that if Britain is kept out, the ch will have won a tremendous victory. Ironically, thé fate of the British membership application seemed to rest ultimately in the Five Market Countries hands of former foes--the West) Germans. It generally is conceded that if the West Germans wilt under French pressure, the British case will be permanently lost. The compromise plan pro- posed by West Germany would refer the membership question to the nine-man Common Mar- 2 Men Walk 60 Miles For Help HALIFAX (CP)--Fort Chimo had two unexpected visitors Sun. day. A young pilot and an Eskimo hobbled into the northern Que. bec settlement to report that six other persons aboard a Norseman aircraft that vanished two weeks ago were alive and well. The two men had walked 60 miles over icefields, through blizzards and sub-zero. weather to seek help, A -ski-equipped plane was to leave today, hoping that other survivors were as hardy as the two who carried news of their safety. The trail the two men covered has been swept by blizzards so severe that planes have been grounded, Paul-Joseph Garon, 24-year- old Wheeler Airlines pilot and son of Judge Alphonse Garon of Quebec, and the unidentified Es- kimo could not be reached by radiotelephone, The communi- cation service to Fort Chimo, 800 miles north of Quebec City, operates only two hours a day. WEATHER WAS COLD Garon's aircraft disappeared Jan, 13 on a, 150 . mile flight from Payne city to Fort Chima. Except, for weather interrup- ket commission," an executive ion a massive search had body of international civil serv' ants." The' commission would study the problem and report back to the six Common Mar- ket members and the British in two or three weeks, n conducted continuously. Skies were clear as the two men walked into Chimo--but it was 20 degrees below zero. A brief report from search co. place of the United States and Britain in continental affairs rested on their efforts. The five gave first priority to maintain- ing a solid front against French pressure, informants said, At a meeting with French ministers they planned to put forward a compromise proposal --largely the work of the West |Germans--to delay a showdown on the British membership is- sue for at least two or three weeks, With time; the five thought they could head off radical re- alignments inside the Western camp which they felt could only give comfort to Soviet Premier Khrushchev in the long run. hroughout most of France but n Paris it was still around reezing point. The representatives of the five shared the same fear. They Liberals Urge Drug Centres For Addicts TORONTO (CP)--Ontario Lib-)ary session remained unaltered|tle doubt the doctors "will' soon) reports that all British troops in erals will fight the next provin-|i cial general election with pro- n substance. The medical care proposal pull the rug out from under it." A working paper on economic posals for government drug ren, engendered prolonged debate in|development approved by the tres to "take the profit out of committee but was approved in| "ally said a Liberal government trafficking," and a medital care| plenary session without com-|Would work for a provnncial ec BRUNEI TOWN, Brunei (Reu- ters)--Tough British paratroop- ers were sent today to the oil- rich British protected sultanate of Brunei in Borneo, scene of an attempted revolt last month. The troops were from the Spe- cial Air Service Regiment, irained in jungle warfare, and were flown in from Singapore. | But a spokesman for British |Far East land forces said in Singapore that although the troops were sent to Brunei, this move was "'not a result of any sudden development in the area --it has been planned for some time." The spokesman declined to comment on reports about the massing of Indonesian "volunt- eers" in the areas where Indo- nesian Borneo borders the Brit- ish colonies of North Borneo and Sarawak. He also refused comment on jthe Borneo territories were placed on a standby alert in the face of "critical statements" by Indonesia. "We are aware that UK. Paratroopers 'Sent Into Borneo I am sure." He added there) was a great deal of "disquiet") in Indonesia over reports abroad of her military buildup. Subandrio was speaking to re- porters shortly before he left for New Delhi for a week of talks with Prime Minister Nehru about the Sino - conflict. In Singapore, a spokesman for Britain's Far East land forces confirmed that a detach- ment of the Special Air Service regiment was sent to Brunei, But he said the paratroops were being used in an infantry role and were not parachuted into the jungle. "They have, of course, the! capability for parachute work,! but they have not been used in| that role to date," the spokes-| {man said. YOU'LL FIND Indian border , c | hatrinn {Canada's rich offshore fisheries. ordinators at Goose Bay, Lab. rador, relayed to search and res. cue headquarters here, gave few details. The men said the others were "fine,"" Their plane is down immedi- ately south of Leaf Lake, north- west of Fort Chimo at the foot of Ungava Bay. The plane had been chartered by the department of northern affairs and among the passen. gers was A. F. Flucke, 49, of Prince Albert, Sask., adminis- trator for the department at Fort Chimo, There were six es- kimos aboard, including three children. The plane was stocked with a oad of seal meat and a couple of tents, the only comforts the stranded travellers had for their ordeal. A. F. 80 Cars Tour Bush Strike Districts KAPUSKASING, Ont, (CP)-- A cavalcade of 80 cars toured this Northern Ontario district today calling for an end to a strike of 1,400 bush workers. About 300 persons, mostly independent truckers, settlers, farmers and contractors, all of whom have been affected by the strike, were in the cars. The strike has been in progress 14 days. The cars bore signs saying "People. want to work" and "Government, union, company FLUCKE 5 Change Ordered In 'Revisionism' PEKING (Reuters)--The Chi-| nese Communist party has is-| chev's The editorial quotes Khrush- recent words that @ sued what observers said/changed Soviet - Yugoslav rela- amounts to an ultimatum to the Soviet Communist party and its followers to change their atti- tude about Yugoslav "'revision- ism" or cause a complete split in the international Communist movement, The development carries the ideological dispute between Pe- king and Moscow to a new ak, A strongly-worded front-page editorial Sunday in the main party newspaper here, People's Daily, unmistakeably refers to Soviet Premier Khrushchev in tionship is possible now because Yugoslavia's Communist. lead- ers "have removed very much of what was considered erron- eous," The editorial vigorously de- nies the truth of this position and qoutes recent statements by Tito in a bid to illustrate the poin, The editorial reflects Chinese Communist anger at the East Berlin congress reception given a speech by Peking's delegate, Wu Hsiu-chuan. asking why "some comrades who formerly took the correct stand of criticizing Yugoslav. re. visionism should now have made an about-turn of 180 degrees," It also implies Khrushchey lied in a recent statement about improved Russo-Yugoslav rela- tions, People's Daily charges that Communists attempting to end the 14-year-old "excommunica- tion' of Yugoslavia from. the Communist bloc were guilty of "perfidy" and a "deliberate" at- tempt to create a split in the international Communist move- ment." CALL FOR CONCLAVE The editorial calls' for a new parties to discuss: ideological dif! ees--an idea rejected by f Khrushchev, at the recent. con-| ap 14. Com.|*" gress of the Kast German munist party. ' People's daily implies the So- viet party should take the ini- tiative for such a meeting. sit down and settle soon," The independents and the settlers and farmers who make part of their living by logging, have been kept off work since the bush workers walked off the job Jan. 14 to back demands for a new contract with Spruce Falls Power and Paper Com- pany and its subsidiary, Kim- berly- Clark Pulp. and Paper Company at Longlac, 240 miles from: here. CHARGE INTIMIDATION The settlers and truckers say they are being intimidated by | Strikers who roam the bush overturning loads of logs. Twenty-five members of the provincial police are on strike duty and have started an inves- tigation of the allegations of in- timidation, 12-Mile Fishing Limit Requested OTTAWA (CP)--The Fisher- les Council of Canada today urged the government to de- lare a 12 - mile fishing limit, foreign fleets from In a 2,500-word brief to a ca- INSIDE. ee inet committee, the council by Canada and the United States at the second United Na- tions conference on the Law of the Sea, held in Geneva in 1960. It was backed by 54 nations but fell one vote short of approval. The Geneva plan was for a six-mile territorial sea around all maritime countries and a further six-mile exclusive fish- The editorial, containing some 8,000 Chinese characters, de- clares several international Communist move- ment is at a critical point, with its future under a grave threat. The paper also makes it clear the Chinese party considers it- self free of,any responsibility for this situation. CITES YUGOSLAVIA | The editorial is limited mainly to President Tito's Yugoslavia and makes it clear Communist China considers this the most important question to be set-| GM Reports Record Net Income NEW YORK (AP) -- General Motors Corporation reported to. day the largest sales and net in- come in its history. t General Motors said its 1962 net income is estimated at $1,- . 459,000,000. Its previous hi; meeting of world Communist by et Income, in 19, totalled. She a0 000000 difference of $270 'Sales last were: 600,000,000. The previous 'was. $12,700,000,000 in 1960. The company's net income' was $566,000,000 more than that of the previous year, 1961, when it tallied $893,000,000, Its sales last $3,200,000,000 more than the $11,- year were times that the/400,000 registered two years ago. Sales of cars and trucks in 1962, the company said, totalled 5,239,000 units, four per cent above the previous record year of 1955 and 30 per cent higher a the 4,037,000 units sold in Net income is the figure ar- rived at after money is put aside for taxes and other things, General Motors said U.S. and foreign taxes for 1962 will total an estimated $1,475,000,000, com. tled before Communist unity) Pared with $875,000,000 in 1961, can be restored. Its over - all theme is that Khrushchey and his associates violated the statements of Mos- cow's world Communist "sum- Dividends last year also were a record amount--$3 a share being paid to holders of common stock. The company said the $850,. mits" of 1957 and 1960 by their/000,000 in common stock divi- open reconciliation with Yugos- lavia since last fall. dends is the ever paid by an industrial firm, largest amount , 2,000) |warned that increased compe- insurance plan. ;ment despite a warning from| omic growth rate of 50 per cent/troops are on 72-hour alert in) Plaque To Honor War tition from foreign fishing ves- The Ontario Liberal Associa-\Dr. Patrick Bruce - Lockhart,| by 1970 to provide a $24,000,000,-/ London, but we are not aware Dead sels is threatening to deplete|ing zone. tion unanimously approved at a|president of the Ontario Med-|90 economy, 3,000,000 jobs and) of the reason for this alert," he! important 'stocks of fish in| 'Unilateral declaration of the policy rally here Saturday alical association, that doctors ceeeiel ae increase in. real| added. | coastal waters. It cited growing] government's policy must. be aes | ; i ars income. ave 9 {fishing activity ssi ; area & ee ee eee would object to working under The Ontario Savings Bank| VIEWED AS PRECAUTION Page 9 ras activity by Russia and followed immediately by active Nmrcibinn atcaol. bo: narti en would be expanded "'throughout|_ There was speculation the) 3 yurt In "The rapid increase in world] jn F teret nti ond OS Sore cotics |the province as a savings, trust|British moves were precautions] : POI sage 'ici jing oreign fishing fleets in addicts. 1 eid @ Savings, ; h Bowmanville Accident Page 9 | fishing effort and efficiency has/the exclusive fishin, th Andrew Thompson |and investment institution," and] against renewed trouble in Bru- . focussed attention on the fact)brief said cone ! z pson, |would provide long-term, low- neue 8 een oh aun teak jthat unless adequate safeguards . Page 9 Dinner To Honor c | Safe Drivers ........ administration of a "central controlling agency." | | The proposal said a medica member)care insurance commission, in- Ukrainian Independence of the legislature for Toronto) cluding representatives of gov- Dovercourt, told the closing ses-} sin of 850 delegates at the two- day rally that such a rehabilita- tin program would take the profit out of drug trafficking and cut down on. associated} crime. Tom O'Neil, a Toronto dele- gate, said studies indicate that "between 30 and 40 per cent of criminal offences" would be stamped out "'if illegal traffick- ernment and the medical pro- fession, would negotiate with Physicians' Services Incorpor- ated and other doctor-sponsored groups to prvide, in two stages, insurance available to everyone. The Liberal scheme would be financed by a combination of personal premiums and special taxation, would allow doctors to practise in or out of the plan and make payment "on a fee- cost credit for municipal cap- ital works and farm expansion and lend money for home reno- vation, low-rental housing proj- ects and urban develpment. The rally approved proposals j\for reorganization of the attor- ney-general's department, ad- ministration of the provincial police by a single commissioner Staged by left-wing nationalists and backed by Indonesia. Meanwhile, Indonwsian For- eign Minister Subandrio denied in Jakarta today that Indones- ian troops were massing on the Sarawak border. | DESTROG 5 o04 is tnsesss Page 9 | are taken, the marine resources Oshawa Scots Hold Burns Dinner Young PCs Urged To Organize Page 9 |Canadian economy will be har- Page 3 | that have played such a vital lrole in the development of the | vested by foreign fishing fleets," jit said. | Foreign boats now may fish| to within three miles of Cana-| He said "'it is not true, of that! dian shores, The council's brief called on the government to adopt on its own initiative an international | Six People Die In 2-Car Crash FLINT, Mich. (AP) -- A mother and her four children and a baby-sitter were killed Sunday night in a two-car crash that injured. six other persons about six miles west of here. responsible directly to the at-| torney - general and establish-| TE ment of a public agency to! |provide legal counsel for ac-! : cused persons unable to pay. The paper, brought into plen- ary session by Willard Estey, a Liberal counsel at last year's Ontario royal commission on crime hearings, also recom- mended establishment of an ag-| periodicals after next June. ency to "thoroughly and objec- tively investigate the adequacy Armed Robbers Take $2 000 of present law enforcement ag- ef | encies."' LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Two men, one armed with a The meeting favored institu-| black revolver, the other wearing a Hallowe'en mask, tied tion of a new labor code--includ-| and gagged a hotel bookkeeper and fled with $2,000 in a ing repeal of section 89 of the| daring. daylight robbery at the Royal Alex Hotel today. Labor Relations Act under Z Eight Rescued From Quebec Bush which: municipal employees may be excluded from the act rf ST. JOVITE( Que. (CP) -- Eight persons were reported safe in Fort Chimo, Que., today after they had been missing and "other doctor - sponsored|--and establishment of a $1.25- service plans." an-hour minimum wage for ur- for more than two" weeks in the sub-Arctic wilderness of northern Quebec. Mr. Bryden said even if this|ban workers with regional ad-} a. 'Was desirable, there seems lit-|justments. | ' ' , fokeervice tmale"" proposal which was sponsored First reaction to the Liberal plan came from the New Dem- ocratic Party. Ken Bryden, leg- islature member for Toronto Woodbine, told an education conference ofy Ontario New ing were halted." The resolution was one of a many considered at the plenary session. Delegates spent nearly two days in committee hammer- ing out a Liberal platform for the election, expected this year. : : c ict, hekate 3 ep Democratic youth in Hamilton a tone ta tts ey Bidet ohenithat the Liberals continue to i Sekt | sift the Pa! play "'on again, off again Fin- pers brought back to the plen-| negan" with medicare. : He said that three months CITY EMERGENCY ago Liberal Leader Winterme- PHONE NUMBERS yer proposed government ad- ministration of medical care but now his party says it will POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 i Degg Paes: rar woman, Mrs, a Agnes Marie pik | 2 Brothers Killed returning home po' Sums Bishop Airport where her hus- | In Lakehead Crash band had Washington. PORT ARTHUR (CP) -- Two) Killed with Mrs. Pobocik were Fort William brothers lost theirjher three small girls and baby lives in a spectacular erash)boy and a babysitter, Shirley here today. Jean Dart, 20. : Dead are 25-year-old James| Witnesses told state police |John Romanowski and his 23-|/Mrs, Pobocik's car ran through }year-old brother Michael. a stop sign and was hit broad- Port Arthur police said it}side by a car driven by Lenard took over an hour to free the/Baldwin. The front end of the |bodies from the car after it}death car, including the motor, |went out of control and smashed/ wheels and fenders, was torn jinto the abutment of the bridge) off and hurled 60 feet from the over the Mcintyre River, at the|/scene. Baldwin, his wife and boundary between Port Arthur|other occupants.of his car were and Fort William. injured. ' To Disallow Deductions On Periodicals OTTAWA (CP) -- The government gave notice today that it intends to disallow as a deduction from taxable income money that is spent on advertising in non-Canadian taken a plane for SETS WORLD RECORD Abigail Hoffman, 16, of To- ronto Saturday night set a world's women's indoor 880- yard record at two minutes, 13.9 seconds in the Royal Can- adian Legion's International ' 3 Meet of Champions in Winnk peg. She was co-holder of the record at 2:17.5 with Sharon Knott of Cleveland. ' (CP Wirephato) N try to work out a deal to have the plan administered by PSI

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy