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Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Feb 1963, p. 1

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Se OARS MAB BTL. EN 2G REET High School Grads Found Unimaginative - Page 13. THOUGHT FOR TODAY The supermarket can help you with that diet -- just ask for _sylph service. he Oshawa Time WEATHER REPORT Sunny with'a few cloudy:periods today and Saturday, not. quite so cold. Winds westerly 10 to 20. e Over Price Not 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1963 Authorized Ottawa and as Second Closs Mail Post Office Department, for payment of Postage in Cash. TWENTY ®:PAGES' VOL. 92 -- NO. 45 DOWN CUBAN REFUGEE A Cuban refugee is downed by a Miami, Fla., policeman today when a group of refu- gees protested the picketing Striking Ajax Workers Say Talks Broken Off higher AJAX (Staff) UAWA (local 1090) members claim Canadian Auto Trim offi- cials broke off negotiations at 6 p.m. Thursday night. ronto. President of 300 member local by four men carrying signs opposing military against were parading im front of the sion of Young Spring and Wire Talks broke down after 32|Corporation of Canada, pro-jtors, when asked how much the straight hours of negotiation injduces cotton pads and door andjstrike would affect production, the Prince George Hotel in To-|seat covers for the major auto|/today said GM industries. sources of supply. IAWA (local 195, he L. x action Cuba. The pickets Striking] strike. The company was given| with three week's warning. legal strike.' It's Cuban a demand al wages coupled with the discon- tinuance of the Canadian Auto Trim, a divi-| system. Nearly 300 members of the Revolutionary cil headquarters. --AP Wirephote |Premier Khrushchev, making a - --|rare appearance in uniform. He for incentive A spokesman at General has A Chrysler Corporation ' Windsorispokesman at Windsor said the , e t Young Wire}company would gotiations. They offered their|and Spring the same time work-|tion by Tuesday if the strikes but cut us off whenjers at the Ajax went on strike! were not settled. proposais Finn we started to deliver our coun-/-- midnight, Wednesday. | ter-proposals." International representative) of the UAWA, Harry Benson, charged that Canadian Auto Trim management was orders not to negotiate under} TAKE EXCEPTION "We take strong exception to this attitude," said Mr. Benson. We went through all the} legal chamnels necessary for the Bomb Threat spokesman this morning said the dispute "'is still under nego- tiation'. while|Local's stand man said ka said |negotiation before stopped. | sickness nemployment creases, working conditions,. rate adjust ment jit A Canadian Auto Trim) Asked to comment the that on "no comment:'. 1090 president Vever- 12 items were under the talks Local He listed and life insurance, accident plans, benefits, wage retroactive pay, and 'job classifications "The union and the company talks had/Shifts last i icketted.|been discontinued, the spokes-| Ajax Plant. Men are taking the the plant was being picketted n i he spokes flgtt shift and woiien the day en. . Said Made jare not too far apart on the|Country music Against Queen A bomb threat was made Adelaide News reports. The Queen and Prince Philip bourne. The newspaper says it com plied with a police request not to publish word of the threat that until she had left the state. The newspaper says an un:- senior executives Tuesday and said: "There is a bomb planted at Holdens." Holdens is a !arze motor works outside Adelaide The News says three de'ec tives investigated.. The visit by the Queen and Philip to the plant went off without a hitch Tuesday. The News says police also 1:\- vestigated reports that three men were overheard plotting to open the weir gates and drain| Union held fast today to its Adelaide's River Torrens which the Queen sailed to a concert at Elder Park Tues-| day night. The objective was to| prevent the Queen drifting on a barge to the festival GUARD AREA guard, the newspaper adds The Britannia spent part of today dodging lobster pots. said Mr. Veverka "However we are quite farjday in what police said was the and climax to a drinking party. The other The union is also in disagree-|Louvin Brothers, Ch against the Queen when she ar-|ment with the company's clas-' vin, swore. out a warrant charg- signal for "hot pursuit." rived in Adelaide Tuesday, the|sification of four job categor-\ing the victim's wife with as ies and the pay. for these jobs.|sault apart ADELAIDE, Australia (AF )--/|sickness and accident schemes.' issue {deputy }cused the United States of bad|sumed Police kept the Torrens Weir| faith by suggesting at one time|States and and its approaches under close|two to four on-site inspections) have shown no eagerness {o re-|ment. when the obstacles which ja year and then reneging on|vive the subcommittee without] have blocked the negotiations on ri this offer. a and British;number of on-site on life insurance Main complaint, money is not the The union disagrees an hour pay. raise offer'sus. GENEVA (AP) -- The Soviet) > it or leave it' offer of Vasily V. foreign Kuznetsov, Soviet minister, ac-| met The American 22-calibre Louvin, they| satisfactory condition The meeting The prior pis with according to| murder. left Adelaide today aboard the|'he union, is the hggorahighh le royal yacht Britannia for Mcl-|'°™ for plecework which, 39, sicn" of pay because of the type'a hospital. of work done. Louvin Italian this since Feb, tol half of tk intent understanding The Windsor and Ajax plants supply General Motors, F or d, Chrysler and American Motors }with seat and door covers. Pickets were on night four around shifts Of the 300 strikers at the Ajax| plant, nearly 70 per cent wom Singer Shot With Pistol At Party NASHVILLE Tenn. (AP) singer early fo was reported brothers Soviet Union Stickin To Offer On Test Ban delegate, week if possible of the three-power test ban sub- committee of the conference. subcommittee the 12 the has conference after a Soviet A message received from the| delegates at the 17-naticn dis-|and other control issues escort ship Anzac said both ves-|2!™mament conference have de- sels were forced to manoeuvre} several times to avoid the pots} set out in shipping lanes ide The' Canadian chief delegatc,|ening '1 our efforts to resolve jnied repeatedly that any such/Lt.-Gen. E. L. M. Buins, urged!this issue." offer was made by the Western| Russia to. spell out its basic re- quirements for a test ban agree-| United States and Russia should Coun- pay}, | Mo.|stession and the Soviet Union alternate stop produc- hour the are Ira Lou-| craft ypension 'and SUB proposals,"'|vin was shot six times with a chasiiig attackers back to Cuba} Thurs-} to punish them. ie singing) velops into a pattern of attacks, lie Lou-|the president may then give the commit|made the warning public at a in| government f | His: wife|nied categorically" the charge ay results in an 'unfair divi-|was held in a security ward of|that its jets fired near the dis- fe have, Florida The company said yesterday|sung on the Grand Ole Opry! afternoon main) program for 17 years and made Be : many records. Their latest al-| pected to have something to say/@ny vessel or aircraft" which The union countered a three|bum is Keep Your Eyes on Je- about it in a televised address| Strikes at a U.S. ship or plane dentified man phoned one of its cent : | not) re-| are twojearly conclusion of an Union|ment to ban tests. At this mo- of the} inspections|t 1 | Russia Against Attack MOSCOW (AP)--Defence Min- ister Malinovsky warned the |United States today that an at- jtack against Cuba would mean ja third world war. He said the Soviet Union will be in the first lranks of these who would go to Cuba's aid. Malinovsky spoke at a Krem-) lin meeting marking the 45th anniversary of the Soviet armed forces, Seated near him was |wore the uniform a a lieutenant-| general with several rows of} | decorations on his chest. | | Malinovsky said: "We would like to warn the | iggressive circles of the United |States that an attack on the |Cuban Republic would mean a third world war. If such an at- tack is made, the peace-loving forces of the world will not con- jfine themselves to protests andj jdemonstrations, They will rise jin defence of the victim of ag-) will be in the first ranks of those who will come to its as- sistance." Malinovsky, also warned that a war involving Cuba "will not be waged only in the territory of Cuba but in the territory of the United States, too."' Touching on a recent 7 Me; by U.S.. Defence Secretary Mc- Namara, Malinovsky said: WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- U.S. firepower will blast any Cuban-based warships or planes that attack U.S. vessels or air- | craft | | But Kennedy indicated 'Thurs- day that, for the time being at} least, U.S. jet fighters and navy will be restrained from If Wednesday's MiG strafing of a disabled shrimp boat de- Several hours after Kennedy Cuban and de- conference, the | press "rejected Ala in the Wednesday shrimp boat Straits abled Premier Fide] Castro was ex-| tonight. | Gg }a grave moral responsibility to with 'an ma from world opinion'| as expressed by the UN Gen-| eral Assembly. "All the nations of the world united in calling for the! agree- unambiguous} ten »9| a treaty have been so substan- lally reduced, world opinion will pot understand any slack- e Burns sug gested that the Blast Attackers Kennedy Orders Warns "I maintain emphatically that in retaliation to the 344 missiles with which Mr. McNamara is threatening us, we shall deal a simultaneous blow of several times more missiles and such a} } tremendous nuclear yield that) 7 EARTHQUAKE 2,000 LEFT HOMELES it will wipe off the earth all|)" targets, United States, will destroy com- pletely the countries which have inade available their territories} |¥ for American war bases. To an audience of 6,000, which| included military attaches of] : many nations of East and West, Malinovsky continued: "We once again uimidated. retaliatory blow will be more than enough to make 'the ag- gressors burn ir the very first hours of war. "Therefore, they can be only advised not to lose their heads and keep their hands as far as possible from the push-buttons, which if pressed, may lead to the unleashing of a nuclear Ca- industrial and admin-| ; isirative-political centres of the] ; firmly re-| 7 mind the Western leaders that] ' the Soviet Union cannot be in-| § The might of our}: S ee LIBYA ? More than 2 miles KILLS 900, BENGASI, Libya (Reuters)-- persons were killed and more than 12,000 'eft homeless by an earthquake that shattered the town of Barce, 60 from here, Thursday : night. "EGYPT eee WHERE QUAKE TOOK TOLL Source Says US. tastrophe. Malinoysky's bristling speech was frequently interrupted by applause, mostly duri tions when he spoke of Cuba and delivered his warnings to the U.S. Awaits Election WASHINGTON (CP)--A woll-jhands of Canadian defence ed soured 'says the U: triops is a mratter of some ur- States. government has decided to await the outcome of thé April 8 Canadian election be- fore entering into any sevious new negotiations on the provi- sion of U.S. nuclear warneads for Canadian troops. This, it was stated, is the gen- eral U.S. government reaction to reported overtures by Cana- Once before, when a U-2 was} _.: ident Kennedy has warned that|shot down at the height of the Cuban crisis last fall, a U.S. warning apparently detevred any more anti-aircraft missile firing on U.S. reconnaissance planes operating over Cuba Congressional critics were not stilled by Kennedy's orders that "all necessary action' be taken by the military forces to prevent any more attacks like the strafing of the shrimp boat. | Several suggested the incident} discredited the administration's) contention that the Russian-| built MiGs are in Cuba for de- fensive, rather than offensive operations against the United States. Kennedy said he saw no reason to change his view. Kennedy said he had _ in- structed the Pentagon to make "any necessary revisions in standing orders so as to ensure that action will be taken against in Caribbean internaticnal wa-| ters. } He didn't elaborate, and de-| fence officials refused to dis-} cuss either the standing orders or the changes. But competent sources said it was clear the president is broadening the present rules under which U.S, fighter planes and navy vessels are empowered! to open fire on approaching air-| an early nuclear test ban agree-| Burns said the conference has|craft or warships if they ap- ment. The ~|three on-site inspections a year,;cesco Cavalletti, called for alane jand moved to block direct at gotiations on a quclear test ban at this time. pear bent on attacking U.S. ter- Fran-|stop nuclear testing in accord-! ritory. said, the president's orders probably will result in placing) more fast jets on "strip alert"! --ready to take off. Navy and marine Phantom jets are poised at all times at the Key West Naval Air Sta- tion, 90 miles across the Flor- ida Straits from Cuba's north coast. At Homestead Air Force base south of Miami, air force F-104 jets also are on alert. Furthermore, these "orders YOU'LL FIND dian Ambassador Charles Rit- chie who conferred with State Secretary Dean Rusk for 30 minutes Thursday. Ritchie was understood to have conveyed a request by Prime Minister Diefenbaker for resumption of the nuclear ne- gotiations that Diefenbaker's previous propos- als were found unacceptab'e by the Kennedy administraticn, While the U.S. goveinment still believes the question of getting U.S. warheads into the Hanging Sentence Commuted To Life OTTAWA (CP)--The federal cabinet has commuted to life imprisonment the death sen- tence imposed. on 20-year-old Gary Alexander McCorkell, slayer of two small boys in a Toronto warehouse last. April. The two boys, Ronald Mac- Leod, 3, and Michael Atkinson, 2, were smothered atfer being 'ndecently assaulted. McCorkell, who had _ been scheduled to be hanged Feb. 26, will serve his term of life im- prisonment in Kingston Peniten- tiary. collapsed when} | gency, there is a reluctance by U.S. diplemats to become en- meshed in what has developed into a major election issue, IF AND WHEN Diefenbaker said in a Toronto speech last Tuesday that "'we're negotiating to make readily available and accessible atomic warheads if and when an emer- gency takes place." The Ritchie - Rusk meeting, jheld at the ambassador's re- jquest. was the first formal one between them since Rit- chie's return from Ottawa con- sultations Feb, 5, Perhaps in an indication of continued coolness een the two governments, the state de- partment turned down press photographers' requests that Rusk pose with Ritchie. The de- partment said Rusk didn't have time. Ritchie was called to Ottawa Jan. 3t for consultations after Diefenbaker described a state |department statement taking is- |sue with his nuclear policies as an unwarranted intrusion in Ca- nadian affairs. Diefenbaker was reported to have proposed at one stage that the U.S. store the warheads suitable for Canada's jet fight- jers and bomarc missiles on the U.S. side of the border, to be hauled into Canadian bases if and when a war breaks out. | This, it is reported, is what the state department had in mind when it said Jan, 30 that Canadian government proposals were impractical and ineffec- tive, Latest reports from the scene said hundreds of injured were i being attended by U.S. Air Force, British Army and Lib- yan doctors, Emergency hospitals have been set up and the home.ess housed in buildings still stand- ing. Roads were littered with rubble and cut by deep ruts. The death toll mounted to - about 500 as more bodies were found in the rubble of the town of more than 10,000 people. One report reaching Tunis in neighboring Tunisia said e state of emergency had been declared in Libya. People fled into the streets in pouring rain when the earth- quake shook the town and the surrounding area which has a population of about 50,000, the report said. Airmen from the big Amer- ican base at Wheelus swung into action immediately after the quake and were joined by British troops based in the area. Eleven U.S. transport planes from Wheelus base .took off. for Barce loaded with food, mdi- cine, doctors, two ambulances and a 36-bed field hospital us soon as news of the disaster reached the base. the From Nicosia, Cyprus, Labor Picks 'Shadow' Cabinet LONDON °(CP) -- Opposition leader Harold Wilson patched over internal Labor party dif- ferences Thursday night by naming a balanced "shadow" cabinet with the accent on in- tellectual talent. didate for the party leadership, agreed to remain as deputy leader. A spokesman said Brown and Wilson now are in "complete accord' about poli- cies and parliamentary tactics. As it stands, Brown -failed to get the key job of "shadow" foreign secretary, a post he badly wanted. Instead he will concentrate on home affairs. 55, a former Commonwealth secretary in the last Labor gov- ernment. Denis Healey, 45, receives the defence portfolio. He formerly was the party's spokesman on Commonwealth and colonial af- fains. JFK Urges Quick End To N.Y. News Blackout NEW YORK (AP)--President Kennedy, saying the 77-day New York newspaper blackout '"'has long since passed the point of public toleration," urges quick appointment of an impartial umpire to settle the dispute. Kennedy's call for an end to the impasse, at his press con- ference in Washington Thurs- day; was echoed by members of the New York Newspaper dispute since Jan. 26, said the mayor will study the resolution and "'comment on it at an ap- propriate time." New York publishers accepted president Kennedy's umpire idea. Kennedy told reporters con- 'cerning the negotiations: "col- lective bargaining has failed." "kn my view," the president said, "one solution of this pro- in New York and. throw thous- ands out of work." The strike has made idle 20,- 000 newspaper employees, in- cluding 3,000 printers and 6,800 guildsmen. 1 George Brown, defeated can-| The foreign: affairs position : goes to Patrick Gordon Walker,| } RAF flew a load of medical supplies and personnel to Baree and a similar team was dis- patched from El Adem in Libya, Barce was an Italian base during the Second World War and changed hands sev al times in the desert fighting bee tween the British Eighth Army and Awis forces. The town, with a population of 10,740, is on a high desert plateau crossed by a mountait range. It is a resort and agrie cultural centre. Flu Outbreak On The Wane In §. Ontario By THE CANADIAN PRESS An influenza outbreak which has gripped widely separated parts of southern Ontario for three weeks was on the wane today as cold arctic air swept across the region. * The outbreak hit the entire Cormwall disttict. In Sarnia, it closed. one school ance at schools in other centres dropped drastically. Dr. John Howie, director of | the Metropolitan Windsor Health Unit, said the return of arctie air may curb the outbreak. "It's preferable to have colder weather than changeable con+ ditions, and cold weather is what we have right now," he said. Dr. Arthur Peachey, «medical officer for Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry Counties, cur tailed visiting hours at. Corn- wall's four hospitals to prevent the illness spreading to patients, More than 400 students from the city's five secondary schools were at home with flu Thurs- day and hundreds more at 19 separate and nine public schools were reported sick. At one time, 22 of 60 teachers at the Cornwall Collegiate and Voe cational School were off. Sup- plementary teachers were called in. ee Powers' response was: think the president has been ill- man and I do not know the source of his information con- cerning the negotiations but he advised. I know he is a busy|% te: rte ens sma Ye and atterd- i KR Kuznetsov brushed aside the|/ment so negotiations can pro-|each submti a complete draft American offer earlier this week| ceed, treaty, leaving blank the num- to negotiate the number of on-| Burns also demanded. t hatjber of on site inspections and site inspections if the discus-|overriding priority be given tojblack boxes (robot detection /sions were broadened to includela test ban treaty stations). In this way, each side the entire control arrangements,| "The Canadian. delega-;would understand the other's} ae . |. This would sidetrack the con-|tion strongly objects to any sug-|thinking cn inspection proce.| 55 Students Work ference into secondary issues,| gestion that this conference turnijdures hefore making a In Offices ..+.+++4 longed strike, if no immediate] apparently has been ill-advised. progress is made, would be for]. . . nobody can tell me there the striking. printers, companies] is anything in our demands that end other involved unions tolis unreasonable." submit their differences to in-| The printers seek a reduction dependent determination of|in the work week from hours to some kind. , 35 hours from 36% plus 'an $18- "Tt is clear in the case of the|a-week pay increase over two New York newspaper strike that|/year.. The publishers. contend | the local of the International|/that the whole package in a whelmingly a resolution asking|Typographical' Union and _ its two-year pact would cost an ad- Mayor Robert F. Wagner to| president, Bertram Powers, in-|ditional $37 a man a week. 13 |tfecommend a_ settlement by|sofar as anyone cen understand! The newspapers have offered next Thursday |itis position, are attempting toja $10 package over two years. A spokesman for Wagner, whojimpose a settlement which can] Printers were avetaging $145 a 13 'has been trying to resolve thelshut down several newspapers! week in wages. Several fishing boat ap Guild (AFL-CIO) in a stormy proached the Britannia to wave to the yacht, which is carrying the royal couple on their cur- rent Pacific tour CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211; INSIDE... session, + | O'Leary PC Nomination Local 6 of the International Speaker Page 13 |Typogra phica] Union (AFL- ClO) went on strike against four of the city's nine major. news- ge 13 |papers last Dec. 8, -and the }others shut down, 13 | Guild members voted over- PREDICTS UPRISING Walter Rehm, 32, of Wind- sor, recently returned from spending two years in Haiti as mine supervisor for a Canadian mining company. In an interview today, 'he predicted en "explosive up- rising" in the Caribbean' is- land before May. final] Kuznetsov declared, adding: {to the discussion. of any mat-| commitment on numbers, | 'Teachers Attend "If we cannot get agreementiter except a test ban unil we; The Canadian delegate) District Co fér Pace on the main issues, discussion of|are. assured that the negotia-|praised the American willing-| wise ere eee secondary matters will prolong|tion of this subject has been se-;ness to negotiate on the hum-|} Blowing Snow Blamed reaching an agreement." riously undertaken and is being|ber of inspections, and said this} [For Accidents Cenada and Italy. called onjconducted in a manner which|proved that the present. differ- jthe disarmament conference to|promises to. yield concrete re-|ence over numbers was not an| Kiwanis Marks |take immediate action to reachi sults." linsuperable obstacle. « Brotherhood Week Page (CP Wirephotg f

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