| | | | | ~" ome $ @ School Board's $4,436,000 5-Year Plarl -- Page 17 WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with-a few sunny inter- vals and not so cold Wednesday. Southwesterly winds 15 to 25. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Several things have a bad influ- ence on children, one of them being children. Oshawa Times VOL. 92 -- NO. 48 1G Cais Por Coby OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1963 uU Second Chote: Mal Tost Oftien Separtemis Payment of Postage Cash. os 'Ottewa and for FIFTY-SIX PAGES 83 Feared Killed In | _4 Mishaps? THE HAGUE (AP)--As manyjin western Japan. The 238-ton as 83 persons are feared lost injferry collided with a 9,547-ton four ship disasters around the|Japanese freighter early today. world, all within 24 hours. Eight) Eight bodies were recovered. bodies have been recovered. |Many of the 39 still missing are Rescuers-braved a flaming|believed trapped inside cabins blanket of oil in western Eu-|of the sunken ferry, Police re- rope's Scheldt River to keep the|Ported 19 survivors out of the death toll down. Sea tragedies|66 persons aboard. also struck twice off Japan and| The freighter Richmond Maru § Apparently no Canadians collision and its crew was un-| were involved. hurt. many as 47 lives, was feared in| Further south, a 67-ton Jap- the sinking of the Japanesejanese fishing boat sank in the -- Sea early today. All 11 fisher-} jmen aboard were drowned, mar- 5,000-Year-Old Fboats searched the area but i' i |found no survivors. Lizard Alive | Two tankers collided in the ' |River Scheldt Monday, cover-| icy river. with flaming oil and| blocking traffic on the busy sea| LONDON (AP) Russian : i _|Sea. The Scheldt is the main scientists have brought two pre-)-t-em of a network of canals} | sembling lizards--back to life. gium They lay frozen solid for 5,000 As 2 . Fire turned the 20,766-ton mi- said today. {raflores, flying the Panamanian The story ss tka taiand. te flag, into a burning torch after] | , British Abadesa. space travellers might be put in a sort of deep freeze to make|__ Cpt. Giacomo Verardo of the cumberance of huge amounts of|27e missing. Rescuers saved 30) * supplies. others including the captain's once in the Aegean Sea. suffered little damage in the The heaviest toll, perhaps as| FISHING BOAT SINKS ferry Tokiwa Maru near Kobe,|rough waters of the East China jitime officials said. Two fishing Reds Cl a ing about a square mile of the} aim route inland from the North historic tritons--vertebrates re- in' denthern Erarice and Bel- years in Siberia, Moscow radio} broadcast said, suggests' that she crashed with the 13,350-ton long journeys without the en- Miraflores and six of his men} The broadcast gave this ac: wife and three badly injured! eount: "Some time ago Soviet geolo- resembl- & lizard at a depth of about 26 feet in the frozen ground of found something northern Siberia. "It revived after being kept at room triton, the oldest and most primitive orders of tailed amphibia that es- er) . ship's radio operator, was the earth in the M ra (the dinosaur age). SLEPT 5,000 YEARS "Judging by the state of the earth in which it was found, biologists concluded that the 5,000 years. seamen. All were Italian. Forty-| two members of the Bitish tanker crew were unhurt. The Miraflores was refloated| today after the fire was put} out, The Abadesa docked in An- jtwerp for emergency repairs. | In the stormy Aegean the! small Greek freighter Egli, car-| | g ore and a crew .of,,.22,| capsized Monday after sending ansos. Michael Kakaris, 52, the} picked up injured on a tiny is-| land. Greek Air Force planes) | spotted three other survivors on janother deserted island. Debbi Wilkes and Guy Re- vell, Canadian pairs entries, were in this position a mo- ment before Miss Wilkes fell to the ice during practice ses- sion Monday at Cortina, Italy, PARIS (CP - Reuters) -- The NATO council will meet here Wednesday with the United States and Britain expected to lay down the guidelines for set- ting up the controversial multi- lateral NATO nuclear force. The Anglo-American approach was said to have been worked out last week in Washington at a meeting of American and British officials, The Washington meeting was @\called to iron out some of the JUST BEFORE FALL for forthcoming world's figure skating championships, Miss Wilkes was hospitalized with a brain concussion. (AP Wirephoto via cable from Cortina) problems. of setting up the joint nuclear force proposed last De- cember by President Kennedy and Prime Minister Macmillan at their summit talks at Nas- sau. The Nassau pact has re- ceived a mixed reception in Eu- rope because of the thorny prob- lems, both political and milit- ary, involved in the formation of the multilateral force, The Washington talks last week covered the part of the Nassau agreement which con- cerned assignment of existing muclear forces fo a joint "multi- national' NATO force while a "'multiamanned" force, with the OPP Legislation | For This TORONTO (CP) -- Provision for reorganization of the provin- \cial police will be contained in { | In addition, Taipei newspapers) legislation. likely to be intro- triton had been asleep for about| reported that a Chinese Nation-| duced in the current legislature jalist steamer carrying 10 sur-|session, Attorney-General Cass 'On awakening the creature|Veyors and an unknown num-| said Monday night. behaved exactly as it had thou-|Der of men is missing off the| mosquitees out of their hands "Tt died after three weeks. "Another triton was frozen about mer, foun 13 feet under- ground. This one also revived) and lived practically all sum-| BRANTFORD (CP)--Fire of f Dairy Farm Blaze | Damage $60,000 jundetermined origin The announcement came dur- sands of years ago. It ran|Southeast coast of Formosa. Po-|ing Liberal opposition attacks around, ate and slept. It 'was|lice said they had no report of}9n government appointments of not afraid of people, willing)@ missing ship. eating wild berries, flies and) jthe OPP and the Ontario Police Commission. Early in the night sitting, the opposition moved to adjourn but |the motion was defeated by the government and debate finally |adjourned .about midnight. Mr. Cass said details of the jproposed OPP legislation will Monday|not be revealed until after the Moscow said that before these|destroyed a barn, 50 head of) report on the royal commission only the simplest present-day vertebrates. useful for long space flights. discoveries -- scientisfs believed This, said Moscow, would be The livestock were valued at ments. and tabled. | body," {purebred holsteins and all con-|on crime, conducted by Mr. Jus ' Organisms|tents of the barn on the farm|tice W. D. Roach, is received, Donald C, MacDonald, New could survive hibernation forjof Donald Engel RR 1, Ayr. centuries, But it said the tritons} were vertebrates, which led to|$30,000, and total loss was esti- the conclusion that prolonged|mated at $60,000--including 3,- hibernation could be induced in|500 bales of hay and straw, A major. aim would be |make the OPP 'an autonomous|@uetico Provincial responsible to the legis- | jlature through a commissioner jmore than 1,000 bushels of!with the rank of a de jgrain, and several farm imple-| ister. | The commissioner would be a Methodist, Anglican 'Merger Urged In UK. LONDON (AP) -- Proposalsjbreak away and set up their)ready for the final stage of com.| for. merging Britain's Method-jown church under John Wesley|plete union in one church." ists with the Church of England/in 1744. The Methodists report! has been announced by a panel|they now have nearly 724,000 of leaders of the two churches.| members in Britain, The ultimate prospect is that EXPLAINS: STAND Dr. Harold Roberts, chair. Another historic departure|™2 of the Methodist represen- the Church of England would be| would be appointment of Meth-|'atives at the talks, said the separated completely from the|odist bishops. They do not exist| Methodists do not object to an state. If the plan for full communion é goes through it will heal wounds HAS TWO STAGES of more than two centuries and in England. The merger plan announced) be a giant stride toward Chris- Monday, fruit of nearly seven| tian unity in Britain. 900 but an actual following num- bering many millions more--is |e the established church in Brit.|odists, jestablished--or state--church as such. But he was practically sure they could not consent as Methodists to organic union with the present form of* establish- years of talks between leaders) ment. The Church of England--with of the two churches, involves| The results of the discussions a claimed membership of 2,900,' Stages: with services of holy | ain with Queen Elizabeth as its;Communion administered by the titular head. The prime minis.|© gy of both denominations | ter names its bishops and it is}and received by the congrega- subject to @ measure of parlia-|tions of both. mentary control. 2, Complete and final union It was fear and dislike of the in one organization. Anglican episcopal system that i 1 caused many dissenters to/t0 disestablishment of the Ang- PIECES . in| all the participating Anglicans) \licans as the state church, in| CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS groups. were published jointly by the 1. Full communion by 1965,|Church information service: and entailing bishops for the Meth-|the Epworth Press in a book called Conversations the Church of England and the Methodist Church. The docu- ment is signed by 11 prominent Anglicans |Methodists. Between eight influential These favor the merger, but The second stage would lead four other Methodists who took |part have rejected it. Although| '| The Anglican Bishop of Ox.|Church of England will agree ford, Dr. H. J. Carpenter, who|With them. POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 4 was chairman of the Churth of England representatives at the|the Angi talks, told a press conference:|church pa "T think the first stage of the|church. There n opposition from tholic or high n. the Anglican The Methodists, too, puty min- Session trained executive of the attor: ability," Mr. Cass said, SEES POLITICAL MOVE North) said the governmen' "played politics in the dirtiest, lowest. possible way" by a pointing defeated political can last election, | -Mr. Cass protested Mr. Re aume's "unfortunate statement' to question the impartiality o the commission members. {Democratic Leader, said "des Tory in the area." ing under permits issued to Mat. thieu Lumber Company had vi nature trails. trespass."' LOSES SECOND MOVE the attempt to force early ad. journment. debate on the lands and for ests spending estimates, Libera moved adjournment of the de ate, ; Deputy-Speaker W. E. John vote. ney-general's department and would be assisted by a deputy commissioner of "proven police Arthur Reaume (L -- Essex didate Thomas Graham to the police commission. Mr. Graham was a Progressive Conservative candidate in York Centre -in the and said there was mo reason olated the permits by cutting near navigable waters and near Lands Minister Kelso Roberts said the company committed a trespass of the permit and was fined $1,058, but was permitted to continue operations because the infraction was "'not a gross The Liberal party won the first vote but lost the second in After 15 minutes of resumed Leader John Wintermeyer ston (PC -- Carleton) declared the opposition motion carried on a voice vote, but government members called for a standing Polaris missile as its backbone, is being set up, sources in Lon- don said. t REPORTS INCOMPLETE ' A foreign office spokesman said reports in several British newspapers Monday that Brit- ain and the U.S. had differed in the Washington talks were "incomplete." Officials in London main- tained there was no intention of reaching a cut and dried agree- ment on the structure of the force which might not be ac- ceptable to other members of | the 15-nation Atlantic alliance. The officials said the Birtish , p-/government regarded the Wash- .|ington talks as "highly satisfac- tory" and hoped NATO would make good progress on the first stage nuclear force. U.S, authorities disclosed in Washington Monday that the -|United States is suggesting to "lits NATO allies that they agree to take part in a multilateral {|nuclear force made up of Po- Killed Pil to|ecration of lumbering work"' in l l ots Park had |been carried out under work | permits issued to a "well-known 'Volunteers, | He said sub-contractors work:| Senator Says WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sen- ate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield has acknowledged that- during the height of the 1961 Cuban invasion several Americans volunteered to fly combat missions and four lost their lives. Thus the Senate's republican leader, Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, got no argument from the Kennedy administration's chief Senate spokesman on his charge that four Americans had -!been shot down im the Bay of Pigs invasion. Mansfield, who said that in -ithis case he was speaking only l/for himself, added some details in his statement: "| "It is known that a few ex- perienced American airmen -|were employed to train Cuban p lots, navigators and radio op- erators. Because of exhaustion of Cuban pilots, several of these Americans volunteered to fly 'combat missions. Apparently a YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Brewin. Outlines | NDP Program ..... Lack Of Funds Hampers Chamber . Page 17 Page 17 the opinion of leaders of both{Were in favor, this does not] NUPSE Asks Remem- mean that all members of the! brance Day Pay ... Page 17 Reach Area Liberal Officers Named ..... Page 17 | Oshawa Real Estate | Board Honored .... Page 3 | scheme may last for 10, 20 or|may be divided whén the plans}. EMO 'Groups perhaps 30 years before we arelare discussed further. a Plan Exercise .... Page 3 decision was made by those di- recting operations to accept this offer. Several planes were at- tacked and four of these Amer- icans lost their lives." DISPATCHES NOTE Shortly before Mansfield's statement, the Castro govern- ment sent a stiff note through the Czech embassy dealing wih a more recent scrape -- last week's attack on a U.S. shrimp boat. Cuba denied that its planes had fired on the boat and then countercharged that two U.S. Air Force jets machine-gunned Cuban territory early this month, endangering the lives of The U.S. state department termed the denial propaganda. Russian and Cuban oil workers.) laris-armed surface cargo ships with the U.S. retaining veto power over the warheads. Any NATO nuclear force de- veloped would be composed of} & two distinct elements -- Polaris atomic submarines assigned by the U.S. and Britain, and sur- face ships contributed by other NATO powers, such as West Germany, Italy and Belgium. BRITAIN, U.S. CONTROL British and U.S. Polaris sub- marines would be manned and controlled by these two coun- tries. No crews from other 4 $500,000 IN GEMS TAKEN BY BANDITS NATO Nuclear Plans Unfold Gunmen Toronto TORONTO (CP): --Four masked gunmen took an esti- mated $500,000 in jewelry Mon- day night after ransacking the mansion of millionaire M. J. Boylen. Philip Boylen, 24, son of he i financier, was struck on the | head with a pistol and bound in M. J. BOYLEN NATO countries would be at- lowed to participate. However, the U.S. also is also ready to support the sec- ond proposed component made up of surface ships that could be manned by mixed crews, such as Turks, Belgians and Italians. But the warhead, which would be on a U.S. Polaris missile, would be U.S.-built and the key veto -- use of the warhead-- would be retained by President Kennedy, Four Missing In Light Plane EDMONTON (CP)--Two heli- copters were among 23 aircraft in the air today as search con tinued for a light plane with four persons aboard that disappeared Monday in rugged mountain country 75. miles south of Cal- gary. Aboard the missing plane, a Bank Robbery | four Murder Trial Into 7th Day MONTREAL (CP)--The mur- der trial of Georges Marcotte, charged with the slaying. of two policemen during a bank holdup Dec. 14 in suburban St. Laur- ent, entered its seventh day to- day with the Crown coming to the end of its case. The Crown so far has called 33 witnesses out of a total of 80 who have been subpoenaed, but Crown prosecutor Claude Wagner indicated to_ reporters all of them may not be called. He said he expected to wind up his case today, The star Crown witness has been Jean-Paul Fournel, 40, who testified last week he took part in the $142,960 holdup with Mar- cotte, whom he named as the gunman wearing a Santa Claus disguise, and Jules Reeves, 29, Fournel and Reeves are await- ing trial March 29, They are charged with the Slayings of Constables Claude Marineau and Denis Brabant, gunned down when answering the holdup alarm at the St. Laurent branch of the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. Robert Holmes, 45, branch manager, gave corroborating evidence Monday that the man wearing the Santa Claus dis- guise swore and cursed a lot during the holdup. He said the man spoke English and could be understood. ater Apache, were Pilot ce, 27, of Calgary and e s fr ort and ca Cc . cameramen Len aaa and Charles Zeig- r. The plane was last seen neat 10,1694o00t Tornado Mountain, where the CBC. camera crew ig photographying a herd of elk. The plane, owned by Trans Aircraft (W.e st ern) Limited, failed to rendezvous at Chares- holm, Alta., with a second Trans Aircraft plane, which had accompanied it on its photo- graphy mission. a closet while the men went methodically through the 16- room home on Kingsway Cres- cent. Police said a large amount of cash was also believed to have been taken from the west Toronto suburban home but were unable to say how much. The bandits ignored one of the largest private collections of art in Canada, taking only the jewelry. Mr. Boylen, a mining promo- ter, art collector and race horse owner, left with his wife for a Florida vacation three days ago Ransack Mansion Police said the men seemed to be from 24 to 26 years old. They wore nylon stockings over their heads to distort their fea- tures, and had on black fedoras, black gloves and black coats. All carried .22-calibre pistols. James Boylen, 26, manager of Celtic Farms in suburban Malton, said his brother Philip, returned to the mansion early in the evening to await a visit froin a brother-in-law, Donald Coulter. "He was home a few min- utes when he heard a knock at and Philip was elone in the Th house. Investigating officers placed the loss at about $500,000. New Guinea Rights): For Canadian Firm New Gui- ' PORT nea ( ada has been' ; ing rights in a 325- nounced today. Director of nea legislative council eration. could be for this class of mining." Daca cae aan ' square region in the Madang section of New Guinea, it was an- y. Lands D. E. Mac- Innis told the Papua-New Gui- Jogists toltbe pany had sent two geolo: t) the area and "the extent and grade of any possible concen- tration of nickel is not yet Ontario Riding NDPs Nominate Aileen Hall Aileen Hall will again try to unseat a Cabinet minister and deliver Ontario Riding for the New Democratic Party in the April 8 federal election. At home in her own McLaugh- lin Collegiate balliwick Monday night, the 32-year-old English and Mathematics teacher took the nomination unopposed be- fore close to 400 supporters. She finished third last June, with 14,437 votes; "more votes," said her nominator T. D. Thomas, MPP for Oshawa Rid- ing, 'than any CCF candidate has ever received in this riding." VITAL QUESTION Disagreeing with an Oshawa the nuclear question as '"'not vital", Miss. Hall emphasized that the nuclear arms question "4s the most vital that any elec- torate-has ever had to face'. "We believe the people of Can- ada deserve to know the facts so that they may decide for themselves," she said, ; "Our party is the only one to make a clear stand. If you vote NDP, you know what you are voting for. You have no fear that you may open the paper at breakfast one morning and find the party policy has been com- pletely revérsed because of political expediency." GUEST SPEAKER Guest speaker Andrew Brewin Times editorial which described QC, NDP member for Toronto Greenwood in the last Parlia- ment, backed up Miss Hall. leader Lester Pearson's per- formance on the nuclear ques- tion as "'extraordinary". In January, 1961, said. Mr. Brewin, Mr. Pearson "was quoted as saying we must have the Bomarc. "Last November he said C role," continued Mr. Brew! "Then he said we must hay ' nuclear arms not because need them but because we /' committed. *~ "He says we should in an effort to get out of having them at all; then he says he has a secret policy which he will reveal after the election," said the speaker. Agreeing with Mr, Brewin, Miss Hall claimed a vote for 'endorses " specific plans ead integrity and leader- Backing the Conservatives, she said, shows the voter "sup- ports a minimum of social se- - curity, eight per cent unemploy- F. A. BREWIN 'WITH MISS HALL A b ment, a shattered cabinet and a paranoid prime minister"'. Miss Hall said the more than one million persons across Can- ada who cast their votes for the New Democratic Party did not waste their votes. BELIEF IN NDP ' "They showed their belief in the NDP principles of peace, cepted and human dignity. showed their belief in the New Democrat method of achieving these goals. They showed that the party is a con- siderable force, capable of alter- ing our country's future. "Even if we do not form the government this time, 'we can continue in our role of govern- Mr. Brewin described Liberal-~ ada should not have a nuclear, i * ve SS ul