ee tgs 4 se Baa a Terry Corbett, (seated, right) who establishes the polls and collects returns for POLLING PARLEY IN LABRADOR the federal election in Labra- dor, discusses the poll situa- tion at Davis Inlet, 180 miles north of Goose Bay, with poll clerk Joe Rich, chief of the Nascopie Indian band, and Rev. Grancis Peters, (stand- ing) Roman Catholic mission- ary, at Davis Inlet. --(CP Wirephoto) Hearing Opens| For 9 Florida Residents MONTREAL (CP) -- Court proceedings involving charges opened Thursday against Gulf Intercontinental Finance Cor- poration Limited and five Flor- ida residents. After preliminary hearing on conspiracy charges against the now-defunct company, and the five individuals, the crown got an adjournment to April 4. Named in the complaint, laid by Jean Robert Bolduc, execu- tive officer for the Quebec Se- curities Commission, are Ches- ter Maier, Milton H. Spell, Saul M. Liberman, Harold Gradsky and Leon H. Gradsky. All were listed as residents of Florida. Crown Prosecutor Claude Wagner said a rogatory com- mission will go to the United States before April 4 to take' statemens from persons. be- lieved to bé involved in the case. South Korean Cabinet Quits SEOUL (AP)--The South Kor- ean cabinet resigned today to assume moral responsibility for Three Florida Men Charged In Land Fraud WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. justice department an- nounced Thursday the indict- ment of three Miami, Fla., men on fraud charges based on the sale of Arizona land by mail. In the first indictment result- ing from a broad-scale depart- ment investigation of mail-or- der real estate operations, the government named: these de- fendants: Dory Aurbach, David Prosser Randell and Irving Gottlieb, all of Miami and all officers of Lake Mead Rancheros Inc., which has offices in Miami and Hollywood, Fla. Attorney-General Robert Ken- nedy said the men had adver- tised as developed a number of 'king - sized western estates" near Lake Mead in Arizona. Kennedy said most of the prop. verty is, in fact, totally undevel- oped desert range land and 45 miles from Lake Mead. 12-Month Plan Considered For Colleges TORONTO (CP)--Presidents of some Ontario universities say they are considering a plan whereby students would go to classes 12 months a year in- stead of 74 and complete reg- iar four-year courses in three years. Their comments came after the Ontario government an- nounced that Toronto's Ryerson Institute would soon begin op- eration on a year-round basis. The plan is already in effect at the University of Waterloo. In making the announcement about Ryerson, Education Min- ister Davis expressed the hope that other Ontario universities would follow the same policy. Dean T. H. B. Symonds, pres- ident of the Trent University, opening in September, 1964, at Peterborough, said a faculty committee is studying possible forms of reorganization of the university year, including Ryer- gon's 12-month plan. Dean Symons said the plan has two advantages -- faster graduation and cheaper opera- tion. However, he said the es- sential factor which will guide Trent's decision will be '"'edu- cational values." INTERPRETING THE NEWS an alleged plot to overthrow the Raps De By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer Dean Acheson once again has launched an attack on the Eu- ropean allies, this time concen- trating his fire on French Pres- ident de Gaulle, describing his "suicidal" nuclear policies as increasing the danger of al® world nuclear holocaust. The former state secretary has no official status im the Kennedy government but his voice often seems to reflect the administration's private views and the president occasionally has sought «cheson's advice and sent him abroad on impor- tant missions. Thus it may be more than the reflections of a private citizen when Acheson ridicules de Gaulle's position among the world's nuclear giants and sug- gests he is: less than a robust leader and that his army is not to be trusted. These are strong words for the majestic de Gaulle to swal- low and not the kind to bring warmth to. coo] French-Ameri- can relations. Why, then, does the U.S. seem to downgrade an ally? A partial answer may lie in Acheson's own words -- that while the main threat to the free world comes from Russia, the United States fears the spark of a nuclear war may come from the Allies them- selves, The multilateral nuclear force Dean Acheson CITY AND DISTRICT military government. The cabinet action did not af- fect the control of the govern. ment, which rests in the hands of the military junta headed by Gaulle the North Atlantic partners would seem to indicate a U.S. desire to share its nuclear de- terrent with its friends over- seas, Perhaps a more urgent ob- jective is to deter these friends from creating independent nu- clear forces that might entan- gle the United States in a nu- clear war not of its own choos- ing. Acheson suggests he would not like to see this happen and also suggests the United States might not respond, De Gaulle has raised thé question of whether the United States would come to Europe's aid with nuclear weapons in a Soviet-European war which did not immediately endanger U.S. soil. Acheson says the United States would--providing it had some say in how the nuclear war is initiated. The policy pursued by de Gaulle, Acheson suggests in his speech, allocates the worst of worlds to the United States, By using his tiny nuclear force against Russia, de Gaulle could force the United States to en- gage in nuclear war because it would be assigned the task of defending Europe against de Gaulle' 3, "inevitable cons e- quences" while being excluded from having a voice in how Eu- rope's defences are shaped. This, says Acheson, might lead to Soviet-American mutual incineration and he would find it difficult to see any U.S. gov- ernment "undertaking. so un- the United States proposes for promising a commitment." Cited By and two American psychiatrists --hunting for a clue that will pinpoint a potential murderer before he commits the. act--say a trivial provocation sometimes turns an apparently well-ad- justed persor into a vicious killer. The psychiatrists studied 43 cases in which men who were living apparently satisfactory lives suddenly and unéx- péctedly committed murder, al- lowed themselves to be appre- hended, readily confessed their guilt and then appeared uncon- cerned or even righteous. In one case, a man who had never shown any evidence of being violent suddenly muti- FELT IT WAS LOUSY TRICK Seeking to get an overdue account to pay up, an Ari- zona auto dealer wrote ask- ing the customer 'what would your neighbors think if we repossessed your car?" The customer wrote back, "I asked my neigh- bors, and they all think it would be a lousy trick." If someone's pressing you to pay an overdue account,, here's a oo trick: Sell something you don't need. for aa mh " atheciig it in the Classified Ads. Just dial 723-3492 LONDON (AP) -- A Soviet whaling = emgage hl rammed and e Antarctic by a Cacho whale, Tass reported y. The Soviet mews agency be "the whale attacked after bein; . The massive of the Cachelot smashed against the stern of the ship, lated and killed his wife be- cause she threatened to leave him. | A mild-mannered man who was raised in a strict religious home shot two waitresses to death in a tavern because they reneged on their "promise" 'to put him in contact with the un- derworld. A laborer who was doing an effecive job beat his employer to death with a metal club dur- ing an argument over his sal- ary. DOCTOR FROM WINNIPEG The study, entitled, The. Sud- den Murderer, was reported Thursday by Dr, Joseph W. Lamberti of Winnipeg, Dr. Na- than Blackman, St. Louis, and James M. A. Weiss, Columbia, Mo., in the current Archives of General Psychiatry, published by the American Medical Asso- ciation. Characteristically, they said, CHICAGO (AP)--A Canadian, Sudden Murderer Doctors formity to the rules of the so- cial system. "Failing in his attempt to conform because of underlying feelings of inadequacy and hos- tilities, he tended to blame other people and to wander from place to place looking for great- er opportunities," they said. "As a result, he felt quite con- sciously alone and isolated from other people." Surprisingly, they added, when such a person seemed to be getting along quite well, when society apparently ex- pected him to be even more conforming and mature and when he had no one to blame, he would become more tense and angry. "At such a time, even a slight provocation would set off the violent surge of rage which resulted in murder." The psychiatrists said that in the majority of the cases in their study, the killer suffered from consant conflict between inner feelings of inadequacy and conscious needs to succeed, between an inner sense of psy- chological isolatedness and an gt drive toward conform- ity. They added that many per- sons with similar behavioral patterns never become killers and that it may be because of some intervening socializing factor such as satisfactory 'ex- perience with church groups, employer, friend or wife. BISHOP DIES PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP)--Rt. Rev. A, .W Noel Porter, 78, who was the episcopal bishop of Sac- ramento, Calif., diocese for 24 years, died Thursday in hospi- the sudden murderer is a man who came from a_ close-knit family in which the mother was domineering, over-protective figure who emphasized con- -- off the steel blades of] #4 its 2%-ton propeller. The chip we repaired at sea. 'Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH Hotel Lancaster "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 tal. He had a heart ailmen:. FOUR AMBULANCE CALLS The Oshawa Fire Department reports no fire alarms were an- swered during the past 24 hours. There were four routine ambu- lance calls. LEAVES ON VACATION vacation in Florida. Until he returns there will be no Osh- awa magistrate's court on Fri- days. PLACED THIRD At the Kiwanis Music Festi- son, 23 Lawlor avenue, RR 2, marks in the boys' solo class under. EUCHRE WINNERS recently at Eastview Park, Oth- er winners and their scores were: Mrs. Elinor Hanna, 99; Evelyn Laverty, 96; N. Copi- thorne, 92; Helen Montgomery, 91; Frances Kettela, 64 and Mrs. S. Flegg, 57, Cut lines under a page 13 pic- Magistrate F. 8. Ebbs left this morning far a two-week val in Peterborough on Thurs- day.of last week, Charles Wat- Oshawa, placed third with 81 for contestants 11 years and Frances Kettela won the door prize at the euchre party held J. MAHER IS NEW MANAGER ture in yesterday's edition of Gen. Chung Hee Park. The cab- inet members functioned only as administrative heads of var- ious government departments. Premier Kim Hyun-chul sub- mitted the resignations to Gen. Park and told reporters they would be accepted. The cabinet resigned after three days of demonstrations by small groups of military offi- cers and men demanding that the junta continue in power in- definitely. Thirty persons, including two former members of the junta, were arrested this week and ac- cused of plotting to assassinate Park and other members of his regime. The government said the plotters planned to estab- lish a ruling junta of their own. A junta spokesman said that Park and his associates are still determined to carry out their pledge to turn over the government to a civilian admin. istration in August after elec- tions this spring. The spokes- man also denied a report that martial law will be proclaimed. Stock Market Pulls Ahead The O Times err ment office in Oshawa. This (who is the manager). TOUR GM PLANT tion of Professional Engineers in Ontario took a guided tour of the General Motors plant Thursday night. Such centres as Cobourg, Port Hope, Bowman- ville, Whitby and Oshawa were represented. A short executive meeting followed the tour. listed Frank Meagher as man- ager of the National Employ-| should have read John J. Maher Forty members of the Lake Ontario Chapter of the Associa- Before Closing TORONTO (CP)--<After open- ing on a mixed notg, the stock market managed to pull ahead in all sections at the close of moderate trading Thursday. Canadian Tire, on a volume of about 300 shares, made one of the largest main list jumps, rising three points to 44 after hitting a new high of 46 earlier. Banks moved generally higher wih Royal up %, Nova Scotia }3 and Toronto-Dominion Hall Assails 12-Month Plan For Colleges LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Dr. G. E. Hall, Univeisity of Western Ontario president, said Thurs- day it would be a disservice to the public if the university instituted a 12-month school year to reduce the time re- quired to obtain a degree. Dr. Hall was commenting on an announcement by Education Minister Davis that the Ryer- son, Toronto, soon will begin operating on a year-round basis. Mr. Davis expressed the hope that Ontario universities would follow suit, Dr. Hall said more than 3,000 persons, the majority of them secondary school teachers, at- tended summer courses at Western last 'year. "If we went on a 12-month basis with our students, we would be denying a necessary service to a great segment of the public. We would be doing a disservice to many people." In effect, the university is serving almost as many people during the summer months as during the regular 744-month university term, he added, He also noted that 85 per cent of university students require summer employment to help fi- nance 'their education, a num- ber of university instructors use the summer months for pure scientific research and the students must be given time for "mental digestion." HEAT WITH OIL NEW HOME DIXON'S | | SPECIALISTS OIL SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 THIMA Real Estate Ltd. TRADES ACCEPTED 728-6286 323 King St. W. ¥%,, Imperial Bank of Commerce and Montreal were both un- changed at 64 and 65% respec- tively. Other main list gainers in- cluded Dominion Foundries and Steel, ahead %, Hayes Steel and Consolidated Mining and Smelting each 4% and Labatt %. Labatt hit a new high of 1614. Industrial declines went to Building Products, Trans-Can- ada Pipe Lines, Canada Cement and Distillers Seagrams, all off ¥%, Investors Syndicate A dipped % On index, industrials rose .25 at 594.88, golds .26 to 91.06, Kase metals .48 to 200.56 and .67 to 116.26, Final volume was 3,018,- 000 shares compared with 3,573,000 Wednesday. The base metals market showed Craigmont, Falcon- bridge and Noranda all up % and Labrador down % to 29%. The latter was trading ex- dividend 50 cents. USE BRITISH PILOTS TEL AVIV (Reuters) -- Brit- ish pilots will fly airliners of the -strikebound El Al Israel Airline, a company spokesman said. today. He said El Al ex- pected to complete an arrange- ment with an unnamed British airline under which El Al air- liners would be registered as British, but would remain under} control of the Israeli company, whose crews walked out 10 days ago. John T. Young, the Lord Provost of Perth, (centre) holds the Scotch Cup, emble- matic of world curling supre- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, Merch 15, 1963 SKIPS ADMIRE OTCH CUP macy, for an admiring circle of skips at the international bonspiel at Perth, Scotland, this week. From left are: Mike Slyziuk, U.S., Sven Ekland and Curt Jonsson, both of Sweden, the Lord Provost; Chuck Hay, Scotland, and Ernie Richard j son, Canada. --(CP Wirephotoy: Alta. Outbreak Of Diphtheria 'Under Control' FORT MACLEOD, Alta. (CP) Dr, Kurt Adler, medical health officer, says "everything is un- der control" in an outbreak of diphtheria which has. struck 14 persons in this area in the last month and caused two deaths. At Magrath, 35 miles to the southeast, the total of five cases since January remained un- changed. "T's past and over now," Dr. Adler said Thursday of the out- break around Fort Macleod, "I don't anticipate any more new cases." Of the 14 afflicted, five re- mained in hospital here. About 15 persons were under quarantine in their homes. Most were in farm families who could order supplies by tele- phone and have them left at the door. One of the Magrath cases has recovered, two remained in hospital and two were being treated at home. DANGER IN REFUSAL Dr. Adler said in an interview diphtheria now could only occur among people who refused im- munization because of religious beliefs. These included some Christian Scientists and mem- bers of the Netherlands Re- formed Congregation. $1,000,000 Offer To Canadian Tire Corp. TORONTO (CP)--An offer of $1,000,000 for 20,000 common shares of Canadian Tire Corp. Ltd. was made Thursday by L. A. Warren, executive secretary of Canadian Tire Corp. Dealers' Association. Mr, Warren, of suburban Don Mills, said his $50-a-share offer would expire March 29 if the 20,000 shares, representing nine per cent of total common Shares, have been deposited. The shares closed at $44 on the Toronto Stock Exchange Thursday, up $3 from Wednes- jay. Mr. Warren said the offer was being made to protect the security of the dealers, in the face of persistent rumors of takeover bids. These shares, combined with stocks held in the employees' retirement fund and $66,331 common shares controlled by President A. J. Billes, repre- sent practical control of the corporation. All 20,000 shares, if acquired, would in turn be offered to Ca- nadian Tire dealers at $50 a share, said Mr, Warren. CANADA IS IN STOCKHOLM (AP)--The In- ternational Ice Hockey Federa- tion has announced that 16 teams will compete in the win- ter Olympic Games in Inns- bruck, Austria, next year. Teams now playing in group A CAPSULE NEWS $12,000,000 City Playground Plan TORONTO (CP) -- Thom Thompson, Metropolitan Tor- onto parks commissioner, has recommended a 20 - year, $12,- 000,000 project to make Toronto Island into a 500-acre summer playground. Mr. Thompson sug- gested to his committee the de- velopment could include a sportsland, funland, model town, two swimming pools, six picnic pavilions and five large public beaches. SALARIES RISE OTTAWA (CP)--The median salary for full-time university teachers during the current aca. demic year is 6.6 per cent higher than last year and 50.4 per cent higher than in 1956-57, the bureau of statistics reported Thursday. The bureau survey, covering 7,441 persons in 60 uni- versities and colleges, showed the median salary for 1962-63 at $8,685. PARTY INVOLVES PUBLIC MONTREAL (CP) -- John Fisher, commissioner of the Na- tional Centennial Administra- tion, says the sense of partici- pation of the general public "will determine the success of the birthday party" when Can- ada celebrates its centennial in 1967. 'There will be no mono- lithic organization at the top dic- tating the course," he told a meeting of the Hotel Associaion of Canada. BACKS UP, DIES LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Danny Buna, 26, of London was killed Thursday night when his head was caught between the door of his car and a fire hydrant as he was backing up the car after missing a driveway. RCMP HEAD RETAINED OTTAWA (CP) --Period of service of RCMP commissioner C. W. Harvison has been ex- tended for one year to April 18, 1964, Justice Minister Fleming announced, Commissioner Har- vison will have completed 35 years' service with the force April 18, 1963, He is the senior member of the force in length of service as well as in rank, RULED OBSCENE WINNIPEG (CP)--The Mani- toba Court of Appeal decided in a 4-to-1 judgment Thursday that the last September's issues of Dude and Escapade magazines are obscene. Four of five appeal court judges agreed to uphold the decision which followed a seizure from a newstand. and a unit of the Royal Navy investigated the islands from which the abduction was alleged to have taken place. 30 KILLED RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (Reuters) -- At least 30 road workers were killed and 39 in- jured when two trucks collided Thursday on a bridge and plunged into a river near Sao Paulo, according to radio re- ports. SIGNS EX-EMPRESS ROME (Reuters) -- Italian film producer Dino de Lauren- tiis announced he had signed ex-empress Soraya of Iran, for astar role in a film yet to be decided on. An announcement by the de Laurentiis company said signing of the contract fol. lowed a screen test which de Laurentiis himself conducted. GLEASON SUED US.-Kremlin Phone Link Suggested | GENEVA (AP)--The United States said today a direct, se- cret communications link be- tween Washington and the Kremlin would greatly reduce the danger of accidental nu- clear war. U.S. Ambassador Charles C, Stelle told the 17-nation disarm- ament conference it should dis- cuss the establishment of such-a link as a matter of urgency, The proposal was first made to the conference last year but has never come up for discus- sion as the delegates concem- centrated on a treaty to ban nue clear testing. Stelle clashed with Soviet del- egate Semyon K. Tsarapkin over a Soviet proposal for an East. West non-agegression pact. Tsarapkin said such a pact is urgently needed to curb West Germany's militarists, and he demanded that it be taken up by. the conference now. Stelle replied that the confer- ence was not competent to dis- cuss the matter because most of the interested governments are not represented. NEW YORK (AP)--A former manager of Jackie Gl sued the comedian Thursday for $62,- 415, claiming that sum was owed him on Gleason's earnings for the years 1958 to 1962 .The suit was filed in federal district court by George Durgom, de- scribed as personal representa- tive and manager of Gleason: ASK NEW TALKS WASHINGTON (AP) --The government has asked U.S. rail- roads and their on-train worker unions to resume negotiations in their stalemated work rules dis. pute. Labor Secretary W. Wil- lard Wirtz made the request Thursday in a public statement. Talks were broke off in Chi- cago Wednesday after only 90 minutes. ASK CANADIAN HELP LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (AP)--The Congo has appealed for men and equipment to help retrain its ill-disciplined army, government sources said Thurs. day. The sources named the na- tions asked for help as Canada, ape. Italy, Norway and Is. rae! ROUND UP CRIMINALS RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -- State and military police began a mass roundup of known crim- inals, hoodlums and vagrants Thursday in a drive to end this Brazilian city's crime wave. Dozens of persons were rounded up in slum areas. Gov. Carlos Lacerda ordered the crackdown after two weeks of ca law- lessness. SAYS NO EVIDENCE LONDON (Reuters) -- The British government says no con- vincing evidence had been found to support charges that a group had been abducted by Cuban commandos from British islands in the Cay Sal group of the Ba- 'FUEL OIL for automatic. delivery by our metered trucks Phone DX OIL CO. 668-3341-42 Active In Church Women's Affairs : PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- Mrs. Florence Harris, 77, widow of Rev. F. W. K. Harris, died here Thursday, A former meme ber of the board of education, she was also a leader in wom. en's affairs of the waned Church. SMOOTH.. SPIRITED! a {lavou ned wine rd Serve cold- on the rocks or with your favourite mixer Switch te ZING | hamas. Commonwealth Rela- tions Secretary Duncan Sandys said a Bahamas police party of the world championship will qualify automatically, That means Canada, Sweden, Czech- oslovakia, the Soviet Union, the combined Easf and West German team and the United States will be in the Olympics. MUSKOKA RESORTS Paignton House, Milford Manor, Delawana Inn, Fern Cottage. For information and summer reservations... TRAINING P The Province of aa In Co-operation With The Government of Canada OSHAWA BOARD will provide NOW| To have that carpet or chest- erfield cleaned professionally in Oshawa's Original Carpet we Centre ee where fully gua i ~~ NOW! $100,000.00 Auto Liability Insurance 2'7.00 A Court Judgment can ruin your life financially . . . be sofe AT PREMIUMS AS LOW AS with ade is assured. Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. PER YEAR BEAU VALLEY IS YOUR BEST BUY We will sell your home fa: = Call us to-day. SCHOFIELD-AKER | 360 KING ST, WES @ Don Ellison 725-6687 FER ed temo Saaenintean . nak Pr (Limited) 723-2265 @ Ralph Schofield 728-3376 ne 570 Stevenson Road No for UNEMPLOYED PERSONS In The Following Courses: ye eee WMI FEY 1 1. and S$ CANADIAN VOCATIONAL The R. S. McLaugh!'» Collegiate and Vocational institute ROGRAMME and the of EDUCATION training at rth OSHAWA, Ontario ai, 2. Basic Trai for Skill D Men and Women to start ee, (a 12 week Course for d for Men and Women) 3. General Woodworking 4 - cot hie should Small Engines & Service Station Work (Courses 2, 3, and 4 are now in progress) All courses will take place Monday through Friday, 4:45 te 11:15 P.M. Provision has been made each day fora half-hour . ic Upgrading * 1 Emnil the N Ottice for further details. Mr. G. L. Roberts Co-Ordinator of Program "5" G. Drynan, Chairman Oshawa-Boord of Education L. Gifford, Mayor City of Oshawa Chairman, Vocational Training Committee