Probe Urged In P THOUGHT FOR TODAY It's extremely rare that a person who gets lit up under a bushel, hides his light ickering Twp Oshawa Gime Page WEATHER REPORT Cooler tonight with showers or wet snow. Sunny intervals with © seasonable temperatures Wed- nesday, si VOL. 92--NO. 72 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1963 Authorized as Second Ottawa and for payment Class Mail Offices Department, Post of Postage in Cash. TWENTY PAGES air Fight To Survive 'WHITEHORSE, Y.T. (CP) -- A pilot and his woman passen- ger, snatched from slow death in the northem British Colum- bia wilderness, were flown to hospital here late Monday. The story of their 50-day survival after a mountainside plane crash was one of almost unbe- lievable fortitude. Injured Feb. 4 when a plane) carrying them to Seattle from Fairbanks, Alaska plunged into a heavily forested mountain- side, 275 miles southeast of here, Ralph Flores, 42, of San Bruno, Calif., and Helen Kla- ben, 21, of Brooklyn were given up for dead when search planes found no clue to their where- abouts. An § O § tramped in the snow led rescuers to them Sun- day. They had been without food for six weeks in sub-zero cold. A lean-to was their only shelter. They melted snow for drinking water. The distress message was spotted by Chuck Hamilton of Watson Lake, Y.T., flying a sup- ly rum up the desolate valley. e directed two Indian trappers with a dog. team to the scene then flew home for more help. Three planes went into the area early Monday. A ski- equipped plane landed three miles from the crash scene. A hike on snowshoes brought Hamilton to a primitive survival camp where Miss Klaben, her left arm fractured, lay almost helpless with an injured leg io wae gangrene had taken hold. Hamilton carried her three miles on his back to the plane. used his only tools, a five-inch hunting knife, hammer and chi- sel, to cut wood and keep a fire going. Temperatures dipped to 40 below zero. FOOD RUNS OUT Only food in the plane was two tins of sardines, two cans of fruit salad and a box of crackers. They had plenty of clothing and matches. They warmed all the food before eat- ing. In a week it was gone. They ate two tubes of tooth- paste. In am interview aboard the CPA plane, Miss Klaben joked with reporters: "After that it was water for breakfast, water for lunch and : water for supper." They could hear occasional airplanes nearby, but most © were too high or on the other ; side of the mountains and did © not see Flores' frantic signals by smoke fire and a hand mir- ror. Flores said he could walk to the Alaska High- way in about 10 days. "I did not know if I was going to make the road but I had thought he = RALPH FLORES, 42, is helped from a rescue plane by an unidentified mquntie and Keith Jorgenson, in charge of the air radio station in Watson Lake, Y.T. (CP Wirephoto) faith I was going to be found," he said. "Yes, I had faith be- cause I have faith in the Lord." A minister in the Mormon Church, Flores carried a well- worn pocket Bible. Miss Klaben said she read it from cover to cover, Also aboard the plane was a copy of poems by Robert Serv- ice telling of harrowing days in the Yukon in the gold rush days. She said she thought their By THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Diefenbaker and Liberal Leader Pearson days of a new Liberal govern- ment is already prepared. '"'We have the measures; we've Party Leaders Hit By Persistent Heckling r piece of evidence that their campaign is the product of the advertising agencies, rather E\cial Credit candidates, For April 8 Vote By THE CANADIAN PRESS | The battle lines are drawn for |the April 8 federal election with \a record 1,025 candidates in the field for the 265 seats at stake. There were few surprises {Monday when nominations closed officially. A -half-dozen | Independents were added tu the list in Quebec and there was a shuffle among some Ontario So- but in most ridings there were no late changes. The 1,025 total compares with the previous high of 1,016 candi- dates in June last year. It in- cludes a full slate of 265 Pro. gressive Conservative and Lib- eral nominees, 232 New Demo- cratic Party supporters, 224 So- cial Crediters, 12 Communists and 27 Independents. NDP's entry is 14 higher than a year ago while Social Credit has six fewer candidates than in June. Liberals have gone up one and other parties are un- changed. Forty-three women were nom- inated, including five who sat in the last Parliament. There are three Chinese-Canadian candi- dates in British Columbia and |\two full-blooded Indians, one in 1025 Candidates POLICE FIGHT RIO BY 6,000 JOBLE U.K. Jobless Try To Get Into House Of Commons. LONDON (Reuters) -- Five hundred police fought a two- hour pitched battle outside the doors of Parliament today with 6,000 jobless men who tried to force their way into the House of Commons. In the bitterest such battle London has seen since the 1930s, mounted police charged into the ranks of demonstrators who hurled horse manure and shouted 'Fascist pigs" and "this is the gestapo." Six times the surging crowds broke through the rank of po- lice defending the doors of the House of Commcns. Police helmets went. flying and were trampled underfoot. At least one policeman was carried away unconscious and others were hurt. An undetermined number of the demonstrators were injured and others were carted off by police to jail. When one demonstrator was sent sprawling on his back by a truck which tried to force its N.Y. Papers Okay Hees, who resigned the trade portfolio because. of his opposi- tion to the government's stand/ on nuclear weapons, Justice| Minister Fleming, who retired from political life for personal reasons, Works Minister Fulton, who now heads British Colum- bia's PCs, and Secretary of State Halpenny, who stepped down because of ill health. For the most part, however members of the last House are seeking re-election, -with 248 of them in the running again There were four vacancies in the Commons when Parliament prorogued. Douglas Jung, a former PC member of Parliament for Van- couver Centre, Mrs. Gladys Chong, the PC candidate in Vancouver East, and Edward Lum, Social Credit standard. bearer in Esquimalt-Saanich, are the Chinese Canadians in the running. way through the crowd, the mob vented its rage on passing buses and cars. They kicked at the doors of passing cars, threw coins at the bus windows. and battered on the trunks of cars with their fists. } Two Rolls-Royce cars yt nf out of the parliamentary pa: ing lot were damaged wi! the demonstrators swarmed arougd them, using their fists and feet, When the battle ended, side- walks were littered with broken glass and paper and only polite cars and an ambulance were allowed to move through Parlin- ment Square. Police feared' further 'ti later today when the strators met at Church House, a huge assembly hall only a few hundred yards away, to discuss their next move. $ APPEALS DROWNED 1 Inside the a mem- bers leaned from the i to appeal to the crowds calm, but were unable to' make themselves heard over sounds of the struggle and demonstrators chants of "out with the Tories." The demonstrators were: part of about 7,000 unemployed men who travelled to London during the night from all parts of Brit- * « Ruling By W LOCATE PILOT worked them out," he said. than the aspirations of the Ca-| aiperta and the other in Tor-| u Ing Vy agner ain to march on Parliament arid rai Meanwhile, the Indians, Char- lie Porter and Louis Boya of the Lower Post area, found Flores attempting to trek to the Alaska Highway for help. He had trav- elied five' miles on snowshoes of. branches, birch! ark twigs, He had 60 more miles to go. Doctors said later it was un- likely he could have lived more than four days. Miss Klaben might have lasted another week. Jack McCallum who accom- panied Hamilton said Miss Kla- ben cried in his arms when he reached her. Flores said. when he heard the Indians approaching Sunday} night his body "was just trill- ing with emotion." They gave! }the* wa: own luck was pretty bad until she read the book. Then she realized it could be worse, COULDN'T SEE PLANE Veteran bush pilot Hal Kom. ish, one of the resctiers, said , the plane wreckage was c aled in the timber it would not have been found in 100 years if they had stayed with it. About two weeks after the! crash, Flores built a camp on| an exposed knoll two miles from the wreck, Later, he set up another camp three miles farther away and tramped out both ran into persistent, heck- ling Monday night at campaign rallies. They handled it in similar fashion. ~ Before--a° Hamilton Foruni Crowd of some 6,000, Mr, Pear- son. commented at one point on the heckling: "Tory democracy in action." Later, he said that if Mr. Diefenbaker were heckled in the same way he would probably say "there is a plot against me tonight." The hecklers in a crowd of) some 4,000 at Victoria greeted) action by his government in 1961 provided new impetus to the shipbuilding industry. ' tion of ships in Canada resulted ployment and $80,000,000 worth Mr. Diefenbaker said broad He said-subsidies for-construc- in a tremendous increase in em. of ships being built. : Douglas, New Demo- cratic Party leader, said in a statement at Ottawa that "The Liberals' preoccupation with arithmetic is just one more! a distress signal in the deep|Mr. Diefenbaker with: "Where's| snow. From there he struck out for e Alaska Highway. Hamilton said Flores th was your cabinet, John" The prime minister he said they were "part meat, rested with him over-|about 70 to 85 miles southeast|Which paralyzed Parliament." night then took him to the res-| cue plane. He had fractured a right rib and injured one leg in the crash. | They were taken 75 miles to} Watson Lake for first aid and| shortly afterwards a Canadian Pacific Airlines plane made an unscheduled stop to pick them! Oe fly them to Whitehorse,| Suffering from exposure and} malnutrition as well as the in-| juries received in the crash, | they were reported late Monday| to be doing as well as could be of Watson Lake when he) crashed. | TO SET UP LABOR CODE Mr. Pearson said a Liberalitoday clashed briefl ignored| {the hecklers for a while, Then and} him bread and some moose|about 60 miles off course and|Patce! of the Liberal a Riot Police Strikers Clash With French PARIS (Reuters) -- Strikers y with) Flores had been working on| government would introduce alFrench riot police at Carline, the distant Early Warnin dar line and had stored his sin-| gle - engine Howard plane at Fairbanks. Miss Klaben said she heard a radio advertisement offering a chance to fly south with Flores. An office worker at) Fairbanks, she agreed to the! trip, hoping to start a tour that would take her to California and Hong Kong. expected at Whitehorse General § Hospital. SLEEP COMFORTABLE Dr. Nesta James said they had received light sedatives and were sleeping comfortable. She © said they could leave for home a@s soon as they wished. Miss Klaben's gangrene was not as severe as first feared. Dr. James said, however, she might lose cone or two toes. In a hospital interview Flores said he ran into snow and fog as he flew from Whitehorse, 1,000 miles northwest of Edmon- ton, towards Fort St. John, C., Beb. 4. When he lost contact with the radio beam, he dropped to 3,000 feet from 7,000 feet to get his bearings. "When I saw where I was it lishing a minimum. wage week and two weeks' and seven statutory with pay. The code & Ta-inew federal labor code estab-|in Lorraine, and several pickets of|received minor head injuries. $1.25 an hour, a 40-hour work The clash came as France's| vacation) paralysing coal strike went into| holidays/its 26th day with no sign of| applies injreaction by the 240,000 miners| industries under federal jurisdic-|to an appeal on television by| tion. |Information Minister Alain Pey- On a recorded television pro-jrefitte not to "drag the country gram, Mr. Pearson said a leg-jinto economic chaos" by pro- Wednesday. : jislative program for the first 60)longing the strike. | The coalminers demanded ra- dio and television time to speak, claiming the official radio serv- ices distorted the truth about their strike. The demand came in a com-| munique from the Central Strike! committee here after discussion of Peyrefitte's broadcast. appeal to the strikers Monday} night following rejection by the| pay increase and eight per cent jby Oct. 1. | pages. Gas and electricity work- ers unions called on their mem- bers "'to show the greatest dis- cipline and immediately follow union instructions" to be issued Rail unions planned "rolling was too late," he said. A wing snapped a tree and the plane = plunged into thick forest 2,000 & strikes" of two hours each on each shift Wednesday in moves expected to delay. services nadian People." RAPS TECHNIQUE ReferringtoLiberal Walter Gordon'saséertion thatthe Lib- erals- will win 100 seats in Que- bec and Ontario in the April 8 election, he said: 'The Liberals have fallen back on the 'jump on the bandwagon' technique. They are in effect asking .vot- Jers to bet on the outcome of the! campaign."' At Chilliwack, B.C., Robert Thompson, Social Credit leader, said neither Conserva-| tives nor Liberals have met the needs of the Canadian people. Canadians didn't want socialism as represented by the Democratic | Party "turning to look at Social Credit." In a recorded television inter- view, Mr. Thompson said he doesn't agree with some things his deputy leader, Real Caou-|department director, said the} ette, has said and "not fighting for our country" was one ofjthe single can from the Sara-| them. onto. 4 Four cabinet ministers from ithe last Parliament are on the Hsidelines.. They--are George | Canned Tuna ' Poison Named BERKELEY, Calif. definite identification of Type E |}botulism in a can of tuna found jon a Saratoga, Calif., grocery \shelf was reported Monday by |the state department of health. The .can located in the store New|last week was processed by a| and were/San Francisco cannery in the| jSame pack with a tuna tin (AP)--A| NEW YORK (AP) -- Mayor Robert F. Wagner announced early. today that. publishers of New York's eight closed daily newspapers had accepted his terms for ending a strike by the Photoéngravers Union, But union negotiators want more time to consider the settlement formula, Wagner said. The photoengravers are the last of four striking unions--the other three are the steréotyp- ers; mailers and printers--to come to contract terms under a formula worked out by the mayor. jblamed for the death of two jwomen in Detroit from food poisoning. Dr. Malcolm Merrill, health botulism had been found only in \toga store. OVER HARVISON REMARK Universi Criticize EDMONTON (CP) -- Twenty- six faculty members at the Uni- versity of Alberta have signed a statement condemning a re- mark in the report of an inter- Peyrefitte made his television| View with RCMP Commissioner, C. W. Harvison. In an interview with a writer miners of a government offer|from the Canadian University' ti of an immediate 614-per-cent|Press published in the univer- q sity paper Gateway, sioner Harvison is reported to Other workers in state-run in-| have said that the RCMP keeps) said. y ldustries threatened work stop-| tabs on Canadian university ac-jble, for often he will get tivities because Communists try|biased opinion. It has happened to recruit undercover agents on university campuses. | "Tt is the job of the RCMP| to know where subversion and attdck espionage where is found," the report quotes the commissioner. 'If we think it is found on university cam- puses, then we 'have to go is it} ty Staff s RCMP |that the RCMP has a legitimate) reason for checking on persons} who are being considered for jobs where security is neces- sary, and "we have always been willing to help them in | this." | '*We object to undercover ac- vity, where a policemen may uietly ask a student what he faculty member," Dr. Scott) "This leads only to trou- a \before." . | '100 Soviet Subs | West Germany For Portugal - MUNICH (AP) Former French premier Georges Bi- dault left West Germany Mon- day and flew to Portugal. He vowed to continue his campaign to overthrow President Charles de Gaulle. Bavarian Interior Minister Heinrich Junker said Bidault left voluntarily. The Bavarian state government had refused to let him stay in Germany un- less he abandoned his political activities. Bidault and an aide, Guy Ri- beauld, took a Swiss airline to Zurich under assumed names. Airline officials there said that after a 40-minute stopover they boarded a Dutch airliner for Lisbon. Junker told a press confer- ence he had "reliable informa-} Commis-|thinks of another student or ajtion that Bidault has arrived| safely at his destination and| Bidault Leaves) \their negotiations deadlocked. : The rose wea ese ye engravers an is! ert i accepted by both sides, signal the end of the 109-day strike. The mayor declined to answer a question about what his next step would be if the photoen- gravers rejected his terms. But he said he saw "no pur- pose in further negotiations" between both sides. In fact, Wagner said, he was "closing shop" for good at a hotel where he has spent sev- eral weeks mediating and um- piring contract disputes between publishers and the city's news- paper unions. Other than the photoengray- rs and two non-ntriking unions which will negotiate new pacts after publication is resumed, the other even unions have} come to tentative or firm agree-| ments with publishers. | Contracts have been ratified by printers, stereotypers, mail- ers, deliverers and Newspaper Guildsmen. Wagner placed his settlement proposal on the bargaining ta- ble shortly before last midnight. It called for a $12.63 package increase over two years, the same terms offered to and ac- cepted by the printers after demand a hearing from the government. 2 Wo eeeee 'Last month, unemployment figures in Britain-rea al pate abet total in." years. Much 0! was cuased by the harsh winter and 'the to- tal dropped nearly 20 per cént this- month. : Many persons fainted as crowds surged around the build. ings chanting "Tories (Consetv= atives) out." : The solid oak doors of the en- trance shook as struggling po- lice and demonstrators thudde@ into them. More than 20 police- men formed. a barrier in front of the entrance, heiped by @ dozen mounted police. MELEE GROWS y Leaders of the demonstration appealed in vain to their. suj porters- to pull back. When, th melee started, it was esti- mated that about 3,000 jobiess men had gathered outside Par- liament. But the crowd grew as more demonstrators arrived and besieged not oniy the St. Stephen's side entrance, - but both gates leading to the main entrance of Parliament. er Civil servants and office staff looked down at the crowds from the windows as demon- strators chanted "give us a job and we will go." ' that he was not sent back at) jam |the border." WON'T PERMIT ACTIVITY The Portuguese government has said it would not permit him to use its territory to carry jon his underground campaign to | overthrow the French president | In Pacific Area |. CANBERRA (Reuters) -- The| Soviet Union has at least 100) who was his wartime associate in the fight against the Nazis. As he prepared to leave Ger. | there. submarines in the Pacific area,|™@"Y Bidault told Dutch and | In their protest, published thi pow.) aerman journalists with whom |with the interview report, thelereq. Sle Ea Sa re | he had been liv#hg near Munich: 26 faculty members said that if| commander ot ihe antlinaberat.} "T intend to continue my poli- police action is introduced intoline force of the United States) tical fight against de Gaulle un- university life for reasons other das : {til freedom in France is re- than law enforcement, then uni-|? acific Fleet, said here today. stored to the point where I can Thach, here for talks with versity life cannot remain free.| , trali | chiefs. told jreturn to the soil of my own ; u Australian naval chiefs, told a) country and continue m liti- | CANNOT TELL press conference Russia had| oa) jife."" sais i A policeman cannot tell maintained the same number of! |whether new thoughts are g | ood! submarines in the Pacific since or bad--only that they are not Tor Mi the Kore War, but had} 7 ~ jin his book of approved ideas. greatly toroid "dale eaatiey| Magistrate Dies feet up the side of a 4,000-foot - mountain. Both were knocked uncon. | scious. When they recovered consciousness they. had suf- fered some frostbite in the 40- below-zero weather. Despite his injuries, Flores hobbled through deep snow to © fashion a lean-to from branches and a tarpaulin used to cover the plane's engine. With no gun and no axe, Flores tried in vain to snare rabbits for food. He CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 f throughout the country and se- Tiously disrupt Paris suburban services. YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Overseas Industrialists Visit GM ... Oshawa Dairy Honors Safe Drivers ........ Page 9 Liberals Plan Motor Cavalcade .. Page 9 HELEN KLABEN, 21 OF BROOKLYN If a creative thinker knows that/and was rapidly equipping! |Big Brother is watching and) many with missiles. . | In Guelph Today | 7% | that Big Brother has a big stick,| : sa | j jhis independence of thought is|_ He said in addition to Soviet) GUELPH (CP) -- Magistrate oe Boy. Scouts jendangered." oe oomgonced must be added)a_ Stewart Mitchell, 59, -col- BALI SALVAGE De ood 'Tura. Page 3| Dr. D. B. Scott, director of| H0Se operated by other Com-|apsed and died shortly after ; seats |the university's computing cen-| ™U™St countries, such as China. presiding over a session of the} A Balinese youngster totes gan March 21 when lava; mu@. 17 Pupils jtre, and Dr. H. B. Collier, a; Thach said Communist China,/Guelph traffic court today. His| the family piglet as residents and boulders spewed forth by Leave School ,...... Page 3 |professor of biochemistry, said| supplied by Russia, now has the|death occurred moments after| of the Bali village of Subagan 'the: island's erupting volcano x i they had obtained the faculty|fourth largest submarine fleet/he had left the courtroom. He| were evacuated from the area sage gers rai' Cafik Speaks signatures. in the world after the Soviet Un-/was found in a washroom ad-| over the weekend. An estimat- [levelled the village. (AP Wire, At Bay Ridges .... Page 3 | Dr. Scott said in an interview'ion, U.S. and Britain. joining his office. ed 200 persons died in Suba- photo via radio from Tokyo), 4