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Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Jul 1963, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY The reason some girls wear hairdos like mo ps is that they don't know what a mop looks like. She Oshawa Zime WEATHER REPORT Sunny and continuing very warm today and Saturday. Winds light today, southerly 15 Saturday. 'VOL. 92--NO. 175 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1963 Class Ma Authorized os Second Ottawa end for payment it Post A of Rasta lage gh ' EIGHTEEN PAGES WATER Workmen excavating King street this morning broke a water service pipe just oppo- site the Biltmore The: oer erate Tae Water shooting up some 50 feet sprayed the theatre for several minutes before it was brought to a stop. PUC work BREAKS crews shut off the main water line between Simcoe ¢ Streets and the dam: repaired within a short t --Oshawa T mes n ime Photo To Divide Loan Fund On Population Basis By KEN KELLY OTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson said today the fed eral government stands ready to divide the $400,000,000 munic- ipal loan fund among the prov. inces on a population basis He told the federal-provincia conference that the government intends to proceed with the leg isilation in the Commons next week. The necessar ment would be bre In his openin the later, Mr drafting legislati overlooked provinces, be closed ¢ "especia ut mark with for loans Mr. Pearson added pose in this: leg needed ment without rights and vidua FALLS SHORT assistance provinces way sions now generally bl. we wil pose those men As for the Plan, Mr. Pe ermment w this legislation until 3 liament's summer recess changes Pension Canada i with 'r Par- amend. . reshaped in our discus- hanges are most modest incomes to retire in adequate security," he said Asking for the province's views on the plan, he added "IT cannot believe that, with good will, it is beyond our wit to achieve the common objec- tive of social security in the spirit of a co-operative federal. 4 ism In this matter, I fee dent that, as with emy confi oyment flict between us," dera r said the g iy to do all it ties would provincia essentia said the confed- ratic hip "has to be This would take ume. With cabinet ference th pe enting Alberta umbia, and a huge batt both federal and provin nd h s of visers VOICE OPTIMISM As red premie they e the rs--w were ge Optimistic of the outcome Premier, Lioyd of Saskat- chewan said he was disap- confer- Se rally d the gov-'pointed that a $10 increase in basic old age pensions will not Start immediately, but in prin- ciple he favored a federal plan plaints that the vades provincial Quebec ine publicly The Quebec mousily passed a demning the the ground ju has ference have d and th province of Qu on the other Ward Testifies In Vice Trial CP from AP-Reaters SI} . ied taday he had t tax LONDON--D: test sexual attr Keeler w act on a few yea Under cross the fifth day pimping an year-old ost different wit "Tt is designed to make it pos- of contributory retirement pen-'yies--he sible for Canadians of even the sions. He also supported estab-'bed w Ushment of a $300,000,000 fund AUDITORIUM PROGRESS $1,000,000 $900,000 $800,000 $700,000 $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 $50,000 for federal loans to municipal- ities but said its proposed four- year life span should be: ex- tended The miers Uantic previnces ff . and ee Premier 'Les } talks sters His colleagues) i ministers to} of op- government has pended pariia on two major ed at the con istablish a cipal develop t had a $40.- ® fund far is purpose QUESTION ADEQUACY question involved t ve ngs irom the jfund is adequate te meet com-i Miss Rice-Davies viously testified t tionship with that of brother and Miss Rice-Davie she slept with others, including banks, Jr. and count Astor. B and Lord Astor taken on thi 1 contro! j id ed mu a legislation In- 'tion tough s question egisiature un molion con- fund on *. VOTE SAID INVALID cipa k ne ture air Vis. Communications jthe docks and local president! treaty nN persaud, business agent for six Ward election will © commission officials persuaded powers also affirmed their de- : US. Launches New now 18, said = Syncom Satellite 2 (AP)--A towering Delta space 2 rocket was launched today in an LONDON (CP - AP) -- The; Only dered os hg met three-power agreement to stop/China stood asidefrom the gen- poisoning the atmosphere andieral enthusiasm. Both are the seas with nuclear babe pressing for ag own nuclear) tests won.a welcome around the weapon strength, world today as an immensely; Prime Minister Macmillan, heartening step on the long road' who helped originate the suc- toward disarmament and inter-/cessful negotiatigns, got a stand- national trust, ling ovation from all parties in j|the House of Commons Thurs- jday night as he announced. con- Toronto Doc clusion of the treaty | "I am deeply grateful that it has fallen to me to announce or ers this agreement to the House, not only because of the value which k jhas in itself, but also because of ac 0 or the hope which it offers of fur- ther progress in the. future," TORONTO (CP) -- Two days) Macmillan said - 1 } - of fighting, turmoil and internal) "We must not be disappointed union strife on Toronto's water- if we do not do everything that front ended today and 300 men)" : Baye in 19 gangs went back to work. hea -- goed ooh Soe It Officials of the Interna-)""" " 8 tional Longshoremen's Associa. HOPES FOR NEW TALKS tion (CLC) called a truce be-) "It ought to give us an oppor-| tween quarrelling factions of the tunity to pursue discussions with union Thursday and promised the Russians on other matters," the men would return to work said he Ear! of Home, Britain's today foreign secretary Harry Bidwell, whose election' British newspapers of every! as business agent for Local 1842/political color welcomed the of the union has been disputed, agreement warmly was sworn in Thursday by in-| The treaty will haye to be ra- ternational Vice-President Tho- tified by Parliament, but this "ete tet ee ee et mt : arold Wilson, leader the from New York and threatened | opposition Labor party, wel-| 'to place the local under trustee-!oomed the accord and said his! |ship unless 500 dockworkers party would be willing to waive| bina a wildcat strike started/the protocol by which treaties! uesday jare laid before the House of] A brief truce ended Thursday Commons for 21 days before! when fists started swinging On/final signature. This means the! could be ratified by Brit-/ cite" Narbar 'commission the[tnyeerere Pareammane sare rs jsummer recess next week. men feared "bloodshed" Wf any-| External Affairs Minister ye yee my sie kdet te |Paul Martin of Canada said the| strike was start y} Bidwell's supporters after the! executive of the union's Great) Lakes district called for a new) election for business agent. It- ruled that the 165 to 164 vote which defeated Cecil Ram- Pars, wasn't sufficiently yer- iit wid | | SyRARRV ER? Fighting broke up a union) WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- meet Tuesday night, andjident Kennedy goes before the Thursday the Bidwell faction public tonight to whip up sup-; refused to work until Mr, Ram-/port for a nuclear test ban} persaud stepped out of the pic. treaty dramatically initialled! Thutsday in Moscow and her-| Dockworkers said the election aided as a major break in the t of a power strug-/ Cold war, t nternational un-| The presidential message at o is in the Great)? p.m. on radio and television ct and Rampersaud will be part of an administra- claim the union's/tion campaign to convince crit-| eastern district is trying to take/ics the pact--ending testing in ol here outer space, in the atmosphere! the settlement reached|and under water--will not en- Thursday under the tough-talk-/ danger U.S. security, ing international president, the) To become effective the U.S., union's international executive Soviet n New York will rule oefore; must be ratified by a two-thirds) Aug. 15 whether Mr. Bidwell's\vote of the Senate and the/ stand measure of public support for The strike tied up the $100-\the treaty may tip the scales) 000,000 harbor and delayed un- there. ' oading of nearly a dozen ships.) The White House said the! Two others, partially unloaded, president was gratified by the! dispute is withir moved on to Hamilton. Harbor agreement in which the three} union leaders Thursday to per- termination to strive for a com- 50- mit emergency crews to unload plete test ban and implied they ishabies will give no nuclear aid to na- fi tions that will not go along with the pact. The three foreign ministers-- American Secretary of State CAPE CANAVERAL, Fia. myko--will sign the treaty in World-Wide Welcome For Nuclear Test Ban Kennedy Seeks Treaty Support and British agreement/lay--if finally the partial ban agree. iment, jsion link, was initialled in a" ;. 5 simple ceremony in Spirdo-| lished in the two papers tonight) novka Britain's Science Minister Lord) The answers were read to cor-| Hailsham and Gromyko. Dean Rusk's Britain' Lord by Gromyko agreement doesn't mean an end to cold war tensions though it) = reflects a change in Soviet = thinking. and holds out the pros-| ? pect of further settlements. MOSCOW HAILS PACT Moscow radio called the| agreement "an important step toward a relaxation of interna-| tional tension and the strength- ening of peace." A later broad-| cast made clear that Moscow)? will continue to press for a non- | aggression pact between NATO} and the Soviet bloc, inspection teams to guard against surprise QUAKE AREA SHOWN 1,000 PERSONS KILLED IN MACEDONIAN QUAKE Thousands Hurt In Capital City CP from Reuters-AP BELGRADE -- A catastro. phic earthquake struck the an- cient Macedonian capital of } Skopje early today and first re- - ports from rescue teams said more than 1,000 persons were killed and several! thousand were injured, the official Yugos-, lav news agency Tanjug re. F ported. Tanjug said the dawn earth- quake destroyed nearly three. quarters of the city of 200,000 and made more than 100, people homeless in a couple of seconds. The quake sent a hotel full of sleeping guests crashing into a attack, reduction of forces in}------------- East and West Germany and a freeze or reduction of military budgets Borba, Yugoslavia's major Communist daily, hailed the pact as "a stimulator of new, daring moves' in search of) peace," French Foreign Minister Mau-| ' | CARACAS (AP) -- Venezue- "vets pot enaaged repeated troops and police combed tional p PE scr ee ih Ne|Caracas today for 86 leftist ter- i ' sai sj.{torists and common criminals jeer oy "Gea ype nn sens who fought their way out ofa would continue to develop a nu-/Crowded prison in a gun battle clear arsenal, He added that as hg left aga five dead and f wounded. diawran 'any tect ben ie onty'e| About 200. of the 816 terrorists device to "crystallize the differ-:and c iminals at Reten la ences" between those nations|Planta prison -- in a residen- with nuclear weapons and those) without them. There was no immediate com- ment from Peking. But the Chi- nese attacked the treaty repeat- edly while it was being negoti- ated, assering it was an Amer- iean device to maintain a U.S. policy of "nuclear blackmail" pated in the break Thursday. They overpowered 40 guards and poured out of the prison gates and a hole in a wall un- der construction. Troop rein- 102. Sixteen were rounded up shortly afterward. forcements drove back all but/bed while Escape Prison Leaving 5 Dead to assault police stations to di- vert forces hunting the prison escapees. Authorities said terrorist pris. oners overpowered guards at the noon meal and opened cell blocks, Other guards moved in, shoot- ing and battling prisoners with gun butts and night sticks. The convicts gained tempor- jally through the melee. cars out off escape routes. and to prevent other Commu- nist nations -- meaning Red China--from developing nuclear weapons, ing the night ports of a number of robberies and shootings, (FALN) incited criminais join them in the break The FALN, known for sabo- tage and attacks on Venezuelan and United States-owned instal. lations and businesses, has Thursday announced only that iti vowed to overthrow Pre sident had been initialed. Romulo Betancourt's govern- SEEK PACT jment Right. up to the time of the @LOW UP BRIDGES te i grenades. | Officials said a police inspec- ing a ompegs and policemen A num r of bystanders caught the wounded. 7 Stab Wounds For Prison Guard MONTREAL (CP) -- A rookie initialling, there were fears the) Elsewhere in Venezuela negotiations might collapse un-|FALN terrorists blew up three} der Russian demands that the|major highway bridges. They) treaty be tied in with a non-/toid newspapers they planned! aggression pact between the) ------ rine North Atlantic Treaty Organiza-| tion and its Communist | K Sees part, the Warsaw pact. Chance The American and British) | delegations opposed the Soviet! s demand. They insisted To Disarm they) MOSCOW (AP) -- Premier would need the consent of all 13) NATO nations for a non-aggies-| Knrushchev declared today that! ithe signing of the new nuclear sion pact and that this would de. |test-ban treaty created "favor-/ not make impossible--a test ban accord. While - png a argued,/on to total disarmament. | presumably over the non - ag-| R ; E ression iss initiaitine| He made the statement in an-| eg a ie initialling) wer to questions from corre- wes held up for. four hours. But} s pondents of the newspapers Iz-) vestia and Pravda submitted to! vithout t by ee IRR eEETeC:| tas in writing. They will be pub-| Palace by Harriman,/ 20d Saturday. j jrespondents at a press confer-! guard at St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary was stabbed seven times in the arms and abdomen Thursday while trying to break up a fight between two prison- ers, Prisoner officials said the guard, Maurice Cardin, 25, was attacked by convicted knife. slayer Marcel Ciricillo, 23, when he tried to stop Ciricillo from stabbing another prisoner. The wounds were not re- garded as serious. Ciricillo was sentenced to life 'able opportunities" to proceed imprisonment last June 18 for! the knife-slaying of Lucien Gir. ard, 29, in an east-end Moni: real taver. A-Arms Monopoly Rapped By China PEKING (Reuters) -- The Guards and police finally ral-| lied, Their fire pinned down is the many of the escapees in a creek! Skopje's water supplies. Troops troops in armored| My | troops pkg the convicts) Scattered automatic fire was/5@ck inside the prison, snipers/clearing the streets from the heard in aia of Caracas dur. pened fire from nearby build-'tubble of houses had freed sev. There were re-|i288 and some prisoners hurled! eral injured, (street, toppled high buildings {and wrecked the city's power and water supplies, rhe ancient, city 250 miles southeast of here sent out emer. geney calls for blood and res- cue equipment, A special train aded with medical teams left Belgrade immediately and other " as'on its way, Blood transfusion teams were }stending by to be flown into the stricken city, capital of the »yav.nce of Macedonia 100 miles inland from the Adriatic Sea, |T0 INSPECT SCENE Yugoslav Prime Minister Pe» ter S:ambolic and other high government officials left by air for the scene, |. Tanjug reported all communi. ri vith the city were out xcept for radio and hospitals I he railway station were badly damaged. | The first shock hit at $:17 a.m, while most of.. the iphabitants were asleep, It was "described as extremely violent. Other shocks were felt 15 to 20 min- utes later, Then about five hours later ;as relief workers swarme 4d |through the stricken city, two more minor quakes hit, Tanjug | reported. |. Tanjug reported that Skopje hospitals were badly damaged, |The few wards that still canbe jused are crammed with injured ital section of Caracas--partici-/ary control, however. -About 100 peo ple receiving emergency women prisoners ran hystcric- treatment, | WATER SUPPLY CUT Adding to the city's hardship fact that the quake cut tried to distribute enough water }to avoid further suffering. Tanjug said rescue teams* | The focus of the quake was jreported to be in centre of the Prison officials said impris-/tof and four prisoners were city, surrounded by high build. oned members of the Armed/Killed. However, Witnesses said/ings which were almost totally Forces of National Liberation) they saw other bodies, includ- destroyed. | Tanjug said all 300 sleeping guests in the Macedonia Hotel in the cross-fire were among near the city centre died when it collapsed and whole suburbs were levelled, The first refugee to reach Bel. | grade from Skopje, ancient cap. jital of Macedonia, told of the xumost solidly built building in | city, the Yugoslav Army bar. racks being razed along with ) others, |STATION CRUMBLES Blagojevic, a pilot for the Yu. goslav Air Transport Company, told Radio Belgrade he was dressing in his room at the | Hotel Invalid, opposite the rails Way station, when the quake | Struck, "I saw the railway sta+ jtion go down in front of my eyes," he said. The quake in southern Yugos: jlavia followed a week of almost )daily tremors which spread tere ror in Italy, across the Adriatic, but caused only slight damage, Geologic disturbances are com. mon in a wide belt stretching across Italy and the southern | Balkans, BUILDINGS LEVELLED A number of buildings several storeys high were reported de- stroyed, Thousands of persons had jTushed into the strects ir their Some 100 newspaper men and ence in the foreign office}chairman of the Communist /night-clothes before the second Averell Harriman! ithe U.S. Embassy. big rally here today the pres- not-too-distant future." photographers, called in to wit. Shortly after U.S. State Under.'China Peace Cmmittee told a/shock struck. ness the ceremonies, were told | Secretary n Let us consider| made a declaration in the same ent monopoly of nuclear weap- bank, the main post office and Home and Russia's Andrei Gro. this as a basis for further spirit at a press conference in/ons would be smashed "'in the several army buildings were re- Steps." The office of the national |ported destroyed, Moscow in "the near future," a) communique said. j REACTION FAVORABLE U.S. congressional reaction to the agreement was generally, favorable and the effort to boost the Syncom Il Satellite into an in which it would seem- y stand still 22,300 miles above the equator orbit Senate's approval | LATE NEWS FLASHES Lord Home called the agree-/ ment "the first of any i tance which the West. has been) able to make with the Russians" since the Austrian treaty of 1955. From Japan, the only country OTN + administra-| © tion is confident it can win the! © subs-) § Boy, 8, Drowns Near Cobourg COBOURG, Ont. (CP) -- Dennis Robins, 8 son of Mr and Mrs. Wilburt Robins, was drowned Thursday in Dart. ford Mill pond, 20 miles northeast of here Quebec To 'Contract Out' Of Loan Plan OTTAWA (CP) -- Premier Lesage of Quebec told the federal government province would "contract out" of arran for contributory pensions and muni- cipal Robarts Criticizes Loan Fund Bill OTTAWA (CP) -- Premier Robarts of Ontario strongly criticized the fede ment's bill establishing a $400.- 000,009 municipa oday is discrimina- tory and tends to load new debt burdens on already hard- pressed municipalities. . today -his oans ral saying it seared by wartime atom bombs, | the chief Japanese' cabinet sec.) retary, Yasumi Kirogane, said/ the partial ban could be a step-/ ping stone to total elimination of] nuclear testing / In Paris, President de Gaulle's government reaffirmed that it would not be bound by) the agreement in its efforts to) make France an independent} nuclear power. Red China, striving te become a' nuclear power itself as it moves farther away from Rus sia in the world Communist The U.S. Air Force's new i nment, denounced 'he Northrup X-214 jet embodies jagreement in advance and' a concept called "laminar JETS WINGS BREATHE AIR flow control," the wings suck- of the principle is expected te durance ef future long-range ing air through razor-thin slots incease substantially the aircraft, te reduce friction drag. Use range, payload and flight en- --CP Phote

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