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Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Sep 1963, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY No wonder kids are confused -- they're told to find themselves and then get lost. % as The Oshawa - Mainly cloudy with a few scat- tered showers tonight, clearing / 'Thursday. "ie ~ Pat Sy TARIO, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER '25, 1963 Authorized es Second Cioss Mall Oftice Ottewa end for payment ot ao THIRTY-FOUR PAGES at SAYS REDS Prince Noradom Shianouk, 4i-year-old Cambodian chief of state, says he is convinced the Communists already have won the battle for South Viet Nam and feels that neutral _Cambodia eventually will fall to the Communists. He made his remarks in a French- language weekly publication. WINNING Sihanouk, shown in Cam- bodia last November, said he felt inmediate neutralization of South Viet Nam would stop the war there and improve international relations, but probably would retard the Communist advance only temporarily. (AP Wirephoto) Big Three Talks Start Saturday NATIONS (CP) -- Big Three f is Oe 'will be held New US, State ggg Dean Rusk will be host to Britain's Home and Russia's An- drei Gromyko at a working luncheon in the American's ho- tel suite. Further Big Three talks are ppremee mext week. Rusk and romyko also had been ex- pecté to meet separatelY be- fore the Big Three talks, but * test-ban understood weapons in space. i minister was; to have put out a feeler on what the Soviet 're- action would be to an initia- tive the Canadian delegation was considering. Before the Big Three meeting Saturday, Rusk will meet with Lord Home Thursday and with Home and West German For eign Minister Gerhard Schroe- der may touch on such matters as the proposed multi-nation nuclear force, main attention will be devoted to issues com- a U.S. spokesman said their schedules did not permit such a Meeting. What the "next step' will 'e Was not known, but there was speculation that it might be an attempt to agree on banning } ose' weapons from space. Gromyko and President Kennedy called for such an agreement in speeches before the United Nations General As- sembly last week. (Canada's External] Affairs Foard Paul Martin was be- ved to be playing a part in preparatory work for a new dis- armament step. Martin held a long meeting|cavating machine was in faulty|W. Anderson 18, with Gromyko at the Soviet|condition and was operated by|Langis G. Miville, 17, St. Pam mission Monday. Details of the|an unlicensed engineer and that|phile County, L'Islet, Que., and) discussion were not disclosed,;the project had not been re-|Sgt. Tom Green of Dartmouth, | ing up with Gromyko. quest Rules Firms Negligent TORONTO (CP) -- Two con- {struction firms were found neg- ligent Tuesday at an inquest into the death of a laborer jkilled by a falliag bucket on ja sewer excavation project Sept. 9. A coroner's jury, investigating the death of Albert Low, 39, of | i |Toronto, was told a rented ex-|mand West, Gsspe, Que., Orvel/ of Regina Race BIRMINGHAM, Ala, (AP) -- }|Another bomb blast shook Bir- mingham today a few hours i jafter a two - man presidential team arrived to help restore racial unity to the big steel city. There were no reports of ca- sualties and no disorder. Two explosions were reported to police, but offcers could find jevidence of only one bomb. | The latest. bombing--Birming- |ham has had more than 40 since lthe Second World War--was in 'a middle-income Negro neigh- {borhood on Birmingham's south side, across town from the 16th Street Baptist Church where four girls were killed in a blast |have been solved. Officers said that apparently meone from a moving car tossed an undetermined amount of explosive at a street inter- section, The house nearest the intersection was damaged ex- tensively. Windows were broken 'jand plaster was jarred from the walls. CUT OFF TRAFFIC Helmeted police officers and | state troopers cut off traffic into the area. Small knots of Negroes |gathered outside their homes, {but no incidents were reported. Meanwhile, the city faced a new challenge in the wake of an announced resumption of se- groes. In Montgomery, five federal! judges ordered Gowefnor George Wallace to stop interfer- ing with court-ordered desegre- jgation of public schools in three |Alabama cities -- Birmingham, Mobile and Tuskegee. Racial tension also was on the increase in Selma, Ala., about 150 miles west of Montgomery |where Negroes have been stag- ling anti-segregation demonstra- tions. idealt with the issue of nuclear! There, police and state troop- ers--led by Col. Al. Lingo, com- mander. -- sreenied more than 150 Negroes during a pair of demonstrations. Two of those Board To Probe Fatal Blast At Army Camp CAMP SHILO, Man. (CP) -- An army board of inquiry con- \vened Tuesday night after the |premature explosion of an ar- tillery shell killed a Toronto sol- dier and injured five others at this southern Manitoba army) ie | 'amp. Gnr. Joseph Richard Cote, 18,| died in hospital from multiple shrapnel wounds. shortly after |the 105-mm shell blew up. jof the Royal Canadian Artillery; Depot here and recent recruits} lin their last week of training were: Gnrs. Jeffrey Charles De- laurier, 18, Linden Beach, Ont., Joseph O. Boulet, 19. Halde- if City Hit By Blast Sept. 15. None' of the bombings} lective buying campaign by Ne-) OSHAWA, ON Torn | H I arrested were members of the student non-violent co-ordinating committee. As the five-judge panel ruled on Wallace at Montgomery, the Alabama 'Supreme Court ruled |that the governor does not have the power to close public | schools. But the court did not re- jstrict Wallace should he deem |it-necessary to close the schools |to preserve peace. | The Supreme Court said that |while the authority to close the |schools belongs to' the local school board, "if closing of the |schools be the actual and inci- dental result of keeping the peace, the power "to keep the peace is not restricted. The University of Mississippi expelled Cleve McDowell after he was arrested for carrying a concealed pistol. The Negro student left the campus for home Tuesday and appeared to take the decision calmly. whatsoever," he said. He still faces a hearing before a justice \of the peace Saturday and could be fined $100 and sent to jail for three months. | McDowell was the only Negro at Ole' Miss since James H. month, Unlike Meredith, he was not protected by U.S, marshals| while on the campus. Army Deposes | Dominican President SANTO DOMINGO, Domini- can Republic (AP)--The Domin- ican armed forces and police deposed President Juan D. a today and proclaimed were turing the country. into a "rightist. state." , The Communist party and party' backing Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro were out- lawed. Reliable sources said Bosch, 53-year-old author - "I have no emotions about it! § Meredith was graduated 'last/: BRITAIN'S MOST famous admiral, Lord Nelson, looks ,| down from his column in Lon- don's Trafalgar Square on jhe world's newest flag, emblem of Malaysia, world's newest _ invaded. Prime Minister Sir Ro- ; chief asserted that selected In- country, Flag is flying from Malaya House in London. (CP Wirephoto) q ' « ' } ' 7 5 y Malaysia Border Tension Rising | But he asserted that "I colonialism of any By THE CANADIAN PRESS Indonesia cut all telegraphic and telephone links with the new Malaysia federation today as special Indonesian forces were reported on the borders of Sa- rawak and Sabah (North Bor- neo), two members of the newly-formed Southeast Asian nation, Reuters news @gency re- ported in a dispatch from Ku- ching, Sarawak, that four mor- tar shells were fired into a Sa- ing to a British. Army spokes- man. No casualties were re- ported, but a dog was killed by shrapnel, The spokesman said the/,, bombs fell in Kampong Sara- wak, about five\miles from the Sarawak village of Gumbang which has been attacked sev- eral times in recent months. Malaysia was promised mil- itary aid by Australia if it is) 5" Ei bert Menzies made the pledge in laying before Parliament in Canberra the text of a defence commitment. with the new fed- ration. He said Australian forces also ate committed to help resist. subversive activity in Malaysia. ARMY ¥ READ In Jakarta, the . Indonesian capital, the Indonesian Army. We 1 . ra er sarawi "Sabah. Antgt news agency said the officer, Sol. Tonu Subroto, reported these troops were "ready for in- stant action if necessary." In Kuala Lumpur, the Malay- sian capital, the defence minis- was a prisoner in the presid tial palace. Another said |he was flown out of the coun- The armed forces issued a/ communique saying they seized| power because "there was a chaotic situation in the coun- try. All schools were closed. Bosch became president in February, taking over from an} interim regime that had ruled ad the Trujillo dictatorship fe jport Bosch had been flown |abroad. Other victims, also members| ° . \que said: | OTTAWA (CP) -- United iStates grain merchants are in Ottawa in the hope of following |Canada's example in sales to the Soviet Union, a spokesman Santo Domingo was\for the Americans indicated aim. early today. The military communi-| The spokesman for the Ameri- \can businessmen involved, Bur- "The government was creat-\ton Joseph, president of LS. ng international conflicts with|Joseph Incorporated of Minne- 1 There was an unconfirmed re- unpredictable consequences. Be- apoiis, said, however, it is "far ore manoeuvres of inter-|premature totalk of a trade be- but it was believed to haveiported to the proper authorities.|N.S., an artillery instructor. jnational communism which do jnot recognize nationalism and *}seek to destroy Dominican tra- ,|dition, the military had to inter- vene to put order in the chaos and fight communism, destroy- ing our country." Tempest At Tea Party Stirred Up By Liberal " By THE CANADIAN PRESS | A tempest over teacups arose/running mate in London South|change the chances of Mr. Ro. at the tail end of the campaigniriding, gave a tea party at abarts. His party held 62 seats for today's Ontario general elec-| London hotel to receive support- in the legislature at dissolution} The tea was still being|to 24 for the Liberals and five poured when: the tempest arose.|for the New Democratic Party. \CLAIMS PC VIOLATION tion, It didn't appear likely to have much effect on the 3,429,- 291 voters eligible to cast bal- lots for 108 members of the pro- vinetal, legislature. weatherman forecast gen- erally sunny and warm weather) for most southern areas of 7 proyince, with some cloud a a chance of showers in cae ea /Im recent provincial elections --and a rather lethargic atti- tude in this one on the part voters--are an indicati yoting could be light. «The campaign scene was gen- erally quiet Tuesday, with the three party leaders in their home ridings drumming up a little last-minute _ support. It was this type of activity that brewed the teacup tizzy for Pro- gressive Conservative Premier Joho Robarts in London, Ont. Mr. Robarts, member for Lon- of| on, | } CITY EMERGENCY | PHONE NUMBERS - PULICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 { RpVEsEAL 723-2211 ._. | y © | jdon North, and John White, his ers, Harry Quigley, Liberal party candidate in Act. "meat, drink, refreshment or provision" at a meeting to pro- his private residence. Mr. Quigley said the premier "no other course' but to resign, He referred to a section of the act stating that if a cor- rupt practice is committed "by} or with the actual knowledge and consent of a candidate" his election would be declared void. However, another part of 'the act states the candidate will not be subject to the stated penal- ties if the corrupt practice was committed without corrupt. in tent or in ignorance. on the matter The returning officer for Lon- don South riding, George Mit- and rule on the matter today, & seemed unlikely. the There were seven vacancies. HAS MORE SEATS London - South, Redistribution since the 1959) Pes |called-on the premier to with-\election has upped the number|eard the Dominican radio de- draw his name' from the elec-|of seats to 108 from 98. The 10 jtion for violating the Election) new seats are in Metropolitan} Toronto. |Leslie Frost. | His Liberal rival is John Win-| mote an election unless it is at) termeyer, a Kitchener lawyer} |who led his party in the last] jelection and could face a clamor} for a leadership change unless the Liberal standing improves. Both he and the premier are 46. New Democratic Party Chief Donald MacDonald, 49, is mak- party Toronto's ing his third effort as head. His riding is York South. Mr. Wintermeyer | This: has led the two men to \ches, said he would investigate|lock horns over pensions, a pro gram for medical care and {fi-| nancing for separate schools. {minute Liberal complaint woul In the month of campaigning, the premier has pointed to his record. He has asked those sat- isfied with his government's rec- jord to support him, Outside of Mr. Robarts had no comment/this he has often spent his time countering points brought up by! |FEUDS WITH HAITI Bosch had been feuding with |President Francois Duvalier of |Haiti, which shares this Carib- |bean island with the Dominican | Republe. The feud erupted into a crisis last April. Last Mon- |day both Haiti and the Domini- can Republic accosted each other in a border conflict, 'a The military communique \said Dominican problems "can- jnot be solved through constitu- tionality." |. "We are turning the country |into a rightist 'state and calling jon the people to help us main- tain order," the communique said. Fia., (In Miami, monitors scribe the Bosch government as pro-Russian and pro-Communist and said the revolution had in- | The Complaint was brought| It is the first election battle|Stalled an honest and just. re- junder a section»prohibiting aj|as premier for Mr. Robarts, who! jcandidate from furnishing|took over from retiring leader! gime.) tween these two countries (Rus- sia and the U.S.)." | Commenting on a report from |Minneapolis that his group is in {Ottawa to negotiate with the same Russian delegation that 'bought $500,000,000 worth of |Canadian wheat and flour last week, Mr, Joseph *said he has not met with the head of the Russian group and declined to say whether a meeting is sched- uled, The Russian. delegation, headed ,by S. A. Borisov, first deputy minister of _ Russian trade, still is in Ottawa although lits dealings with the Canadian |government were concluded last lweek. J 'We jusfdon't know what. we have here ourselves," said Mr. Joseph. He would say only that the Americans were here to sell wheat and declined further de- tails saying, "we're way ahead of ourselves." Mr. Joseph is accompanied by two other Minneapolis grain men, Charles Ritz and Ralph Bruce,, as well as by Leopold iStern.. director of the Louis Dreyfus Corporation, New York City. He said were "a few more". representatives of the American industry in Ot- tawa but would not identify them. i The mimneapolis report men- tioned 4,700,000 tons of wheat, grain and oats as the amount in export licences being sought by Russia in connection with the deal. The sale would be for cash, the report said. U.S. Treasury Studies Tax _ Inducements | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Tax credits for greater exports were under study at the U.S. treas- ury and commerce departments today as a possible inducement to harder selling overseas of American goods. The plan is similar to the in- | vestment tax credit enacted last year, which officials say has helped to stimulate the outlays of industry for new plant ma- chinery and equipment. The export credit idea emerged from a committee of about 30 industrialists in closed meetings last week at the White House conference on export ex pansion, where President Ken- }erease in export volume. LATE NEWS FLASHES ORANGE testing atom bombs, Presiden today in the first speech of hi WASHINGTON (AP) -- A ings, assassinations and the c power struggle in New York. SMITHVILLE, Ont. (CP) 35, of Rexdale died early tod village about, 10 miles east of ¢ France To Continue Testing A-Bombs France (Reuters) -- France 'will continue t de Gaulle told an audience s 20th provincial tour. Senate Crime Syndicate Probe Opens Senate investigation into the dark workings of a national crime syndicate opened today with Attorney-General Kennedy telling of its secret meet- hance of a major underworld Rexdale Man Dies In Car-Truck Crash --- Keith Witford Maclaren, ay aiter his car ran into the rear of a poultry truck parked on the main street of this Hamilton, The committee's report, made public. Tuesday by Commerce Secretary Luther H. Hodges jalong with other export-boosting 'proposals from the conference, said an export tax incentive '"should be recognized as nec- jessary to overcome our imme- 'diate balance-of-payments defi- eit." Several tax jalready were under study by \the administration. The industry group suggested lthat each manufacturing firm ibe permitted to take a credit, deductible from its corporate income tax, amounting to 10 to 15 per cent of the dollar in- crease in its export 'sales dur- ing a specified period. A jsmaller credit could be estab- ndy called for a 10-per-cent in-) incentive plans} U.S. Grain Merchants May Copy Wheat Sale One of the more sensitive areas as far as such an Ameri- can sale is concerned would be former reluctance on the part of the U.S. government to fos- ter trade with Russia. The Minneapolis report said that the exporters are moving under existing U.S. laws to form a corporation to enable joint private action on the sale. The corporation, taking respon- sibility for such necessary items as contracts and per- formance bonds, would sell shares to any U.S. firms wish- ing to participate, with alloca- tion of shipments to be worked out among themselves, This is unlike the Canadian sale which was negotiated through the Canadian Wheat Board and guaranteed by the government. | In Washington a well-informed agriculture department. source said some private grain dealers have reported what are de- senibed as authentic Soviet feel- ers intended to determine whether the U.S. would be will- ing to sell grain at world prices. Private dealers, the informant said, are pressing for clarifica- try said two battalions of troops will be moved to Sara- wak and Sabah, which share the big island of Borneo with Indo- ne sia. Indonesian infiltrators have been attacking across the border. Indonesian Defence Minister Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution told nesia will not prevent its youths ried posters With English Col as 3: Sew pee eoee er Indonesia claims sia, made of Malaya, CUT TRADE Many trade ready been cut relations were severed tion was born. after In Singapore, it was an.' nounced that all students staged a quiet worn ag yo the mbassy 'oscow. They car- Dowa e Fight Against British Ma- aysia. a meeting of students that Indo-|nedy, from joining anti-Malaysia reb- els engaged in a guerrilla war in Sarawak and Sabah. He said Indonesia 'also was prepared "to assist and train the youths of North Kalimantan (Sarawak and Sabah)." Nasution denied London charges that Indonesia claims the two former British colonies, OSHAWA RIDING - VOTING LIGHT Perfect voting day wea- ther did not change the usual report of "'very light" voting in all sections of Osh- awa Riding before noon today. Spokesmen at the Liberal, and New Democratic Party committee room said they have been "swamped" with calls from voters requesting tranportation to polling stations, Oshawa returning officer described campaigns in the riding as "clean - fought" and stated there were no difficulties throughout pre- election activities, Indonesia has pockets. of grandoise luxury, but it "i in Jakarta's coun fel are usually more i pressed by the povertY outside ae oe A magnificent or overpass - ait 0 : tapers off ' "Poor man's Hitler," scoffs Richard Hughes in The Sunday Times, and Paul Johnson writes in the British magazine Town that Indonesia is the worst-gov- ring Halt in the world, bar- jaiti, Os! Pie * "It is slithering fast int bankruptcy and corruption, adds Johnson, while speak of maladministration peed pay @ panic capital, declining money : and chronic material "moist eye for a neat ankle' --by frenzied oratory, pealing to the nationalism of Indonesia's 100,000,000 people. tion of government policy. | QUEBEC (CP) -- Five mem- bers of the former Union Na- tionale government are to ap- pear in court Friday on fraud charges resulting from a Royal commission on purchasing prac- tices of the former government. The Royal commission _ re- port, handed down last July 4, lrecommended judicial action lbut didn't specify against whom. However, the report was la scathing criticism of the purchasing practices of the Union Nationale government from 1955 to 1960. Proceedings begat Tuesday against two former cabinet min- isters--one of them still a leg- islative assembly member, one legislative councillor, a former top civil servant and a Quebec City business man. \lished for trading firms, as dis-| The actions rose directly from itinct from manufacturers. mission under Mr. Justice Elie; Salvas. A total of 76 charges involv- ing $309,000 were outlined in writs presented to Chief Judge 'Thomas Tremblay of the Court) of Sessions. Accused of fraud or conspiracy to defraud the prov- ince were: Gerald Martineau, 62, Quebec City Businessman, legislative councillor since 1946, former treasurer of the Union _ Na- tionale: Joseph D. Begin, 63, former colonization minister and Union Nationale chief organizer, mem- ber for Dorchester from 1935 to 1962; Antonio. Talbot, 62, former highways minister, leader of the Union Nationale for eight months in 1961, member of the legislature for Ohicoutimi since ithe findings of the Royal com- 1938 and still iy member; 5 Ex-Union Nationale - Members Facing Trial Alfred Hardy, former direr- tor of government purchasing services; ° Aieaee Arthur Bouchard, president of the Baribeau .- Etchemin Cor- poration, Begin faces 11 counts of fraud involving $95,000; Talbot | 13 counts involving $47,000; Mar- tineau 27 counts involving $56,- 000; and Hardy 24 counts ins volving $29,000. y Bouchard, a Quebec City bus- inessman, is charged on one count of conspiracy involving $82,000, His Baribeau-Etchemin Corporation acted as interme diary in sales of. heavy equip: ment to the government'. by Charles Cusson Limited, ace cording to the Salvas réport, . The report said also that Begin and Bouchard's brother were, with Bouchard, the major stockholders in the --

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