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Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Oct 1963, p. 1

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\ _ Algerian Troops Join Army Of Rebel Chief e - ax i Oto Sich a a ---- oy Oe' eae vr Sette Ne tr . , _. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Most people would rather be ruined by praise than saved by criticism. Sunny with cloudy periods aud» and continuing day. Winds sout warm Wednes- hwest 10 to 20. VOL. 92--NO. 230 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1963 COL. MOHAND OU EL HADJ, left, and Hocine Ait Ahmed are shown in Tizi Ouz- ou, Algeria, yesterday after a ALGIERS--Units of the Al- gerian army today began join- ing the dissident troops of re- / dellious Col. Mohand Ou el Hadj. The colonel called for a decisive fight against President Ahmed Ben Bella's government. A government officer in Tizi Ouzou, capital of the Berber area of Kabylia which is the nerve centre of the revolt, said most non-commissioned officers and men in the area have de- serted Informants in Tizi Ouzou said all was quiet in the city and virtually all troops disappeared from the streets. Small convoys were seen heading toward the mountains where el Hadj has been organiz- ing his stronghold. El Hadj called on officers and men of his seventh military re- gion "to join us 'n time has come to en- gage in a decisive Lake Pact Sought By Labor Leaders Sel = ; our combat." | LINKE: mander of the 7th military region covering the area. (AP Wirephoto) meeting in which they defied the regime of President Am- hed Ben Bella. Ou El Hadj was deposed by Ben Bella as com- against the dictatorial regime,"|Moroccan troop concentrations the appeal said. on Algeria's western frontier. There was no immediate com-| Ben Bella said Morocco was ment from the government in)hacking the Berber revolt which Algiers. It appeared to know lit-|broke out Sunday in the Kabylia tle about the situation in the)Mountain region east of Algiers. mountainous region, some 60 The president told reporters: Decision Union Checkoff Upheld SOCREDS UP MAJORIT Entire 43 Tories Defeated In B.C. VICTORIA (CP)--The Social The 63-year-old Kelowna hard- ial Oil Limited in Vancouver,; refused to make the required declaration. The company cut off the dues checkoff privilege in a subse- quent contract and dues since have been collected indepen- dently by union stewards. The B.C, Federation of Labor de- cided on a test case against the legislation and the union volun- teered to ask the courts to de- clare the legislation invalid. The joint appeal of the union and the Saskatchewan govern- ment to the Supreme Court was opposed by Imperial Oil and the attorney-general of B.C. OTTAWA (CP) -- British Co- lumbia legislation making it il- legal for B.C. unions to use un¢ ion dues for political purposes was upheld today by the Su- preme Court of Canada. The court, in a 4-to-3 decision, rejected an appeal by Local 16- 601 of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union (CLC) against B.C. Supreme and Ap- peal Court decisions which also upheld the validity of the legis- lation. The legislation, an amend- jment to the B.C, Labor Rela- tions Act, forbids use of union dues for political purposes and| requires a statutory declaration that a union is complying with this provincial law. The union, with the support of the New Democratic govern- | 2i-Gun Salute, miles east of the capital. \"Moroccan soldiers of (King) Ben Bella sought to rally the/Mouiay Hassan are 10 metres Algerian masses against the) (yards) from the A'gerian front- jthreat to his one-man rule. itier .. . We know what it means. pond ae de Ages We fear nothing. We can defena mem mere ourselves," Forum tonight and called. for Morocco has been demanding mass attendance. : ; ja portion of the Algerian-held Ben Bella arranged to address Sahara and the relationship be- pret 6A ores tie tome a tween the two governments has lier to allow workers to attend.|Deen stiff and frequently hostue. Meanwhile, Ben Bella forces|DUt Ben Bella implid the pur- established a ring of steel-hel-|P0S€ of the alleged concentra- meted troops around the Kab-|ton of Moroccan troops was to ylia area and set rp checkpoints|4™@W Algerian troops away from the Kabylia and to the frontier. on main roads leading to it. D WITH MOROCCO WILL SEIZE PROPERTY The pr id Ben Bella Monday night linked a ed Berber revolt with rted| his. g t. has nationalized ~ . ' two more European-owned ho- OTTAWA (CP)--Spurred by. the imminence of government; trusteeship legislation, Cana-| dian and United States labor leaders are moving closer to . agreement on a private pact ww rid the Great Lakes waterfront o labor hoodlums, reliable sources say. The informants say it is still not certain that behind-the- scenes talks between the Cana- dian Labor Congress and the AFL-CIO will produce a work- able, effective union-sponsored clean-up of the strife-torn lakes problem. But, they say, efforts for a non - governmental trusteeship * are sharpening -- just 24 hours before the Canadian govern- ment plans to ask Parliament for the power to clamp a fed- eral trusteeship on fiye water- front unions. There were indications that the government may put its trusteeship law into effect-- ithe Seafarers' International Un- ment of Saskatchewan, argued jbefore the court in January that the legislation, enacted by ms B.C.'s Social Credit government} N Ni is invalid because it infringes| ew igerla Parliament's control over fed-| eral elections. LAGOS,. Nigeria (Reuters)-- After passage of the amend-|The federal republic of Nigeria ment by the B.C. legislature in|WaS born today, ushered into be- |1960, the union, which includes|ing with a 21-gun salute and the some 165 employees of Imper-|blast of sirens from ships of pon ly ay anchored in the Vote On Racial Discrimination Sirens Usher -- Credit government of British|ware merchant now must serve Columbia was returned Mondayjonly 17 months to surpass the with an increased majority, jrecord for continuity in office | Premier W. A. C. Bennett/set by Conservative Premier. 4 campaigned on a 'Social Credit|/Sir Richard McBride between ' or socialism" slogan. His party|1903 and 1915. , took four seats from the social-| NDP Leader Robert Strachan, ist New Democratic Part y|sweeping to victory in Cow- which in turn gained one from|ichan-Newcastle, commented: the government. "There is obviously no stabil- The standings ity in Social Credit government, so we carry on until the next Social Credit Jelection."' NDP Liberal Leader Ray Perrault Liberals 5 4 |won a close fight in North Van- At dissolution the standing|couver and said later voters was Social Credit 31, NDP 16,|should "be of good heart be- Liberals 5. cause this is truly the beginning Monday night the polls had/jof a new day in this province." been closed only 80 minutes; He saw the fact that his party when The Canadian Press treid|retained its five seats was an analysis indicated return of the|indication that the Liberals had government, been accepted as "'the party of The sweep marked the eignth time in less than a year that the middle way." provincial voters in Canada Mr. Fulton said: "Nobody let me down; we have re-elected their govern- ments. were not ready... , We started the fight only five months ago. E, Davie Fulton, former jus-|The fight for good government tice and works minister in the|continues and we will remain in federal cabinet, was defeated) the fight but it will take longer." along with his entire slate of 43 Progressive Conservatives, It FOUGHT GOOD FIGHT ' ; h | He fought a neck-and-neck Conservative "ane ceed' f'lbatte Ghrough much ofthe night vineially in B.C, with Highways Minister Philip Gaglardi. It was a personal dis- MINISTER DEFEATED appointment for Mr. Fulton to Recreation Minister Earlejlose provincially the area he Westwood, who won Nana:mojrepresented federally for near!y and the Islands by 51 votes from the NDP in 1960, lost it 'eels Ce ad 1963 1960 34 32 13 O16 20 years. : Ww. A. C. BENNETT VICTORY SMILE One of the strongest fights of els av ble oil factory n "aes o by @ Mostem: He promised to seize all Euro- pean farm property in. severul days; an obvious bid for support from the impoverished masses. Ben Bella declared that the rebellion -- in which no shots have yet been fired--came at a moment "when Algeria is equally menaced abroad." He said the Moroccan troop, movements came after two re- bel leaders, Belkacem, Krim jand Hocine Ait Ahmed, made a trip to Tangiers, Morocco. Ait Ahmed and Col. Mohand C Ou el Hadj, the Berber troup ment trusteeship over the SIU|jeader in Kabylia, allied them- and also over three other trade] selves Sunday with the aati-gov- unions and the marine section/ernment clandestine Socialist of a fyourth as the only way to|Forces Front (FFS). oust the corrupt influences he} exposed in his massive report to] ived support 'Deportation Upheld Sonal Sate. ol Of Trujillo Chief OTTAWA (CP)--The Supreme Court of Canada, with one judge dissenting, today upheld a de- |portation order against Arturo |Rodriguez Espaillat, 41-year-old Justice T. G. Norris denounced fon of Canada and its contro. versial leader, Hat C. Banks of Montreal, as a lawless tyranny that terrorizes shipowners aad seamen and threatens the econ- omy of Canada. The judge proposed a goverm- former history pr research director of the Cana- dian Brotherhood of Railway, Transport and General Workers (CLC). At the stroke of midnight this In Public Place West African nation gave up its Status as a British dominion, which it held. since: gaining full ' es a ' CAMBRIDGE, Ma. (AP)-- With a divided Negro leadership' apparently holding the key to the outcome, Cambridge voters decide today whether to ban ra- cial discrimination in places of publec accommodation. City officials, hoping approval of the city charter amendment will ease racial tension in this town of 12,000 on the eastern Shore of Chesapeake Bay, pre- dicted a turnout of 80 per cent of the 5,282 registered voters. Opponents; many of them res- taurant operators and other businessmen, predicted a 60- per-cent vote despite an emo- tion - packed campaign and a forecast of clear, cool weathe: Mrs. Gloria Richardson, the Negroes' most vocal champion in the bong battle over integra- independence Oct. 1, 1060, and became the sixth republic in the Commonwealth... ... 4. The guny and siténs also Sig: nalled the start of celebrations, which will be happier than first expected -- a general strike, which began four days ago, was called off Monday night; As a republic within the Com- monwealth, Nigeria recognizes Britain's Queen as head of the Commonwealth, but no longer as Nigeria's head of state. This role will be filled by Nnamdi Azikiwe,-Nigeria's gov- ernor - general ti® last three years, who was sworn in today as its first president. PLEDGES DEVOTION Azikiwe pledged himself to "preserve, protect and defend"! the constitution and devote him- seli ia "the service and well- being of the people of Nigeria." tion, has urged them to boycott) AtTangements were made for the referendum on the grouad|more than 600 prisoners to be -- it involves a constitutional released today under an am- Gihee Neste tenis ane ee signed by Azikwe in honor ing City Councilman Charles E,|°F Republic Day. Cornish and officials of integra-| The general strike, which tionist groups, pleaded for ajthreatened to dampen Republic large turnout to assure passage|Day celebrations, was in sup: of the amendment, |port of union demands for a fed- Mr. Crowe, who played an un- sung role in uncovering much of the evidence and many of the witnesses during the Norris in- then suspend it while the trade union movement tries to clean its own house on the great! lakes. This manoeuvre would leave the trusteeship law--unprece- dented in North American .a- bor history--hanging over or- ganized labor to ensure a thor- ough clean-up of lawlyesness The inner cabinet of organ- ized labor in Canada--the >ight- man executive committee of the CLC--meets today to con- quiry, fired a sharply-worded last at AFL-CIO leaders. Canadian labor by their actions| in the marine labor problem. ' former head of the security forces of the late dictator Rafael Trujillo of the Dominican Re- Among white leaders, Mayor Galvin W. Mowbray and the city council campaigned vigor- public. The court, in a 4-to-1 judg-/atgued its defeat would deepenjunion leaders and government | He charged that they are|ment, said Espaillat is a mem-|the stain on the city's reputa-|officials that a "high-powered \threatening the independence of!ber of a class of persons pro-|tion created by several eruptions|commission" would be ap| hibited entry to Canada as 'landed immigrants. HOME PROMISES CO-OPERATION sider the latest moves toward a| voluntary union trusteeship One stumbling block is ported to be a demyand by the Seamen's International Union of North America that its jurisdic. tion over Canadian seamen be guaranteed after the trustees have completed their task. This would mean scuttling the fledgling Canadian Maritime Un ion, an all-Canadian union set up by the CLC after it expelled the SIU of Canada for raiding. The CMU has only about 500 members on lake ships while the SIU claims about 15,000 members, with about 7,000 ac- tually at work. While the feud between the SIU and the CMU lies at the|*® heart of the dispute, 'there are other issues at stake--including the extent of U.S. union con- trol in Canadian labor. A'ter a year-long inquiry, Mr. re-) UNITED NATIONS (CP)--; The Earl of Home today p'om- ised Britain's co-operation in talks with Russia that could lead to a summit meeting of alli 18 members of the UN disarnid- ment committee. The British foreign secretary said in an address prepared for the UN General Assembly that he could "see some value in such a meeting,"' but said some points should be studied inten- sively at a lower level first. | Andrei Gromyko, Russia's for- eign minister, called for ihe He also made these chief points: --China would be compelled to-drop force from her na- tional program "'if she wishes to survive," and should be a member of the United Na- tions. --South Africa should remain a UN member because "once eviction is allowed by major- ity vote the organization will cease to represent or reflect the state of 'the worid." --African countries should not seek to change the status quo with "wars of liberation.' Dealing . with the proposed summit talks on disarmament by the 18 nations, which inciude Moscow. |Britain, Canada, the United Lord Home, in a 3,500-word/States, France and Russia, Lord speech: today, praised Soviet|Home said: Premier Khrushchev for his} "Balanced disarmament re- "step by step" approach to so'v-|quires precision, and it is there summit talks in a speech to the assembly Sept. 19, and said they ld be held in the first six months of next year, possib'y in CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS ing East-West problems andithat preparation is essental." said he hopes that next year) Certain objectives which "we shall be able to say that|should be studied in advance in this session o° the assembly/detail at Geneva and betwen POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 marks the end of the cold war "}governments, he said, should in There were signs, he aid,|clude: ously for the amendment. They jof violence during integratiorist demonstrations last summer. leral commission to investigate wages. It was called off after it was jagreed at talks Monday between Mobster T View Of Gangland WASHINGTON (CP - AP)-- Joseph Valachi, whom Canadian police hope to interview priv- ately, give investigating sena- tors today a mobster's eye view of a bloody gangland war back in the 1930s. Valachi, who has not prized silence since he says. ne re- ceived the kiss of death--a death sentence -- from Cosa Nostra's "boss of bosses,"' Vito Genovese, begins his second day of public testimony before the Senate investigations subcom- mittee. Subcommittee counsel Jerome Adierman announced that the convicted killer and dope ped- lar would tell of a 'gangland war for power and vengeance" that liquidated Peter Morello as the crime syndicate's old oss. The subcommittee said police testimony would back up Val- achi's story, Valachi has said that a secret high commission then took com- mand of Cosa Nostra dcting as a board of directors but that Genovese muscled in to become --as Valachi put it--'"'boss of bosses under the table." SPREAD INTO CANADA? Valachi also has disclosed that Cosa Nostra had 'spread into Canada through the buf- falo, N.Y., branch or "family" to. NDP candidate David Stupich by fewer than' that Monday andj¢; asked for a four Communists, one indepen- dent and one member of the So- cialist Party of Canada and all! were defeated. There were 113 women in the field of 205 candidates and only one -- Lois Haggen, NDP, in Grand Forks-Greenwood -- was elected, Camille Mather in Delta and Margaret Hobbs in stoke, NDP bers. inj the last House were turned out ply of Social Credit candi- ates. The government party gained two Delta seats, one in Burnaby and-the Revelstoke riding, Premier Bennett won re-elec- tion in Okanagan South, a con- stituency he has represented for 22 years and said: "A stable government and a good opposition, that's what: we'll continue to have." CV which runs crime operations in the Buffalo - Toronto area. The Ontario Police Commis- sion, headed by Judge Bruce Macdonald, wants to interview Valachi on how much he knows about the operations of Cosa Nostra (Our. Thing) or the Mafia, as it is also called, in Ontario. The U.S, justice department Canada Having Trouble Filling Wheat Orders WINNIPEG (CP)--Grain of- pointed to probe workers' de-| mands for more pay. U.K. Joins Summit Talk Curtain to minimize the danger of surprise attack, and progress on the first stage of a plan for general disarmament, including the abolition of-some nuclear de- livery vehicles. the stationing of observers key points in all the countries of the NATO and Warsaw Pact alliances, including Russia and the U.S., as '"'the most promis- ing collateral measure which we can pursue, and I would hope that we can work out a plan for adoption. | Lord Home has been discuss- ling this question with Dean Rusk, U.S. secretary. of state, and Gromyko in backstage taiks in New York. He was due to have lunch with Gromyko today jand the three ministers are ex- pected to have a* further meet- ing later this week. The British foreign secretary today welcomed "construct:ve passages" 'in Gromyko's Sept. 19 some missiles until the whule Lord Home said he regarded) in} Lord Home said it might be that "we are getting a l:ttle nearer to some start with the physical destruction of some | weapons." WAR 'UNTHINKABLE' Communist theory might in- jclude the use o* force, he said, but "'the plain truth is that the nuclear bomb has made war un- thinkable as an instrument of jnational. policy. or a means of |propagating a particular doc- |trine. Home said Red Ching might not. agree "but she will learn as snc gains nuclear knowledge |that all her millions wou!d not |Save her from annihilation if nu- jclear war were to break out." | He said if Russia stands by \its word to convert the world to 'communism by building a more prosperous life for its peopie and jsucceeds, "then I for one shal! jhave no quarrel with them." "I may not approve Commu- | speech, saying his proposal that|nist philosoohy and practice but/aircfaft wthout Ights over theito "force more and more young East and West. should retain/it will have 'yon by fair means.'*|Cuban capital. Lord Home, Gromyko and ficials here indicate Canada may have trouble filling new| wheat orders. because' of the $500,000,000 Russia sale. The 228,000,000 - bushel Sep- tember sale to the Communist) country will tax port facilities to the limit until next July making new sales a problem. How bg a problem is not yet clear, but of'icials emphasize there is no shortage of wheat itself with a near-record crop said that their request for an in- terview with the mobster will be given full consideration but a spokesman noted that there is a heavy demand by police offi- cials in many cities for private talks with Valachi, Valachi swore Friday he is out to destroy the syndicate be- cause Genovese gave him the kiss of death and ordered him slain while both were serving sentences in the Atlanta, Ga, School Addition Financi (4 OR BOUGRE opeceicices J. C. Ward Prominent Oshawa Merchant Dies ........ Page 9 Little Theatre Plans Membership Drive ../..Page 9 Maple Grove Man Says Daughter Abducted .. Page 9 Oshawa Woman Injured In Toronto ....4...... Page 3 Gideons Present New Testaments .......... Page 9 Home . Beautification Cups Presented ......s+- Page 9 the night was between Social rediter Herb | ap sbi ral - of the Westert ball Conference and Liberal J. Gordon Gibson in North Van- couver. Mr. Capozzi lost. A Second scoreboard was in- stalled at Empire Stadien where Mr. Capozzi's team beat Calgary Stampeders 32-14. Que gave the game score, the other the election returns. Earlier forecasts were for a heavy vote but fewer ballots were cast Monday than in either of the two previous elections. In 1956 Social Credit captured 46 per cent of the popular vole --a figure which fell to 39 per cent in 1960 but which climbed to 41 per cent in Monday's vut-+ ing. For the NDP (successors to the CCF party) the percentages were 28, 33 and 28 respectively,. For the Liberals it was 22, 21, 20. ' The Conservatives showed steady increases from three per cent in 1956 to six per cent im 1960 and 11 per cent this tune. POWER TOP ISSUE - Power was a top issue in the short, sharp campaign--so sig- nificant that Progressive Cca- servative organizations in Peace River North and Peace Raver South did not put forward can- didates stating that they sup- ported Mr. Bennett's announced policy of developing the Peace River hydro potential simuita- neously with that of the Colum- bia River. : . Mr. Fulton had said he wou have postponed Peace River de- velopment for the present Another prime topic during the cam; was. the New Democratic Party's posal for a $50,000,000 medical care plan, Prominent names fell befcre now going into' the bins. federal prison last -year. + the disapproval of voters Any country that wants wheat can get if, but may not be able to have it right away because of the transportation tieup. "The moment you haven't got it, everybody wants if," one private trader said sadly, The Canadian wheat board, which controls sales abroad, imposed a temporary ban on private wheat deals before the Russian sale was' d It was an apparent move to ensure that pending Russian commitments would be amet. There was no word Monday on when it would be lifted. Tracer Shots Light Skyline In Havana HAVANA (Reuters) -- Tracer shells and bursting flak lit up the Havana skyline Monday night as- anti - aircraft guns opened fire on an unidentified TORONTO (CP)--The heads of universities in Ontario today recommended to the provincial government that students in high schools be exposed to more French as an integral. part of their courses. In a wide-ranging report sub- mitted to the Ontario govern- ment's advisory committee on university affairs, the educa- tionists also recommended that once the students graduate from high school they have a' more varied fare of education' and training opportunities. It opposed the current trend 'people into, the mould o° the Searchlights scanned the sky/university-"Whether they are fit-| the needs and abilities of stu- dents. The report, entitled The Struc- ture of Post - Secendary Edu- cation in Ontario, 'reviews the growth of the Ontario education system since 1870. The report was prepared for the committee of presidents' of provincially assisted' universi- ties and colleges of Ontario by its academic subcommittee with Dr. John J. Deutsch, vice-prin- cipal of Queen's University, Kingston; as chairman. Dr. Deutsch was recently appointed High School French ~ | Courses Boost Urged | that want them for s i in post-secondary and adult ucation. - existing provincial instituties of technology. 3, Better distribution of the highest-quatified teachers 4. Resistence to movements that, would introduce junior cel- leges that would give university: Jevel-work, : 5, Make the learning. provess more .attractice to lessen the number of drop-outs. , 6. Provide help for. university chairman of the new Economic Council of 'Canada. It also made the following that might hera'd a "'new chap! Prevention o° the spread ofjprocess' of disarmament was Rusk met for more than threc|but the plane apparently disap-|ted for it or not." Instead, peta enema ver |ter of co-operation between tiejnuclear weapons; stationisg ob-|completed seemed to remove an hours in their second session in}peared into the darkness without/should be opportunities for ad- : _* jSoviet Union and the West." 'servers on both sides of the Iron'earlier Western objection, jthree days Monday night. ibeing hit. sa hm se eee 1, That a new fype of college Is & ARF IRAP IES I et en rg expamsion,~ b. -& "qugstion of greater ust of \Freneh in high schoo! was » essary "if it is desired to yi {duce truly bilingual citizens," vanced training that would suitibe established in communities| the yeport said, a seryeeettoen tessa ig Ni ea 2."Expansion of curriculums in" =

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