Your Community Chest -- Investment In THOUGHT FOR TODAY With automation, work isn't as hard as it used to be but it's sure more taxing. Oshawa Cimes WEATHER 15 to 25. REPORT Sunny and very warm today and Thursday. Winds southeast VOL. 92 -- NO. 248 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1963 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa ond for poyment of Postage in Cash. TWENTY-SIX PAGES UK. Feu Builds Up Over Date LONDON (CP)--The Ear! ofjas "verging on the unconstitu- Home today relinquished his | tional." peerage as a preliminary to en-| wilson said Parliament owéd tering the House of Commons, quty to the nation to discuss! as Britain's 43rd prime minis-| vita) questions "regardless of ter. the convenience of an_ indi- He signed an "instrument of vidual, even though he be prime disclaimer" giving up his anci-| minister." 5 sae GOVERNMENT TO OKAY TAKEO May Prosecute 1 | | | ent Scottish titles and seat in the House of Lords. The dis- claimer was delivered by mes- senger to the Lords where it was received by Sir George Coldstream, clerk of the Crown. The process of shedding: the peerage customarily takes about two weeks. Home will then be known as Sir Alec Frederick Douglas Home. He is a Knight of the Thistle Home, 14th earl of the Scot- tish family line, gave up four titles. These were the Ear! of Home, and Baron Dunglass both dat- ing from 1604 and Baron Home dating from 1473, all Scottish/to settle down before facing (CP)-- titles, and Baron Douglas of the United Kingdom, bestowed in 1875. As Home set in motion the processes that would strip him of his Scots earldom, Conserva- tives and Labor alike girded for a wordy war over Home's pro- posal to defer the opening of 'the new parliamentary session to Nov, 12. This is two weeks later than originally scheduled and will mean the loss of 10 sit- "should not "It is not the fault of Parlia- ment, certainly not of our side nor of a lot of Conservatives that they had to. go to the House of Lords for a prime minister 'Therfore, I would have thought the convenience of the House of Commons and the duty of the House of Commons be set aside." The Conservative answer is that to start a new session with a prime minister. unable to speak in the Commons would be ridiculous, and that the recon- structed government needs time Commons questioners Normally Thursday's proroga- tion would be a mere formality. A parliamentary official called Black Rod walks into the Commons to summon its mem- bers to the House of Lords. |There they hear a message from the monarch ending one jsession and setting the date for new, the SIU MEMBER: 'Hyannis Spirit S TAKE VOTE HALIFAX (CP)--Prime Min-|will exemplified in that kind. of Insurance Sought =.04.60 27 For Mentally [ll MARIE, of the men- SAULT STE Treatment tally ill has a long way to gojclude a } to catch up to that given per- more psychologists and several a'well-trained social workers. sons with physical ailments, community services conference was told here Tuesday. Ont. health clinics to serve schools. school Donald - Sinclair of Toronto,|brought to the attention of the executive director of the Onta-| psychiatrist eacl : rio division of the Canadian|ment could only be justified one|country about the other didn't} The meeting neither created! Mental Health Association, said|day a month. in 1959 daily care for the men-|He advised lister Pearson said Tuesday! meeting." |night Canada and the United} aan incly LONG TIME AGO | States must find "increasingly At che paint he enarted iho gether his prepared speech to say that) But he warned this will be a renee Fee wor quite a) ficult to achieve--not because of 078 8 ; F ; ' | In an obvious reference to any deliberate design on either) 4 / \side to create trouble, but be-|C@mada - U.S, differences over cause "carelessness, accident orl ee gee = SS relations, Pearson said "'the events of re- Referring to his meeting atjcent days have inspired some Hyannis Port last May withliess than enthusiastic references President Kennedy, Mr. Peat-ito the 'spirit of Hyannis Port.' | No more than 10 per cent of S°n told the annual meeting of! Such an attitude. reflects a pupils would ever bejthe Atlantic Provinces Eco-\") asic misunderstanding of nomic Council: jwhat the meeting was all "The misinformation of each|about," he said. | He said such clinics would in- psychiatrist, one or and his employ-| jend lasi- May. The techniques of/nor solved any problems. It) against tal patient cost $5.31 compared/ment of a psychologist by the|become full and instantaneous|recent difficulties were on the to $26.41 paid for care of the!school, greater physically ill. since he might havejand effective. list for discussion at Hyannis difficulty establishing) 'But while things have not be-| Port. employ-jconsultation did not suddenly|identified problems. Most of the|-- 49 Drown When Pearson Irked By [ ALLAN MacEACHEN SE E SIU Executive OTTAWA (CP)--The federal government likely will invoke its trusteeship measure today and take over the rebellious Seafarers' International Union of Canada in an all-out offensive to end a threatening shipping emergency. The cabinet is expected to make the move in the face of the SIU's continuing defiance of federal law--an overwhelming vote Tuesday night by striking sailors in Montreal to stay off their ships despite a govern- ment back-to-work order. At the same time, government lawyers may press legal action » against the top brass of the SIU, including the Seafarers' burly chieftain, Hal Chamber- jain Banks. "The law of Canada continues to be disobeyed," said Labor |Minister MacEachen after jlearning that members of the SIU voted in Montreal by a show of hands not to return to work "'until we get civil jus- tion to maintain a "dictatorship over the waterfront. | Under the federal trusteeship jact, the trustees have the power to take over control of the five unions, dismiss officers and run the organizations for three jyears, or until they can be turned back to their members ja clean, democratic union. | The trustees also would man- age the Canadian Maritime Un- ion, the Canadian Merchant Ser- vice Guild, the National Associa- tion of Marine Engineers and 13 marine locals of the Canadian |Brotherhood of Railway, trans« port and General Workers--all of which have agreed to the trusteeship, There were indications that one of the first actions of the trustees would be to depose Mr, Banks and order a secret bal- lot of the striking sailors on re- turning immediately to work, This could be remedied only rapport with a student whojcome perfect, things would be| "What some hack called the . A : Eee ' rice." if medical insurance plans were| would recognize him as part of/far more imperfect if w didn't)'spirit of Hyannis Port' was not '91 Ships Idle pe doa the postpone- Tito Mission Home wants a ment so that he will have time to include mental |have the kind of spirit and good|a honeymoon condition of sweet-| to be elected a member of the Commons in a byelection a gl gg Pert, on the! F euds With '»xm,4-Y- Police safe seat. jrio hospital system should be illness, he| school authority. | { added. He said that "almost unman- agable-sized units" in the Onta- 'Expansion Urged jness and light, in which it was} SEOUL (AP)--A river terr i ed that all isti b- eu vi erry ee Poke seaehea eae carrying school children home from a picnic capsized near Seoul today. Police said 37 chil- dren and 12 adults lems had been washed away. "It. was rather a determina- tion to deal seriously with ser- Ferry Capsizes |MOVE TODAY would "likely" legal front sometime today. Proclamation ment's trusteeship act-already ed./approyed by Parliament He said that the government move on the Across Canada| From Walkout | of the govern- ious lems between our two bandh jx and not to dodge any| Rescuers plucked 88 others from problems would disappear .over-|the water. ' cult." | The wooden Ferry was carry- The Hyannis Port meeting/ing 137 passengers, mostly fifth recognized that none of theland Grade 6 students from | Anyang, 15 miles south of Seoul. and) given royal assent--would emi-| BY THE CANADIAN PRESS |power three trustees to take}, At l6ust.91 ships were idle in over the SIU and four other ma-|C@nadian ports today foll rine unions representing some|@!koffs by Seafarers' Interna- 22,000 Canadian sailors, engi-|tional Union (Ind.) crews pro- neers and deck officers. testing government. trusteeship of five maritime unions, 'NEW. YORK. (AP)--' av mission tt" and sioner Michael J. M 1 . : se ass PeMatiue on aug ome in U.K. Education urphy haye|nity Council and Welfare Fed-| statements /eration. |NAMES CAUSES Te to y or Fri ay and adoption meeting is fixed fori; Saturday. Voting is Nov. 12: Meanwhile, Parliament reas-; sembles briefly Thursday for|exchanged heated the prorogation of the old ses-jafter the mission cancelled a LONDON (Reuters)--A gov- of its kind to cover such a wide) ernment report today recom-|field, will go before Parliament! mended a massive expansion of|for debate. Probims would disappear over-| sion. A h by the Queen|public reception in honor of} will be read on her behalf at a|President Tito and his wife. | joint meeting of Lords and Com-| 4 notice from the mission to moners, and Parliament will|the invited guests said the rea- elose until Nov. 12. json for the cancellation "is the| The Labor party sent out or-|failure of the competent author-| ders for all its 250-odd members|ities of the city of New York to of the Commons to gather in|undertake adequate secur- London to try to stop Home's|ity measures in connection with delaying tactics. Part of Labor's|the celebration." The reception plan would be an attempted fili--had been scheduled for Thurs- buster in the Lords. |day night, Labor Leader Harold Wilson, 'This is sheer, unadulteraied Speaking on the television, de-|nonsense," snapped Murphy nounced 'Home's postponement| Tuesday night. | Big 3 Urged To Ban ' Underground A-Tests UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- The Big Three powers were un- der mounting UN pressure to- day to ban underground nuclear tests, but the Soviet Union and the United States remained deadlocked on the inspection is- sue. Eight non - aligned . nations framed a resolujion Tuesday night calling foy' the ban, but sponsors feay-any mention of in- spection wil kil its chances of passage in the General Assem- bly's main political. committee = Since the diarmament debate test-pan question to the 18-na- opened in the Lll-nation com-'tion disarmamnt committee in mittee last week, delegate after Geneva with a recommendation delegate has called on the for priority treatment United States, Britain and the -- - 3 . US. Army To HELP | Remain In The Chest | Germany-Rusk CLIMB WASHINGTON (AP) -- State 261,800 Secretary Dean Rusk will pub- licly announce in West Ger- many later this week that the! |United States has no intention jof withdrawing any of its 250,- 250,000 |000 troops in Europe. | The imminent Rusk' state- 225,000 200,000 175,000 foreshadows some future troop withdrawal 150,000 A | German suspicions were jaroused by a speech Deputy! 125,000 iL! 100,000 shifts in the form of our mil- pre As a Gilpatric said, the United States "should be able to make useful reductions in its ment, disclosed Tuesday by a Secretary of Defence Roswell L.| 75,000 _ heavy overseas Soviet Union to extend the lim- ited test-ban agreement to un- derground blasts. France, the world's fourth nuclear power, has refused to sign the agree- ment. The Russians claim onsité ,in- spections would aid, Western spy efforts. They. contend that such checks are not necessary| to verify underground expl sions TO GENEVA Some delegates believe the est that can be expected is an high-ranking U.S. official, is de: signed -to dispe] German con- cern that the current airlift of 14.500 Americans from Texas Gilpatric made last Saturday in |Chicago. The "big lift' ex- ercise, he said, may enable the United States "to make some 50,000 itary 25,000 Start nana conaindesnt tems h . ence' overseas result, | He said unemployment, finan- cial worries, anxiety and poor housing were factors in causing mental health. Mr. Sinclair said more than 75,000 mental patients night -- that "some of them/It capsized near Hoju, 35 miles The government is reported to Britain's higher education sys- tem to avert a possible '"'seri- ous decline' in the country's world standing. in the!raised to a scale comparable to| within 10 years and to 560,000 The report recommended: Lhe nan ate tet time| WOuld last indefinitely." 2 8 outhwest of here. have three trustees ready for jstudents taking higher educa- |tion courses should be boosted It suggested the system be/from 216,000 now to 390,000 Nassar Warns appointment by order in- council when the trusteeship act is implemented. Shipping sources say that by ithe fundamental political ques- £4 'ers were overcome by smoke. country occupy more than half;that in the United States and the hospital beds in Canada.' Russia. The estimated loss to society as! The six-volume report issued the result of mental illness is after three years of study by $600,000,000 annually. a special committee estimated Ralph S. Derby, Sault Ste.jthe cost of the recommended Marie director of education,/expansion at £1,400,000,000 ($4,- said local mental health associ-| 200,000,000) during a 17 - year ations should -establish mental period. The committee, which visited |the U.S, and Russia to study their higher education systems, jalso examined the education jplans of France, West Ger- many, The Netherlands, Swee and Switzerland. The report said the American jand Russian systems greatly exceeded the present British |program in scope. A dramatic upgrading of igher education here was nec- essary as "'a probable condition for the maintenance of our ma- President Josip Tito of Yugos- lavia urged the United Nations|h Tuesday to give high-level con- sideration to establishment of a code for the peaceful coexist-|terial position in the world--an ence of the world's nations. | essential condition for the reali- Speaking in forceful tones in|zation in the modem age of the his native Serbo-Croat, the vis-|ideals of a free and democratic iting Yugoslav leader told ajsociety," it said crowded General Assembly that| the committee, under the tion facing mankind is cong mermsnnatin Mi ined Gebeans, ence among states with differ-|"¢ ent social, economic and polit-|o¢ its "brains." ical systems, | : 3 | With its relative lack of na- He urged the UN to take the|tyrai resources "it would be a lead in translating the princi-|prave risk to aim any lower ples of peaceful coexistence into|/than we recommend," the re- reality and said that one of the| port said. ky steps in achieving this 1s! The committee's survey, first the establishment of bold new! trails in international economic| relations. | b | Tito declared that war had| US. Pro es become an absurdity which} > should be banished from inter-| = tin national relations; that the cold 1p tra g war should be ended; and that} the UN should seek an agree-| d ment of all states against in-} Off Cuba terference. with or intervention in domestic affairs of any state. ~ | an investigation of the strafing "We of $ Million Damage ie coast of Cuba early Tues- | day. There is no doubt the straf- In Metro Blaze 'ing was carried out by Cuban oo ' : planes. Although it did not iden- TORONTO (CP) -- A: three- alarm fire destroyed the Cana-/its air force attacked a vessel dian Electric Box and Stamp- in the area. ° ing Ltd. factory in suburban| Havana claimed the ship was| Scarborough today, causing anjcarrying saboteurs and arms. estimated $1,000,000 damage, aover, it was learned else- Strong winds fanned the blaze| where that the vessel, the -bulk which swept through the build-|carrier J. Louis, was steaming ing within 20 minutes of its dis-|from Ocho Rios, Jamaica, to covery by a passing pedestrian.|Corpus Christi, Tex., with 31,500 The flames threatened a nearby tons of bauxite ore, the raw ma- service station terial for alumium A series Of small explosions The answer may be in an ac and flames that soared hun- count given the Néw York dreds of feet in the air hamp | Times by what the paper re- ered firemen, Several firefight-|ferred to as highly placed in- formants. K most countries had to make use} & WASHINGTON (AP) -- The; U.S. government has launched) » an American-owned ship off} | tify the ship, Havana radio said) § Thursday the SIU's work stop- page will begin to throttle wheat shipments overseas, Informants said that in addi- tion to the trusteeship action, the government also has the Moroccan King {should be 69 by 1970 compared ALGIERS (AP) Africanit : rr ; , ERS (/ -- jtor Tuesday and are "'intensify- : jwith 32 now. leaders kept up efforts today to|ing their pressure against the sees SIU leaders under the The report recommended that/pring Algerian President Ab-|aggressor." Psa labor law, the Canada Britain's annual spending om/| meq | The Moroccans have had con-|¢ * Ae Act and the Criminal , u , Ben Bella and _Moroccan| ipigter education be increased/King Hassan IL to the confer-|trol of Hassi Beida for a week,| rom by 1980. 2. A minister of arts and sci- ence should be established| jimmediateiy, and the number of} linstitutions of university status! lerag Caan year lence table, but the warring|but the Algerians have never of-|ACT ON REPORT | 000, y . |North African neighbors re-|ficially admitted its loss. | The government also could pA RT Te ae ~~ -fused be prodded. | j 'Cl k Killed At Bot akase yee rena sending | SELASSIE MEDIATES ' two lmepeea onic oun | Uler, 1 reinforcements into the disputed| Emperor Haile Selassie of|ina) action against Mr. Banks B Ri d B k oa Desert or, as new iat the pivot ye He me | and his chief lieutenants in con- | ti s t in the} , 3 i i i ay 1 ges an liken Glee ae wae |sia to confer with President Ha- epntnae 8 Ms vanes bag on BAY RIDGES (Staff) --.A 22-| he -- Moroccans said their a ge) pet cD end 'than three years--as 'recom- o* oe Canadian imperial torces fought off attacks by| over a mineral-rich ack. Se.|mended by Mr. Justice T. G. Ban of ommerce cler Wa | about 350 Algerians on the out-|assie visted Morocco betore Norris after his searching in- accidentally killed here this|posts of Hassi. Taghout south of | coming here' Tuesdil vestigation of Great Lakes la- See eae the on eats Fever |the oasis of Erfoud, and Ous-!""aigerian Foreign Minister Ab.|DO" Strife and shipping disrup- ver out of the bank safe. Duvid|sada, near Zegdou. Rar < i _| tions. Fallowfield, formerly of Wood-| The 'Algerian state radio said Coorectiice "vamiiny tes Ferner | It was Mr, Justice Norriw stock was dead upon arrival at/Algerian forces counter - at-| (14 enter talid da his set vie propped. the trusteeship to the Oshawa General Hospital. tacked in the Hassi Beida sec- ation efforts. He got both Ben ot Trees nae ane industry. He blamed Banks for using fear, terror and intimida- Bella and Hassan to agree to meet, but they stalled over a site. President Nasser of the United Arab Republic took up a suggestion by Bourguiba for a Ls meeting of North African chiefs | i : of state--Ben Bella, Hassan, | | |himself, Bourguiba and King | é » \Idriss of Libya. . ' | Nasser warned Hassan, how-| ever, that any attack on the) "Algerian revolution" would be} regarded as an attack on the U.A.R. '| Bouteflika also rejected the Nasser-Bourguiba proposal and repeated a demand that the matter be brought before an emergency session of the Or- ganization of African Unity in| Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Japan PM Sets | Nov. 21 Vote ' TOKYO (Reuters) -- Prime) f |Minister Hayato Ikeda today| , \dissolved the House of Repre-| |sentatives and ordered a gen- jeral election for Nov. 21 | The election will mainly test voters' opinions of government economic policies. | "civil justice." Under the Ikeda's '"'income| The vote by hand was, taken doubling program' Japan hasjin front of reporters 'who had "\had an unprecedented econogic| previously been kept out of the |growth. The opposition Socialist|two-hour meeting. Union mem- party claims the government's! bers told reporters that speaker economic policy has failed in after speaker got up to condemn view of a current sharp rise in|the trusteeship legislation and consumer prices. 'that Mr. Banks spoke for about The four-year term of office|an hour. jof the lower house members \ as due to end next: fall: « ome |Z MONTREAL (CP) -- More than 2,000 members of the Sea- farers' International Union (Ind.), led by president Hal C. Banks, have voted to continue their walkout in protest against government legislation to place maritime unions under trustee- ship. The walkout affects shipping in the Great Lakes and eastern Canada but West Coast union members remain on the job. Even before the biggest meet- ing held in Montreal Tuesday night--which was to: have given the lead to members gathered a other union halls--more than 500 members on the Great Lakes had voted overwhelmingly to Stay off their jobs. The Montreal meeting of an downtown Atwater Market |voted~ overwhelmingly to stay joff the job until they obtained VIEWS OLD BACKBONE Dr. Gordon Edmund of the Royal Ontario Museum ex- amines a vertebra of the ex- tinct mastcdon in a pond on the farm. of Harold Stayzer, Wellandport, 15 miles west of Welland, (CP Wirephoto) hy estimated 1,500 members in the) Latest reports indicated 85 of these were tied up in Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Seaway ports. Six were idle in Atlantic ports. Many other SIU-manned ves- sels were still plying the Great Lakes, the Seaway, the Welland Camal and the Atlantic, Crews were expected to leave most of them when they reached' their destinations. A Toronto Harbor Commission official estimated today that at least 95 per cent of the approx- imate 245 Canadian ships oper- ating in eastern Canadian ports are manned by SIU crews. The only other Canadian un- ion representing seamen is the Canadian Maritime Union (CLC), arch rival of the SIU, which mans 18 Upper Lakes Shipping Limited ships. The other three unions affected- by the trusteeship represent dock- workers and ships' deck and engineering officers. sen More than 2,000 SIU seamen in eastern Canadian ports have voted to continue the boycott that could eventually cfipple Canada's maritime transporta- tion. Hundreds more weré ex- pected to make the same deci- sion~at meetings today, SIU Votes To Keep Walkout es SIU's 15 years in Canada," Mr. Banks told the members in front of reporters. He said the resolution invit- ing reporter's to witness the vote was passed to show that "'the SIU is not being run by a dic- tatorship." Only about 20 sailors put up their hands in favor of return- ing to their ships. They were to put up their hands and-th number who did so decreased each time. A meeting of the 600 sailors who walked off their ships in Toronto was postponed 'until to. day just before the vote in Montreal. They had been wait- ing for instructions from Mont- jreal,. officials said. Earlier; 250 sailors from -16 ships tied up at the Lakehead voted overwhelmingly in favor of continuing their walkout: at a meeting in Fort William, say- ing the decision would stand"'no matter. what happens ;in Mont- aioe headquarters of the | Another 275 SIU members of |the Hamilton district met in Thorold, Ont. and also voted fo Stay off their ships. A spokes- man said the membership "did "This vote could quite possibly|not feel that politicians should be the most important im the be running the -- union."* ¥ ey asked a second and third tim 1