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Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Oct 1963, p. 1

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ee ommunity Hea THOUGHT FOR TODAY A magistrate suggests that too many parents now think kids should be seen and not hurt. SEE reel a ate etl oa aad ee vee cal an net "an fate a ace cae a be Oshawa Cine er a ty ee NE rt Beats In The Community Chest « A s im 3 ? Mainly cloudy with occasional rain. Not much change in tem- VOL. 92 -- NO. 255 Strike On At Trenton Hospital OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1963 REPORT UNTRU Rowntree's promise that he ™ would introduce leg's!ation for|' arbitration of the dispute. F Mr. Rowntree said during the} ' TRENTON, Ont. (CP)--Picket lines formed outside the Tren-| ton Memorial Hospital today,) but hospital officials said oper-| ations were continuing smoothly |legislature session Tuesfay that! with extra staff replacing strik-|the government intends to ap-| |point a committee to report on); About 75 employees, members|the desirability of compulsory)' ers. of local 183, Building Services Employees International Union (CLC) were to strike at 6 a.m. Hospital officials said they had) jarbitration in labor . manage- ment disputes affecting public | hospitals. He appealed to the Trenton no immediate estimate of the|hospital. employees to stay on| number of employees who went _on strike. "We've still got a full staff) working--and some of them are) a_ hospital! union members," spokesman said. "We were prepared for the strike. We've been training new the job while the inquiry is pro- |ceeding. staff for quite some time. This Follow Federal is not going to affect the pital's operations." The spokesman said the hos- pital received a telegram from A. G. Hearn, union interna- tional vice-president, at 1 a.m. today advising of the strike deadline. ag, has warned that the strike--over the hospital's refusal to agree on terms for the union's first contract--may last six months, Union mem- bers voted 21 to 9 for strike. ac- tion Wednesday after two pre- b agg strikes had been called Mr. Hearn said in a telegram to the minister reliance on, his word has placed the union lead- ers in an untrusted position in relation to union members SAYS PROMISE MADE | He said the earlier strike deadline was lifted on Mr. DuPont-ICWU Reach Deadlock jauto. Pension Raise TORONTO (CP) -- Most old. age pensioners living in provin- cially-supported homes for the aged in Ontario will keep about $1.50 of their $10 federal old-age pension increase, it was learned Wednesday night. Deputy Welfare Minister James Band said the province expects public homes it supports through municipalities, or pri- vate homes it supports thcough | Rent Hikes May John Daniel, 9, and brother Brian, 8, claim they are not frightened of ghosts. But a candid shot of them when startled b a misty apparition shows that all tricks are not played by children on Hallow- e'en. The brothers are the US. Will Expel 13 Red UN Envoys WHO'S S-S-S-SCARED? sons of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Paniel, 500 Eulalie. avenue, Oshawa. --Oshawa Times Photo grants, to allow residents wto cannot pay the full cost of their room and board to retain 15 per cent of their pensions. He said that as far as he! |knew this would apply to the $10 pension increase and that| pensioners thus would retain| only $1.50 of it. Rents $2 higher are in store for many pensioners living in housing projects for senior citi- zens in Toronto, The increase is to be-applied iy despite hints from BROCKVILLE coh -- con. the f gove nationai Chemical. W ork ¢¢ s|Doost Union (CLC) broke down today and the issue is exnected to go to a conciliation board. Officers of Local 536 and com- pany officials both declined to ' give details of the: dispute be- cause of the likely c.ming dis- the @ral government that ers William C. Dies, chairman of the Toronto Housing Authority, said that in the city's senior citizens' projects the pensioners basically are charged 20 per cent of their income for rent, Castro May Execute Two Canadian Pilots HAVANA (AP)--Prime Minis- said Wednes- his ent 'has cee iaieiiansnss U.S. , nite gence Ai ey including two Canadian , who were sent into Cuba on sabotage missions after Hur- ricane Flora. He indicated they may face death sentences. He said several prisoners from a CIA ship called the Rex would appear on television to plus a service charge varying cussion on the issue before a , board to be set up by the On-| tario conviliation service, a pto- vincial government agency. between $12 and $16 a month. also will apply to the $10 in- crease. Vatican Approves Modern Art Use VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The Vatican ecumenical council voted today to encourage the use of modern art forms in Ro- man Catholic Church construc- tion and decoration. But the document approved by the council warned against "some abstractions (in painting and sculpture) that are extern- ally incomprehensible to Chris- tian people and alien to their religious feeling." The document, final chapter in the council's schema on pub- lic worship, also cautioned against excessive costliness in church construction and exces- sive decoration with statues and images The counci} voted 1,8°° to 9 to approve the chapter, which deals with sacred art and fur- HELP The Chest CLIMB 261,800 __250,000__| 225,000 200,000 175,000 150,000 125,000 100,000 75,000 __ 50,000 25,000 Start . jnishings. Another 94 fathers ap- proved, but with reservations. Following an admonishment |by Julius Cardinal Doepfner of /Munich, who was presiding to- day, the council fathers agreed |to vote on the entire art chapter without first taking separate votes on six amendments. By voting approval of the entire |chapter, they automatically ap- proved the amendments. Among the amendments were! changes to stress that: 1, Beauty, rather than costli- jness, should be the first con- |ideration in church art. 2. Sta- itues and images, paintings, mosaics, glass windows and should: be stained tapestriesc, train artists and artisans. On of the amendments also opens the way for new arrange- allowing the congregation. to gather on all sides. tell their stories, He did not say when they would appear or give He said the 20-per-cent rental) details of their capture but said the Rex was a 150-foot diesel leraft flyingthe Nicaraguan flag jand based in West Palm Beach, |Fla. In West Palm Beach, port hurricane," he opportunity. after rites justifies 's rejections the U.S, ar of aid." The assistance was offered by the American Red Cross after Flora killed more than 1,000 Cubans and caused disastrous crop and property damage in eastern Cuba. In Washington, the CIA de- charges. Castro said the two Canadians --identified as Ronald Patrick Lee and William David--were arrested in Havana Oct. 24 as they tried to smuggle in 18 cans of explosives concealed inside foam rubber. manager Joel Wilcox said the Rex was tied up in the port of Palm Beach. vision speech, Castro accused the CIA of murdering workers, landing weapons and infilttators in Cuba, hiring saboteurs and using postal packages to send dynamite and other explosives into Cuba. "This was the kind of aid the United States sent to Cuba after Canada To Seek ' Talk With Pilots OTTAWA (CP)--George Kidd |Canadian ambassador to Cuba jtoday is checking into the ar- jrest of two Canadian pilots in Cuba Wednesday, including) An eternal affairs spokesman) said that the ambassador prob- ably would seek interviews with larrest and the charges against \them. |Canadian citizens, |man said. In his three-hour radio-tele-| SON ope st Ss, Cacau' camer it comme: Zanity ater ihe hnesanespis ita clined to comment on Castro's! reial vana on several occasions. He said their last trip aroused the suspicion of author- ities. when was discovered they were mail from the. United States. The prime minister showed his television audience incen- diary grenades which he said were part of the Canadians' cargo. | "Canadian authorities have no responsibility in these acts," he declared. '"'They are. Canadian citizens, recruite dby the CIA." Castro accused the CIA of systematically raiding Cuba and linked the Oct. 21 strafing of the American freighter J. Louis near Cuban waters with a CIA foray he said was taking place at the same time. U.K. Suspends Further Aid To Indonesia KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya (Reuters) -- Britain has sus- |pended further aid to Indonesia junder the Colombo Plan until |relations with the new Malaysia \federation improve, a Malaysia |government statement said to- | \day. | The Malaysia statement quoted Robert Carr, the Br' ish government's secretary for tech- >inical co-operation, as saying he) jhoped the current Colombo Plan conference in Bangkok "would follow the previous pat- tern of not getting mixed up in polities," "However, Britain has sus- moderate in number Ronald Patrick Lee and William pendeq further aid - . " under ¢ and doctrinally sound. 3. Sacred|David Mean and ascertain the vp to Indone Aon art centres should be created to|circumstances surrounding their! with the republic have im- |proved." Carr will lead the British dele-| H I The ambassador would see|gation to the ministerial meet-|below the surface in a pocket) ment of altars in churches,|that the rn received the pro-|ing 0' the Colombo Plan for thejof air compressed by waters) |such as centrally located altars,|tection they were entitled to as|economic development of South-frém a broken dam which! the spokes-/east Asia in Bangkok next,claimed the lives of 40 other; month. Castro said the Cuban fight- ers strafed the J. Louis because it was thought the freighter was a mother ship from which coas- tal raiders.in small boats were being launched. This conformed to an earlier announcement by the Cuban armed forces minis- try that the air force that night} had repelled a landing by two launches and had attacked the mother ship. | Drills Bite Near |3 Trapped Miners BROISTEDT, West Germany \(AP)--The week-old operation to rescue three 'miners trapped jin a flooded iron ore mine near |here moved into its precarious |homestretch today. Drills were biting their way jthrough the Jast 62 feet of earth | fi ] sia until relations;\down to the dead-end gallery! Sabotage Tria where the men have been en- tombed since last Thursday They were trapped 259 feet miners in the pit. FAIL TO AGREE ON AGREEMENT cease-fire in the Algerian-Mo- roccan desert war doesn't take effect until midnight Friday ana neighbors disagree about what they've agreed to. agreement Wednesday night with Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia and President Modibo Keita of Mali. called for: 1, A ceas-fire all along the Moroccan » Algerian border at already the two north African] Algerian President Ah- med Ben Bella and King Has- in san II of Morocco signed the} °° 1-2. | 2. Withdrawal of Moroccan forces from territory claimed by Algeria. 3. Demilitarization of all eva-| jcuated territory which officers of Ethiopia and Mali supervis- 4 Border Truce Teeters BAMAKO, Mali (AP) -- The|midnight on the night of Nov.|country's campaign of abuse|included and their forces would against the other's leaders and political system. 6. Morocco and Algeria to solve all future disputes by ne- | gotiation. | Hassan and Ben Bella left for their capital, Haile Selassie flew to Switzerland. Then the argu- 4, A commission to be set up|ments resumed. 'by the foreign ministers of the) The zone to be evacuated. by [Organization of African unity to the Moroccans . was determine the responsibility fo not pre- T) cisely defined in the agreement. Based on a compromise for-jthe recent fighting in the Sa-/Aigerian officials said: it in- mula drawn up by Selassie, it|hara, examine Morocco's terri-\ciuded Hassi Beida and Tind- '|/U.S. government demanded | UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- The United States is expel'ing three members of the Soviet UN delegation after accusing them of a spy plot with another Rus- sian and an American electron- ics engineer, Diplomatic immunity pr vented prosecution of the three delegation members, but the their immediate departure from the country. They were ex- pected to leave today or Friday. The Russian government was expected to protest the expul- sion order and reject the espi- onage charge. A member of the Soviet UN delegation claimed the case was a provocation to: prevent further improvement of U.S.-Soviet relations. The three ordered expelled are Gleb A. Pavlov, 39, an at- tache; Yuri A. Romashin, 48, third secretary, and Viadimir I. Olenev, 37, identified only as a member of the Soviet delega- tion. gation linked the three with two. persons arrested on spy charges in a railway station parking lot in Englewood, N.J., Tuesday night--Igor A, Ivanov, 33, of New York City, Russian chauf- feur for Amtorg, the Soviet gov- ernment trade agency, and John William Butenko, 38, Orange, N.J., control adminis- The federal bureau of investi-| trator for the International Elec- tric Corporation. of Paramus, NJ. 2 The FBI said Butenko met Ivanov, Pavlov and Romashin in the Erie-Lackawanna's old stone parking lot and handed them a briefcase contain- ing data on "'a highly sensitive air force contract" being han- died by International Electric Corporation. Peterborough Man Dies In Crash PETERBOROUGH (CP) Douglas P. McGrath, 25, of Pe- terborough was killed and two others injured when their car rolied over several times on Highway 7 east of here Wednes- day. Pauline Stewart, 18, suffered two broken arms and a broken leg. Ray Petherick, 24, suffered a broken arm and punctured lung. Both are from nearby Camp- DETROIT (CP)--Crew mem- bers belonging to the Seafarers' International Union remained aboard their ships today as re- ports of a walkout in protest against the Canadian govern- ment's union trusteeship proved to be untrue. But an umeasy peace sur- rounded the Great Lakes labor war and a shipping official warned that union activity against Canadian ships in Amer- ican lake ports is resulting in the vessels being detoured to Canadian ports. The report of the SIU walk- out appeared in a Detroit Free Press story saying that hun- dreds of members of the SIU walked off Canadian freighters in Detroit and throughout the Great Lakes Wednesday night. The Free Press withdrew the story from later editions. showed that there' were no walkouts in major U.S. Great Lakes ports. Another survey showed that St, Lawrence River and Cana- dian Great Lakes ports were quiet. bellford. Hal C. Banks, president of the | Police Search Whitby Marsh For 3 Men WHITBY (Staff) Town police, aided by Whitby OPP's, the Oshawa Police Department and two planes, are searching a marshy area south of Highway 401 today for three men. The men abandoned a car loaded with cartons of cigarettes shortly after 9 this morning and fled southward. It is believed the cigarettes were stolen Wednesday night from an Ajax store. OPP Const. Norman Wasylyk spotted the men loading a car with boxes onthe south service road near the. Sklar furniture plant. He was eastbound on 401 and had to go to Thickson's road to enter the service road. When he caught sight of them again, their car was westbound. When the men spotted him, they stopped their car and ran south into a field near Me Shorgas plant. The Ajax store, at Baseline jroad and Harwood avenue, was broken into sometime early this morning, About $500 worth of cigarettes and cigars were tak- en. | May Resume In South Africa PRETORIA (Reuters) -- South Africa is likely to resume within three weeks the trial of 10 men accused of sabotage and pilotting the violent over- throw of the government, legal sources said today. The indictments of the 10 men --six Africans, three whites and one Indian--were quashed by a Supreme Court judge here Wed- continue to occupy them, A commission of Moroccan,, {Algerian, Ethiopian and Malian lofficers is to determine the lim- its of the demilitarized zone. | The Algerians said they had the right to administer the de- militarized zone. The. Moroc- cans Said they did not. King Hassan wants to organ- lize a plebiscite among the no- |mad inhabitants of the disputed area to determine their views on which country they wish to |belong, To Algerian delegation! forial claim and make recom-|joub, the focal points of the re-jofficials said there was nothing mendations. 5. An imuteitiate ent 4e-reuck| cent fighting. The Moroccans} said the two outposts were not'such @ plebiscite. in the agreement. to .authorize nesday. But Nelson Mandela, alleged underground leader of the banned African National Con- gress; Walter Sisulu, former secretary of the ANC, and the eight others were immediately arrested again under South: Af- rica's 90-day detention law. The judge ruled that the state had failed to tell the defendants sufficient. details of the charges OTTAWA (CP) -- The Trust on the grounds that death itself causes enough hardship without adding the burden of taxation. The association, representing 32 member companies, said in a brief to the Royal Commission on taxation that revenue-raising has not been the historical pur- pose behind the tax, and the so- cial objective -- limiting the ac- cumulation of wealth--should be! reviewed in the light of today's society. Estate taxes last year ac- counted for only 1.7 per cent of total federal revenue, and the association said that if this were raised to provide a significant source of revenue it would mean the tax's social objective would be changed to a confiscation of, wealth. "Such an objective would be- long within a different political philosophy than the one which Graft' Trial Jury Unable To Reach Decision HAILEYBURY, Ont. (CP)--A jury deliberated for seven hours Wednesday night without reach- ing a verdict in the trial of Tracy C.. Swartman, 60, and Mrs, Bridgit Martha O'Hare, 58, on charges of conspiracy to de- fraud the Ontario government. The all-male jury will -con- tinue its delibérations today on the four charges against the suspended municipal engineer for the Ontario highways depart- jment at New Liskeard and the widowed owner of O'Hare Con. 2 age Company of Kirkland Lake, ter the 14th day. The jury re- turned once during the evening to ask about statements made by Alfred Harris, 69, former bookkeeper of the construction company in his cross examina- tion Oct, 22 by defence lawyer G. Arthur Martin of Toronto. In his address to the jury, Mr. 'Martin said Harris was an ac- complice and warned of the danger of taking his word with- out corroboration. Harris was of a 12-month sentence for de- frauding the department and is against them. Later the attorney - general directed that the defendants be |charged with sabotage. It was expected that on Nov. 12 the defendants will face a| hearing and that their trial will Nov, 18, still on parole. Charles Dubin, special Crown. prosecutor, said the jury could assume there had been a fraud and that Harris was. not the only| one to bene'it by overbilling to Trust Firms Urge " Estate Tax Cut the majority of Canadians now creased to $100,000 from $60,000) with The trial went to the jury af-| | released after serving 10 months) § Ships Being Detoured U.S. Official Claims SIU of Canada would. not com ment on the situation. "I just have no comment make," Banks said when reached at his home in the Montreal suburb of. Pointe Claire Wednesday night. In Detroit, Captain James Patterson of the freighter Bay- goerge, operated by the Bavs- water Shipping Company. Lim- ited of Brockville, Ont., sad there was no walkout by the SIU on his ship. f He made the comment in e@ marine telephone conversation with The Associated Press De- troit bureau. 'T haven't heard of any walk- outs of any of the Canadian An Associated Press check put into MAY LOSE BUSINESS In Toledo, Ohio, embrace." exemptions -- they would rise above the $100,000 minimum additional dependents--the association estimated that three- fifths of today's eligible estate taxpayers would be exempt, along with about 26 per cent of existing revenue. To streamline administration, the association recommended' that the provinces suspend their estate tax acts--Ontario, Que- bec and British Columbia now levy their own--and have one federal. - administered tax. The federal government would retain the revenue from prop- erty held by persons living out- side Canada, and taxes from persons living in any province: -- be refunded to that. prov- ince, The brief said this system would reach the "desirable ob- jective" of reserving the estate tax: field for the provinces, but without creating new adminis-| trative difficulties for each prov- ince, It would also result in one the proposed increased) Near-Blizzard Sweeps Maine MILLINOCKET, Me. (AP) -- Relays of rescue teams, hin- dered by deep snow and severe winter-like conditions, pressed their search today with dimin- ishing hopes for six persons lost in Maine's northern wilderness, The missing, including four 'hunters, were caught by a dou- ble blast from near-blizzard storms that battered the state on two successive days with up to 1% feet of snow and gale- uniform tax across the country. force winds. , Jane Kmita, 19, "Miss Can- ada" in the "'Miss World" contest, poses taking temper- ature of 'Miss Malaysia," Catherine Loh, 19, in their London hotel today. Cathe- the department of highways by the O'Hare firm, tine, who arrived yesterday, © * finds October in London two cold so she stays in her hotel room while other contestants go sightseeing in the British capital. That's a hot water bottle at right. (AP Wirephoto)

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