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Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Nov 1963, p. 1

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Chest Drive Entering Home Stretch ommunity The dollar never falls lower than many people will stoop to pick it up. 4 aN She Oshawa Cine tures, WEATHER REPORT ~ Cloudy Tuesday with a few showers, seasonable tempera- VOL. 92 -- NO, 258 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1963 Class Mail Post Office Authorized os payment of Postage Ottewa and ak Second for TWENTY PAGES ' Rail Union | Asks Raise: | 12 Per Cent OTTAWA (CP)--Demands for; 3. Time and one-half after a 12-per-cent wage increase for eight hours for employees in} 20.000 operating employees of western Canada on road) the CNR and CPR were re- switcher service who do not vealed today by the Brother-|now receive overtime pay. | hood of Railroad Trainmen| 4. A shift differential for yard (CLL). service employees and improve- W. P. Kelly, vice-president, ments in graduated rates for also warned in a statement that;conductors and brakemen based "the brotherhoo has no inten-|on the number of freight cars tion of accepting the delays ex-|handled. ae perienced during the last round) The union's statement said its of negotiations." last. round of negotiations lasted| The union's current contract 14 months with the CN#® and) with the two major carriets ex-|18. months with the CPR '"'due pires Dec. 31. to long drawn-out conciliation | Last Friday the CNR and board hearings held intermit- CPR received demands from ns Al on 'gap pare setter 14-union negotiating team rep-|°° is i adh Gane 8 resenting 80,000 non - operating|S'TiKe date. ee employees. These amounted to| Mr. Kelly expressed the hope between 15 and 20 cents hourly,|that, "in view of their much Still to announced are the| improved financial position, the ; railways will come to terms in contract terms being sought bY! direct negotiations." Railway Employees, another TIMES TOPS 20,000 MARK major union of non-operating employees, and other operating unions, The Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen bargains for conduct- The Oshawa Times has passed another significant milestone in its road of growth, Paid circulation of The Times now exceeds 20,- ors, brakemen, yardmen, car retarder operators and switch-) 000 daily, giving this news- paper virtual blanket cover- tenders. SEEK BENEFITS | age of the city and retail area. It has been prove' that. In addition to the 12-per-cent wage boost, the BRT seeks these fringe benefits: 1. An improved health and! welfare plan with the compan-; 0n the average, a news- ies paying the entire cost. | ptvigd has leg piehe f i ; + | and four readers for eac 2. Eight paid statutory holi copy. bought, This - means that The Oshawa Times is now read by about 80,000 people. F VOLUNTEERS BATTLE GODERICH FIRE Seafarer Documents 'Produced For Judge | eounsel for both it can be deter- Crown to surrender to the court|/mined "what is pertinent." lall items taken in RCMP raids} Jean Martineau, special fed- on Seafarers' International Un-|eral counsel appointed to inves- ion (Ind.) headquarters and tigate the possibility of criminal three private homes Friday. |proceecings against the SIU, The items, some 1,500 in all, had proposed to return imme- criminal assault in 1957. were immediately transferred|diately to the SIU all documents) ,. procedure in court dealt to the offices of the clerk of the|that the Crown considered not peace from the RCMP roomy in/pertinent. i ma the Criminal Courts Buildings.) Judge Trottier said: "I pre-| Judge Emilé Trottier said his/fer to have all seized material) order-applies equally to all/turned over, whether pertinent 4 a? copies or photoStats taken of or not. ust Ss i reat [éscerente after they were) "These items do not belong to| Meanwhile, ' oor Gis: sede alter sty 3o™ they belong i reyes respon a ini le A viously y 'pertaining' | tery--at leas ewspaper me' PARIS (Reuters) ---. NATO)Dirk Stikker warned the Unitedcounsel Joseph Nuss argued oe te cate ta grey. < who had been iver reach chiefs today warned the West States and Britain not to over-jthat all the seized material|jarrow sense." him since Justice Minister not to relax its g ard following|ride western opinion in their|should be in the custody of the ith tt aterial in court|Chevtier announced in Ottawa the nuclear test ban agreement/tension - easing "exploratory" court at the present time, ac- Wit the materia in court last Thursday that a charge had with Russia. talks with Russia and "embark) ------ : fein Sie custody, counsel for either the peen jaid against him. Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer,|on pourmes which other mem-| ti pene oo al aca Saas the Neither the RCMP nor Mr. NATO supreme Allied com-|bers of the alliance might be| Atlan c Area | s " © Martineau would disclose s Tax Incentive mander in Europe, told the| unable to support." jit. whether the burly union lead 'Program Urged Second Sabotage several small cartons and a quantity of envelopes. Mr, Martineau had said ear- lier the searches were carried out to find possible evidence of conspiracy in last month's SIU MONTREAL. (CP)--A Mont-{cessible to days of train -- operating em- ployees who do not now get hol- iday pay, and one additional paid holiday for yard service employees. Threat To NATO | anks, head of the SIU, CAN'T FIND BANKS Tough security measures were in force for the appear- ance of, the accused as police ordered about 40 colored school } J covered 1:15 Sunday by Gera Gerald Lee, 17, and his uncle, Terry Ciaus, 25. HELP The Chest CLIMB © oF __250,000__-- __225;000 200,000 __ 175,000 _ 150,900 125,000 100,000 75,000. 50,000 25,000 Start _ opening session of a five-day; 'There are positions which | | The material taken in Fri-is at his home in suburb: conference of NATO legislators:|we cannot safely yield. There} jday's seizure was contained inj|Pointe Claire. "The military threat to NATO are points beyond which we) | remains at least at the very|cannot safely go." substantial level prevailing be-| Stikker also called for closer 'fore the treaty... ." jintegration of NATO forces as NATO Secretary - Generaljthe only solution for dealing ge ch a ----'with the German situation, OTTAWA (CP) The At- 2 2 He dismissed "any idea. that/jantic Provinces Economic! : . 2nd Hamilton the Sino - Soviet dispute will|Council said today the entire| T1a ourne bring Soviet Russia to ally it-| Atlantic region should be desig- . Killer Hunted son with the West against/nated as one area where new| China, industries can qualify for tax! CAPE TOWN (Reuters)--The| As these were still being type eek ee Rah 200 delegates to the vena exemptions and other incen- second major sabotage trial in--when the court petition Bye HAMILTON (CP) -- Discoy-jference will discuss a: possible tives. volving an alleged plot to over-|suggested the hearing be ad. ery of the body. of a well -non-aggression pact with the' The exemptions and' incen- throw the. South <Agsican poe Nounned cntit Masada S a dressed man floating in the|warsaw pact powers, the U.S.'tives, announced at this session ernment by. violent revolution |jdge agreed cay r Desjardines Canal with a bul- p'an for a NATO mixed-manned|of Parliament, apply to indus- opened here today and was al- Ag ; n let hole in' the back of his head nuclear fleet and France's rela-|tries establishing in centres with'm ost immediately adjou! Chief accused is Dr. Neville 2 ENG > * ; E s y adjourned i Sunday touched off Hamilton's tions with the alliance, confer- high unemployment figures, but! until Tuesday Alexander, a doctor of philoso- -- murder hunt in nine'ence sources said, pears are oe in a pinay tae The 11 accused -- six colored Phy described as one of the «beg 4 ndhil jsoyal Commission on taxation (mixed race) men, four colored|most brilliant graduates of Walter Moson, of Harmilton,) wus -aays that many of these centres are PB la eae gar was found under a bridge at the Fire Wipes Out leat athens potential iudiviel ee mid Aa Indian jmade| Cape Town Unive. sity, His sis- mouth of the canal by two fish- } galy A ore: Appearance I SDCiter = Dorothy, a. high schoo! . . growth. : Cape division of the Supreme|;,./.p Ys. gh schoo aca Family Of Four "This is the policy which was Court, eacher, also is a defendant. Suicide bahor ruled out of the ado, ted in Great Britain several The 10 Pretoria defendants wucntina by ge Police WARREN, N.S. (CP)--A fam- years ago and which is now be- will go on trial again later this : at ae ge of four perished early today|ing abandoned for larger areas |month after _the state has to go on this aad invested: in a fire which levelled their containing centres with good framed new indictments, tion than in the nine-day-old frame home here. é prospects for industrial. concen-| wniidren to leave the public gal-! Nicholas: DeCicch: cake, Dead are Thornton Chapman, tration. : : lery. | The body of Moson was dis-\2°: his wife, Faye, 21, and their, The brief said the program Li : tie dered alt 3 e e : q Chilren David, 2, and Stephen, also should offer incentives on a ater police Hd si a cay ce ] htists 11 months Icuger term, "The nature of the not wearing ties or "not prop- It was the second tragic fire problem of achieving acceler-|¢tly dressed" to leave, too. All in the Maritimes in 48 hours.\ated economic development in|!eft quietly. Seven persons died early Satur-|the Atlantic provinces is such) When the trial began, J, E day when fire swept a three-|that it is most unlikely to yield|Nothling for the prosecution storey house in Saint John, to such short-term measures.|Said the defence had applied for N.B vis further details of the charges, } ATHENS (AP) -- Veteran statesman George Papandreou and his underdog Centre Union rolled today to an astonishing Greek election victory. But the |party almost certainly fell short of e ugh votes to, win a: de- |cisive majority in Parliament. | The 75-year-old former pre- jmier and his party upset long- Test Drillings Seek More Entombed Men Une Premier Contanie Care BROISTEDT, West Germany! Miracuously the drilling hit ain generally good condition. But|Radical Union in the voting, and (#P) -- A huge drill bit its way|tiny air potket 196 feet down'they had been subsisting on wa- possibly swept Caramanlis out oday toward 11 more German|where the 'll men were en-|ter and reported their legs were Of politics altogether, : miners found alive in a flooded tombed. swollen from too much liquid,! Caramanlis, who had solid iron mine a week after they had Fired 'by this stroke of luck, One man had haijucinations/P@tiamentary majorities for been given up for dead test borings were begun avout) which doctors ascribed to hun- eight B Mcghbed Said he was con- Officials hoped to reach the'two miles away near Broistedt| ger. Sedatives were sent to him, |femmplating withdrawing entirely men by Wednesday Cemetery. Mining experts be-\and he was reported calm to- Hania ae gg cya ned bh abi The 11 were among 40 miners|lieved a huke air pocket may day. eade. the o hey bur they 7 | missing inte a nearby dam |contain five or six miners there.) "phe men said they were in an pot bn sodiirtes yo broke Oct 24 and looded the Rudolf Stein, the mine mana- old gallery where there had| The Moscow line United jmine, Eighty . six miners es-|ger, said chances were extrem- gee ; poin| Democratic left: ran a poor third jcaped, and three more were res-jely slim that any minezs there|/been no digging recently, Their) "the tialfoting.f $00 saatat |cued Friday. through a shaft| would be alive, "but we are try-\compartment is 15"teet 'long, "six! ee eee, a bored by the same rig that went|ing anyway." |feet wide and 1% feet high. gressive party came in last. into operation again today After the 11 men were found, Stein said the boring of the)" x, change was expected in Acting on 'leads' from other a micophone was lowered. to new rescue shaft Was @n €X-'Greece's pro - Western align- miners. the mine managemen: them a'ong with food, warm un tremely difficult operation, mont. Foreign policy played lit- early Sunday had a narrow test|derwear and socks, an eiectric|"'"much more dangerous'than the}tle part in the campaign in this shaft bored near the main pit-/cable and light fixture. |boring of the three mien freed|NATO country on the alliance's |head. The. men reported they were\Friday." strategic eastern flank. A lonly with the matter of the |seized documents and. did not rtain directly to Harold the whereabouts By Greek Voters Greece's single' house. The Pro-) Fire Threatens Grain Elevators GODERICH, Ont. (CP) -- A; windswept fire that started .in} a rubble of a demolished fiour mill Sunday and threatened to turn into an inferno was brought under control early today. The fire was controlled before) it could reach two grain eleva-) tor .complexes and a_ barge! loaded with grain. ! No estimate of damage» was available. It destroyed three buildings and threatened to spread to the jtop of the Upper Lakes and St |Lawrence Transportation Com- |pany elevators. For a time the wind carried it directly toward the Goderich 'Transportation Company elevators. The Upper Lakes barge John |Fitz, loaded with 350,000 bush-| lels of grain, also was threat-| ened, Grain dust on top of the ele-| vators had to be watered down and considerable water damage; to the grain is expected, j | Firefighters from Goderich, Exeter, Seaforth and the Clin- Oasis Attack 'Beaten'Back Morocco Says RABAT, Morocco (AP)--Mo- rocco claimed today it has beaten off an attack by several thousand Algerians on a desert oasis the Algerians have been shelling intermittently since Friday. jbeen vacant for some time. 'Stall In Snow |work stoppage and in a case of|ton RCAF Station remained at} SAIGON (Reuters)--A lynch- ing threat developed in Hue to- day for a younger brother of the late president Ngo Dinh Diem. Reports from the northern city said large, hostile crowds were threatening to storm the Hue home of Ngo Dinh Can, 50, boss of the northern provinces under the ousted Diem regime. The reports said the situation in Hue could get out of hand easily. The pople showed signs of determination to sack the house--strongly guarded by troops--and lynch Can. the scene, They had clung to ire escapes pouring water onto the flaming rooftops of the Up- per Lakes elevators while oth- ers poured water over the barge. Residents of about 50 homes in the area watered down their roofs as a 40-mile-an-hour wind threatened to carry the fire into the heart of Goderich. The fire began in the rubble of the recently demolished Purity Flour mill. Before fire- men reached the scene flames were leaping 125 feet in the] Meanwhile, mystery sur- air, The glow was seen 30 miles|rounded the whereabouts of the away in Grand Bend, South of|podies of Diem and his strong- Goderich, |man brother, Ngo Dinh Nhu, Destroyed' were the old Pur-|who died during Friday's coup. ity salt mill, a building over the| come reports claimed the bo- | es were buried in a Saigon abandoned Purity salt well, and | qj another mill building. Ail had) sovernment ceremony this after- noon, | But there were conflicting re- ports from Diem's relatives and |heavily-guarded St. Paul's Hos- 700 Motorists . POWER RIVALR VIET NAM FEA say Diem and Nhu were killed by the insurgents, i Members of the military rew olutionary committee behind the coup were reported to have heid lengthy meetings on the [- position of a new mixed itary - civilian government, In- formed sources said it was un- likely any decision on the gov- ernment would be announced before Tuesday. The new premier ts expectéd to be Diem's former vice-pres- ident, Nguyen Ngoc Tho, a 55- year-old Buddhist. The office of president no longer exists sinte the constitution was suspended. It was widely believed that there is some danger of a fur- ther struggle for power within the military group that over- threw the Diem government. « American official sources, dia - closed that U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge was visited Sunday by two top committee members--Maj.-Gen. Tran Van Don, acting chief of the joint |pital, where the bodies had been reported earlier. The funeral for the brothers, oth, Roman Catholics, pre- sented a dilemma for the new QUEBEC (CP) -- Salt trucks regime and the church. The rey- and graders early today rescued the last of some 700 motorists tal 'snow tires on Q in the first real storm of the season. Provincial Police reported about 600 vehicles stranded. Sun- day between Granby and Sher- (brooke in the Eastern Town- ships, and nearly 100 others herths 3 ers commii cide, Under Roman commit suicide are hot crated ground, Sa mitted to be buried in conse- general staff, and Brig.-Gen, Le \Van Kim, Maj. - Gen, Ton That Dinh, Saigon's military governor, warned that Communist Cong es : order and sectrity and army "is closely united i the 'come But reliable private reportsibat the Communists." just west of Quebec City. Almost two feet of snow fell in most ateas and drifts reached a height of four feet in) some spots. Montreal escaped) with just a taste of winter --| Despite an all-day battle Sun- day at Figuig, an oasis north of ;previous fighting areas, King |Hassan's government said it in- tends to abide by the Algerian- Moroccan cease-fire agreement. The agreement called for a cease-fire at midnight last Fri- day and an international inves- tigation of the neighbors' rival territorial claims. The Moroccan government, in notes to the United Nations and the Organization of African Unity, accused the Algerians of aggression at Giguig. The Mo- roccan ambassador at the United Nations, Ahmed Taibi Benhima, said his government may ask the Security Council to |take up the border war unless |the fighting stops, |. Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia and President Modibo Keita of Mali, who arranged the cease-fire, continued efforts to make it stick. Benhima said | Morocco would await the out- come of contacts with Algerian | President Ahmed Ben Bella be- fore turning to the Security /Council, Ousted , Papandreou, 75, leader 'df |Greece's government - in - exile during the Second World War and its first post-war premier, charged that Caramanlis had jgoverned this birthplace of de- jmocracy as a police 'state, More than 4,000,000 persons in a population of 8,400,000 turned out for a record vote. Returns from 9,841 of the 10,- 162 voting districts gave this vote: Centre Union, 1,844,475 (42,2 per cent); National Radi- jcal Union, 1,710,307 (39.15 per cent); United Democratic Left (the Communist Front) 627,437 (14.36 per cent); Progressives, 161,587 (3.69 per cent), Because of the complex elec- toral law, the composition of the one-chamber House could not be determined immediately. Under the new proportional rep- resentation system, .44 per cent of the vote was said to be nec- essary for a working majority. Two years ago, Caramanlis' |Party won 180 parliamentary jseats on a popular vote of 51 |per cent. The Centre Union won only 33 per cent of the 95 seats, while the Communist Front got about 1% inches of snow, which} May Roc melted quickly. Police lage A reported all high- ways open but "very sli Ags yt Y the heal NIAGARA FALLS, Ont, (CP) If the issue of self-government reaches the floor at the Ontario At the height of the bad weather Sunday, main highways Federation of Labor's annual jconvention which starts today, along both the north and south he proposed revolution. against shores of the St. Lawrence River were closed to traffic. American-based 'unions could rock the Canadian labor move- ment to its foundations, The OFL is a provincial or- ganization of the Canadian La- bor Congress, representing some 5,000 trade unionists. A vast majority of the members belong to international unions based in the United States. The proposal for Canadian au- tonomy comes from the second largest local of Canada's most powerful union -- Local 1005, United Steelworkers of America (CLC), with 9,000 members at the Steel Company of Canada plant in Hamilton, Ted Hammond, a Local 1005 delegate, said an attempt would Convoy Detained | By Border Guards BERLIN (Reuters) -- ' U,S. Army conyoy has been detained by Russian border personnel at the western end of the 110-mile autobahn between Berlin and West Germany, an American Army spokesman said today, because the Russians demanded the soldiers dismount from their vehicles. The convoy, 12 vehicles and 44 men, was heading to Berlin from a training exercise in West Germany. Autonomy Issue k Labor be made to debate the issue, but said it could be ruled out of order as not a proper subject for consideration at the provin- cial level, Mr. Hammond said his sup- porters are not anti-American or opposed to international. un- ion ties, but added the CLC should be the focal point of Ca- nadian unionism with sufficient power and money to organize and build a national strike fund rather than the American AFL- clo, s He said he is proposing. that international unions should al- low their Canadian locals to hold referendums on whether they would rather have direct affiliation with the CLC, He said: "We want this done through straightforward, democratic ne gotiation." government of Ngo Dinh Diem, receives a flag from girl students of the Buddhist Gen. Tron Von 'Don, acting chief of staff of the Vietnam- ese forces and member of the revolutionary council wigich 15 per cent and 20 seats. Gia Long high schoo] in Saigon. overthrew the South Viet Nam dents at the school often " FLAG FOR THE VICTOR staged' demonstrations against the Diem government and many been arrested by the regime. (AP . Wirephoto via cable from Saigon)

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