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Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Nov 1963, p. 1

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Community Chest Drive THOUGHT FOR TODAY The government should save more. Look who's talking. says Canadians Oshawa Times WERTHER Entering Home Stretch REPORT Cloudy Thursday morning fol- lowed by partial afternoon. clearing in the VOL. 92 -- NO. 260 She Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Ospartment, Ottewa and for payment Postage in THIRTY PAGES. By Voting In South WASHINGTON (CP - AP) -- Democrats kept control today of such keenly contested posts as the Kentucky and Mississippi governorships and the mayor's office in Philadelphia. Depitet heir defeat, the Re- publicans cut heavily into the Democratic vote in the south, making the race in Kentucky particularly close, but they were upset in another big city, San Francisct. San Franciscans elected a Democrat as mayor for the first time in 55 years. Elections were held in many parts of the United States Tues- day -- on the state and local level primarily. The vote in Kentucky was close to the finish and in Mis- sissippi Republicans for the first time since the post - war days of the American Civil War rolled up a considerable vote in defeat. In Philadelphia, Democrats kept their grip by about 67,000 votes--but this was their smal- lest margin in a mayoral race in 12 years. CONGRESSMAN LEADS In San Francisco, near-com- plete returns showed 12 - year congressman John F. Shelly ahead of his closest rival, Re- publican supervisor Harold! Dobbs by 114,790 to 88,954. tion races was expected. Gov. Ross Barnett ordered the unit on duty at the request of the local sheriff Unidentified voter enters precinct. --AP Wirephoto GUARD ON DUTY -- A the Brookhaven, guard unit } member of 605. But it's something new for § | In his campaign, Phillips con- |tended either Kennedy or a Re- | publican would be the next pres- e 4 4 , would ensure the nomination I ect | and election of Senator Barry ¢ Gaapme Goldwater, "the only Conserva- mayoralty fight was Demo- cratic Mayor James H. J. Tate, for whom Kennedy made a cam- yer who never has held public office. Racial overtones got into this vote. Denying this, McDermott said part of the racial unrest in the troubled city could be laid Miss., national ew or ers Stands on duty at a_ voting | precinct where trouble in | hotly-contested general elec- OK Off-Track a Republican to, get that many § ident and the election of a Re- tive who can beat Kennedy." paign sortie. Loser was James campaign. Tate accused Mc- to indecision on the mayor's | is LOS ae Betting $2000 Cash Bail OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1963 Ends Soviet Blockade | BERLIN (CP-AP)--The Rus- jade against a U.S. Army con- voy on the East German auto- bahn--in the face of a solid dis- play of Allied unity -- and the Americans finally arrived West Berlin early today 42 heurs. late. A two-day war of nerves over Allied rights ended in the small hours after the British and ithe American convoy blocked since Monday by the Russians. The British and French con- voys went. through without in- terference. And early today the Soviet officers dropped their de- mand that the 44 American sol- diens submit to a head count. Then they pulled back the arm- ored cordon blocking the auto- Show Of Allied Unity jlitaited to Berlin and there is, sians suddenly lifted their block-|no possibility of confrontation |the 44 U.S. soldiers boxed in on |with the Russians. | Allied officials mulled over a| |vairiety of likely reasons for the| Soviet blockade -- the third in| in|less than a month -- and its| brown fox jumped over a lazy sudden withdrawal. | One theory was that the Rus-! \sians wanted to force the West-| jern powers into negotiation on| } | French sent units on the 110-|Something which they have de-|the Soviet-American, confronta- mile autobahn in support of|clared unnegotiable--their right | tion on the road to Berlin. jby conquest to set their own rules for access to Berlin. * Another was that the Rus- sians wanted to flex their mus- cles in advance of Communist- bloc talks intended to denounce | Red Ohina's henesies. The Pe-| king Reds charge the Russians) are too soft with the west. | porters "'to stand by the The election capped a cam-|i"g margin for off-track betting paign which came to life last|in a New York City advisory! Sunday when 112 pickets were|referendum has set the stage a@rtested for demonstrating/for a new push to get legisla- against alleged racial discrim-|tive approval. ination in hiring at a restaurant} Mayor Robert F. Wagner, a partially-owned by Dobbs. |Democrat and a leading pro- In Kentucky, a still -\incom-|ponent of the proposal, called plete count showed Demiocratic/Tuesday's vote an "overwhelm- Edward: T. Breathitt Jr. the|/ing mandate" from the people. winner for the governorship,| 'I sincerely hope to get it but by only about 15,000 votes|through in the next session of out Of some 860,000 votes thus|the legislature,' Wagner told far counted. f |iepeere. A number of Repub- His Republican o pponent,|licans oppose the plan. B.. Nunn a i Complete . unofficial. returns " shOwed: Yes, 958,346; no, 300,- votes for Mississippi governor. ae publican governor in Mississippi The victor in the Philadelphia T. McDermott, 37-year-old law- Dermott of playing for the white Tre, NEW YORK (AP)--A thump- P t { B B ] S MONTREAL (CP) Hal)then of Welland, "'between Jan. bahn near the West German border, and the Americans ident Kennedy got several hours | ro'led through. jadvance notice that the Rus- Soon after dawn the 2-vehi-|sians were going to lift their WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres-| |Banks, president of the Seafar- ers' International Union (Ind.) has been arraigned on one | charge and warned (further) charges against him are being} considered by the Crown. He was released on $2,000 cash bail Tuesday shortly after being arraigned before Judge Emile Trottier of sessions court who. fixed preliminary hearing for Nov. 12 on the charge of conspiracy to commit assault. voting|310. machines and ballot boxes." | Advocates of legalized off - GETS LITTLE COMFORT jtnack betting on horse races con- President Kennedy could take! no comfort from the Mississippi governorship result because both the winner -- Democratic a year to help the state and city meet education and other costs of government, jtend it would raise $200,000,000|/conspired with two SIU mem- Maximum penalty for the of- fence is two years in prison. The charge alleges that Ban! jbers to commit assault occa- jsioning bodily harm against i\Capt. Henry Francis | Walsh, | Lieutenant-Governor Paul John-| son and the loser Republican) Rubel Phillips--made a point of| opposing him and integration. | The Republican vote was smaller than Phillips hoped for --Johnson 172,237, Phillips 101,-) OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition Residents Rush |MPs say they plan to demand To Beat Boycott jthat Justice Minister Chevrier of the government was to keep) the men on the job on the ships." Opposition MPs indicated that} SIU member; 1, 1957 and Aug. 31, 1957, in the city of Montreal and elsewhere in Canada." Capt. Walsh, an organizer for the Canadian Merchant Service |Guild (CLC) which represents masters, mates and pilots, was beaten. up in an Owen Sound parking lot in August, 1957. Eildon (Jack) Richardson, 38, surrendered. to RCMP today and also was ar- tainged on a charge of .con- spiracy to commit assauit occa- sioning bodily harm. Prelimi- nary hearing was set for Nov. 12, A similar charge has been laid against Ernest Paul Carsh, 37, another SIU member. MPs Query Delay In Banks Arrest icle convoy arrived in West Ber- ilin. The convoy's 25 - year - old lcommanding officer, Lieut. John Lamb of Wewanitchka, Fla., was erect and unsmiling in the lead jeep. There was no interference at the Russians' Babelsberg checkpoint just out- sie the city. CROWD CHRERS : A-big crow@. waited through a cold and foggy night to cheer the convoy. | As soon as the convoy was safely through, the U.S. Army sent 56 more mer on to the autobahn, travelling from West Germany to West Berlin in four vehicles. This convoy, unlike its prede- cessor, dismounted for counting by the Soviets, at Marienborn on the western end of the life- line highway. Nu emosion of Allied principle was involved, however. The Al- lies accept counting when a convoy carries more than 30 men in addition to the driver and co-driver of each vehicle. armored-car blockade of a Ber- Thus as the hours passed with the East German stretch of au- tobahn, the hot line apparently clattered into life only for its hourly test messages: The quick dog's back. However it came, offiei said the information was pass: 0 the president during a 50- minute White House meeting on OSHAWA MEN FA CAR THEFT COUNT Arrests Terminate Three-Year Three Oshawa men including a father and son and a fourth man from Halifax were charged in Toronto Tuesday in connec- tion with what police describe as a $100,000 car theft ring. Police said charges were laid after a three-year investigation, the longest ever conducted by the Metropolitan Toronto Auto Squad. | the operation, which involved more than 50 cars, included tak- ing the cars apart and assem- bling them for resale. The cars, which were reported stolen from Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie, Osh- Diem's Death Said 'Accident Nam 's revolutionary govern- ment claimed today President Ngo Dinh Diem and his brother Ngo Dinh Nhu committed "'ac- cidental suicide'? -- they were SAIGON (AP) -- South bn oat re carrier last Saturay lin-bound U.S. army convoy. killed while struggling for a From whom the word came |suard's pistol. was not clear, but informants| The latest official version of said it was not flashed over the|the death of the brothers con- "hot line" set up for swift emer-|tradicted widely believed ac- gency communications between|counts that they were murdered the White House and Kremlin, by rebel troops in an anmored Suicide' after they surrendered at a Ro- man Catholic Church. The, military revolution- ar: council announced Saturday that Diem and Nhu, his cloest adviser, shot themselves. 'oday, Brig. - Gen, Tran Tu Oai, minister of information in the new provisional gove. ment gave this account to.a@ préss conference: 'Mme. Nhu Decides" To Remain In US. LOS ANGELES (AP)--Mme.| Ngo Dinh Nhu was expected to |move out of her $90-a-day hotel suite today and set up house- keeping in the Los Angeles area for herself and her four chil- dren. | South Viet Nam's widowed former first lady changed her mind late Tuesday about joining |her three younger children in |Rome today. She said she'd fly |them here instead as soon as |possible. | Mme. Nhu said she "coul not the exclusive Bel - Air district. Mrs. Chase said she had re- ceived no definite word as yet whether Mme. Nhu will accept the offer. Chase, who has business con- nections in Australia and the Orient, met late president Diem several times in Saigon, Mrs. Chase explained. The children, aged 15, 11 and 4, were flown to Rome Tuesday with permission of the new gov- ernment of South Viet Nam, which overthrew the ruling fam- ENTERPRISE, Ont. (CP) --| Residents of this eastern Onta-| rio village made a rush on stamps at the post office-home of Mrs. Clare Stewart Tuesday to see them through their threatened boycott of the new postmaster, Mrs. Thomas Dil-| lon. | The villagers signed a peti- tion asking that Mrs. Stewart, | mother of five children whose late husband was former post- master, be kept on. But Fed- eral Postmaster-Genera! Azellus Denis has rejected it. Most of Mrs. Stewart's christ- as stamps now have been bought, and older residents have said that, rather than buy a: Enterprise if the new post- master takes. over, they would go to Tamworth, eight miles HELP The Chest CLIMB 261,800 250,000 225,000 700,000 175050. _150,000__ 125,000 100,000 75,000 50,000 25,000 _--| Start . A explain to the Commons on what authority a warrant for the arrest of Hal Banks was not executed for 13 days. Mr. Chevrier told the Com- mons Tuesday that the arrest warrant was issued "contem- poraneously with or immedi- ately following" the laying of charges against Banks, presi- dent of the Seafarers Interna- tional Union of Canada. Banks was charged Oct. with conspiracy to commit as- jsault occasioning bodily harm. The warrant was executed and |Banks was taken into custody at \Montreal Tuesday, 13 days | later. Progressive Conservative and New Democratic Party MPs ar- gue that Mr. Chevrier hinted in the Commons Tuesday that the course of justice was suspended with regard to the warrant for 'Banks arrest. Arrest warrants instruct peace offices "forthwith to ar- rest the accused' and bring him before a judge or magis- irate. Mr. Chevrier said "these war- rants were not executed imme- diately upon being taken out." They weren't issued by ime Banks appeared in Ottawa Oc. 24 to confer. with the gov- srmment-appointed trustees who have taken control of the SIU and four other maritime unions,| Mr. Chevrier said. The meet- ing that day arranged to halt an illegal walkout by 2,000 SIU sailors He added:. "The first concern jof the government was to get jthe men back to work. Hav ng gotten the men back "to work and having gotten the ships and zrain moving, the next concern Burma President | Wounded In Arm | BANGKOK, Thailand (Reut- ers) -- Unconfirmed reports reaching here today said Gen. Ne Win, president of Burma, jwas shot and wounded in the lright arm during an attack by assailants near the Thai border Oct. 26. 23) the) Mr. Chevrier's statement might) be interpreted to mean the| # RCMP were instructed not to serve the warrant and arrest Banks although the warrant commands them to arrest him and bring him before the court forthwith. : Their aim is to have Mr. |\Chevrier answer two questions arising from his statements: 1, Was the RCMP instructed jto delay executing the warrant to arrest Banks and, if so, by |whom | | 2. Why was such an instruc-| tion given if it was? | HAL C. BANKS The Soviets cleared the SEC: | odare tha thn ae fe ne ond convoy quickly. ; jaccording to George White, Wiith the autobahn tension at] manager of the Beverly Wil- \least temporarily lifted, the| hire Hotel where she has been army reinstated a Berlin exer-| staying. cise which had been twice post-| \jme. Nhu has been offered poned. More than 5,000 Amer-|yce of the home of Allen Chase, icans, the entire U.S, brigade injan associate of Canadian-born Berlin, were ordered into their|television star Art Linkletter, in annual fail manoeuvres to test city defences. |JOIN MANOEUVRE British. and French liaison units joined the manoeuvre to test Allied co-operation. A U.S. spokesman said the exercise is ily of President Ngo Dinh Diem Friday in a military coup. The children were in the highland resort of Dalat northeast of Sai- gon during the revolt. Mme. Nhu had been sched- uled to leave this morning on a polar flight to Rome. with her eldest daughter, Le Thuy, 18. Informed sources said Mme. . |Nhu's decision to remain in the US. Will Have |tntcs"stetcs may "have' been '475 ICBMs By ry 'TORY CONSULTANTS LIST' WAVED Rheaume Trig Tuesday night over the most'the problem. jsensitive word in the politica!) 4 yote of '118 to 92 defeated jdictionary: Patronage. n NDP non-confidence motion a In the spotlight was Postmas-| charging government inaction in| (PC--Northwest Territories). |ter-General Azellus Denis, tar-|meeting job dislocations caused get of' rep _ t = opposition] hy automation. part ae Matern " ya Bat i The Commons then voted 123 ' 3' -- uib- leral candidates and other per-|' sons allegedly used in dispens-|, . A : ib jfailed to present any new poli- jing government patronage. c'es effective in reducing unem- But this time there was a sec-| ployment, Sal : : j {Ploy aie _ M sagrcme Bars 14 The second vote had, one un- t the "Tory consultants list." ¥S¥a! feature -- NDP I ; 5 Douglas missed his cue -to vote, "This list is even worse than'and he and 11 followers - were the Liberal list," the minister! pot counted: An embarrassed declared Mr. Douglas rose later to say The noisy grievance debate,/he had intended to support the |lasting about an hour,' overshad-| Conservative motion. jowed the central issue of a two-- Real Caouette's Creditiste day supply" debak' which had group backed the government just ended with the m'nority!cn the Conservative motion but Liberal government weathering;n»t on the NDP move. Robert two more tests of confidence in the Commons. ined up with the governmen: Unemployment had been dis-jon both votes and so jcussed for most of the two days Patronage Wrangle OTTAWA (CP)--Commons de-|exchanging claims as to which ent o bate erupted in verbal fireworks | side had done the most to meet) enough without them. o 75 against a Conservative mo-| |tion saying the government had} Thompson's Social Credit group|ment included both Mr, lems, possible difficulty in re- End Of Year turning here, an outpouring' of sympathy for her in thousands of messages from Americans and profitable offens of speak- ing engagements and magazine LONDON (AP) -- The United States will have 475 intercontin- ental rockets stacked up against Russia's armory of about 100 by the start of 1964, an authoritative aiticles. defence survey estimates today. Present strength of Soviet armed forces was put at 3,300,- 000 men compared with 2,700,- 000 men under arms in the United States. i: But total service manpower for nations of the Western alli-) The raucous debate over pa-|ance was put at 7,920,000 com-| |tronage that followed was|pared with 7,522,000 for the, \touched off by Eugene Rheaume| Communist bloc, including Com-) munist China, | He 'charged that the list of| The findings are given in a) j Liberal "consultants'" used by|jreport by the Institute for Stra-| |Mr. 'Denis includes Mayor Ted|tegic Studies, a non-governmen-| ; Horton of Yellowknife, N.W.T.,|tal but authoritative body whose} 7 a member of the Liberal party| researches are backed by grants | executive in the territories. from such organizations as the| He said Mayor Horton has|Ford and Rockefeller founda-| &* |been reported to be in line for|tions. : |appointment as commissioner of}. In addition to the home-based the proposed Mackenzie Terri-|ICBMs, the U.S. has 1,300 stra-| gers could have won easily, ader tory to be formed. in splitting|tegic bombers and 10 Polaris|} the present Northwest Terri- submarines equipped with 16)' tories. {rockets apiece in its nuclear de-|: % 3 The government had talked of|terrent pattern, the report says.) a new spirit in the north. '"I) It estimates Russia's strategic) * would say the new spirit is one|air force at nearly 1,200 planes, |: jof blatant patronage," Mr, | though about 1,000 of these! Rheaume declared. - are Badger medium bombers | Mr. Denis: fired back that a|with a comparatively-short un- "consultants list' used by the refuelled range of 3,500 miles. former Conservative govern- Russian strength in interme- Rhe-| diate and medium-range rockets jaume and Erik Neilsen (PC--|--those with a range of up to MAJ. GEN. Duong Van H did| Yukon), with their election cam-|2,100 miles--is giyen as 800. The! Minh, left, South Viet Nam's 1 B NDP member Frank Howard|paign headquarters with Liberals and Conservatives) (Skeena). The 110 Liberals pres-itheir addresses. listed as| United States no longer is de-| new veloping this kind of missile. chief. .of state, and | Nguyen Ngoc Tho, prime min- hy ere' you ored car?" he asked. GRABS PISTOL Nhu were not spirited away, the mob would lynch them. An into the carrier, but Nhu whipped around and grabbed the captain's pistol. As they wrestled for the weapon, the of- ficer managed to drag Nhu into the car. Oai gave no further details but added: "Their deaths occurred after Nhu took the pistol from the captain."" The bodies have been turned over to relatives for burial, the spokesman said. The bodies were reported to have been hid- den awaiting burial instructions from another brother, Roman Catholic Archbishop Ngo Dinh Thuc, who is attending the Vat- ican ecumenical council in Rome. Asked if the military revolu- tionary council would request the extradition of Nhu's wife, who is in the United States, Oai said: "Our military people don't make revolutions for the sake of avenging or revenging. We are not paying any attention to ques- tions of this sort, but as a cour- tesy we have sent her children to Rome." ister of the civilian govern- ment, stand together in first public appearance at news conference in Saigon today. = A crowd had gathered and be- gan shouting. The rebel officers were afraid that if Diem 'and tion army captain tried to push Nhul/? Probe awa, and points east to Halifax, were mainly automatic gear+ shift models, : Charged with being in posses- sion of stolen cars and conspir- ing to defraud the public are William Zedic, 50, 202 Green- wood avenue, his son, Alexander Zedic, 28, 163 Windsor avenue, and Ronald James Gray, 36, of Halifax. Also charged with con- spiring is William Rudyk, 30, RR 1, Oshawa. ' Oshawa Deputy Chief Con+ stable D. F. Ferguson and De- tective Sergeant J. K, Young arrested Rudyk and William Zedic in Oshawa Oct. 9. Gray and the Zedics were also jointly charged with p i of stolen goods over the value of $50. Assisting the Toronto fraud squad in the investigation were the Ontario Provincial Police and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Four other men are in jail on charges arising out of the car- theft ring. Labor Congress Delegates OK «| Lakeover Move Ont. (CP) n of the : Union (ind.) and four other Canadian Maritime unions over whelming approval 1,000 delegates to the Ontario Feder- NIAGARA FAL their independence if they were internally infected with gang- sterism and hoodlumism. i The convention's support fol- lowed an impassioned speech by the Canadian Labor Con- gress' secretary-treasurer, Don- ald MacDonald, who described SIU President Hal Banks as a "neurotic, power - mad bully, who is a disgrace to humanity, to say nothing of the trade un- jon movement." Only a handful of delegates supported a. motion from Local 717 of the International Associa- tion of Machinists at Mailton's Orenda Engines Limited which condemned the trusteeship and asked the government to with- draw it. Bill Falls, an international representative for the Amaiga- mated Meat Cutters, said no la- pro' union's trusteeship had done @ disservice to the labor move- ment, he said. Minh led the revolutionary junta that toppled President Ngo Dinh Diem from power. , AP Wirephota |

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