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Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Sep 1964, p. 1

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--D Weather Report Mostly cloudy with scattered showers to- night and Sunday. Turning colder Sunday, High-72, low-60, 'The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, Oshawa Times -- Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. LAY-OFF DELAYED She VOL. 93 -- NO. 227 Pg Dogs 8 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1964 TWENTY PAGES ee - ton, Bowmanville 'Festival Con- "awa. Front row: Leslyn a MAJORETTES WIN EIGHT TROPHIES test at St. Catharines. All the between 11 and Chamberlin, and Gayle Mc- are aged : second 13 years and live in Hamp- f and Osh- row: Joan Patsy Blake and Cheryl McCume; back row, Dale Wilson afd Brenda Henning. They all competed in team twirling, solo, strut and 'Most "" events in the competitions. Oshawa Times Photo Security Council Approves. Extension Of Cyprus Force UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- with a deadline only hours away, voted unanimously Fri- day to keep United Nations troops in Cyprus until Dec. 26. The last mandate of the 6,130- man force expired today. Fri- day's decision authorized it to stay for another three months. But the council took no action on requests to clanify the pow- ers of the force and to put it plans to toughen the fonce's; The secretary-general ailso an-| terms of reference. settiement | Thant nevertheless told the|tionny t problems that el pete: council he fatended to "continu | ja ype sé . inibuted to tension on the island, | to seek full nespect for the free-| dom of movement for the apparently as a result of unoffi-/ foree," which the Cypriot gov-|cial agreement between Turkey] emment had agreed to March) and thé Makamios regime st | He said the Greck-Cypriat He did not mention two other), "© ® idee 2 steps put forward in the Sept. have agreed to permit rotation | of a third of the 650-man con-| 10 report, to empower the fonce tingent Turkey has stationed on on a sound financial footing Secretary -General U Thant warned that continuation of the to remove fortifications and to set up. buffer zones between|the éshand under the Cypriot in- Greek- and Turkish - Cypriot TALKS ADJOURNED DETROIT (AP) -- New con- tract negotiations between the United Auto Workers Union and: General Motors Corpora- tion remained suspended today |. while pickets paraded at GM j '|plants in a countrywide strike. The bargainers left the tables Friday for a couple of hours sleep, but there was no definite indication today when they would resume ne; Meanwhile, 1965 GM auto pro- duction was at a standstill. 7 More than 250,000 UAW mem- bers stayed home. Asked when he planned to sit down again with GM bargain- ers, UAW President Walter Reuther said: 'We'll be in touch with the corporation as soon as we get a few hours' sleep, and we are again able to join them at the bargaining table in an effort to begin to deal with the problems that brought about this strike." Louis Seaton, personnel vice- president and GM's top negoti- : ator, agreed with Reuther, and indicated something would be done about ~ resuming 'negotia- tions during the weekend. He did not elaborate. CALL STRIKE A' country » wide strike. w9s., called inst the No. 1 aiito- | PREDICT DOOM | OF MOUSTACHE LONDON (AP)--The ma- gazine Tailor and Cutter Friday predicted the doom of the moustache as a facial adornment, "That it is currently out an. shows no sign of return- ing among the smooth. faces of Britain's younger genera- tion is quite clear," said the publication, an, arbiter of male fashion, ""Moustaches today are invariably the property of the over - 40s. Even the beard, when it is worn by younger men, is often worn sans moustache. maker Friday when GM and UAW-negotiators failed to!" reach agreement on a new three-year labor contract. Although assembly lines UAW PRESIDENT Walter Reuther gestures during an interview after 'contract nego- : .| tiationts between "the United se on Pontiacs, | Auto Workers Union and Gen- mobiles and Cadillacs, most of) the company's parts factories continued in operation. worked out mated 130,000 workers and an- A company spokesman said/other 74,000 at Chrysler. They japproximately 300,000 new cars|call for higher pensions, lwere turned out before the|creased pay, longer vacations, walkout hit--enough to last 12|additional holidays and other ito 13 days. fringe benefits. ; : | In keeping parts plant work-| Reuther said the strike did lers on the job, the YAW wasj|not involve . economic matters, lengaging in selective st ri ke|since GM had offered the union Istrategy designed to continue|virtually the same money lthe other two members of the/settlement it already has ac- in- Car Production At A Standstill eral Motors recessed. At left is Leonard Woodcock, head of UAW negotiation team at Gen- eral Motors. ---AP Wirephoto for Ford's esti-|cepted from Ford and Chrysler. The contract with Chrysler included early retirement in- centive in the form of pensions jof up to $400 a month for work- ers retiring at age 60- with 30 lyears' service. The pension would decline to $127.50 at age 65 when the worker's social se- curity benefits normally begin. Part of this total would come from a supplementary fund. lauto. industry's Big Three --|~~ |Ford and Chrysler--in full pro-| |duction. Both companies rely | Mrs. Slack had planned to fly |i Part Shipments Providing Work General Motors' Oshawa pro-;contract negotiations now going duction lines will be able to keep|on between the UAW and GM going '"'through most of next|in Oshawa. week" despite strike-bound plants in the United States, a company spokesman said late Friday. First indications here yester-|--from parent company plants day were that 12,000 hourly-|in the United States. rated workers would be laid off, A GM spokesman said the Ca- beginning next Tuesday, be-|nadian company had its allotted cause of a shortage of material. Shipments of comp it parts |* already on the way 'here mean car and truck production can be maintained until late next week. This prediction comes as a re-|. sult of company surveys made late Friday afternoon. UIC BENEFITS Russell McNeill, secretary- treasurer of Local 222, United Auto Workers, said today unem- ployment insurance and supple- mentary unemployment benefits would be paid to any laid-off employees. Mr. McNeill said this would amount to 65 per cent of normal take-home pay. When the Oshawa plants are in full swing some 13,500 work- ers are employed. The full com- plement of workers have not yet been called back to work follow. ing re-tooling for the 1965 model cars. The strike is not expected to affect the 3,000 office workers in GM's Oshawa offices. , Local merchants. are wary of the effects of a continued strike in the U.S. The weekly payroll) in Oshawa totals' around the $2,000,000 mark and is a major factor in the local economy Union officials indicate that the U.S. strike is not expected to have any immediate effect on Another 7,000 frourly workers at the db nd Beet ee | a a i FI at ; 2 5 8 gz 2 R agit if i ; 5 Ba 3% Ee aE 'Woman Stabbed With Ice-Pick TORONTO (CP)--Avis Slack, 43, of Toronto died of six ice- pick wounds in her chest Fri- day night after she was at- tacked by a purse snatcher two blocks from 'her suburban North York home. i 38 3 j ge E i t | & a ake to her native England Thurs- day night to help her eldest fighters. dependence agneements. Turkey on the other hand has "Tt may never be seen again after its current de- on GM for some of their auto- 'Goldwater Pushes "most unsatisfactory" voluntary financing meant that he would have to pull the fonce out before Dec. .26 if there was not suf- However, Thant told the coun-| agreed to pull back the Turkish) cil he intended to "continue to) and -Turkish-Cypniot fomces that | initiate any actions which would) hold a stranglehold on the stma- |prove necessany for the jmple-jtegic Nicosia-to-Kyrenia road. votees die out?' The: magazine said the meal reason for the mous- motive equipment. The selective walkout affects jabout 65 per cent of an esti- mated 350,000 UAW-represented daughter plan her wedding but postponed the flight to Oct. 2. She was on her way to an all-night doughnut shop where she was working as a_ part- Police Searching For Kidnappers CHARTRES, France (AP' . | ient™ | , ; | tache is the vanity of the ase time waitress to help finance tici money. mentation of the mandate" to|Thant said the road would be| ' ; |workers at GM. } peared to have from the stand Sept. 10 neport At that time ff the farce were extended, he! _2WaY) mai conditions. ee eo i CABINET MINISTERS DISAGREE would have no choice but to con-| sider any expenses not covered| by voluntary payments as "a/ iti charge against) .whatever source derived." : OTTAWA (CP) -- Two. mem- BROUGHT REACTION bens of the federal cabinet have. | This brought reaction {0m indirectly rebuked a Hamilton | the Soviet Union, France and) judge Czechoslovakia to the effect that' heist immigrants are not fit financing would have to continue, become Canadian citizens. on a voluntary basis. gona of) the three has contributed so far.| 1:7 ' : id enship Minister Tremblay The Soviet and Czech dele-| vent out of their way to: dis- | Sociaite themselves from the rul- i j who ruled, in effect, that 7 Citizensh: ores Justice Minister Favreau and 5 P Mien et GUY FAVREAU 8P-| prevent fighting and restore nor-| placed under the 'exclusive con- trol" of the UN force. i Three - year contract agree- iments already have been Ruling Rebuked na ad C Rights, which guarantees free- dom of religion and freedom of the Greek Cypriot President Makar: 5. they 'came under mount. i comment on court cases as sauce |ZOnship certificates purely for } SANTA BARBARA, CAIif.| that reason. its rampage |donia, near Hamilton, to re- trolling it in the canyons of the times carried home-destroying in im- Since it started, the fire has tos, also blocked requests that rm ® z i , - améte tig Opposition pressure in the > council endonse Thant's| Friday. ; Mr. Favreau said he cannot End Of Blaze minister of justice, but added | that he feels as a lawyer that | M B N }persons who do not believe in | ay © NEAL | cod shoutd not be denied citi- | | AP)--Fog hit the Santa Bar-) ; sare fire today. It bumed on,|, For the second day running, but firemen began to speak| ye, Practically invited Mr. and aniatically of 4 curbing| Ms. amnest Bergsma- e- blaze 5 charr open their controversial case oteee Meee A eel Tey | going to a higher court. It is etill out of control. No es-| Mr. Tremblay said later he timate has been made for con-| Will Santa Ynez Range, where 2,000 men aire fighting it on a 20- mile long front. The high winds--which three flames into Santa Barbara sec- tions--have disappeared Today no. homes are mediate danger. destroyed 78 homes and major structures, causifig ar. - esti- mated $3,500,000 damage. One| man was. killed. | do everything possible to speech. # fessed to be aliheists and al ed is denied citizenship by a} clined to swear an oath of alle-|judge for reasons of not belong-| giance ending with the wonds,|ing to any religion. | "so help me God." New Democratic MPs| Mr. Bengsma, a 43 - year - old|changed that citizenship laws Dutch immigrant who works iN|haye been enforced unjustly in a Hamilton steel plant, told re-|many other cases, They cailled ' Ponters he and his witfe believe/for a revision of the act and in the Bible as a book of rules'the establishment of an imde-| but do not believe in God. pendent appeal board. | Mr. Favreau said Thursday that applicants for citizenship) BRANDED AS REDS do not have to swear an oath) Mr. Brewin said many immi- 'on the Bible. They could elect|@rants can't get their citizen- to affirm their allegiance to the|Ship papers because secret Crown. without referring to the|RCMP reports brand them as deity. |Communist sympathizers. Often ESS ROCA oa 'the reports were based on in- i ooh i he accurate or frivolous evidence. e minister added yrday, . " * * during consideration of citizen-|4, Speakers Fe srt gery apt ship department estimates, that| cial' Credit panties criticized the (a higher court could weil direct Immigration Act for being too Jadge Leach to interpret the] restrictive especially in the Citizenship Act in a way that| case of non-whites i | woul not automatically bar hip elon patter |atheists. It was up to the Berg-| to ci Biba lay bred Mageimr sma couple to seek such a writ| Din" mrs So0n i th : and of certiorari. 30 nges" in the Immi- 'The citizenship depantment |STation Act to step up the in-| could not intervene in the case| flow of new Canadians. He gave DETROIT (CP-AP) -- Sene tor Barry Goldwater .moved his campaign for the U.S. pmesi- dency into Michigan today, hop- ing to unite the divided Repub- lican party with "'the gospel of togetiherness" Goldwater, fresh from' a meeting with New York's Goy- ernor Nelson Rockefeller who shook his hand. but didn't say he would vote for him, planned to take his case for party unity 'to another lukewarm supporter, Governor George Romney of Michigan. Goldwater, LBJ Relaxes After Tour JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP)-- President Johnson relaxed to- day on his home acres after a three-state tour in which he mixed horsemanship, states- manship and stump-style poli- ticking. Jobnson displayed his horse- manship at Oklahoma City, the Republican jmounting a palomino quarter horse at the State Fair and cantering around in front of several thousand people. presidential nominee, planned stops today at Niles, Mich., Midland, where he will attend an ox roast, and Detroit. At Midland and Detroit he will meet with Romney, wind- ing up a week - long, 15-state campaign tour. Goldwater. was in Vermont, New York State and Kentucky. Friday. Romney has said he will vote for the Republican ticket of Goldwater and vice-presidential \candidate Representative . Wil- the flight. Residents said they heard a woman scream, "I've been at- tacked" several times. They found Mrs. Slack crumpled on the sidewalk, called. police and covered her with a blanket un- til an ambulance errived. Mrs. Slack was pronounced dead on arrival at hospital. ' Police found her empty purse in a vacant house nearby and its other contents strewn on: the floor. They searched the area for the murder w The kidnappers of 'three French children were still at large today, but: police, said a light blue car found in this city southwest of Paris may have i ee in the crime. children, Patrick : : gens Joel Biet, 5, were freed harmed Friday held for 85 hours. reunited with Mamay, a village near 'in south - central i. 100,000. police searched for abductors \liam Miller of New York in the |Nov. 3 general election, but he |hasn't gone out of his way to \do anything else for Goldwater's |campaign. DECRY EXTREMISM Both Rockefeller and. Rom- ney were disillusioned by the steam-roll ties of the Gold- water faction the San Fran- cisco nominati convention, and both tried failed to have the party platform repud- iate all forms of extremism -- |whether right r left. | Goldwater, trying to. reverse the defection of many liberal Republicans to the ruling Dem- ocratic faction, preached party unity Friday night before some 16,000 cheering Republicans in Louisville, Ky., after a stop- ensure there is no repetition of| the Bergsma case when other| The tanget of the MPs' fire| hecause tihe Bengsmas' applica- no details. jearlier, at El Paso, Tex., where atheists apply for The law would be changed i necessary. CALLED INJUSTICE : Andrew Brewin (NDP --)months ago on the grounds that Toronto Greenwood), a lawyer|they are "not persons of good who specializes in citizenship|character within citizenship, and immigration cases, said the judgment in the Bergsma case was an injustice that should be| redressed immediately by _the government. The d Was brought out jected the tions for citizenship about of the Citizenship Act. |was Judge W. W. Leach of the|tionc 4 itizenshi - | Haldimand a it Pt a a zenship had never | necently that he re-| tudge Leach's decision in his| Bergsmas' agg capacity as a citizenshi the meaning| He said a report on the law and government: practice in handling deportations, being p judge. |Prepared:~by Toronto lawyer Mr. Favreau said he is con-|Joseph Sedgwick, should be vineced personally that atiheists|ready in six weeks and will be and agnostics ought not to be|tabled so all members can| branded as persons of bad|Study it. | character ,and denied. citizen-| Arnold Peters (NDP -- Tim-| department, due to Judge Leach 'said in an inter-|ship simply because of their iskaming) said there is a re- vie: that "Canada was founded) views "God" and the Citizen-| ecision was|Ship Act disqualified. the. Cale-| pleased to take ail « with the Bill ofidonia couple because they pro- luctance in the immigration de- be|partment to look at immigra- teps neqes-|tion cases from the point of jsary to make sure that no one| view of humaniity, Mr. Tremblay said he will jover in Albany, N.Y., to confer with Rockefeller. He told the Louisville 'audience: | "Please, preach the. gospel of togetherness. . . . Get this party united so that we can present the strongest party this country ever had." That way, he declared, Nov. 3 will be "the day you get your country back." .. The statesmanship came Johnson greeted President Adolfo Lopez Mateos of Mexico to celebrate a treaty ending a Rio Grande border dispute. Before flying to his LBJ ranch with Mrs. Johnson late Friday night, the president talked to a noisey after - dark crowd that jammed into John F Kennedy - Square' in Tex-| "We started out the under- arkana, U.S,A.--so. named by|dogs," Goldwater said, "and I local people bécause the city|think we still are, But I can NEWS HIGHLIGHTS MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) -- nard Napoli, 21, to serve a mi Muddy Rio Grande of the Mexican border today tinued to rise. The stream homes in Laredo, ploded and wrapped a Danish in the Copenhagen suburb of were killed and 400 injured, a 70-52 with a 43-point scoring s' straddles the Arkansas and|promise you that we're going Texas border. to win in November." boundary as the permanent f. Germany. : Drug Seller Jailed For 63 Years A juldge has sentenced ber- nimum of 63 years in prison for selling narcotics, mostly to high school pupils. Waters Spread LAREDO, TEX. (AP) -- Muddy waters of the churning Rio Grande spread into hundreds of homes on both sides and the flooding river con- forced 342 families from Three Die In Danish Explosion COPENHAGEN (Reuters) -- Two 90-foot high gas stor- age tanks with a combined capacity of 762,000 cubic feet ex- gas-works in a sea of flame Valby today. Three persons t least 38 of them seriously: Canada Wins Basketball Game YOKOHAMA, Japan (CP) -- Canada won its first game of the qualifying basketball tournament, defeating Thailand urge in the second half. ~ Berlin Wall Removal Proposed WARSAW (AP) -- Paul Struye, president of the Belgian- Senate has suggested an East-West agreement removing the Berlin wall in exchange for recognition of the Oder-Neisse rontier between Poland and

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