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Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Oct 1964, p. 1

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The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, VOL, 93 -- NO, 248 he Ostawa Price Not Over 10° Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1964 Simes Authorized os Second Closs Ma Ottowa and for payment Weather Report Cold, Cloudy With Sunny Intervals Today. Colder But Sunny Tomorrow. High-43, Low-32, i! Post Office Department _ of Postage in Cash, TWENTY-SIX PAGES It's a tight squeeze for Mrs. i LADYBIRD'S IN THE M over to confer with Sen. Stuart IDDLE making a campaign speech Johnson as the President leans Symington (D-Mo) just before Wednesday night in downtown ALMOST EVERYONE BLAMED Driver Neglected, Died After Crash MILTON (CP) -- A coroner's jury Wednesday blamed almost everyone involved in the Oct. 6 death of Harold Drake, 21, of! Holland Landing. After an accident in a defec-| tive borrowed car in which he! was a passenger. Drake was! left beside the wreck by the) driver. He iater died in hos-| pital The jury censured: --Patrick Churchill, 20, of| Acton, driver of the car, for) abandoning Drake and failing) hours and failing to send him to a larger hospital. --Churchill and Clifford Wedge, 20, of Acton, for their|not tell th handling of Drake when they returned to the scene and drove him to hospital. --Louis Hiltz, of Rockwood, who sold the unroadworthy car four days beforehand. --Officials who scheduled the inquest when the doctor who treated Drake was on holiday. The inquest found that Drake died of a broken neck and sev-/have contributed to the death. ered spinal cord. 1 |left Drake beside the car and \thumbed a ride to Acton with} a provincial policeman. He did e officer of the ac-| cident beca ence was suspended. Churchill and Wedge, neither |trained in first aid, later loaded | Drake into a car and drove him |to hospital. They had to move jhim a second time when the |two nurses on duty could not jcarry him in. The jury decided | that this unskilled handling may St. Louis. Five Injured Near Newcastle Bowmanville (Staff) -- Three women and two children, a believed to be from Bowman- ville, were injured at about 1 a.m. today when the auto i which they were riding was in- volved in a_ collision with truck a the 'Hole in the Wall underpass on Highway 2, of, Newcastle. The accident ged from the underpass. orial: Hospital. (AP Wirephoto) east occurred jus jafter the west-bound auto emer- The use his driving lic-|injured were taken by ambu- lance to the Bowmanville Mem- Soviet Bosses 'Condemn 'Cult Of Personality' MOSCOW (AP)--Soviet Com- munist party leaders denounced \today the Stalinist-type "cult of! \the pensonality' in a policy| \statement dearly intended to explain the ouster of former premier Khrushchev. 'Life shows that not alll com- rades completely overcame the |ways, forms amd methods of |work that were built up during \the period of the cult and re-| jjected by life," an editorial in| the journal Party Life said. ll The magazine, an organ of the party central committee, continued: "Precisely for this reason the party is so demanding in the. questions of maintenance of the fi principle of collectivity of lead- ership, the Leninist norms of party life in ail the links of t party and state apparatus. "Not a single Communist, not a single party body has the right to bypass cases when any- 1 n stops taking into consideration the opinion of comrades and [CONGOLESE REFUSE TO RELEASE 800 HOSTAGES OTTAWA (CP) -- External Affairs Minister Martin said Wednesday the International Red Cross is still having dif- ficulty trying to convince Congolese rebels in Stanley- ville to release 800 hostages, including 20 Canadians, The situation was "'serious". Social Credit Leader Thompson asked in the Com- mons whether there was any developments in.'attempts to release the hostages, some of whom had been held July. Mr, Martin said 'a Swiss aircraft with Red Cross mark- ings was allowed to land in Stanleyville last month with much - needed medical and food supplies. It was hoped that some of the hostages would be flown qut at that time but the rebel leaders, re- fused to release them, While negotiations continued, the situation was 'regrettably serious". since body displays haughtiness,|\Wednesday Queen's Visit Exposed Fatal "Division" MONTREAL (CP) -- Prime)j Minister Pearson suggested Queen's recent visit to Canada may prompt moderate Cana- The truck involved in the ac-\does not concern himself with|dians to speak up on the prob- Grocers Co., Limitéd. jthe creative and not formal dis-| 'Bananas' Likely' Has "Got His" [cussions at plenums, meetings jand conferences." | The new attack on Khrush- |chev, which did not mention his| name, came amid mounting un-| jnest in the Communist. parties} jcident was owned by National|the development of criticism,||ems facing the country. He said the Queen's eight-day visit contributed to public rec- ognition of some of the coun- try's basic problems. "For it reveald to us som- thing about ourselves and about night 'that the|@ WASHINGTON (AP) -- Com- munist China rejected today President Johnson's suggestion that it sign the limited nuclear test-ban treaty and repeated its call for a global summit to abol- ish nuclear weapons. It had been expected that the United States would afswer this call by proposing through dip- lomatic channels that the Pe- king regime sign the test-ban treaty which more than 100 countries, including Canada, have signed, Johnson said Sunday night in a televised speech: "We call:on the world--espe- cially Red China--to join the nations which have signed it (the treaty)." An editorial today in the of- ficial Peking People's Daily ealled the treaty "nothing but a fraud," adding: "Haw can we be expected to walk into the trap now that we possess the means to break the nuclear monopoly of the United States? Fantastic, isn't it? SAYS NOT OBSESSED "China is by no means ob- sessed by the idea of possess- ing nuclear weapons. It. will CHINA SAYS 'NYET' TO A-BOMB TREATY Calls For Summit To Abolish 'Bomb' U.S. envoy John M. Cabot who forwarded it to the state de- partment which in turn sent it to the White House. Officials said that no decision had been made yet on the ques- tion whether the U.S. would re- spond directly and if so what it would say. Privately, how- ever, they generally ruled out any message from Johnson to Chow but said that an informal, oral statement of the U.S. posi- tion on nuclear weapons test- ing could properly and logically be made by Cabot to Wang in their scheduled meeting Nov. 25. The U.S. and China have been holding periodic meetings between ambassadors, most re- cently in Warsaw, for nine years. SEE AS PROPAGANDA Both State Secretary Dean Rusk and Johnson have already publicly dismissed the Chinese manoeuvre as a propaganda play for the purpose of offset- ting criticisms of 'China's first oon test explosion last' Fri- ay. US, officials have no real be- lief at this time that China can to notify police. Once in hospital, Drake lay lour country, revealed it per- stop developing them as soon NEW YORK (AP)--Death atjof Europe over the treatment --Milton Hospital for leaving/DID NOT TELL Drake on a stretcher for 10; LB] "TOO SOFT" WITH REDS Barry Tells Soviet After the accident, Churchill) \at the hospital until afterwards. on a stretcher from 2:15 a.m. to 12:25 p.m., when he died, His mother was not notified of the accident until three hours be- fore he died, and did not arrive The accident car had been} |sold by dealer Louis Hiltz four| days beforehand, with a certifi-| cate listing faulty lights,| brakes, tires, steering gear, windshield, horn, and tie rods. Leaders How It's Done PHILADELPHIA (CP)--Rus- sia's new leaders can prove pledges of seeking new accord with the West by wrecking the| Berlin wall, clearing out of) Cuba and holding some free) elections, Republican presiden:| tial candidate Barry Goldwater) said Wednesday. President Johnson and the} Democrats' "'soft - on - commu-} nism" policies are responsible} for renewed '"'unity" between) The jury recommended that| jsuch sales should neither be al-} the hands of underworld execu-|of the deposed Soviet leader. tioners probably was the fate of ping Wednesday. Bonanno's Jawyer said forced B car on Park Avenue. two|him The Soviet party's explana- Cosa Nostra boss Joseph (Joe/tion in Party Life said it was Bananas) Bonanno, police be-|impossible to let "even the lieve. They say they have no most authoritative per-| }elues-in hisreported. kidnap-'con avoid the control of . ...| : party onganizations, and to let|sion and discord and 'the knows ger of too much silence con- into aleverything and that he can do/cerning them. think that he leverything and that the knowl-| /haps with an unprecedented and |disconcerting, and at times hu- miliating, clarity. i "It exposed to vast numbers of moderate Canadians the po- _|tentially. fatal weakness of bal n- "And if it did that, it contri- Police said Wednesday night\edge and experience of his|buted much to our ultimate they believe it was a kidnap-|comrades are nothing to him."' stronger unity." ping and hot a ruse to enable Bonanno to avoid testifying be- to attend the New York funeral|!owed nor be protected by @/fore a federal grand jury. He of former president Herbert Hoover. GOOD CROWDS Goldwater spen5 all day around Philadelphia. Crowds were good but not overpower- ing. He was met by about 200 at the Philadelphia airport, ' per- haps 2,000 at West Chester, around 3,500 at Upper Derby certificate of defects. | Churchill will appear at Mil-| jton Nov. 9 on charges of failing |to report the accident and driv-| jing while under suspension. | | Fashion Nude =| | |Marries Doctor | NEW YORK (AP) ~-- Chris- Russia and China, the Arizonajand by about 7,000 at a night) tina Paolozzi, who was dropped senator charged. "Drift, deception and defeat"|Paid $100 a plate--a fairly com-|cause of her nude - banquet including 3,820 who from the Social be- from - the-| Register by the Democrats also have|mon device of the Republicans | waist-up photograph in a fash- led the NATO alliance into dis-|Who are short of cash this cam-|ion magazine, married a young' unity, he said, promising that if elected he will hold a "con- clave" to put matters right. Goldwater was back full-time on the Nov. 3 U.S. campaign trail Wednesday he droppea commitments today: GM-UAW "V"-DAY . paign. "We don't have to be belli- gerent,;"' Goldwater said of new firmness toward Communists. election|"We don't have to go to war.|late Mr. . But|We just have to stop atrenge| Temple Immanual in Passaic, N.J ening them." doctor Wednesday. |. The bridegroom is Dr. How- ard Theodore Bellin, son of |Mrs. Maurice Bellin and the Bellin, a founder of had been his third appearance Wednes- day. Asked what might have hap- pened to Bonanno, Assistant Chief Inspector Walter F. Hen- ning said: "You don't find them alive any more," Mobster Joseph Valachi testi- fied last year before the U.. enate crime subcommittee that Bonanno was one of the top fig- ures in the Cosa Nostra and the chieftain of one of five gangs that, control the rackets in met- ropolitan New York. Bonanno, 59, was at the Apa- lachin, N.Y., underworld. con-| vention in 1957 that was broken up by state police. Five of the Bonanno gang ap- peared Wednesday before the grand jury, which is investigat- ing organized crime. Johnson Prod Tees Up Union Vote For Sunday DETROIT. (AP)--An end_ to}"'jeopardize the continuous up-all national contract, the UAW; Prior to the new contract the economy-pinching 28-day- old U.S. - wide strike against General Motors Cor poration may come during the weekend. If it does, it will return more) than 300,000 automakers to as- sembly lines and still more thousands to jobs in supplier plants and the transportation industry. Idle auto workers alone will have lost some $200,- 600,000 in wages. The United Auto Workers un- ion Wednesday ordered its 130 units within the GM empire to, take a vote Sunday on ending the strike. . President Johnson prodded both company and union Mon-| day for speedy agreement. Hejing. But when agreement was|hourly over their three - ward thrust of our economy" | and it was beginning to affect production and employment in other industries. Leonard Woodcock, a UAW vice-president and chief of its GM department, said the vote call was prompted in part by the president's request for settlement action. | He said two otheh consider- ations were involved: 1. The pocket '- book - pinch on UAW members and their families. 2. The -strike's deteriorating ef- fect on the U.S. economy. The walkout came Sept. 25 in| support of union demands in new national contract bargain- made return to work contingent on settlement of at-the-plant working agreements which supplement it. The new national contracts in agreements, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Standards had computed the average auto worker's wage at $3.01. scheduled to make} | more executive | said John Taylor, | mier the U.S, auto industry include|9my, which Johnson mentioned, | sharply higher pensions, early) retirement incentives, longer vacations, two new holidays, more relief time 'and broader as been reflected places. At Flint, Mich., a GM manu- facturing centre; more than 900 in many | insurance coverage, plus wage|/non-GM. workers have been laid| increases. A Christmas bonus of| $25 to. $100 is possible also at |Ford and GM. Chrysler and Ford came to terms ahead of GM and UAW | President Walter P. Reuther es- jtimated the pacts worth 54 cents year said strike continuance would!reached Oct, 5 on a new over-|span. off because of the strike. The Grand Trunk Western and Chesapeake and Ohio rail- roads reported 200 Flint crew members laid off because there were no new Cars to haul away. | LONDON (CP) -- Prime Minister Harold Wilson, a somewhat dumpy figure, was advised Wednesday to smar- ten up his appearance. "Mr. Wilson should project appeal," editor of Tailor and Cutter, the sartor- | jal bible. Taylor spoke out after The Daily Express published a letter from a woman reader saying that until she saw re- cent photos of Wilson' she thought former Soviet pre- Khrushchev's trousers were "'the baggiest on the po- litical scene." "He's not a very good ex- ample to his ministers, who seem to dress just as badly,' the writer, Mrs..R. Charles, added severely. WILSON 'NOT NATTY ENOUGH' FOR U.K. SARTORIALISTS Wilson, 48, looked 'distinctly spruced-up during his recent political campaign -- wear- ing natty suits and an ever- present rose. "But pictures of Mr. Wil- son arriving at 10 Downing Street the other day showed him in trousers that must have been 22 inches around the old - fashioned turnups," wrote Mrs. Charles. "With JEAN-PAUL SATRE Writing Prize STOCKHOLM (AP)--French playwright novelist Jean Paul Sartre won the 1964 Nobel Prize for Literature today--and said he will refuse the $53,123 award. The coveted award, whose winner is selected by the Swed- ish Academy of Letters, car- ries with it a. gold medal, dip- loma and 'the cash- prize. Sartre, 59, was reported by sources here ,to have written the academy in advance declin- ing the prize for 'personal and objective reasons." as U.S. imperialism does so." party, a world summit "practical, reasonable, tion of control." The Chinese government, which exploded its first atomic bomb last week, would not use nuclear weapons "to intimidate others and em- bark on any adventure." The state department dis- closed Wednesday that Chinese Premier Chou En-lai had sent to President Johnson Monday the same message which he had circulated to other, govern- ment chiefs around the -world, even though the U.S. and China do not have diplomatic rela- tions, The message was transmitted through Chou's ambassador in 'Warsaw, Wang Kuo-chuan, to The newspaper, official organ of the Chinese Communist said the proposal for abolition of nuclear weapons w is easily mo ques- per the Peking be prevailed upon to sign the year-old treaty which bans nw clear 'testing in the atmosphere, -- ge ng The pact does no it under- ground tests. © Bn fo ogy say that aris verely crttical of eat ae tests might eventually have some influence in Peking, The US. Atomic Energy Commission said Wednesday. night that additional evidence from the Chinese test "'indl- cates that it was a fission de- vice employing yranium - 253. This conclusion is based on a& preliminary analysis of air- borne radioactive debris. : "The low yield of the test coupled with other information obtained from the radioactive debris indicates that the tech- nology of the device is that which we would associate with an early nuclear test." them he wore a spotty old | sports coat.' Taylor summed up: "For | the normal working day I see | him as best presented worsteds from his native Yorkshire. "The jacket should be sin- gle-breasted to disguise body bulk, and an illustion of ex- tra inches can be given with narrow trousers (say 16-inch bottoms) with turnups."' NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Government May Give Aid To Industry OTTAWA (CP) -- Industry Minister Drury said today the government is considering direct financial aid to private industry for "promising"' individual projects to develop new or better products, processes and: techniques. King Says Legal Segregation Dying | CHICAGO (AP) -- Dr. Martin Luther King said Wed- Strike impact on the econ-| Nesday.night "legal segregation is now on its deathbed" and the only question is 'thow costly segregationists will make the funeral." Two Sets Of Quads Born LIMA, Peru (AP) -- Quadruplets -- three boys and a girl -- were born Wednesday | have seven other children. } Some 51,000 of GM's 60,000 hourly-rated workers in Flint also were out of work. The parents are Antonio Ramos, 56, a member of the republican guard band, and his wife, Lucia, 40. The babies now in an oxygen tent, ranged in weight from four pounds, nine ounces to four pounds, 13 ounces. NAPLES, Italy (Reuters) --.Conetta Marotta, 33-year- old wife of a building worker at Busciano near here, gave birth to quadruplets, three girls and a boy, Wednesday. The couple already have seven children. On The Road To GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY in | to a Peruvian couple who Japan's Isao Inokuma throws Canada's Doug Rogers over his shoulder in the Olympic heavyweight judo fi- OVER HE GOES nals in Tokyo. today. This throw did not count as it happened out of bounds. Inok- umo defeated Rogers on points to win a gold medal. (See Story on Page 23. Wirephoto) via cable from Tokyo) CHEST Quota Of $275,000 so7a2i | | | | $128,000| | | | $150,000 | | | $174 000| | | | $200,000 rt | $2800 | | | $250,000 | | | a $250,900

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