Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Oct 1964, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres; VOL. 93 -- NO. 250 Over Price Not 1 per Copy 0 Cents Oshawa Cimes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1964 Authorized as Second Class Mo' Ottawa ond for payment Weather. Report Sunny And Milder With Cloudy Periods Today And Tomorrow. High-58, Low-40, - It Post Office Department of Postage in Cash, EIGHTEEN PAGES Business Expansion Slowed BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (AP)--A petite 77 - year - old feminist named Rebecca Shel- | ley is running for vice-presi- | dent of the United States in |WOMAN VICE-PRESIDENT 'CAN'T BE VOTED IN NEW YORK (AP)--A move |by Labor to end the General Pd | Motors strike bouyed hopes this | week that the giant automaker | would soon return to production. '| The rest of the U.S. econ- i|omy, meanwhile, continued to ' |cruise along in high gear. But | |there were fresh fears the pro- i | longed blackout at GM was be- the Nov. 3 election--but her name will not appear on any ballot. Mrs. Shelley, whose 232- acre farm home north of Bat- tle Creek is known as Peace- ways, is a write-in candidate on a ticket with Herbert F. Hoover, a 40-year-old Iowa farmer who claims he is a fourth cousin to the late for- mer president. | ||reached at 33 of the 130 GM RED FEATHER GAL GIVES "TIMELY" TIP Pretty Martha Frankfurter is here to remind you to turn back your clocks one hour tonight when we return to Eastern Standard Time from Eastern Daylight Time. Miss Frankfurter, a 17 - 'year - old Grade 11 student at McLaugh- lin Collegiate and Vocational Institute, is Oshawa's Miss Red Feather. She is also' en- rolled at a modelling school Unrest Outside Russia Judge In Bordeaux Jail -- Mounts On Ks Ouster PARIS (AP) -- Western Eu-|publish full details to dispel A : rope's two biggest Cuba where top party leaders are whispering that the Rus- sians should set the record straight. The French Communist party, eeconddangest in the West be- hind Itally's, sends a three-man delegation to Moscow today. The Italian Communist party has also said its representatives would meet soon with the Soviet party's central committee, which voted Khrushchev out of in Toronto and plans to enter the field of television adver- | tising. --Photo by Joe Serge | ginning to slow the business ex- pansion. With agreement still If elected, Mrs. Shelley promised in an interview, she will do everything possible to end the war in South Viet Nam. "Peace," she says, is the chief election campaign issue. to be bargaining units of the United| Autoworkers Union, the- union! called for a vote Sunday on| whether to accept new contracts! jand return to work. Mrs. Shelley, a widow, and | Hoover were selected as | write in candidates last month at a meeting. of the Farmers Association of Iowa, a group she described as "de- voted to peace." "With me, this is a matter | of conscience,' Mrs. Shelley added. "I feel there must be some public expression of our nation's conscience against the war in Viet Nam carried on by this administration." Mrs, Shelley was among early suffragettes and has written numerous magazine articles and a book called A Widow's Mite. Asked what her first reac- tion would be in the unlikely prospect that she was elected, | Mrs. Shelley replied: "I'd be shocked." | | A top union spokesman said he is confident most local unions | will vote to end the strike. PROVINCIAL SECRETARY: | ' Avaiting Decision On Bail MONTREAL (CP)--Superior 'Court Justice Adrien Meunier In Rome, the Communist daily Paese Sera said in a Mos-} cow dispatch that Communist party sources there accused hiehch, of chintiol ; what one callled false impres- sions left by the sunprise action. mind too often and of scrapping, a five-year economic plan for Eastern Europe. Communist Albania, which sided with China's hard4ine pol icy toward the West against Khrushchev's peaceful coexist- ence, denounced the ousted) chief Friday. The Albanian gov- result in a change in Soviet- Cuban relations. | been indi- . mame since the announcement eight days ago that Leonid I. Brezhnev had replaced him as Communist party boss and Al-| exei N. Kosygin had taken over! as premier. Soviet Culture Minister Ekat-! erina Furtseva said Friday,| however, that the former ruler was living in Moscow. "As far as I know he is welll," she told a reporter upon arriv- a "great victory" and called for the 'complete destruction of traitors'"' to Marxism, Collective Finance | Stressed For UN has been lodged: in Montreal's Bordeauy *°'! to await Aine cision ¢. a vail request hb appealing a two-year sentence his! for perjury. The 58-year-old former mem- bgr of Partiansht owas: con- victed on three counts of per- jury Friday and sentenced to two years in penitentiary by Sessions Judge Benoit Turmel. The conviction, believed with- out precedent in Quebec judicial A -| history, came one year after his} ernment hailed the change as| appointment to the bench and| |climaxed a dramatic trial. showed no emotion as he was led from the courtroom hand- cuffed to a provincial police- man. Lawyers for Mr. Justice Meunier immediately filed no- tice of appeal but failed to ob- | | QUEBEC (CP)--Bona Arsen- ; i Gprae.|ault, Quebec provincial secre- removed from his post prac itary, said Friday night 'an in- tically automatically" if the | dependent Quebec would be a conviction stands but that no| Communist Quebec. action could be taken while the) He was,addressing a Quebec | ease is being appealed. government dinner celebrating | \the 50th anni of the Judge Turmel, brought . ls Royal 22nd Regiment. Maj.- jin specially from MncrOTOONe | Gow Paul Bernatchez, Que.; sessions *Cuurt to hear the! retired vice-chief 'of the army's case, said he was convinced | general staff succeeded Gover- "beyond all reasonable doubt"|nor-General Vanier Thursday as that Mr. Justice Meunier had|colonel of the regiment. | knowingly given false evidence! Mr. Arsenault said left-wing | 'with the purpose of deceiving|Communistic persons have in- |the court and hiding the truth." | filtrated most areas of French- The changes were based on | Speaking Canadian life. : testimony given by Mr. Justice| "There has been left - wing Meunier during a closed-door|Communistic infiltration of the hearing before Claude Wagner,|French network of the Cana- former sessions judge and now/dian Broadcasting Conporation, | Quebec solicitor-general. The hearing involved a police) complaint against a former cli-| ent of the accused, who prac- No Justice In Independant Quebec Would Be Communist | most of our newspapers and political organizations, perhaps} ation," he said, Mr. Arsenault said French- speaking journalists should "clean out their ranks if they wish to deserve the respect the jon of ,Quebec gave their He said left-wing Communis- tic dictators of an independent Quebec could turn only to the Soviet Union for protection against the 200,000,000 Ameri- cans and English-speaking Ca- nadians in North America. "An independent Quebec cold mean only being under the iron hand of a Communist dic- |vote on locallevel agreements. even tihe Quebec Liberal Feder-| DETROIT (AP)--The United Auto Workers' rank and file in General Motors' car - factory jempire weighed a decision to- day whether to end a U.S.-wide | strike which began 31 days ago. The UAW's GM local unions vote in secret ballot on the |question Sunday. The return to |work of more than 300,000 em- ployees hinges on the result. Impetus for a favorable ver- dict came Friday night when |the union's General Motors council . voted overwhelmingly to recommend a return to work, The council, a representative national group, acted on the recommendation of UAW Presi- dent Walter P. Reuther. Reuther predicted that the negotiated national agreement between GIM and the union would get "ovei i sup- port" of the UAW membership. He said 95 per cent of the coun- cil approved it. The rank and file also is to Disputes at the local level pro- longed the strike after the na- tional settlement. The national agr it, simi-| UAW VOTE SUNDAY COULD END STRIKE Reuther Says Membership. 'Will Give Great Support sions, eariier retirement incen issues and an end to the in the interest of the national Where local settlements have not been achieved, the local union members will vote whether to end the strike re gardless of this lack. At Jast count, there were 97 settlements at-the 130 bargain ing units. The GM tie-xp has cut total U.S. auto output approximately in half. GM is the U.S. indus- try's langest producer. Chevrolet, GM's langest single er, meansvhille a sales drop-off of almost 50 per cent for the second 10 days of October as compared with the same period a year ago. Chev- rolet said its Oct. 11-20 sales of cars and trucks totalled 41,253 against 72,787 for the same per- iod last year, The sales report made no fe e to the strike, but no lar to those at Ford and Chry- Chevrolets have been built since sler, calls for improved pen- Sept, 25. VATICAN CITY (AP) --, How specific a stand will the Vatican ecumenical council take on_ the problems of birth control? ~ This question lingered in the background today as the ect menical council faced the pros- pect of another session in which to discuss the Roman Catholic Church in the modern world. The council fathers voted Fri- day that a council schema on tatorship," Mr. Arsenault said. How Specific Stand Likely On Birth Control Problem? icism from both conservatives and progressives, acceptable as a basis for discussion. At the same time Pope Paul VI sent word there would be @ fourth session, at an unspecified date, after the current third session closes Nov. 21. This means more time to dis- cuss issues such as family life, control, warfare the subject was, despite crit- | State Police Abruptly Quell Defiant Rampage In Prison tain his release when Chief Jus-| tised as a lawyer for 33 years} tice Lucien Tremblay took the|/ 8d was once a Liberal mem-| South: Negroes request for bail under advise-| er of Parliament for Montreal-| | ines afore hi -, | MAGNOLIA, Miss. (AP) ment.' A decision is expected|PaPineau beforé his appoint-|Nine white men accused of ra- next week. ment to the bench. | bombings have drawn Crown Prosecutor Mare office, The smali Austrian Commu- nist party announced in Vienna Friday it would send a dele- gation to Moscow Monday ing in Rome to attend a series OTTAWA (CP) -- In a United of ballet performances. Nations Day message, Prime In New York, the Communist) Minister Pearson reiterated to-| party newspaper, The Worker,|day that the principle of collec-| said Khrushchev's removal had|tive financing of UN peace- | cial In Havana, members of Pre- mier Fidel Castro's government began passing the word pri- vately Friday that they want a fullexpianation too. They puzzled a lot of people. But the| keeping operations must be up- publication added the change "revealed that the leading bod- ies of the U.S.S.R. felt Khrush- held. Although there was a serious jdifference of views on these chev would not be able to, for) problems "'the UN has shown a praised Khrushchev in conver- sations with correspondents and said that the Kremlin should reasons of health, age and per-|capacity for extracting itself sonal faults, carry out Soviet|from hopeless situations,' he policies," isaid. Russia Says Hand Canadian 'War Criminal' yews nicHticats the war children, MOSCOW (CP) -- Russia has|down an entire village of 300;Organization during demanded that the Canadian) houses, jand killed 'women, government hand over to So-| It said Kupiak should be | and elderly people.'"' viet authorities a former Uk- nee ae for trial in the So- Mr. Kupiak said in an inter- rainian, now living in Canada, The Canadian embassy com- view Friday that, the Soviet whom the Soviets claim is @ muynicated the' Soviet note to government was attempting to war criminal Ottawa discredit ail East European ref- Izvestia, the government) The Soviet news agency Tass W8¢es in Canada, newspaper, published Friday said Kupiak directed "mas bes- as tes that vo ni pre. : 3 F jtial reprisals' in the western|{"e Uxrainian Nationaiis: fi oe ee & * ee delivered) regions of the Ukraine against|ganization before the Second rlier this week to the Cana-|""S" = | j '; dian embassy calling for the re. | Victims who murdered "women, | World nee: hid aeecried tis gn orate ip (Children and elderly people." |STOup as dedicated to fight any turn of Dimitri Georgiyevich j Kapisk of 7 ' foreign power that controlled = of Toronto TORONTO (CP) -- A Toronto the Ukraine. e note, prepared by the So- man, whom the Soviet news ag- Cupi ai » bel > viet foreign ministry, accused ency Tass claims directed shy graced pally, Kupiak of terrorist activities in|"mass bestia! reprisals" organization at first, His duties the western Ukraine while that)against Russian citizens during) were to distribute leaflets and region was still occupied by|the Second World War in the) make the aims of the orgamiza- German troops toward the end| Ukraine, says he is the victim|tion known to the populace, -- of the Second World War. of a Communist smear and that} : ' The note said Kupiak headed/he has a clear conscience. WASN'T INVOLVED 1 a group under the Organization Dmytro Kupiak,. 44, was) He said he was not involved of Ukrainian Nationalists that|named Friday by Tass as ain military activities at this killed more than 100 Polish and|"war criminal." Tass said he time. Soviet citizens and burned'ied the 'Ukrainian Nationalist} Prior to the outbreak of the On The R Briere objected to the granting| of bail on the grounds that the! offence was not extraditable| and Mr. Justice Meunier "'could| well decide to spend the rest of his days elsewhere." In Ottawa, a government source said the judge would be Over DIMITRI KUPIAK last war, he estimated the membership in the 'hundreds of thousands." DENIES TALK |suspended sentences and Negro He denied under oath that he|leaders said it shows Missis- had held a telephone conversa-|Sippi courts won't crack down tion with police in September,|0n whites. 1962, in connection with the| '"'No one can doubt that had mysterious disappearance of a|\the homes. these men bombed lossier concerning a $64,000|belong to white families, the ankruptey fraud. |sentences would have been very When a police recording of|different," the (Negro) Council | the phone call was produced in|of Federated Or ganizations | court, he insisted the voice was| said. : not his. He also was charged] Six of the nine McComb men | with lying about the removal of| pleaded guilty Friday to illegal lexhibits from a court file andjuse of explosives, a charge |about the date of notice of a|which carries a maximum pen- civil action filed against police.|alty of death. d |b: | Hungarian Marksman Defects TOKYO (AP). -- Japanese police said today a 22- year-old Hungarian pistol marksman, Balla Gabor, has defected and will leave Japan tonight for West Germany. He came here for the Olympics. Hearing Soon On Hate Literature OTTAWA (CP) -- Postmaster General Nicholson said he has submitted the names of three persons he hopes could form a board of review to consider distribution of literature attacking certain races or religions. If all three accept, he said in the Commons, "I hope to be able to an- nounce at the beginning of the week the composition of the board 'of review and the place and date of hearing." Corruption Charge Dismissed BRACEBRIDGE, Ont. (CP) -- Magistrate A. J. Marck today dismissed charges of municipal corruption against former Bracebridge mayor Glen S, Coates. The magistrate said no judge in Canada could accept the three charges for trial. : JESSUP, Md. (AP)--Defiant prisoners at the Maryland & House of Correction rioted Fri- & day night but ended their ram- page when 100 herded cells. The prisoners jammed locks, burned clothes, mattresses and blankets, drenched ceilings be- low by, ripping out plumbing and threw fumiture and debris from the four-tiered cellhouses, Vernon P. Pepersack, state commissioner of correction, es- but said it might be greater. head injuries from objects dropped or thrown from tiers above. They were treated at the prison infirmary. Lt..- Col. George Davidson, chief of operations of the state police, led the troopers into the two cellhouses and a dormitory where about half the 1,783 pris- oners ran loose. Pepersack esti- mated -that ofily 200 prisoners were involved in the most ser- ious part of the rioting, GUARDS RESCUED A dozen guards who had bar- ricaded themselves in cells when the rioting started were rescued by the troopers, who wore steel helmets, carried long riot sticks and shotguns. The rioting started when'a prisoner became disorderly dur- ing the first feeding at dinner. He punched a guard and was removed. "There was a rumble (fight) at the time," Pepersack said, "but we got the men quieted down and they returned to their cells."" state police } them back into their , timated the damage at $50,000 § Four prisoners suffered minor Ps POL ICE EXAMINE RIOT DAMAGE oad To GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST Quota Of $275,900 v 2 $103,3 } é a | -L Usr280001 1 | | srsBoool | | | sizZooo! | 1 | s2ofoool | | | s228oool | 1 | sastoool | | | 5 $275,900

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy