Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 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; ay "VOL. 93 -- NO. 254 Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1964 Authorized 9 as p aigig oe ool Class ye Ottawa Weather: 'Cloudy And Showers Report Today And Colder Tonight. Sunny On Friday. High 52, lows, ft os Office ot Postage TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES aiid aN ALL@WEEN Thousands of children in Oshawa and district will be "trick or treating', for needy children through UNICEF on Hallowe'en this er: GETTING INTO HALLOWE'EN SPIRIT Susan, 8,- Patty, 9 and Steve, 5, children of Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Ellis, 748 Mary street will be doing their part to help less fortunate children, Ail three are pupils at Dr. S. J. Phillips public school. More than $5000 was collected last year in door-to-door collec: tions and donations for the United Nations Fund. See story on page 13. --Oshawa Times Photo By Joe Serge Children's "PERUVIAN" FLA Credit "Trap 'Clause TORONTO (CP} -- Door-té-| door credit transactions should include a three- or four-day pe- riod in which the buyer can withdraw without penalty, the Ontario legislative committee'on consumer credit was told Wed- nesday: Robert W. Johnson, professor 'lof business administration at -|Pardue University, Ind., said such a clause would end many of the abuses of door-to-door selling. "A housewife trapped in her jj home by a high-pressure sales- man deserves the opportunity to be rescued from the contract when her husband comes home," he said. i TO START of the U.S. strike of the to work. Recalls went out today to by Duplate of Canada Ltd., 300 START BACK AT DUPLATE More than 11,000 Oshawa workers laid off by the effect United Auto Workers General Motors Ltd., will return to work- Monday. A GM of Canada Ltd. spokesman said today that recalls are going out to practically all the -jaid-off men, of materials to the Oshawa plants from the U.S, has re- started, he stated, enabling production here to begin. Russell McNeill, secretary-treasurer of Local 222, UAW, said today that some GM workers have already returned "Some maintenance, "'were recalled Wednesday, and some today, too.' Gordon Coulter, manager of Coulter Manufacturing Ltd., said today that apfffoximately 60 men will be recalled to work within a week. He stated that the men were laid off as a result of the GM Shutdown. Ontario Steel Products, a supplier of car springs to GM, will also recall some laid-off workers. company manager, said today that somé ten men affected ,, will return to work next, weeks Duplate supplies automotive glass to GM. AT COULTER against The flow and other workers," he said, C. J; Roesch, more than 500 men employed a company spokesman said. MORE CBC CRITICISM a hs Says One MP oon ioneering TV" -Another OTTAWA (CP) -- The CBC took it on the chin in the Com- mons again Wednesday, with one Conservative charging it has "revolting" plays that could corrupt young Cana- dians. Percy Noble (PC Grey North) lauded the corporation| for much of its work but criti- cized three recent plays in the Festival series. "Each play appeared to be an effort to outdo the previous one in yulgar language and in por- trayals of seduction and illicit love," Mr. Noble said. "Thousands of television view- ers across the country were alarmed and disappointed to think that the CBC with. its great influence would give time to such revolting plays, which not only sl cao bad taste but could. be instrumental in pro- pone immorality in our young people."" The plays were The Feast of Lupercal; Mis. Dally Has a Lover and Today is Independ- -}ence Day. |GETS NDP SUPPORT | The CBC--with several Con- | servatives and a handful of Lib- ferals attacking and New Demo- crats and other Liberals de- fending--has been the main sub- ject during the last three days of an interim supply debate |that opened last Friday. The government is seeking op- jerating money for November| and December, and the epposi- tion may debate on any topic and keep the discussion running} as long as it wants. flag committee is to table its feport but there was no indica- tion when it will be debated. Acting House Leader J. Watson MacNaught said at the adjourn- ment hour Wednesday evening the interim supply debate would continue. Mr. Noble said "this sordid- ness" in CBC plays must be dis- continued -"'bécause we cannot continue to sow: such vulgarity ing reward. "There is an abundance of |clean, informative, constructive land entertaining program ma- |terial | which would assist parents in| available to the CBC getting their children on good moral foundations and by which they'... . could make a really | creditable contribution to our Today the Commons special'way of life." More Nobel Prizes Announced STOCKH 0 LM (Reuters) --# The Nobel Prize for physics was awarded jointly today to Prof. Charles Townes of the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technol- ogy and to Professors Nikolai Basoy and Alexksandr Proch- orov of Moscow's Lebedey Phy- sics Institute. Townes will receive half of © the' 273,000 krona (about $53,000) award. fhe two Russians share the other half. The three men won the prize a for 'fundamental work in the field of quantum electronics, which has led to the construc- tion of oscillators and: amplifi- ers based on the maserlaser principle,"' it was announced. The maser principle allows light waves to be focused into a narrow, high intensity beam which can be applied for pur- poses ranging from drilling to surgery. The Swedish Royal Academy of Science said Townes was a professor of physics at Colum- bia University in New York when, with its collaborators, he reported his first results of ma- sers in 1951, and' on the appli- cations to visible light in 1958. Basov joined the Lebedev In- stitute in 1948, and Prochorov became associated with the in- stitute two years earlier. NIKOLAI BASOV The academy said: "together these two, independent of Prof. Townes, developed their ideas about maser action, which were| then reported at a conference in Moscow in January 1953 -- re- search work which was subse- quently expanded in a number of Russian publication$ in the following years. ALEKSANDER PROCHOROV It was the United States' 23rd Nobel physics award and Russia's fifth. Maser stands for molecular| amplification by stimu- lated emission of radiation. La-| ser stands for light amplifica-| tion by stimulated emission of | radiation. without reaping the demoraiiz-| "DARLING .. ." KISS STEALER LONDON (AP) -- Pretty Mrs. Ann Murphy, 26, was sleeping soundly this moming when someone kissed her on her cheek. "Darling," she said, emerg- ing from her slumber. But darling--in this case Mr. Murphy -- was sound asleep beside Mrs. Murphy. Turning: from her husband Mrs. Murphy saw two .shad- owy forms, one of them car- rying a-dimmed flashlight. The shadowy figures scram- bled through an open window. Mrs. Murphy heard them clattering down the apart- ment house fire escape. "Did you kiss me?" manded the wife. "Somebody stole a kiss--'" "They probably stole some- | thing else too,'? said-the hus- band hopping out of bed. Murphy was right. While his wife called the cops, he de- stolen a tape recorder, an a electric razor and some cash. to the bedroom in gemneral,. discovered that the thieves had By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Communism -- both foreign and domestic--took the U.S. po- litical spotlight today. Barry Goldwater accused the Demo- crats of Communist backing while President Ji of the need. for... guide the future Communist lands. Johnson, in a speech prepared for a meeting at the Mormon Tabernacle in Salt Lake City, said the new Soviet premier, Alexei Kosygin, had written him that "the Soviet Union would maintain its present poli- cies and seek better relations-- and maintain its own search for peace--with the West." Johnson said "inside -Russia today a powerful force for change is at work--education, the bedrock of democracy, the enemy of dictatorship. Inside the Communist bloc, powerful currents are surging against the dam. "We cannot sit idly by," he continued. "We must work to guide the inevitable changes| that lie ahead." Goldwater, off on a whistle- stop train tour of Pennsylvania today, told a crowd in an Osh- kosh, Wis., high school auditor- { CROWFOOT-HODGKIN today was awarded-to Profes- of Sommerville College, Oxford, | England. Prof. Crowfoot - Hodgkin, 54,| won the award, "for their de-| | terminations: by x - ray teeh- STOCKHOLM (Reuters)--The, niques of the structures of im- 1964 Nobe prize for chemistry portant bio - chemieal sub- jsor Dorothy -Crowfoot Hodgkin|phomas Hodgkin, a cousin of Demos Red Says Barry Reds Changing: LBJ jum Wednesday that he was asking the Democrats to re- nounce what he said was Com- munist support. Waving a copy of the Com- munist newspaper The Worker, Goldwater said its editorials ¥o| had 'unged voters: to. "smash Goldwaterism." "I haven't heard a Democra- tie candidate yet say he doesn't want the Communist party working for him," Goldwater said. "Now I am not accusing any Democrat of being a Commu- nist but I am getting a little sick and tired of theif not de- nouncing this party, this Com- munist group, not ,, denouncing their backing. . OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition Leader Diefenbaker flatly re- jected as unacceptable Wednes- day night the single maple leaf flag design reported to have been approved by a 10-to-4 vote }of the Commons flag commit- | tee. « Mr. Diefenbaker was asked on the CBC national television network whether a design of a single red maple leaf on a white background with a vertical red bar at each side would be ac- ceptable. "Certainly it wouldn't," he replied. "I am not prejudging what the committee will do. If it was virtually unanimous, then I would have to reconsider the situation in the light of the statements I have made. But certainly we couldn't accépt that type' of flag." | Mr. Diefenbaker was inter- viewed on the program The Nation's Business by Geoff Scott of the Parliamentary Press Gal- lery. REITERATES STAND Mr. Diefenbaker reiterated the stand he took six weeks ago when the question of a Cana- dian flag was sent to the Com- mons committee for decision-- be supported by at least 13 Goldwater's running mate on the Republican ticket, vice- presidential nominee William E. Miller, said President Johnson was more interested in. social committee. seven Liberals, security as an issue than as a e way to help the Ayers ler, who - is....touring 'West, told a posens at Wentena|" "rt State University in Mossoula that Johnson could have won congressional approval of the 1964 social security bill if he had not-insisted on including a plan of medical care for the aged. Meanwhile, sharp criticism of the . Republicans came from Senator Hubert H. Humphrey, the Democratic vice-presiden- tial-candidate. - | SUDBURY (CP) -- Premier Robarts said Wednesday his government aims to place a medical care insurance plan be- fore the next session of the leg- uary. through Northern Ontario by the provincial cabinet, said he could give no details of the plan becausé the government has not yet received the report of a provincial committee ap- pointed to study a voluntary private-carrier plan favored by Ontario. said in 'y CHARLES TOWNES stances," it was announced. She is married to a historian, |Profl. A. L. Hodgkin, last year's jrecipient of the Nobel Prize for medicine. g | They have two sons and one} | daughter. R | islature, likely to start in Jan- The premier, in Sudbury on the last day of a three-day tour Dr. J. G, Hagey, chairman of the 14 - member provincial 4 |committee, Tuesday his report should be -- by the end of the year Toronto 4 Die In Gas | Plant Blast GYTTORP, Sweden (Reuters) |Four persons were killed in an lexplosion at a_ nitroglycerine plant here today, the Swedish news agency reported. Ambulances rushed to the factory from the surrounding area shuttling injured to hospi- tals. It was not immédiately knawn how many persons weré injured. Windows over a wide area within a three-mile radius of this central Swedish town were smashed by the force of the ex- |plosion which occurred in a dy- |namite processing shed. Medicare Plan For January but that he was in no position "to say what the final report will be." Dr. Hagey refused to confirm or deny a published report that coverage will be provided through private carriers -- in- surance - companies and doctor- sponsored groups. The report said the commit- tee will recommend .a voluntary scheme with government subsi- dies for those who cannot meet the premiums, It said the rec- ommendations would follow the pattern of medical insurance legislation introduced by Al- berta last year. the recommended design must members of the 15 - member The committee, composed of five Progres-| 1 sive Conservatives, and one on an informed source Sunday GETS DIEF'S GOA Flag Hassle Starts. Again This Afternoon night, as saying four Conserva- tive MPs orf the committee de> clined to support a recommen- dation t® the Commons that the oneleaf design become Can- ada's flag. The informant was quoted as saying that earlier in the com- mittee's proceedings, when members were expressing pre- ferences among several designs, the red-leaf design was given a 14-to-0 vote, But in the later voting it mustered only 10 votes as a design to be recommended to the Commons. ' WANTS UNANIMITY Mr. Diefenbaker said that if the committee's report does not produce virtual unanimity the Conservatives will revert to their demand for a plebiscite at the next general election. Referring to the single red leaf design, Mr,. Diefenbaker said "You mention that the, ree- ommendation may be a flag with a red maple leaf, with a white background and two bars of red. Well, all I have to say about that, 'aside altogether from the fact that it shows nothing of our. heritage, is that it would be far from being dis- tinctive. "As a matter of fact, it would be the Peruvian flag, ost entirely a replica ex one case you have a2 rms, "oF 100 ats ee wth flag, we would have ther Peruse vians saluting it anyway." Strike Threat At Ford, Agreement Deadline Near | DETROIT (AP)--Ford Motor Company was threatened today with a crippling strike, just as General Motors Corp. got its fifth assembly plant going again after.a 31-day U.S.-wide walk- out by the United Auto Work- ers Union, The UAW seta strike dead- line Wednesday of 10 a.m. Nov, 6 for its bargaining units at Ford which lack at-the-plant working agreements to supple- ment the newly-negotiated Ford- UAW national contract. Ford figures that 23 of its 90 UAW bargaining units lack stich agreements. Strikes by them today a secret Kremlin report werkers says Nikita Khrushch would involve, am nine Ford assembly three key stamping plants, General Motors still is hobbled by similar local-level stoppages. The UAW called off a na- tional strike against GM last Sunday. But at the. same time it authorized units without at- the-plant agreements to remain out until local issues are re solved. Then 28 of GM's 130 UAW bargaining units lacked agree- ments. Twenty-one still do, and 18 of 23 assembly plants still are shut. others, NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Paper Says Nikita Fouled Up Industry ROME (AP) -- The left-wing weekly L'Espresso said to Communist party local cell ev was deposed for ignoring collective leadership and causing major trouble to Soviet industry, agriculture, diplomacy and the party | itself. WARSAW (AP) -- Wladyslaw Gomulka declared Wednesday the Soviet Communist party leadership accepted Nikita Khrushchev's resignation, 'hav. ing proper grounds to do so." The Polish party leader then expressed a hope that the' rift in world communism could be healed by the Soviet Union and China taking steps to their ideological differences. He described the recent Kremlin shake-up as in accord- ance 'with "Leninist principles of inter-party unity" and said Polish-Soviet 'co-operation will be strengthened. - settle | Gomulka was one of the lead- ets who had praiséd Khrush- chev after his downfall as. So- viet leader was announced to the world Oct, 15. Apparently, Poland, as had other Eastern bloc countries, feared that the Kremlin shake-up might portend a trend back to tighter control from Moscow as in the days of Stalin, MET LEADERS Gomulka met at the Soviet- Polish border last' week 'with Khrushchev's successors, First 'Party Secretary Leonid Brezh- Khrushchev's Ouster "Proper": Gomulka nev and Premier Alexel Kosy- gin, who have begn trying to reassure the restless Eastern bloc. These assurances were given Gomulka_ personally at the secret rheeting. Addressing a rally for a visite ing delegation from Mongolia, Gomulka said: : "I wish to state here with a full satisfaction that the general line of the Soviet party as dee fined by the 20th and 22nd So- viet party congresses will be upheld and that it fully agrees with our party, our governe ment, our country. On The Road To GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST Quota Of $275,900 $116.90 | | $128 0001 | | | s138 000 7 | 1 sr7$ 000] | | | s208,000| | | s22¥ o00l | | | $256,000 | |: | '$279 s00

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy