If It's Good For The lsland The Guardian Is For if Ito Put Mio- VOL. LXXVII. NO. 265 Department. man. ad for ply-nu of put-go II and . ‘ . J - 9 w E A r H I it ; Mostly sunny and warmer; west winds ' , “ 15. Lowehigh 30 and 58. Wednesday; - ‘ . cloudy. little temperature change. “ I: "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA TUESDAY. OCTOBER 27. 1964. “m” SEVEN CENTS 14 PAGES $117 Million Program Decided For N.B. Area H OTTAWA tCPl——The imposi- ltion of British import sur- r-ndr- charges. hitting about one-third a M. lof Canada's exports to- Britain. PART or A $117,000,000 by John Park of Engineeth Mr. Park c or nated the than! been accepted her? with Iteel mill, chemical and min. Consultants Ltd. while Prem- work of the developers. Brun- vregsnauon ahd Spine] relief. . ier Louis Bobichaud. left swick Mining and Smeltan . _ overhmeh 0 0135 were 1‘9- . ing dmelopmcnt in Nortncrn lmks on during the premier; Corporation, Slgned to the fact that such New Brunswick is explained .move was inevitable. They were ~ 'reliev. that it wasn't more drastic for Canada. The 15-per-cent surcharge on manufactured semi-manu- factured goods is a temporary e and will apply to im- ports from all countries. ‘ Minister Pearson told bile Com- mons Monday that Prime Min- ister Wilson of Britain assured him that the surcharges "will programming and. be reduced as soon as the bal- ance of payments situation per- lmits and abolished at the ear- tliest opportunity." announcement. of the projcct. (CP Wircphoto) Dief Heads CBC Critics Over Interview Oi Nazi OTTAWA tCP) ~ OppositionltSC—Medicine Hat) returned tallests about Leader John Dicfcnbaker and aithe topic when an interim sup-.wondered why officials or the Liberal backbenchcr Monday ply debate resumed and echoedgovernment were afraid of a protested Sunday night's ap-‘a call by Mr. Diefenbaker‘s foricommittee. . g . pearance on a CBC program of‘a parliamentary committee to‘ There was sprinkled desk-' He Sald,°“l5|d€ the House or Lincoln Rockwelliquestion CBC official-s. thumping w en he said themcahada very fortunate" l tadcr of tile American Nazi], Mr. Lamontagne turned downlCBC had caused greater divi- abouthO-lhll‘ds 0‘ its export! the demand. isions between French— and Eng- t0 Bnlaln Will escape the new "U 2 3 o Dicfcnbakcr . ookwe 0 had already appearediattention“ to extremist view- raw materials are exempt. man whose conduct I can see:befme the public “mums com_;points. v I Some trade officials here had ' j - u“ in addition thel During the question penodlexpressed earlier fears that Ca- attention of the CBC across ‘CBC were asked to appear be_‘the government was pepperedlnadian goods might be subject Canada and Nazism glorified in ; fore a parliamwtary commitgwuh questions a bout rec .to greater restrictions than oti'l- thls way." wee. this in my View might c0m_:items in Sunday night's Seven. The U-5 N37" 193d" “'35 l ‘lpletely paralyse the corporationlDays Show and quebec Provm'lance tor-viewed on the network ‘ i n _ trade with Canada. DEO- . in its work. which would most :c‘al secretary 30“ Arsenaull's '; gram This Hour has Seven toenail” be “most. we." estatement Communists are in- _. l M {8mm 58‘..." CBC pro-lfiltrating the CBC French net-1 State Secretary Lamonlagne. ducers associated with "some- “'“rk' Lamontagne agreed to: Mr. Diefenbaker's request that; |hc ask the provi in] secretory lily." A commiltee could meet'f‘.’r “9 “mes” 8“” Cnmnm‘ withaMBCJo 11619::W nlsts. . Who reports to the Commons for What arty" groups where “per- thc CBC. said he had received flaps there is not the same ap- "Views and protests" when it .preciation of everyday moral- was announced Rockwell would appear and he hoped the CBC itiad taken these into considera- 1011. its functions. CHECK PLANNED Mr. taken. l _. Marcel Lambert (PC ‘ Ed-o He charged that CBC showed? . nnton West) and H. A. Olsonla "cavalier disregard" to 1 Queens) asked whether he did not consider it cept food. pro- an "impropriety" for the pro- rials a tobacco, W0 Byelections Have °" hree-Cornered Fights ‘tiat was withdrawn from v w- . l. . . The levy. effective today. is mm m the US by Rembhcan being coupled with tax rebates f ‘. By THE CANADIAN PRESS who died last. May. is running Three - cornered federal by- in Westmorland. l a Chaplin amt De y s. M lMax)l s Goldwater, or exports-rs ranging from one The state secretary an! 1 'l to three per cent ithat he intended to follow the The surcharge on imports wul lexample set by former Conser- lvative revenue minister George [Nowlan when he reported on . broadcasting not to comment on lCBC programming. affect all Britain's trading part- ncrs but will hit hardest at Brit ain's strongest competitors. About P0 per cent of the lm- ‘ports from Canada will be af- fected because Britain gets mainly food and raw materials from her. About 57 per cent of ; presidential candidate B a r r y election campaigns were com Opposing r. firmed Monday both in Water New Democrat , loo sh-lth. Ont. and Westmor- Saltsman. 43. owner of a Gait , imports from Common Market 1a nd, N.B., as nominationsidrycleaning and laundromat “mmll‘les Will be subject '0 the glosed for elections Monday. chain. and Liberal Roderick levY- ov. . . Stewart, 31, Gait hi h school Waterloo South. usually Con-‘teacher who defectedgfrom the IMPORTS ARE AFFECTED servattve in the past. and West- NDP in September after twice, . The new duty is On about morland. most often Liberal. running as an unsuccessful OTTAWA (op) -.- The CNR “vim-000000 worth M manh- are marginal enough be NDP candidate in federal e1ec-. sidetracked [is controversial factured goods imported an watched for lndivations of any lions. ' run-through program at Na. nuaily. including about 200- natlonal shift of popular attl- Mr. Stewart's nomination., kina, om,_ and Wainwright 000.000 Shipped from Canada. .tudes towards the minority Lib- with the support of national 1A1”, Monday hue,- ghe [edema These additional emergency eral government and its oppo» Liberal .party leaders. createdgovernment agreed t sition. a will In riding Liberal ranks lformal inquiry into the matter. as some members charged 0t-,‘ A policy of running trains tariffs, which will increase the buying price for British con- sumers. cover a huge assort- osetupa HELD av FATHER said in the; He said president Mphnnsedish-Canadians by "repetitious dUtles- This is because fond and: I . lawn with interference. ‘throu h those two points with- Running against Mrs. Bideoutout the usual crew change went in Westmorland are Moncton into effect early Sunday. It mechant Henry Landry. 4f. ‘touchcd off a no-work protest for the New Democrats andlby hundreds of CNB employ- deoth last June. Mrs. . H. Moncton lawyer J. Edward ees across the country who Rideout. 41. Widow of the Lib- Murphy. 50, for the Conscrva- "booked off" for various rea- sons. t 1 od. f Gait Alderman James Chap- men 0 80 8 mm "mm lln. 31. is the Conservative can- eral member of Westmorlvand tivcs. l . . . I ,1 fierest Upsurge ls Noted For Atlantic Winter Fair A tremendous upsurge in in- terest has been noted in some sections of the Atlantic Winter Fair at Halifax. with entries ‘0 homccraft. for example. hitting more than 2.400 this year com- pared to 1.081 a year ago. man Nicholson and Mrs. dell Phillips. Summer Street neighbours in Charlottetown. heading the list with 31 entries between them Some 10 people have more than 50 entries in the vegetable: Incidentally. n Charlottetown and held crop, with Levi Jay. lady. Mrs. Edwin Donald. 3 2 last year’s seed potato chamo Clydesdales that took three first Gordon Drlvc. won the grand lion exhibitor from Mt. Stewart. prim ribbons and one second at championship award in home f——-———— iglldfaxd 1Cyl!" 'IBSO.beThe gig crafts last year with a hoohcn .- /y 05 8 Elm I! ('0 Iln 0- ' rug with] Prince Edward ls- l INSIDE TODAY leafed at Prince Edward Island land pattern This year Mrs. fairs for the past two years. Wen- hack for another try. The vege table exhibit has increased more than 50 per cent this year. over that of a year ago. LIVESTOCK ENTRIES Harold Taylor. Dundas Cen- tre will be showing his in ten . 311118. d I“)! 3-13 mu” h” "We" 9 “‘3 w‘m Clzsslfiede 12.1: There were no blind MM 1 Canada design When is in Cm.“ u entered last year but Almon keeping with the fact that Prince SW“ , BMWHL Dunstaffmge h” m Edward Island celebrated this WWW“ 7 mm“ Cecil Godfrey, New .W, you inc 100th annlvrrmy M mum...“ , . Wiltshlre has six and so. so»:. “‘ l,“ "mu" C'mmemm CM' Kim. Queen. City I art and Son. Charlottetown a 1.“ “man MW '0“ emote more than two do 8mm " ' h" “9' A" m Ywhhm' ernment'c Economic Minis- In people to in home- mm c'~ ‘~'"“~~ ' lrving mall. Hatfield for George Brown. left. and crafts this year from Prince Fm'm' "mm" ' ' ' ' ' " ' has to poultry entries. and Chancellor of the Exchcquer Edward Island with Mrs. Not. -———————-— tContlnued on on. I col. 7) 1 James Callaghan tell news- tBritish Import Restrictions Hit One-Third Canadian Trade lBritain has been making con- ’certed efforts to correct this. . In the first half of this year. :trade was running about 2 to .in Canada’s favor. Between lJanuary and August. Canada ‘sold $792,000,000 worth of goods 3 ito Britain—about 15 per cent of ‘ .this country‘s total exports in lthat period. l Mr. Pearson was advised of. 1the move before Mr. Wilson made the announcement in Lon- ‘ ldon Monday, but officials were ’of lstlll waiting for all the details before giving an accurate esti- lmate of the effects. In the meantime. said Trade1 ‘Minister Sharp. it appears as though only about one-third of Canadian exports to Britain will be subject to the duty. This ‘would include newsprint. but te minister said this was un- llikely to affect total sales since l“they ' st 1 ave buy newsprint and ‘crimination inv ‘ Both Mr. Pearson and Oppo- ‘sition Leader Diefenbaker ex. lpressed hope in the Commons :Britain's balance of payments; {difficulties will soon be elimi- ‘nated and the surcharges lved." ers because of Britain's imbal- d ; rop . l “Mr. Wilson has told me how: Wilson Uses Surcharge lToCut British Imports LONDON (CPl—Britain's La- nadian products affected range I nomics Minister George Brown: Mr- Lamomagne landed value of all imports ex- bor government linked this British curbs may remain fort industrial raw mate- cmergency measure with mar-1 several years The i ginal tax incentives to encour-' age more exports and thus seek o overcome a total deft cit in international payments ex timated to reach possibly an an precedented $2.400.000000 his year—about double what had been anticipated in earlier months The Conservatives challenged this estimated deficit as an ex aggeration but indicated they won't put up much of a fight against, the measures which also include plans for profit and wage restraints and government assistance to relocate industry and retrain workers replaced by automation CONCERN ABOUT PAPER In Canadian quarters there was some concern over the tax on newsprint. because this is a big Canadian export item. But there also was a general view the curbs could have been worse ——that they were not as tough as those imposed by Canada against British goods during the 1962 Canadian exchange crisis men at I lando- preu fol-once Monday of an omn- (30" gency oconoml program to be put into effect immediate- ly. By a ta on» 1 1 the Commonwealth." there is no dis- l 0 SAINT JOHN NB. (CPi—Alby-product of roasting these py- $117,000.000 stccl. mining. chem— , rites is sulphur dioxide. a gal ical and fertilizer project forllised to manufacture sulphuric New Brunswick was announced 1 acid. by Premier Robichaud in a tel-. The steel mill and smelter evision address Monday night. i would produce about 800. He said the biggest projectltons annually of this acid. an much he regrets t'lat it [been necessary to impose {charges on certain imports from sai Mr. ‘Pearson. "But Britain's Idiscriminamr-V ' "bllgfihm ever undertaken in the province 1‘ important industrial chemical idle urgency 0' .thens‘luatm" left will include a complete steel | compound. 'm n” allemauve' mill as its major component. “Brunswick mining proposed to construct one of the largest phosphoric acid plants in tho 000. 1-. world to utilize this sulphuric Mr. Bobichaud stressed that acid." the premier said. ow ‘ ~- « he capital expenditure, all by "Brunswick Mining also plan private Canadian corporations. 1 to construct one of the largest TA .is in addition to the more than lfertilizer manufacturing plants 350,000,000 already expended orlln the world. This plant Will lcommitted at the Bathurst-arca ;produce approximately 640.000 HOPE EXPRESSED "I have expressed olir hope. that the combination of meas- ures introduced by Britain will =result in the speedy restoration; ‘ balance of payments equi- .librium and the earliest possi- Eble elimination of the special.’ icharge on imports." ‘ two new base metal mines, two‘ ,,new concentrators and a $12. I ’ 000 are carri Ibrahim Abbound. Sudan's Diefenbaker said: “We recog-1 DreSldenl- dissf’lYed "‘9 cabi' imine - mill site of Brunswick jtons per year of high grade lulu that tile Cll'cumSl'ances "9" mid me m'l'l’ary supreme ‘Mining and Smelling Corpora. ‘ complex fertilizer.‘ imust hay, been such in the council Monday and took over “on and for ‘ smelter ‘ ypar’amund harbor k, b. all powers. His action was a , . Gross sale value ofhthe new develop on ew Brunswick's move toward ending anti-gov- , industries' products at currentinorth shore would handle veg. item 0f “"90” Charge” Wthh ernment “ms ll‘at 1e“ “"mer' lmarket prices would be about seis with drafts up to 40 feet. twill have a very considerable ous dead and injured. $9olooolm annually premier Robichaud said m. “meet 0“ canadian trade “'llh‘ MP Wl'ephnm’ l The premier gave this estl- harbor will be used not only for ith United Kingdom - - ' lmated cost breakdown: Iron ore the mining industry but also'by ‘ “Our hope is that the United 0 Ipreparation plant and steel mill. the pulp. paper. lumber. fishing Kingdom Will find itself 800“ in ‘$64.000,000; mine development and other industries. He did not ‘3 Posmon '0 resume "‘9 “rdl' » and concentrators. $15,000,000; say exactly where the harbol nary tll‘adln: mosifign. free from t I on c 6 chemical and fertilizer plant. twill comm" 3" te i e". A A G 000.000 construction of shi -l , , . Trade officials said ti'ie Brit- .1533; " iCHARTLRBD (ARRIEB ish move is unlikely to have any affect Kennedy ng and handling facilities. ln-‘ , .cluding a 30.000—ton ore carrier.: " h“ “""Omemenl about on : the ore ound of tariff negotiations now being held in Geneva. l iUnited Kingdom as to impel them to bring into effect a sys— l By THE CANADIAN PRESS arner. . . d ‘20'000'000' IBrunswick has chartered he! SMELTER BEING BUILT lfrom Engineering Consultants l .' ‘ ed of Saint John. Construc- A $29,000,000 lead and zinc lllml' , _ smelter already is under con-llm'h Slam” lmlnedlalf’lyv 3* structlon by East Coast Smart “1“ 53”" 'Wm filllhhflfldmg Md ‘lng at Belledune Point on Cahl- “W 12"“ 0"] “’3‘! eur Bay. 25 miles north of Bath- . “led Pr mm” P 1°“ at the 9 urst in northern New Bruns- l M 196'“ H “'"Uld "ea" l-mim wick iman hours of Work at the ship- Eremicr Robichaud said thel-Vard' Brunswick Corporation " decided 7"“ ""l' Chew-“l 3’34 l9! MONDAY. Oct. 26, 1964 The Commons continued de- bate of the government's pro- posal for authority to spend “40.710974 to meet Novem- bar and December bills pend- ing approval of all estimates. This opened the way for a discussion of CBC program- in E. El“ Marcel Lambert lPC-‘Ed‘ .. tilizer complex would employ ' Olson said Parliament Prime Minister Pearson told ' , _ . , 50mm 319:: "fiffidtttta: til: it}: mingpctmaleiuge “thug: more than 1,100 men. in :1de l . He said it appeared from the has been denied access to 03¢ Alvin Hamilton (pc _ Qu'hp. By HAROLD MORRISON bites to washing machines, Ca- in announcing the curbs. Eco-1 homénon’t. ' be rec'ons'ti‘mted 'c fm ' “:0. p ' ‘ ‘ed I n V “an in the 450 employed” mm. preface to the interview read officialsfor tilree years and he pelle) allegations made .on the I ‘tmah cf CBC o erafiom f" "g? He." ""0qu .. pa lpieiinn or the landmine smelter by master of ceremonies John was“ tire of providing the Seven Days show that. a pris- bor government Monday an- from newsprint and plywood to land the chancellor of the ex-‘ "gctect SP r tarp LamMF or a “1”” Comp ex”. ‘1“ 1955 Construction or ,1] Drama the Views had been con- CBC with a blank cheque." loner at St. Vincent de Paul nounced an extra lfi-per-cent leather. plastics and electric ‘ chequcr. James Callaghan. de-; ta‘ 3 :1 r“ grkym Farm. one ’le‘” base metal 3mm! mirachmgs would require about .Ildcred. . . Members of Parliament have . Penitentiary near Montreal had surcharge on imports in a crash stoves. lscribed them as temporary but i mng' fr; "theepCBé said tm‘ Brunswlc‘if propert). to b: ‘ 12.000 000 mamhm‘rs of m.th V; Mr. Dramle noted many hadlan obligation to take a “good'been given a 14-year sentence program to curb overseas All told. about one~third ofl refused to be pinned to any spe- W‘suld .. an] gen “the corp“: ‘OPehed hlmOSt lmmed‘mebf. | lahnr'and create approximately “‘95.”! the "1"".me bl” 531d hard. look" at the CBC because {01‘ his Part in a riot mane than spending and to increase Brlt- Britain's total 1964 imports of l cific elimination date. Canada 1 ratio!” gera'l'i‘ons iw‘ll .be 3”? “mes “um "I lt‘ 29 (m 000 man hm,” of “park 1“, e producers felt the best way public resentment was mount- two years ago and had his mail l ish. earnings. about $14,500.000.000 will be hit withdrew her special higher on t ‘ p ( ', . . lex'St‘E‘g "mm and concentrator m", p'mfincp hal‘dle e’memlsm was m 9x' e ""1 t9 the P°”,‘,t Where “Pretty . Stopped 5thd be €l‘eCk9d- The 15 - per - cent levy. oe- by the higher rates. files in about nine months; there l H‘ : also: thSCENéedfwme £20 “1”” “Nb of Béthursi‘ The Nomi...” «ave this mum,“ dfififirn‘. SOUGHT idrasnc “no” ought 9 bell Heat Macqual‘ne (PC ‘ scribed as temporary. is on the Prime Minister Wilson's La-zwas some talk here that the! H3“ “mule e B or a The second new mme “"11 be ' A tonnage list of the major prod. ucts to be produced: Finished steel 250.000. lead concentrates 39.000, zinc concentrates 38.000. "cavalier disregard" to tests about. programming. P r i m c Minister Pearson agreed allegations made on a DI‘O- hat the new Larder U property? .of Key Anacon Limited. about 15 miles from the present . Brunswick mine. The additional 15 - per - cent. duty will affect about 20 per - - ‘ t ' ' l- l ' ‘ CBC program by a former The remler said a 1,500—ton- m “l? (“Fellini’s 430m"- 3" 5::r‘tth0fofczliifilils silligrorgem'oegl prison” at St- Vincent de laday 1)custom lead and zinc phlmc “M 800'000' Dho‘plrx‘c Britain. Percentages of imports1 .Pa‘” penitentiary abmit pm?“ Chnfienlfaml‘ Will he hull! '0 “.“d am'om' Eran‘naled P ' lshments should be investt- ‘ e n. m hm mlnm llzcr 640.000 from other sources to be al-l .1)?“ 55 “re 01“ 9 . , - , _ {edgy United mm“ 48 ti gated. :answick Mm pmmsed 3 SN.“ All the ra\\ materials. except "1- 'c thh - {lie l Stanley KMWI“ -‘NDP— lond concentrator to recnt'prll": l‘hml’l‘al' lw'l‘ WWI," l” cc , ommonwea counres. w. i V rm Cent") . Y produced m Now Bnmsmfl, l 13: European Common Marketl “#20: 31:01.01. “5 in”; 1abolfllttbtlflxioo fonts par .VPatrax Th9 "mm? “mm [mum i ' i ‘ ' 18 0 a 10" 19 concr‘n l‘ . ' ' _ I 2;: Euro-3:3: area Trade Are". View of American Nazi leader -fmm wanna, M the three about 100,000 kilowatts of power l 'remal " l George Lincoln Rockwell. jmines anllnll.v h.V ROM“ l CWle “'llh tht’ emergencyl whim he said may have set. 3 ' ‘challd said it is significant the 5 moves were British negotiations l back the cause of racisma ‘WILL USE PYRITES .Vlaclaouac Bydrnljlectrlc orm with the lnlernatinnai Mona?! Gerald Began tL—Hallfax) To produce flnishcd slct‘l, loci on the St. John River near e CBC programs were in bad taste it was the fault of directors. all bllt two of them appointed under the Conservatives. Gene Rhcaumc ‘PC—Nnt‘th- west Territories) asked whether the houbling of CBC President Alphonse Ouimet's salary was so he CBC would try to keep the Liberal party in power. - TUESDAY. Oct. 2'7 The Commons meets at 2:30 to continue debate on m supply. The Senate iBrunswick planned to use the h‘rcdcriclon is scheduled to bee ‘iron pyrite ooncenlratcs. Ono gin producing power in 1968. Min Regime Seeks. To Quiet Ouster Alarm uord of Khrushchev-'5 whers- . abouts ,slnt‘c Leonid l. Brezhnev look nvcr the party leadership tary Fund to obtain huge tem- porary loans to help build up Bn’tish monetary reserves. Cane ads and other countries have already been helping to some extent through currency ex change swaps and other mean ures to help Britain get back on .3 her financial feet. Britain's economic problem has increased this year because while imports were climbing.‘I exports were not keeping pace. l At the some time. more capital seemed to be flowing out of the country. The now MOSCOW tAPI Kremlin regime appealcd in East European allies Monday p. lnteri charges on imports and ' tax concession for exporters. and the f a wealth economics camel). the government figures to stands adjourned until Nov. 3. Moon what It described on a two billion difference between and ound. ‘ for llnlty within the Communist , he call apparently sought to quiet the alarm ,caused by the oustci' of Nikita 'Khrushc'iev as Soviet lcadcr. The appeal came in an «in ‘torial on the front pagc of tho governmcnt ncwspapcr iri'cstla, it warned the fulurc cconomic ‘progress in Easlcrn Hilrnpc Will and How ,\‘. Knsygln became, promwr. Thcrc arc unconfirmed r!- nori: indicating foreign (Tom munl~t dclcgntiolis here wer- hcln: givcn a mcmorandum cr- plalnln: l'lc cilanzc to th- Krcmlin command Thc Ichvtia editorial. rcpcatpd asstlrancc K h r u .I h: ‘demand stronger Communist chm": popular pollclcs of da- lunity, slallni7atlon and cconomlr. pr!» ‘ There was no mcniion of :i'oss uollld be continued by {China and thc appcal sccmcd ,aimcd only at Eastcrn lliili-opc. Where doubt had boon ralscrl n: .to ill? wisdom of bustingv ‘ Khrushchev. [ The editorial (‘Olnt'lflf‘tl ollh a [flocking to Moscow of forcizn 1Communist dclcaallonc to sock lcxplanations for Kll‘llnllt'llf‘\'.< .‘removal Oct. H as prcmlor and lfirst secretary of flu~ sol-tr! iCommunist party, 'Diplomatic Informanls in lVlenna reported thry had learned ihf‘ now Krolnlin lcad- ers are pulling prcssllrc on tho East European f‘nnlmlln'sl parties to speak out azaind Khrushchev. St a l c m cuts of praise for Khrushchcl had come from Hungary. t'7cchn- slovnkls. East German}. and Poland.) TOLD OF‘ ACCOUNT Communist (‘nrrf‘spnndrnls in Moscow were advisod an offl- ciol account of the sccrcl moot. 1“ that deposed Khrushciev would he published within the nod few days. has been no official l11< <11(‘l'f‘<§0":. Thcn if stressed "in tho prmcnl moment. th! mm of pm: and social oror gross in an increasing degree dcpcnds on strengthening tho 1mm of thc socialist counrrlcl. the World Communist Move- mr‘nl “ St. John’s 1 Dock Strike 15 Resumed ST .lnH\ S, \‘fld CPI—St .lnhn': apocarcd hcadcd for its second ion: waterfront tleup of thc \cm \londay as longshorc‘ mcn began setting up strike [llflt.ll‘f‘l< along the harbor in a smtrcl vole shortly ho- forc noon. Inc 300 actlrc mem- bcrs of the Longshoremcnl Prolcrtnc l'ninn 1ND.l voted unanimously to walk off their watcrfront jobs at 1 pm. VST h nrntcsl recommendations 0! tan industrial inquiry. h