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Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Dec 1963, p. 1

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Christmas THOUGHT FOR TODAY Don't begrudge a stingy person his money -- he never buys any fun with it. ail Volume Shatiers | Ghe Oshawa Cures .eCOr s--Page l WEATHER REPORT. Occasional snow squalls tonight. Colder. Cloudy with snowflurries Thursday. Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy VOL, 92---NO. 296 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1963 Authorized as Second Class Mail o Ottawa and for payment Post Office Department if Pos! in Cash. TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES Pope Paul May Visit India Next; DAMASCUS, Syria (AP)--The| But he added: "It comes at spiritual leader of world Ortho-|a time when all Eastern and j doxy, Patriarch Athenagoras 1,| Western leaders of Christianity) 3 will meet with Pope Paul VI! are looking forward to the cher- during the pontiff's pilgrimage!ished hope of Christian unity." to the Holy Land next month, Aprhenagoras had proposed a it was announced today. summit meeting of all major It will be the first encounter) Christian religions during the § between the head ofthe Roman) pope's trip. The Vatican indi- Catholic Church and an Ortho-| cated Pope Paul would be will-| § dox patriarch in more than five ing to see Athenagoras and pos- centuries, sibly other Christian leaders, al- Announcement of the historic)/though not for formal talks on encounter between Pope Pau!/ Christian unity. and the American-born Athena- It was suggested the two lead- agate gy Fig actooml might pray together in the Githodox Church of Aritioch Church of the Holy Sepulchre. (Syria) and the. Entire East The meeting will take place in EX-MRS. BURTON REFLECTED Mexican divorce from actor R chard Burton. Latter has been making film in Mexico. --AP Wirephoto Sybil Burton cast reflection in mirror in lobby of her New York City apartment Monday night as she was interviewed by newsman after obtaining a Athenagoras wil] travel to Je- rusalem from his see in Istanbul| despite the opposition of the} Jerusalem, Me 0 Orthodox! Greek Orthodox Church. Its rul-| A spokesman for the Ort jing body went on record in| i te in Istanbul, where) - een tae his see, in- Athens Tuesday against a trip sisted however, that a decision| by Athenagoras to the Holy on a meeting with Pope Paul|Land at the time of the Pope's pilgrimage. is not yet final. said| The Greek church is the prin- Informants in Istanbul the final decision rests with|cipal Orthodox opponent to the All other Orthodox sees, including|Christian unity movement. Alexandria, Greece -- which is|/other Orthodox churches are re- opposed to a meeting--Moscow,|ported to have sent their ap- Qshawa will keep fighting for|(Oshawa appoints one of the Belgrade, Budapest, Bucharest,|proval to Athenagoras for @two amendments to the mew/three members on the Commis- Sofia, Cyprus and Prague. meeting with Pope Paul Harbors Bill which was ad- sion.) While '"'first among equals" in The Eastern church split from|journed indefinitely Monday by The mayor said the consent the Orthodox hierarchy Patri--Rome in the great schism of the Senate banking committee:|problem arose because some arch Athenagoras lacks the over 1504 City Couhcil consent rather) harbors have more than one all authority of the Pope. --_-- than 'notification' before -- on them and ecg Oshawa Harbor Commission en develop as to whose city "The becinioren a followed :a -- ed the provisions of/representative should sit on a ici 7 jthe new bi commission oe aon P sbig mon Fo The Tight to inspect the; 'I suggested to the ' Senate accepted an invitation to visit Commission's books _and rec-/committee separate amend- India for his second break with ords and right to "notice" of its|ments covering both situations," the tradition against papal bylaws : ; said the mayor, "They said they travel abroad. The pilgrimage "We like the bill; provided the/ would consider it. In Three-Storey "Bi T Bl * endments are included," said| On the inspection of books, or a SS . oronto aze Hever" tatean Gifford today.|right of audit, Mr, Stead got [P)--M than) His Worship testified at yester- Monday simply, "this informa- Orthodox patria as Eugene|smoke today to pring under|W4S_accompamed by "ily solic) «That's not good enough," BT Mk SsaS Str 2° which lentes arbor] answered IV, who Ti tor E. G. McNeely and Hi mayor. "I'm not TI at the Council of Florence in'damaged a downtown building. ae chairman Fred satisfied with that. I-want them 1439. oy | One fireman suffered an in-|"C'%; cieaq. assistant deputy Mayor Irked By Ottawa Official Fireman Hurt We need a safe- wide open. We. shouldn't have) T h S ik ' , ' A | to di 8 s : Theodossing described the up-ljured hip, while fighting the| riser of Marine, sald in Ostr| factor eomme Om,our knees to se | Teacher strike coming meeting between Pope|biaze in the three-storey, 60- Paul and oe Athena-| year-old building near John and) goras as one "courtesy" ra-|King Streets midway between| : ther than a formal conference|Spadina and University Ave- mount iw -- rin eel ee between a city council and on Christian unity. nues. ' hg ey x a pire tit can| harbor commission would ob- Roost eae tes ovabid viate this problem. BAKER'S TAX FILE SCANNED | "phat is a bureaucratic atti-/ "Our relations with the pres, awa Monday that a constant) pyuard."' amendment would be tanta-| The mayor agreed good rela- " retorted His Worship to-/e@t harbor commission (Fred) | Students Stage Red Square Riot MOSCOW (AP)--Several hun-/fighting police on top of tne dred Negro students from|trucks and underneath. | Ghana and other African na-| The big gates of itions stormed into Red Square|Tower, the main entrance from [today right under Pre mi-ef|the Kremlin into Red Square,| Khrushchev's _ office break into the Kremlin. to get into the Kremlin. | The students said they were Tiey stormed past the office protesting the fatal stabbing of|of Khrushchev. They were sep-| a student from "hana by a Rus-! arated from his office by the big| sian last Friday. brick wall of the Kremlin. The Negroes broke past bar-| Whether he was inside his of- ricades into Red Square, where! fice was not known. | Russians march on May Day| Inside the Kremlin, the Soviet i ; land on the day of the October| parliament was meeting, discus-| © Revolution, But. the scene was/sing the new budget. more reminiscent of the wild' Police apparently at no time days of revolution in 1917. The students bore a_ sign|students. Instead they wheeled] ithe head of an African. Another them to go home. | sign declared: "Friend today,' storming up to,a barricade of| devil tomorrow trucks, one labelled "bread,"'| "Moscow is a second Ala-'the students fought their way| bama,"' shouted one student. into the square. 'They ran in| GATHER AT EMBASSY aa of the big red tomb of The students fought police all) 4°"? and on to Spasky Gate, the wa yto Red Square from the|the tower of which holds the Ghanaian Embassy-a mile| Kremlin. clock. away, where they first gath- DRIVE OUT CROWDS ered. . | Shortly after 2 p.m., erowds They stormed over a bairri- of shoppers who had swarmed| jeade of Soviet trucks -adege Bet into Red Square were driven out jtrance to Red. Square fighting|aiong with foreign correspond- police on top of the trucks atlents" ihe. eatnance fo i idan The students remained in the | square for a time and were re-| inforeed later by some 200 more who came, apparently carrying | a message of protest. | made their way up to Spasky| | Sends 200 | Gate, where a Kremlin official! jcame out and said a delegation} jof 10 would be received by the) Students Home ministry of higher education. A! H |group of the demonstrators then| headed for the ministry with SAULT au MOUTON, Que. wo; H ; (AP) -- About 200° students at| ci Petition of complaint. Spasky| j windows, | banged shut as students rolled) : fought with police and tried to!over police opposition and tried} = showing a knife plunged into!out loud speakers appealing for} © ; They | & used their guns to control the| | "4 5 | "FREED BY FIREMEN | Nine-year-old Tony Goguen of Hamilton smiles from his hospital bed after being trapp- ed for 30 minutes in a six-inch space between buildings. Fire- | | men had to chop a hole n a barber shop wall to reach the | boy who was playing on the | roof before he fell, He was | trapped 30 minutes. --CP' Wirephotol speak, gave this explanation to JOHNSON OFFERS TALKS AT SUMMIT ere Willing To Meet Anyone, He Says WASHINGTON (AP--Pres- ident Johnson said today he is willing to meet with any world leaders -- obviously including Soviet Premier Khrushchev -- any time he believes such conferences would be 'fruitful and pro- ductive." Johnson was asked at a press conference to discuss his attitude toward a pos- sible early: meeting with Khruhchev, He replied with the statement of willingness to engage in promising talks -- a number of which he al- ready has arranged with leaders of Canada, West Ger- many, Britain, Italy and Mexico. reporters after complaining of what they termed substantial interpretation by the press in re- porting what Rusk said to the NATO ministerial meeting in Paris Monday. They objected to any infer- jence that Rusk had asked the Western allies to help Moscow in its battle with Peking. Past U.S. policy has been to stand aloof from the inside-the-bloc conflict, and Rusk's position was described as representing no change. What Rusk actually said at the closed session of NATO min- isters remained a secret. Re- porters in Paris were given only a briefing by a state. depart- |ment representative on what |Rusk said. No transcript of WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S.|remarks was provided. State department officials said| Tuesday that State Secretary|REMAIN ANONYMOUS -- Dean Rusk is against any West-| In Washington, the officials, ern intervention in. the ideologi-|who declined to be quoted by cal dispute between the Sovietiname gave this statement to Union and Red China. jrenaesars: ines tale' naan ; - | "There has been substan' But they said the Soviet Un.- | isinterpretation of what Secre- ion's efforts--imperfect as they) Z may be--to solve cold-war prob: '21% ih" his speech Monday' be. lems through-peace coexistence|$* pe y obviously are preferable to the fore the ministerial meeting at j ' NATO. tough line of Red China. ie The officials, authorized to| 'The. speech itsell was a | PARIS (CP) -- The diploma-; tie discovery of Communist} China was a feature of a sin-| gularly sedate NATO minister- ----|ial meeting which ended Tues-|quring the meeting at the alli- Red China Threat Dominates NATO gen- eral review of the entire inter- tio al situation, : "In 'his brief comments con- cerning relations between. the Soviet Union and Communist China he noted that to the ex- tent that their quarrel is about militancy, vs peaceful coexist ence--and only to that extent-- it would seem that the peace- ful coexistence theory better serve our interest. "At the same time the secre- |tary stated that while peaceful coexistence as practised by the Soviet Union is by no means "genuine and. fundamental' im- provement in East-West rela-/ tions. This was a dominant theme |French-speaking Roman Catho-; iday -- a day ahead of schedule. | ance's political, defence andjideal, the position of the West Cash Stockpile Baffles Probers whole show: sometimes. and Alex Shestowsky) were | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sen-jof the things that will be pur- "We supplied (leased) (55|never better," he said. "But,|lic schools were sent home today D ss acres of parca Fi . the od ba knows what is in the;when six teachers refused to Court ecision Commission here; - we want|future? No, I think it's a right) work because they haven't been some say in its development,|We deserve." | paid since Oct. 30. | We are still in the minority on His Worship recalled that Mr,| Two teaching members of re-| Lauded By | the Commission, you know." Stead had telephoned both Mr.|ligious orders remained on duty | LTP ae The Soviet Union -- always) named as the adversary of the! |West at these affairs--picked| up some sort of grudging re- spectability when State Secre- tary Dean Rusk of the United McNeely and Hamilton mayor| and taught about 75 children. | . | States said Moscow's -- policy| Vic Copps (Hamilton also ob-| Laureat Maltais, president o\U.S. Communists ::ou: prevail over that of Red/ jected to terms of the bill andjthe school commission of this | China. } economic affairs were reversed. At the same time, NATO min- should be one that makes clear its preference for realistic proach toward peaceful eoedies tence as against militancy. isters heard ag powerful pleas from Rusk for creation of a NATO multi - lateral nuclear) force. Rusk stressed the substantial| military and political advan-! Malaysia PM ate investigators said today they|sued. are trying to ferret out where' He satd he expects other wit- wants out, had then gone to the Senate and! told them both cities like Toronto) and| Village 160 miles east ef Quebec ity, said he hopes to solve the were|problem by obtaining a bank WASHINGTON (AP) -- The| The West should explore ey-| 'tages of such a force and ar- U.S. Communist party has ap-|ery way to promote coexistence| Sued it was the best proposal Raps Indonesia yet. advanced to attain nuclear Robert G. Baker got the thous-/nesses to be questioned about plauded and the chairman of the with Russia as a check on the KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya ands of dollars in cash a wit-/the source of the money and agreeable to terms of the bill. [loan for the salaries. House of Representatives com-|militant attitude of Peking to- partnership without prolifera- ness testified he kept in his Sen-)aqded that Baker himself will ate office. : |be asked about it when he is To help them, President vhs called as a witness. son signed an executive order) Ser ; permiting the rules commits, ,senaton, Ruel Jordan carrying on the Nae ee Boxee |chairman, said he does not know amine the joa iiles shen the|When Baker, a onetime Senate Johnson's protege » spa.(Page boy, will testify. . Indica- president was Senate Democr tions are that it will not be tic leader. soon. "There was a big misunder- standing somewhere," said the) mayor. "Mr. McNeely told him| we still had objections. Then, he} came down here and we met! with him Monday afternoon be- fore we went to Ottawa and he says everything's cleared up. "We still didn't get what we wanted in Ottawa but the bill jtion of national nuclear forces. West Germany supported the plea but Britain and France remained non-committal, | A communique issued at the} Sault au Mouton is adjacent/mittee on un-American activi-|wards the west, said Rusk. to Les Escoumains where 525/ties has denounced a decision! Never before has the topic of| children were given an unsched-| overthrowing the party's con- Communist China cropped up so| uled holiday Tuesday for the|viction for failing to registet aS/frequently at a NATO meeting.| same reason. jan agent of the Soviet Union. |pritain's Foreign Secretary) The ~~ a "Fantastic," said committee) R A. Butler joy gt eaten een ment, in charge of education,,|chairman Edwin E. Willis|,:, i | : acraiied a $36,500 Lea loan for| (Dem. La.). He said the U Pa licen gt re gy ted ee ia Hag Fat nea eye the school commission to pay 20/ Appeals Court "bought the pho-| ,; i; ie .mporvance not} teachers' salaries owing 'et Viously important to the West,!oniy of seeking agreement on| (AP)--Malaysia's prime minis- ter accused Indonesia today of sending saboteurs and secret agents to hialaysia with the aim of shattering the new feder- ation's economy by destroying public service facilities. Tunku Abdul Rahman. told Parliament 37 Indonesian agents had been arrested in Malaya Senator Carl T. Curtis (Rep. Jordan said no more publicij has died a natural death. If it! since the end of September party." A limited measures which would|and Singapore and large quan- 0 imagine Moscow w. be driven into the brace. help to reduce tension "'but of|tities of arms, hand grenades, achieving a genuine and funda-|explosives and miscellaneous mental improvement in East-|sabotage equipment had been Neb.) said he regarded the tes- timony about the money as "'the is introduced at the next ses-| sion, we'll be there," hearings will be held until after the Christmas holidays. them|ney argument of the Communist|pyt jt would be waa to | as Classes returned to normal in) The three-judge court ruled| est's em- LYMAN GIFFORD {Les Escoumains this morning. |unanimously Tuesday that the big point" at the commiltee's| first public hearings Tuesday) in its investigation of Baker's} business dealings and allega-| tions. of conflict of interest. Baker, 35, resigned Oct. 7 from his $19,600-a-year post as secretary to the Senate's Demo- cratic majority after questions were raised about whether his outside interests conflicted with his official duties or involved other improprieties. BLONDE TALKS WOUND MISSED BY DALLAS DOCTORS in a filing drawer in his office came from Mrs. Gertrude C.| WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres-| Here is the new account of|forehead. Unquestionably, Novak, trim blonde widow Of ajident John F. Kennedy might|the wounds, as reported by a|wound was fatal. contractor who was Baker's|have survived the first bullet to source acquainted with results! 'This bullet. the source said partner in the building Of -Aistrike him in the Dallas assas-|of a post-mortem examination| was recovered from the limoui- pen perry " one rd Mi. |sination, a source familiar with) conducted at the Bethesda, Md , ine. She told of getting thousands | ayjtons i ' > S. | anes nital: : of dollars at a time from Baker| aye. it nisi -_ AE yn maya} slash bla ais The second shot fired by the for deposit in the motels ac-|that roved fatal f _ The first shot struck Kennedy assassin hit Governor John B. "ount. to meet construction| os.° Seine SENS _in the back, made what was de-|Connally of Texas. in the chest un é This source said Tuesday the|scriped as a small, neat holelas he turned toward Kenned costs and operating expenses. 'rirst bullet fired by Kennedy'sland penetrated two nH "Bali pichibecebr iin boeskered Committee sources said after|acassin struck the president inlinchos wi or urec\after the first bullet hit the 'he hearing that investigation|tne hack and did not damage|o cre, Vihout damaging vital| president. The source said Con- armed up one or two pOS-|,,. vital orcans. He said it was organs jnally's wound was at approxi- sources of the case--or a not likely (o have caused death _The bullet may have entered|mately the same elevation as rt of it--and that other This accoun of Kennedy's| Sennedy's back after first glan-\the one in Kennedy's back. He 'e be'ng run down. They). ing differed Bove earlier re-|°i"s off some part of the pres-|was seated in front of Kennedy ! to disclose details. ports provided by physicians| 'dential limousine, since its pen-/on a jump seat. s, tanking Republican) yi ministered to the president|etration was not deep when) Since there was an interval ver of the committee, said shortly after he was shot Nov.{compared with the damagejof five or six seconds. between in an interview that this is one'5) done by the other shots fired.|/Kennedy's first and second Doctors who attended Ken-)This first bullet was said to|wounds, the new account leaves |nedy in the emergency room at|have been the one that was re-|the implication _that Kennedy CITY EMERGENCY Parkland. Hospital in Dallas|covered from the stretcher on/ might have survived -- perhaps ad found two wounds, one in the which Kennedy was carried into|escaped serious injury -- had PHONE NUMBERS throat and one in the head. They! the hospital. he quickly thrown himself to the expressed some uncertainty, The second. bullet to strike|floor of his limousine after the POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 whether both' were caused b° }Kennedy--the third bullet fired|first bullet struck. HOSPITAL 723-2211 this the same bullet. But they said --left a large hole in the back! It seems apparent, however, jthat if two bullets were in-of the president's head, de-|that the'first wound was so pain- been fatal. sue and severely damaged the|was unable to react immediat- Assassins First Shot "fhe tein ant Ble Str uck J F K In Back federal government had failed to prove there was a volunteer available who would step for- ward and register the party un- der terms of the 1950 Subver- sive Activities Control Act. Lawyers for the Commumist} party had argued that no officer! of the party could register for it without incriminating himself "This is not a complete vic- tory,"' said Gus Hall, spokesman for the party in New York. But he declared: "This decision re- affirms the validity of the Con- stitution and the Bill of Rights \for all Americans. . . . It is my: jely except to throw his hands opinion this decision will help to in front of him. jdispel a legal and political cli- |mate that tends to outlaw polit- |KEPT ON BACK jical dissent in our country." External Affairs Minister Martin of Canada gave Can- ada's policy toward China as one of trade and cultural con- tacts--but no formal recognition and no support for a United Na- tions seat. SHOWED UNITY Martin and Defence Minister Hellyer said the NATO meet- ing, which did not have any "flamboyant" decisions to make at this time of relative East- West calm, was chiefly valu- able in showing NATO's unity and integrity after a period of drastic change. The 15-country alliance was firmly pledged to work for a found a wound in Kennedy's jback. This can' be explained, however, by the fact that he was on his back on an emer- gency-room table throughout the Soe: LATE NEW S FLASHES time they worked in vain to re- vive him. These physicians, in reporting a throat wound, said it could have been caused by the entry iof a bullet or perhaps by the} exit of the one that struck. him in the head, They also raised the possibility that it could have been caused by a piece of bone or metal driven through the throat by the bullet that entered the back of the head. The autopsy findings * were said to conclude that the latter itheory was correct Reports of a bullet wound in the throat-had raised questions | because it was established that) from a railway bridge to the died in hospital today. Eric classes at the Galt Collegiate bridge. and behind Kennedy, s 90 Foot Plunge Kills Galt Youth GALT (CP) -- A 15-year-old youth who plunged 90 feet Toronto Unionists To Aid Strikers TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto union members will help striking Trenton hospital employees attend a Christmas party with their families Saturday by supplying substitute pickets, a union official said Tuesday. Anglo-American Military Cuts Denied LONDON (Reuters) -- British officials said today they know of no Anglo - American decision to discuss with Russia volved, either wound could have|stroyed considerable brain tis-/ful and startling that Kennedy|the assassin fired from above| the possibility of arranging for cuts of up to 10 per cent in the military budgets of the three countries. froze Grand River Monday Larsen was on his way to when he toppled off the icy West relations." seized. 2088 HAPPY TO BE FREE and 18 other hostages were freed Monday night at. an area near Oruro, from where they were flown today. "Boy"', said Fergerstrom, "I'm go- ing home and take a hot bath and shave." (AP Wirephote Robert Fergerstrom, 26- year-old bachelor "Peace Corps volunteer from Hono- lulu, - gives airport _ inter- view. at La Paz, Bolivia, Tuesday after being released from hostage at the hands of Communist-led tin miners, He by radio from Lima)

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