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Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Jan 1964, p. 1

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ap em cin at in og ee ag ag ape i ey i a ig i a ae mney a in and Grenade Found By Four Oshawa Boys--Pg. Automation is something that work done It used while we sit to be called She Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Mainly cloudy Sunday and con- tinuing mild. Winds light. he VOL, 93---NO. 15 Price Not Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1964 Authorized as Second Class Mal Ottawa and for payment li Post Office of Postage in Cash. SIXTEEN PAGES U.S. Envoy Flees To Canal Zone PANAMA CITY (AP) -- U.S, after Panama took the final po By severing diplomatic re- la with the United States. Meanwhile, Soviet Premier Khrushchev threw Soviet sup- port behind the Panamanians and denounced U.S. action in the Canal Zone. Most US. members and their dependents were evacuated to the Canal Zone Friday night shortly be- fore an anti-American students demonstration and several hours after Panama said it was recalling. the remainder of its dipiomatic staff from Washing- ton Panama asked the United States to recall its embassy staff from Panama City, but a U.S. state department official said the request did not apply to consular officials, Peace Corps volunteers or members of the U.S. Agency for Interna- tional 'Development. Because of the exceptions, the United States does not re- gard the break as final. U.S. officials also indicated that President Johnson's trou- bleshooter, Edwin M. Martin, ned to remain in Panama. n embassy staff bassy and handle consular af- fairs. Taylor will assume the of- fice of U.S. consul general, Khrushchev, touring a textile factory in Bree 100 "It was not comrade Castro who organized the events in Panama," Khrushchey - sai d. "These events 'are a result of the predatory policy of United States imperialists in Panama," "We do not know what part the Communists took in these events, but we firmly know what part the Communists took in these events, but we firnily know that the people of Pan- ama, the working people of Panama, are fighting for the freedom of their country, "They want to get rid of the oppression of the United States imperialists. This is a legiti- mate desire and we side with the people of Panama... . "We are convinced that sooner or later the people of all countries will gain genuine free- dom and independence and ex- pel the imperialists from their territories, This is why we say: Display some reason, gentle- men. Get out before it is too 10 Cents per Copy These steel stairs lead up but that's about all -- for the moment anyway. An Ottawa late, before you are chucked out." oe contractor, trying out a new STAIRWAY TO NOWHERE method, has constructed the #0-foot staircase and plans to build a three-storey apart- ment building around it. -- CP Wirephoto staff in Washington. eta as es. Costa Rica also lomatic matters States in Pan- will dipl for the United ama. A skelton staff of seven men, headed by senior consular offi- cial Henry Taylor, remained in Panamia City to man the em- Swiss Police Arrest OAS Suspect BERN, Switzerland (Reut- ers) -- Georges Marcel Watin, described by French police as the most dangerous of the Se- eret Army Organization terror- ists free until now, has been ar- rested by, the Swiss police, the Swiss news agency said today. Watin, a small man with a limp, was regarded as the brain behind plots to assassinate French President de Gaulle at the military college in Paris last year and later at Petit Clamart,.a Paris suburb. Aged about 35, he was being held in a jail somewhere near Bern, it was believed. The police said the Swiss government had dec'ded to ex- pel Watin but did not say whether this would be to France. Watin was sentenced in his absence to death by a French military court in Paris March 4, 1963, for his part in an at- tempted machine gun assassina-| tion of de Gaulle in the out-| skirts of Paris Aug. 22, 1962. France will demand Watin's extradition "as soon as pos- sible,"' justice ministry sources Conference here have agreed to recommend to their govern- ing fishing limits, it was an- nical "A (Reuters)---A _ ma- ¢ 'the European Fisheries ments.a draft convention defin- nounced Friday, A communique said the con- ference has invited the British government to convene a tech- conference open to all states fishing in the North At- lanic to draft a modern code for the policing of fishing op- erations. Canada and the United States will be asked to send represent- atives in order that extension of the provisions of a policing convention to the Northwest At- lantic fishing waters may be delegations attend-/nation Policing Code Sought For Fishing Industry - ere The communique said the 16- _conference urged the governments representéd on the North-East Atlantic Fisheries Commission to intensify their efforts for the conservation of stock, The conference . will vene here Feb. 26. Under the draft convention, coastal countries would have the exclusive right to fish and exclusive jurisdiction in fishing matters within a six-mile zone measured from base-lines. This would be subject to transitional arrangements to enable affected parties to adapt themselves to exclusion from the zones, A further zone between six and 12 miles would remain recon- considered. open to fishermen of other na- LONDON (Reuters)--The So- viet government has recognized the new government of the Republic of Zanzibar and Pemba, the Soviet news agency Tass reported today. In a telegram to the president of the republic, Soviet Premier Khrushchey said he hoped "the relations between the Soviet Union. and. the Republic of Zanzibar and Pemba will de- velop. on the basis of the principles of peaceful coexist- ence, in the interests of both countries and of a lasting peace in the whole world." Communist countries . th at have recognized the Zanzibar regime following the Sunday armed coup ousting Zanzibar's sultan so far include Yugo- slavia, East Germany,' China and North Korea. in Paris said today. New Zanzibar Regime Recognized By USSR ZANZIBAR (Reuters) A gpokesman for this _ island's revolutionary government an- nounced today the country's official. name now is the Peo- ple's Republic of Zanzibar. He also denied reports that Field Marshall John Okello had deposed President Abeid Ka- rume. "President. Karume is still head of state, there's no ques- tion about this," the spokesman said, The denial followed a state- ment broadcast Friday by Okello, chief of the armed forces, in which he criticized the BBC for reporting the alleged Zanzibar radio broad- cast and other British newspa- per reports. tions which traditionally fished inthe area, oF cs The coastal country would have powers of regulation and enforcement in the latter zone on a non-discriminatory basis. However, in this zone the coastal nation would be able, subject to the agreement of the other signatories, to restrict fishing where the local popula- tion is overwhelmingly depend- end on coastal fisheries. Unborn Baby Will Get New Blood QUEBEC (CP) -- Sometime in the next few weeks, a team jat the Winnipeg General Hos- |pital will give an unborn baby a fresh injection of blood to jsave its life. This is the one baby in 120 whose mother's blood is an Rh negative type and whose sys- tem is sending antibodies to de- stroy the foetus. it bears. Since 1947, the treatment in such cases has been to deliver the infant as early as possible of blood. But 30 per cent of such bab- jies have died in the womb. The Winnipeg hospital will in- troduce a method to save these that was evolved recently in New Zealand. Dr. Bruce Chown, professor in the department of medicine at the University of Manitoba, de- scribed it this week at the meeting of the Canadian Society of Clinical Investigation. The new method involves tak- ing a sample of fluid from the placenta, in which the foetus rests, and analyzing it to de- i |delegates and give it a complete change 50 LONDON (Reuters) -- Com- }\monwealth Secretary Duncan Sandys today started an all-out weekend bid to find a settle- ment of the problems of the troubled Mediterranean island of Cyprus. He was scheduled to meet of the two rival communities in Cyprus -- the Turkish - Cypriots and Greek- Cypriots--in an effort to get them to agree to a_ political settlement to their dispute that Police, Army Still Patrol Riot Areas DACCA, East Pakistan (Reu- ters)--The situation in this riot- torn east Pakistan provincial captial appeared to be easing today after five days of what were reliably reported to have been the biggest Hindu-Mosiem riots here in more than 10 years. But strong police and army patrols were still in ce, and a 20-hour curfew was re- imposed on parts of the city after 'a break of only four hours. Government officials have given no casualty figures. But, foreign private concerns and diplomatic missions reported a high death toll, possiblya s high as 300, hospitals choked with wounded and outlying villages burned down. Sandys Tackles Cypriot Dilemma led to bloody pre - Christmas fighting. : Sesawtile, a special United Nations envoy was scheduled to leave' here for Cyprus after arriving by plane Friday for a whirlwind series of meetings with British, Greek, Turkish and Cypriot aides. f Jose Rolz-Bennett of Guate- mala, representing UN Secre- tary-General U Thant, opened his talks here with a call on Sandys. Sandys is chairman of the current. Cyprus constitu- tional conference here which is seeking a political solution to te. bitter feud between the Greek and Turkish communities on the Mediterranean island. SEES OTHERS In quick succession Rolz-Ben- nett called on the Greek-Cyp- riot, Greek, Turkish-Cypriot and Turkish delegates to the confer- ence. He also had a 30-minute méeting with British Foreign Minister R. A, Butler. Authoritative sources said the main aim of the Rolz-Bennett mission is to discuss the work of Indian Lt.-Gen. Prem Singh bail on charges of defrauding the central figure in a $100 Anthony DeAngelis leaves Superior Court in Jersey City, N.J., yesterday enroute to jail after he was unable to post @ tank 'storage concern of nearly $46.5 million, DeAnge- lis, president of the ied Crude Vegetable Oil Refining Corp.. of Bayohne, which went bankrupt two months ago, is », Indonesia , (Reut- ers)--Left-wing workers today failed in an attempt to take over the British-Dutch Unilever Conporation, one of the biggest commercial. organizations in Indonesia. Corporation director B. W. 'Schwarz refused the workers' over control to unionists. Thegovernment controlled national news agency Antara today published statements by five large mass organizations demanding a government take- over of British interests in retaliation against Britain's support of the Malaysian feder- ation. The take-over bid came after crowds of students demon strated in front of the American' Embassy and the home of the British ambassador, Some 2,000 students and youths demonstrated in front of the US. Embassy shouting "Panama yes, Yankee no" and "Crush the American imperial- million vegetable oil scandal. (AP Wirephoto) ists." KICK BRITISH OU INDONESIANS CR U.K. Firm Repels Takeover Attempt At the home of the British ambassador some 1,000 stu- dents demonstrated and read a petition urging the Indonesian government to cut off diplo- matic relations with. Britain. 'Steel-helmeted police formed 'two lines in front of the locked US. pogrom gates as the ed lier demonstration at the Brit- ish ambassador's residence. The US. em charge d'affaires received a five-mem- pashan pee Daa 6 ee rs wl a gaine planned U6, YO Flot movements in the Indian Ocean and expressing support for "'the 'heroic vureagis of the people of Panama." d'affaires told the dele- gation threatened the Indone- sian: people would American property "just as we did with the British" if the 7th Fleet vessels moved into the Indian Ocean, Gyanj who arrived in Cyprus Friday to act as a UN observer to the British peace-keeping operation on the Commonwealth island. Sandys. flew to Cyprus at Christmas and arrangéd a truce after fighting broke out between the Greek-Cypriot and Turkish- Cypriot communities. He cur- rently is holding long private talks with the two sides in separate meetings in an effort to find a way to remove the causes of tension between them. OTTAWA (CP)--The Cana- dian Chamber of Commerce said today Canada should have a broadened tax base with more emphasis on sales taxes and reductions in both corporation and personal income taxes. A bulky brief to the Carter royal commission on taxation from the Chamber said that personal income taxes should be decreased by 10 per cent-- with a top rate of 60 per cent instead of 80--and the top rate of corporate tax should be trimmed to 40 per cent from "We are convinced that the Train Jump Fails; 2 Escapees Nabbed SUDBURY (CP)--Two prison- ers who jumped from an east- bound passenger train were re- captured early today, provin- cia] police said, Roland Creeland and Arthur Lalonde, both 19, were arrested by Levack OPP as they hitch- hiked near Cartier, about 35 termine the state of the unborn child. | miles north of here, where they jumped from the train Friday. TRANSFER BLOOD FROM DEAD TO LIVING PERSONS Highway Dead Aid Living PONTIAC, Mich. (AP)--Rus- sian accomplishments with blood transfusions spurred a Michigan research team to dis- cover how corpses could pro- vide. the blood to keep injured persons alive in the battlefield or in disaster areas. Dr. Jack Kevyorkian and re- searchers Neal Nicol and Ed- win Rea of Pontiac General Hospital announced Friday they have performed the first known direct transfusions of blood from human. corpses to living persons, The process, Kevorkian said, is a simple one "with what appear to us to be tremendous military possibilities." Kevorkian had read Russian CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS medical journals which de- scribed the taking of blood from persons who had just died, storing it and then transfusing POLICE 725-1133 it into living patients. FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 "Il asked our department head, Dr. John J. Marra, if we could try to repeat the Russian experiments," Kevorkian said. |"He didn't think the idea would work, ahead STARTED EXPERIMENTS Kevorkian and his assistants gave blood from corpses to living volunteers after storing it 12 to 15 days "without adding the chemicals which are always put in stored blood to prevent coagulation," he said. "Then we made the transfu- sions, The Russians said this would work. and.we proved it to ourselves. "Then came the next logical step -- the direct transfer of blood from g dead person to a living patient. This was some- thing the Russians hadn't done. but he gave us a go- came. a volunteer, agreed that whoever's blood) Came wp next would take a transfusion. This turned out to be Nicol. Although a dead person's blood may be tapped up to six hours after death, the team worked quickly and transferred 400 cub'c centimetres within half an hour. "Nicol never flinched and he |calmed any umeasiness that janyone else might have felt jabout the experiment," Kevor- |kian said. "And after we fin- ished the second experiment, just about anybody in the hospi- tal would have been willing to try it." Another important discovery} injured in automobile accidents. Both had suffered broken necks which prevented draining the blood from the juglar vein in the neck, as in the first trans- fusion. : "We had to drain the blood from the heart--which yielded about 200 cubic centimetres (about half a pint)," he said. "This has its adyantages, since it doesn't necessitate tilting the body to get the blood into the neck and depend on the travi- tational flow." In each case, researchers had to check with friends and family of the deceased to deter- mine whether there had been "Everybody in the lab be-|came because the second and/jany history of jaundice or liver and wejthird corpses were of persons|disease. Cut Income Tax Chamber Advises jnedy disclosed he will confer again with Sukarno in Jakarta next Wednesday after an ex- change of views with President; Diosdado Phillippines in Manila and Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman of Malaysia in Kuala Lampur, conporation tax rate is too high and is a contributing factor to the economic slowdown in re- cent years. We believe that the basic solution is a reduction in the rates rather than simply the tax incentive approach prac- tised in recent years." The brief said that tax in- centives should be kept to a minimum, While they lightened the load on qualifying taxpay- to d eral Kennedy predicted today the disputants in the Malaysian crisis will gather around the conference table to settle their differences. peacemaker in the dispute, wound up an initial round of talks today with Indonesia's President Sukarno, Malaysia's principal opponent, bandrio, said an Asian summit meeting of Malaysia, Indonesia HOLD MASS MEETING After the protest Said 'Likely' TOKYO. (AP)---<Attorney-Gen- Kennedy, President Johnson's At.a press conference, Ken- of The Macapagal Kennedy, appearing with In- lonesia's Foreign. Minister Su- and The Philippines is "very possibie."" the Malaysian s (formerly British North Bor- neo), 0 "crush Malaysia" campaign. Sukarno regards Malaysia as a form of British neo-colonialism. The 38-year-old brother of the late President John F, Kennedy said he was "encouraged" by' his conversations with Sukarno during the last two days. Ken- nedy, accompanied by his wife, Ethel, is' on his first major diplomatic assignment for Pres- ident Johnson. Britain was the chief force 'behind the creation of Malaysia last September. It is composed of the former British territories of Singapore, Malaya, Sarawak tried to moderate Sukarno's|tre tions with Britain. A stron of battle po- lice, un ekandenoae and rifles with fixed bayonets, pro- tected the residence which has been used as an embassy chan- cery since the British embassy Tai ie nutes lence fo! atl of the Malaysian Federation. © The demonstrators were pro- testing against what they al- leged was the detention in Hong Kong of two Indonesian pilgrim- and North Borneo. age ships. ers, other taxpayers had carry an increased burden. The affect of high rates of personal income tax on incen- tive wasn't clear. "It does ap- pear, however, that in many instances the tax clearly dis- courages people from using their full potential of capital and talent in the strengthening of Canada's economy. To this extent, high personal income taxes are hostile to the national interest." The brief said the Chamber holds strong reservations about any tax policies that tend to discourage foreign investment. Another recommendation was that no capital gains tax be implemented. Code Number Lead To Auschwitz Oven FRANKFURT, West Germany (AP)--B It F--this coded ref- erence on a list of children meant their death in the gas chambers of Auschwitz. This was disclosed Friday in testimony by former SS captain Franz Hofmann, an Auschwitz subcommander and one of 22 Germans on trial here in West Germany's biggest war crimes case. "B I F meant Birkenau Feuerstelle (oven) 2," Hoff mann told the court. He was quick to add: "T had nothing to do with it." Hoffman, 57, serving a life term in prison for murders at another concentration cam p, Dachau, portrayed himself as a benefactor at Auschwitz who had installed playgrounds for children and recreation rooms. He denied all charges that he had ordered prisoners frozen to death or fatally beaten them. The trial resumes Monday. HELICOPTER GUNNER WOUNDED A U.S. helicopter gunner gets assistance, from a fellow crewman as he lies wounded in helicopter during yester- day's assault on Communist bases in the Mekong Delta area of South Viet Nam. He was one of three helicopter crewmen who were wounded in the operation. Five~others were killed, Associated Press. photographer Horst Faas, who accompanied the assault forces, made this photo. -- AP Wirephoto by radio from Saigon

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