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

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Thought For Today Weather Report The average person's will power isn't nearly so strong as his won't power, Moaavin <Q ET turning colder 'Wednesday. hig and , Sia Ny a C al ye % ga a LIK a Wat anow tonicht, Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Department Ottewa and for poyment of Postage in Cask, VOL. 93--NO. 41 Pa thay Me nA OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1964 TWENTY-SIX PAGES "he CANADIAN FIRM ORDERS THREE 2000 MPH JET | Airliners Cost $25 Million Each MONTREAL (CP) -- Cana-jrange specified for the Ami \dian Pacific Airlines announced/ican model, mt. today it has ordered, at a cost} "CPA will put down $300,000 of $25,000,000 each, three super-|in initial deposits on the airlin- sonic airliners from the United/ers. Full cost of the planes is * | States. jexpected to run around $25,000, =| A joint agree by N./000 each," +|R. Crump, chairman of Cana-| 'The plane would have a } |dian Pacitic Airlines, and G. W.|nosed range of more than 4500 |G. McConachie, the airline's| miles and would carry between A |president, said an agreement|j59 and 230 passengers, Al- "to reserve three delivery po-|though minimum specifications sitions" has been signed with/had been set down y the Fed. jthe U.S. Federal Aviation Ag-/ergi Aviation Agency, the final jency, design, speed and capacity of "Under favorable conditions,|the plane has not yet been de CPA might expect to put its|cided, 'first supersonic into operation) ne agency was evaluating by 1974," the announcement proposals submitted by three said, engine companies and three airs The plane, still to be con-|frame companies. These evalu- structed, is expected to travel/ations and others would be fore at speeds of up to 2,000 miles)mally reviewed in a joint gov- Britain, Cyprus Reported Agreed On Police Plan an international peace force for Cyprus and with machinery for mediating the conflict. bom ranean island with an interna-| It also would appeal to all Beery 8 Ay de ear Rebel Sold i ers Se i z e Tiny Gabon Republic tional force while an impartial/countries to respect the terri-|ject of an international force. and that) UNITED NATIONS (AP)--lhow the international force Britain and Cyprus are reported|should be set up and would agreed on principles for a plan|merely agree that there should| to police the turbulent 'Mediter-|be such a force. | mediator seeks peace between torial integrity of the island, an) One objective was tQ find a the Greek- and Turkish-Cypri-/appeal which Cyprus had|formula that would be a cepted Ots. |planned to propose in a separ-|by all parties concern _ The British-Cypriot plan also|ate resolution. javoid the risk of a Soviet veto. | calls for a consultative COM: THANT ACTIVE President Makarios of Cyprus ota of United Nations mem-| The council debate, originally |indicated he would accept no ers, } | force unless it was under |scheduled to start Monday, was|Peace on Bee The two countries were re-|postponed after Secretary-Gen-|COMtTol of the Security Council, ported to have agreed on gen-jeral U Thant took a hand in\LINKED TO UN BRAZZAVILLE, Congo Re-:government palace self, perhaps jnaudibly but suf-| public (AP) -- Rebellious troops|rebel troops ringed it, : jficiently perceptible, To avoid eral terms of a Security Coun-|the crisis with peace proposals! Sources close to Thant said|staged a midnight revolt in the) Strong army units moved into|the breaking out of. uncontrol- cil resolution after the council of his. own. jhe thought agreement might be/neighboring West African re-|the principal government build-|lable demonstrations, the Gabo- postponed the start of its debate} Thant's ideas were handed tojreached on a force linked to|public of Gabon and scized gov-|ings, including both the post of insee armed forces had to put aj on the Cyprus crisis until this/representatives of Cyprus, Brit-|the UN but not directly underjernment buildings, rebel radio|fice 'and radio station, [stop to this situation," -- afternoon, jain, Turkey, the United States|UN command, He was under-/broadcasts from Libreville said) After Odene made his an-} He said that public liberties! | The resolution would avoidjand Greece in a memorandum|stood to be seeking accord on/today. nouncement at 5 a.m. EST, an|were 're-established' and said Red Wheat Ship Boycott ally." ' There was no immediate port on any bloodshed. re- FOUND STARVING Maj. Gen, Thomas J. Gent who had come from a meeting|been arrested." a night without serious incident . i the controversial issue ofithat dealt with establishment of|an arrangement under which! An army tifficer identifying|unidentified speaker broadcast|that the Gabonese Army would t with President Johnson in| An Agence France-Presse re-| Gabon, on the west central Washington. port from Libreville, the Gavon-'coast of Africa, is the home of in the communal conflict be- tween Greek- and Turkish-Cyp- . . | |Britain, Turkey, Greece and/himself as Lieutenant Daniel jinat 'calm reigns throughout |see that a new government was F |Cyprus would finance the force, cast over Radio Gabon that the|the country, Shops and stores|form f U.K. Troops Free rapped Turks In Cyprus, a spokesman for|ese capital, said that Mba and|Dr. Albert Schweitzer, who Wakenes Seams aaas British|National Assembly President! founded his jungle hospital at riots, British military sources said ed within 24 hours. Thant discussed his views/government had _ been over-|are open and operating norm- as a NICOSIA (Reuters) -- The; In another development, a Cy- charges that the Cypriot goy-| Louis Bigmann were in the|Lambarene in 1914, It obtained There was some entsion today Monday with George W. Ball, |thrown and that "President | U.S. undersecretary of state|Leon Mba and his acolytes have troubled Mediterranean island of Cyprus was quiet today after in Kokkina area of northwest Cyprus, but no shooting was re- ed The island was reported gen- erally quiet Monday night--with exception of a tense situa- in Ktima, -nain administra- centre for western Cyprus, Polis, the northwest min- town where tensfon began running high a week ago. Polis, 700 Pe ee originally reported a Buse spokesman to be sur- |was Cyprus arms as there its territorial prus government spokesman said the independent 'British Commonwealth island sought arms from other nations after Britain refused a request Dec, 31 to supply arms to its secur- ity forces. The spokesman was com- menting on a London statement by Commonwealth Relations Secretary Duncan Sandys that Britain had protested against arms imports on Cyprus. Sandys declined to name the nation supplying the arms. INTEGRITY THREATENED The Cyprus spokesman said it "completely lawful". for to be supplied with was a threat to Meanwhile, Greece warned 'independence from France in ernment was permitting gun-| 'i 1960. jrunning to the island while Brit- jish troops were trying to keep peace. | The spokesman said Cyprus had the right and responsibility \to buy arms because of what he called threats to its. terri- torial integrity. WAS POWER STRUGGLE Parley Fails Odene's broadcast indicated} the coup was staged to end aj r power struggle between the country's two chief political leaders, Mba and Aubame, op- SS position leader and chief justice | a of the Supreme Court. In an ef- MIAMI BEACH, Fla, (AP)-- Efforts of the U.S, labor depart- ment's top troubleshooter to quickly settle a union boycott against American wheat ship- ments to Russia apparently have failed, Insistence by labor leaders | Jr., 52,. retired West Pointer who flew 46 missions over Europe during World War Two, was found mumbling in- coherently and suffering from malnutrition in a New York hotel room in which his wife lay dead, Police believe -- pending autopsy -- his wife, Martha Louise, died of natural causes, and that Gent | was suffering from shock. an hour and will be used by OPA for its long routes. With the new plane, CPA expected "to be able to make spectacu- lar cuts in flying times between major international centres." The announcement said: "The U.S. plane was picked up by CPA in preference to the Anglo-French Concorde design primarily because of the longer | fort t t yre th ppo- | Form Greek Son leer, va ted eel | the 67-member national assem- J Cabinet On Wednesday bly Jan, 20 and called new elec- tions next Sunday for a smaller, ATHENS (Reuters) -- George! Papandreou, 76-year-old liberal| that at least half the grain be transported in U.S. vessels dashed President Johnson's hopes of an 'early solution. James J. Reynolds, assistant secretary of labor, who was sent here by the president, was to go to Daytona Beach on an- other labor dispute, a strike against the Florida East Coast Railway that , 47-member assembly. Odene in his broadcast said: "Next Sunday. the country would have voted again in the insecurity which the reigning police regime has constituted, and soon we would have aa Peace Talks Failed Malaysia Claims veteran of Greek polities, today: agreed to form a new govern-| ment after being called on to} do a0 by King Paul. | Papandreou was entrusted with the mandate at an audi- ence with the King after the for- rounded in a school by Greek- Cypriots dug in about 100 yards However, a Cyprus govern- ment spokesman described such reports as "entirely unfounded found the same "hfe; "thy re with danger because from day to day discontent is showing it- has slowed con-| KUALA R.. (Reuters) Struction of space facilities at|/ The Malaysian Fade » gov- Cape Kennedy, ernment said in a statement te - day it doubted the value of fur- . < ther peace talks with Indonesia. LBJ's Overtime that its armed forces have been instructed to shoot down any foreign planes intruding into its! air space, authoritative sources said, They said the move fol- jlowed repeated violations by un- PRESIDENT M'BA It added that it based its opin- ion on Indonesia's declared un- and malicious." The situation in Polis was "normal," he added. ; In London, Briti-h prime min- ister Sir Alec Douglas - Home said in a television interview Monday that British troops had Yeleasec 700 Turks trapped in the Polis school. A truce was arranged in that part of -the island, Douglas- Home added. Greece Issues Protest Over Move To UN ATHENS (AP)--Greece pro- tested informally t- Britain and the United States today, accus- ing them of failing to inform it of their decision to take the) Cyprus issue to the UN Secur- ity Council, The oral protest was made by | jsaid there was nothing new in|government of John Paraskev- } Minister Feridun Erkin Turkish - Cypriots were identified foreign aircraft. In Ankara, Turkish Foreign said| "at-| tacked mercilessly by bands of! Eoka (Greek-Cypriot terrorist) men" in Limassol last week) "with the open support: of the! so-called police force acting un-| der the orders of the Greek- Cypriot authorities." Informed sources in Ankara reports from Iskenderun--on the Turkish coast about 100 miles| from Cyprus -- saying naval| units there were in a state of alert and that planes were fly- ing 'over the area. The sources said the navy |had been continuously at alert/per cent an° stations since fighting between | Greek- and Turkish-Cypriots in Limassol last week, The milit- ary situation had not changed since Saturday when Turkish troops disembarked and_re- turned to their barracks after naval 'exercise,' they added. U.S. MPs Guard Viet Nam Schools orm. (AP) -- Pen SAIGON (AP) -- The U.S.,stayed away from school Mon- the White House" doesn't square nesday, a royal court spokes-|Army maintained special/day, As many as six Ameritan|With his administration's propo- man said, guards on American installa-|military policemen guarded/|Sal to cut down on overtime The Union of the Centre took tions in Saigon today to counter/each school, while three or four Work, says banker David Rock- 173 of the 300 parliamentary;a Communist terror campaigniothers rode on school buses, /efeller. seats, Monday the caretaker|that has killed three Americans Military policemen also went| Rockefeller, president of and wounded more than 50 in/on duty at all military billets|Chase Manhattan Bank of New opolous resigned, the last two nights. in Saigon and offi@s of most! York, compared the White Papandreou's party won 52.7; U.S, and Vietnamese officials | other American agencies, House work day with the admin- per cent of the votes cast, with also set up a joint security coun- istration's double pay for over- the National Radical Union tak-'cil to work for greater safety|/ POLICE ON GUARD ltime work proposal in a speech ing 35 per cent and 105 seats,/for the thousands of U.S. serv-| Some of the same Vietnam-| Monday, He called this "ironic," The extreme left-wing Unitedjicemen and civilians and their) ese police strongarm men who, The 48-year-old Rockefeller, |Democratic Left trailed with 12|families in the Vietnamese cap-|were assigned last summer to|youngest of the five Rockefeller 22 seats. ital 'roughing' up Buddhists and | brothers, spoke to the Financial In elections in November, the) American military policemen| Western reporters were on duty| Executive Institute of Detroit. Centre Union failed to win a'stood guard at schools attended|*oday at the American schools| Rockefeller's talk was an ex- working majority and Papan-/by American children and rode |#!0ng with the U.S. servicemen, |pansion of a press' conference dreow resigned as premier in on school buses with them, U.S.|_ They included Inspector Lam|!" Which he attacked the dou- December. soldiers also patrolled other|Van Ly, one of Saigon's most|ble overtime proposal as an at- Voting then was: Centre Un-| American installations. feared judo experts and strong-|tempt to pressure industry into ion, 138 seats; NRU, 132; and Only about. one-fifth of the 650|arm men under President Ngo hiring more workers. Democratic Left, 28. American children in Saigon'Dinh Diem's regime. He said union leaders' propos- mer's Union of the Centre party) swept to victory in the general election Sunday--a vote held in 9 shadow of the Cyprus cri- sis, The new cabinet will be sworn in before King Paul Wed- Called Ironic DETROIT (AP) -- President About 2,500 American civil-|8'S for a 35-hour week and the willingness to withdraw forces from Malaysia's Borneo terri- tories of Sarawak and Sabah (North Borneo), | A cease-fire was declared along the border between Mal- laysian Borneo and Indonesian) |Borneo last month following a |peace - keeping swing around {Southeast Asia by U.S. Attor- jney-General Robert Kennedy. | Measures to police the cease- \fire were discussed in Bangkok /Thailand last week b; bi The statement issued today from the Malaysian foreign ministry said Indonesian For- eign Minister Subandrio had mised to communicate- by eb, 12 or 18 the decision of President Sukarno on Razak's reservation, "Since the conclusion of the Bangkok meeting nothing has been heard from the Indonesian side," it added. "However, yesterday, Dr. Su- bandrio was reported to have declared that the Indonesian troops would not be withdrawn from Malaysian territories prior to a political settlement of the ernment - airline discussion in Washington March 25-26, Ethiopia Beefs Troops Along / Somali Border HARAR (AP) -- Ethiopia flung reinforcements up to its desert frontier Monday after Somali forces were reported to have seized a border village and wrecked another with heavy -- shelifire. A military spokesman here at the of the emper- or's crack Division irted that "police guards wit! from the village of Yett in ee of a determined Somali at- cK, They pulled back to a locality called Barrie, a desert oasis some 15 miles from the fron- tier, where the regular army reinforced them. The an said Somali artillery was shell- rew the jing the border town of Dollie 150 miles southwest and had rendered one or two airstrips there unusable. The fighting was continuing on the lengthy Ethiopian - So- mali border more than 36 hours after both countries agreed te Malaysia crisis, a cease-fire. soe y ministers from Malaysia, Indo- nesia and The Philippines, |. Further talks between the for- jeign ministers of Malaysia, In- jdonesia and The Philippines in |Bangkok were to be held next jweek, but senior officials at the |Malaysia foreign ministry said jthey thought the chances of such} § talks were "'very slim." | Withdrawa' was not touched| | on in the joint communique af- ter the Bangkok conference, but an attached reservation by the |chief Malaysian delegate, Dep- uty Premier Tun Abdul Razak, caretaker Foreign Minister Christos Palamas to Ambassa- dors Sir Ralph Murray of Brit- ain and Henry Labouisse of the United States. Palamas was foreign minis- ter in the ron-political govern- ment that handled Sunday's na- tional election and then re- signed Monday. However, Pa- lamas said he had consulted premier-designate George Pa- pandreou b<fore lodging the protest. "I expressed our country's dissatisfaction to both ambassa- dors for their countries' move i the United Nations,"' Pala- mas said. Rolls Car 5 Times Driver Walks Away TORONTO (CP)--Ray Dade 42. rode a ccr down a 150-foot cliff off an east Toronto high- wav and suffered only bruises After 'he car took five fips and landed a total wreck, Dade told police he emerged, felt him- sel' for injuries and said: "Will my wife be mad at me ber car." Po'ice said his car ripped through. 15 feet of guardrail: and mrt> the plunge after being cut off by a car Believe Nazis Aiding War Crimes Suspects LIMBURG -- Dr, Hans Hefel-|had always managed to '"'strug-|that a Nazi underground is or mann, who once headed thejgle through life no matter how |ganizing escapes of Germans "mercy killing' section in Hit-/bad things were." wanted for war crimes and even ler's chancellory, wen' on trial) "I believe © can say without of helping with suicides when in this West German city today boasting that no matter how the accused are concerned. jcharged with murdering 73,000 had things were at times, I al-| Fritz Bauer, chief prosecutor persons, 3,00€ of them children.| ways managed to make the best in the state of Hesse and the Hefelmann is the only one ofjof even the most difficult situa-'man who worked for years to four defendants still around to tion," Hefelmann said. prepared the trial against Heyde testify. Two others are dead and He denied he was a member and his three co-defendants. the third has fled the country. oft he SS (Elite Corps) while he shares this suspicion, Dr. Werner Heyde, the mainjserved in the department from) Bauer disclosed Monday that defendant, killed himself in pri-'1036 to 1945. an escape plan with evidence son Thursday, The day before, The 57 year - old accused of outside help was discovered the No, 2 defendant, Friedrich agronomist testified in a low last year in Heyde's cell in Tillmann, died in a fall from faltering voice and fidgeted Limburg prison an eighth-floor window. A third with a pencil while he related jdefendant, Dr. Gerhard Bohne, .his career in Nazi Germany, fled Germany last summer and He told the court he was ar-| Ex-SS$ Captain It' < t CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS 1133 wor 725- "9: is believed to be in South Amer- rested' once by the Russian se- ica eret police after the war but e J Heyde, a 6°-year-old medical |\;as released because "I was Admits Leading professor, headed the medical not a member of the SS." : aspect of "'itler's euthanasia All the victimis of the four de- "li: (mercy killing) program and fendants were mental or physi- Killing Squad was charged with participating cal defectives, people whom in the death of 100,000 persons, Nazi terminology termed "'liv-; KIEL (Reuters)--A 48-year. SOUGHT DELAY ing matter unworthy of life,/old former SS captain confessed After the deaths of Heyde and useless consumers of food." Monday in this West German Tillmann, th prosecution About 200.000 persons who fell)cily to giving the order to shoot sought to have Helelmann's into this category died during|Jews during a Naz style case postponed until hé could/the earl ystages of the Third "'witch-hunt"' in occupied Novo stand trial at a later date with/Reich under a program that grodek, Poland! several other persons accused served as a stage setter for the' Hans Graalfs. who went on of participating in the euthan- mass murder later practised in trial Monday charged with the asia program Nazi concentration camps "brutal and cowardly" murder 725- _ But the judges insisted that Aroused German churchmen of at st 1.550 Jewish inhabi the trial take place even if Hef. brought sufficient pressure on ts of By he defendant the Nazis to get the mercy kill, was in charg a ing program ended in 1941 the Waffen SS in t There is widesoread susvicion/of 1941. POLICE FIRE DEPT. 6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 tants said mmpany of he summer elmann available Hefeimann told the court he! s the only o ians live in Saigon, including| administration's double over-/said his country believed with- | military wives and children, |time idea were both defeatistidrawal to be essential for con- |The total of Americans in the|®"4 inadquate, itinue* peace, men aid orca, ie eevee >| FOUND IN DA's OFFICE Dallas Police Nab Man With Pistol | U.S, officials denied any con- sideration was being given to sending civilian dependents back to the United States, ATTACK 3 MEN ; _ The terrorist campaign con- tinued Monday night with an at- ; DALLAS ipo ag scum in a with malice (a capital Ce, ' ;.|Jack Ruby's trial begin todayjoffence) to prove that Dallas is -- was hurled at their|the painstaking search for 12/a place of law and order." & ' jresidents of Dallas County to} Belli, an urbane, grey-haired A nconfirmed reports said the judge. whether Ruby committed|San Franciscan, wants the trial Viet Cong rebels were circulat-|murder with malice when he!moved to a city at least 200 ing leaflets saying "Two Amer-|killed the accused assassin of/miles from Dallas, : in Saigon the last three weeks,/in Dallas. Belli and District Attorne sh iy . | 3 . y killing six and wounding 85, | "Nothing happened this morn-|Henry M. Wade each will have The Vietnamese government jing to change my opinion about }15 peremptory challenges with also was investigating possible|that," said Melvin M. Belli,|which they can reject a pros- involvement of some Vietna-jchief counsel for Ruby, after|pective juror without stating a mese policemen in recent Viet/seeing the first 150 prospective reason, be ld be ---- peat, ee the district attorney's office, r * : next door to the courthouse _ Kennedy was assassinated /quring the luncheon recess. Nov. 22 only 630 feet from the/cheriff Bill Decker identifie scene of the trial, Two days/him as David Conrad Glass. 39, later, in the basement of Dallas/or Reatty, Ort, He was held on} j tack from ambush on_ three {American military men. One} was wounded slightly when icans a day si president Kennedy, | Nine hundred prospective ju- Communist terrorists have The defence says it is impos-jrors are available for question- made six attacks on Americans|sible to get an impartial jury ing on their qualifications. Cong terrorism, including Sun-|jurors in the courtroom of Dis- day night's bombing of an'trict Judge Joe B. Brown, -- re oper 4 American theatre, i i i "man carrying a loaded .32- saci Actes _____ |, The question of an impartial) inie pistol was arrested in | 16 Persons Burned | In Indian Village BOMBAY (AP) Mysore State Police reported today 16 persons hd been burned to death in the Indian village of| Idapnur Monday when a mob of several hundreds trapped them in a house, poured gaso- \City Hall, Ruby killed Lee/a charge 'of illegall ri Harvey Oswald, who had been! weapon, oe ee © = with killing the presi-| peer said Glass "talked in- : icoherently" 'about. the assassi- MUST CONVICT nation of Kennedy. year-old daughter of Britain's Belli says "the shame brought, Glass 'mumbled about the} Prime Minister, is shown with ime and kerosene over it, and.on the Dallas image' is such slaying of Oswald by Ruby, but} her fiance, ..ndrian Darby, at set it afire. Tho-e kitted in-/that a juror "would be obli-| Decker said he does not believe: 'No, 10 Downing Street, Lon- 'cluded women and children. {gated to convict Jack Ruby of/Glass intended to shoot Ruby,' don, Miss Dougias-Home and Meriel Dougias-Home,. 24- Be PM'S DAUGHTER AND FIANCE Darby, 'a 'tutor in economics and (a fellow of Oxford Uni- versity's Keeble College, plan to marry Marc). *) (AP Wirephoto)

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