nace ne aot geen Tart Thought For Today --~ The man who is too old to learn probably was always too old. VOL. 93 -- NO, 69 She Oshawa Ti OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1964 Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy i SiePreis fil Sv hel of fD e 'Weather: Report Clearing and turning cooler to- night. Sunny with a few cloudy intervals Sunday. uthorizedsas Second' Class Mall: Post Office Department Stege yaa "aie oe nee ee EIGHTEEN PAGES Canadians Spread Out On Cyprus NICOSIA (CP) -- Canadian|will strike out Monday on over-| soldiers today began to show/|night visits, one east to Fama- the United Nations' flag| gusta where the aircraft carrier) throughout Cyprus. |Bonaventure will arrive March} It will be the first time Cyp-|29 with more vehicles and men riots outside Nicosia will have|for the Canadian contingent, the) seen the flag and the Canadians|other south to the port of Lim-| who serve under it. assol. - : Even though the UN force is} Today's patrols will each| not yet operational, and may|comprise about 50 men in jeeps not be until next week at the|and trucks and three Dragoons) earliest, Lt.-Col. Andrew Wood- scout cars. The later patrols} cock, commander of the 1st Bat-\ will have some 150 men each. talion, Royal 22nd Regiment,) Col. Woodcock said the patrols wants his men and those of the|will also give his men a chance] § Royal Canadian Dragoons to get/to be introduced to persons in acquainted with the islandjauthority in the towns and vil- which is half again as big as\lages. There are more than 600) Prince. Edward Island and has) villages in Cyprus. highlands like those of Quebec's; UN headquarters here as ap-| i eastern townships or of Cape|proved the patrols. Breton Island. "I hear we will be well re-| Col. Woodcock told reporter's ceived," the Van Doos comman-| Friday at he Canadian campj|der said. "I hope we are not too| here that his patrols will bejwell received with the careful to avoid any incidents| wines." which may occur between Col. Woodcock said his battal- Greek- and Turkish-Cypriots. ion's communications are car- "If we are invited to stop for|ried on in French but that he coffee at any of the villages we|does not foresee any language} will drink an equal amount with/| difficulties. The Cypriots speak) each side," he said with a smile./English but no French. The col- one| said one-third of his 950) SENDS TWO PATROLS men speak no English but that| The veteran of the UN Congo|each patrol will include at least operation said two patrols willlsome English - speaking mem-| go out today, one north to the| pers. | port of Kyrenia and another! | west to Troodos. Anther ag a agloy seyret bes riod since his first troops ar-| go to Kyrenia Sunday and two os Monday has been a bonus. | 4 id "We thought we might be| No Fighting |handed ait job as soon as| On Cyprus local) |said. | More tents are being put up} driven into solid rock. The Ca- WOMAN DIES IN OSHAWA BLAZE Ray Hobbs said this morning Pearl Ella Cory, 39. 497 that a provincial fire marshal nie " would be called in immediate- Ortona, was found dead in the ly to investigate the fatal fire. smouldering ruins of a neigh- Jt took city firé crews more bor's home early today. Osh- than two hours to douse the awa Fire Department Chief two alarm fire. The city cor- Autoworkers Rap | Lunatic Fringe An Oshawa woman, Mrs |Grand Duchess Charlotte of| rest of Rabbi Norbert Leiner of|ities, Dr. Benoist said. i 'GESTAPO' PLAN IN DEATH SPASM Hint Robarts Unaware French-Canadian renee | Of Liberties Threat | More Depressed? | 3 | tario government's proposed/no one really realized what was HAMILTON (CP)--A psychia-|Hospital recorded an increase|new police legislation appearedjin the Police Act. trist from the University oflof similar cases to 20 per cent headed for the waste basket to-| The newspaper says the bill, Montreal's sociology depart-|from 11 per cent. day with only. the formality of|in completed form, was in Mr. ment said Friday the incidence} She cautioned that .results|}committee crumpling awa ting Cass's hands at least by March of psychological depre # sion|from a study of depression that)it--perhaps on Monday. 19. seems to be rising among|she and fellow faculty mem-| Premier Robarts pulled back! It says Mr. Cass brought the French-Canadians put decreas-|bers are carrying out are asithe legislation under fire Fri-|bill to cabinet meetings before ing among English-Canadians injyet only partially completed,|day, telling the legislature that|this week but did not get a Montreal. hence all conclusions are tenta-\he personally would not toler-|chance to discuss it. Dr. Jea Benoist told tive. ate "any legislation which im-|. "It is certain the bill went the Northeastern Anthropoiogi-| Dr, Benoist and French-Cana-| fringes upon or jeopardizes the|through the cabinet either Tues cal Conference that statistics|\dianism was being considered | nersonal right and freedom of/day or Thursday," the newspas have shown that between 1894/a culture for the purposes Of! an individual." per report adds. : " land 1954 the number of cases|the study. That culture involves! phat spelled death for the so-| "Perhaps when this legisla. jof acute depression at Verdunjan awa reness of speaking! catleg "police state' bill that|tion was brought forward," Pré- | Protestant Hospita: declined to/French, of French ancestry, a| would have given the Ontario|/mier Robarts said in the legis 18 per cent from 33 per cent. |series of traditions, 2 fear Of| po) ce Commission the power to/ lature Friday "it was directed | But in the same period, she/being a minority in Canada and incarcerate a person without alat control of crime and if it Mrs. Cory's death had yet to | A 'i svahin: 4 he R : . | r m has rs . : Saint - Jean - de - Dieu|'membership in the Roman | be determined. It would prob- said, the Sai it ------------|Catholic Church, she said. jtrial. jthese side effects, of course as oner's office said the cause of ably be burns or smoke suffo- | Fc Offi | But still cofronting the gov-|I have said, they are complet. --Oshawa Times Photo | : by reinforcing the French Ca-)Jegislature's committee on legal cass ausaeee sath res RELIGION HAS PART emment was the committee|/ely repugnant to all of us and oo Or REE) o APORCRIEN | The religion emphasizes the} post-mortem. Opposition mem-|we have to attempt to find an- oe | lindividual's responsibility forjbers may get their chance to other .way of dealing with the = tes | Fo d Guil his situation, she added, there-| publicly decry the bill when the|problem of crime." | |nadian's feeling of inferiority. |hills meets Monday. Mr. Ro- Duchess To Rule | TORONTO (CP) -- The Met-| The French-Canadia consid-ibarts said he wants the bill to gps 8 Pre geretag ve | } opolitan Toronto Police Com-jers himself as neither Canadian receive the "closest scrutiny" is Until Vote Held (eeainn Friday found four po-jor French, but rather as onelin committee. |Robarts made his statement. lice officers guilty of charges|who has a pessimistic percep-| There is no certainty, how-| 4 demand for Mr. Cass's res- --lunder the Police Act in the ar-|tion of his own values and abil-/eyer the bill will go to com-|isnation was made in the house oist |mittee Monday. 'The commit-|by Andrew Thompson (L--Tor+ Luxembourg, who plans to ab-|Saratoga Springs, N.Y., in Jan-| Her. study indicates remark-|toe!s agenda was drawn up be-|nto Dovercourt), LUXEMBOURG (Reuters) "Sf the leaders of the govern- at the camp, held up by stakes|The United Auto Workers union,|™ent ' ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)|ment provision. One union seg- which claims dicate in favor of her son, Grand/uary, 1962. support Duke Jean, has agreed to stay; Magistrate C. 0. Bick, com from local unions with 600,000/on the throne at least until almission chairman, said disc -|STOUuDs. lably differing attitudes towards fore the Police Act tempest -|depression in the two language!niew up in the province. | we stepped off the plane," he} During Night build-up of Canada's contingent|clothing in April. to the United Nations peace| force in Cyprus ends Sunday with the arrival of 32 troops, oo the Canadian total to jnadians still are wearing battle: | convention called on "those|™. Graning fi 2 SI call i \dress but will switch to bush ' [is pushing for a 60-year age. = |/ { he ioe heseae ee jleaders of the Republican party) Current contracts provide for|informed sources said Friday. |laid after Rabbi Leiner alleged Col. Woodcock said the bat-|who are engaged in a flirtation/retirement at age 65 with pen-| The sources said Charlotte|in a civil action last year that jin the first action of its 1964} | | The rest of Canada's 1,100- man contingent will ar- rive March 2 on the Canadian aircraft carrier Bonaventure. Meanwhile, all was reported! quiet on the island. A Greek-| Cypriot shepherd reported miss- following a shooting inci-| dent in the hills north of here! was found hiding in the botom of a well. Greek-Cypriot Foreign Minis- ter Spyros Kyprianou left Ath-| ens for New York for talks with) UN Secretary-General U Thant on the future role of the. UN peace-keeping force. Kyprianou 'arrived in Athens Friday for talks with Greek government officials on devel- opments on the One US. BERLIN (AP)--Soviet auth- orities have \announced | they will release Lieut. Harold W.| Weich, one of three American flyers shot down over Commun- ist East Germany March 10, a U.S. Air Force spokesman said today. The 24-year-old native of De- troit, who was injured when the three airmen parachuted, is expected' to be turned over to Allied authorities later today,| the spokesman said | Welch suffered fractures one arm anda leg and has been| in a Russian military hospital} LT. H. W. WELCH CITY EMERGENCY | PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 troubled island.|Commons. Reds To Release jvin J. aware of a U.S. warning }man officials. letters | Draft Not Needed jof an address by UAW Presi- | pose although it might help Ca-|year with the automakers. "Nothing can compare with and said "a total break be- ethnic newspaper editors. '"We|, mighty blow for democracy." He said oe ' parts of the counrty were about) continued government harass- neg Dorets| vorthicight end to that flirtation ~-- |in-the interest of both the na-| ition and of their party." | This action came in the wake Mi * if . inister C alms \dent Walter P. Reuther 1n/ TORONTO (CP) -- Compul-|which he emphasized fringe| sory military service in Canada| benefits would get top priority} would serve no military pur-|in contract. bargaining later this) nadian unity, Defence Minister) The UAW resolution on civil] Hellyer said Friday. rights was adopted late Friday our professional forces," he told|tween the Republican party and a conference of 35 Canadian|the radical right will constitute yao) peprore Ot Waal we Taye It also put the union on rec- 3 from many|°Td against what it 'termed eight to two in f r of t -o-(ment of the International Union posal, di otek veceatis ih: of Mine, Mill and Smelter Work- . ers;"' Regarding the latter, it said, "the civil liberties of that union j|must be protected without re- |gard to any affinity to the Com- |munist movement--past, pres- ent or future."" Pilot ses TOP GOAL In the opening address to the nearly 3,000 delegates 'attending the UAW's tonvention, Reuther said earlier retirement will be t him three|/made the top economic goal of the union during 1964 He said it also will seek im- Americans, | proved pensions, better working Holland, 35, of|conditions, longer vacations, a : and Capt. Mel-|chorter work week and a curb Kessler, 30, of Philadel-lon overtime. Higher wages phia: They were held by thelcame far down his list of prior- Soviets at an undisclosed loca- ities though Reuther renewed eis his plea that production work- The Soviets have admittedjers be paid on annual salary that a 'Russian fighter shotlinstead of an. hourly wage. down the unarmed -RB-66B re-| : at Magdeburg, East Germany U.S. Air Force physicians have been allowed to visi times. There was no word of the fate| of the other two Capt. David I, Holland, Minn., at it was on a sion. DEMAND RETURN The U.S. government made several demands that all| three flyers be returned to the| West and insisted that their| plane strayed over Communist} East Germany while on a rou-| tine training flight. It denied) By THE CANADIAN . PRESS the spy charge. Five Canadians won prizes of Welch, who was reported in $150,000 each today in the first good condition earlier this week : when he was last' visited by an American doctor, was a navi- gator on the RB-66B. Only Friday Soviet Foreign|tree, England. Four Canadians Minister . Andre <A Gromyko|won prizes of $60,000 ea on said the fate of Welch, Holland Purple. Silk, second in the Grand and Kessler "is really' a mat-|National, and one won $30,000 ter for the East German auth- on third-place Peacetown. orities."' spying mis- Irish Sweepstakes of the year as Team Spirit won the Grand National steeplechase at Ain- Four of the top winners were He said in Stockholm, Swe- from Ontario and the fifth was den, that American. diplomatic from Edmonton. Two of the *ntations to Moscow for second winners were from Tor- » of the flyers should] onto, one was-from Calgary and rted to Premier. Otto/the fourth from Belleville. The Grotewohl's government. in third - place winner 'was East: Berlin, which is not ree- Stouffville, Ont., ognized by the United States. | Only one of the $150.000 win- Gromyko. said he was fully/ners was named. on the ticket that\drawn in Dublin in the Irish continued detention of the three Hospital lottery earlier thi would jeopardize improving re week, He was J between the United! Kiichener Hi States and the' Soviet Union but) car that it wa Hubacheck of osher tickets nom ime as. fol- Let. Go, Brockville, Gol- lden Girl, Edmonton, Fruits,| lations ried a case for East Ger-/lows No Oshawa Winners | In Irish Sweepstake | of the UAW's 1,125,000 members| talion has steel helmets but lik-| with the radical right to put a|Siors of $2.80 monthly for each|told the leaders of Luxem-|cight officers mistreated him ely will wear UN all the time, $8 Guards Killed For | Fun | FRANKFURT (AP) -- A for- mer Auschwitz concentration camp prisoner testified at Ger-| many's largest war crimes trial] Friday that guards | often drowned prisoners in lat rines} for "fun." | "They'd line us up about 60) feet away from one of the open| latrine trenches and then yell] 'the last man to crawl out gets) a bullet in his head,""' Willy} Leeuwarden told the court try- ing 21 former SS (Elite)guards and Auschwitz functionaries: | "We raced for the trenches, jumped into excrement over our heads, swam through it. and then tried to scramble up the other side of the trenches as quickly as possible. The last one out got shot." Leeuwarden is the first to tes- tify that he had been tortured by defendant Wilhelm Boger on the so-called Boger swing. The swing, or "talking ma- chine" as Boger himself has re- ferred to it, consisted of a large wooden beam hanging from the ceiling:of a barracks to which male prisoners were bound,| their hands tied to their feet,! and beaten on the genitals with and forth. |Stoney Creek, Ont., and Green River, Toronto. The second place _ tickets} were listed as Now Is It, Tor-! onto, Raspy, Calgary, Horses,| Toronto, and Mrs. M. Miles, Belleville Mrs, Miles, a widow with three children, is a clerk in the drapery department of a gen- eral store in Belleville. The third-place ticket was in the name Stouffville, In all, 170 Canadians 'held tickets on the 3 horses that started in the Grand National Holders of tickets on horses of D. Livingstone, from/that ran out of the money will/su near Toronto,/win prizes of about $1,200 each,/against only In. addition, there -are some! 1,500 consolation and residual prizes totalling about $300,000 A total of 6 tick or lly National waned as Canadians the had 80 horses eligible for th but their chances the field was cut in drawn on the days before the race. lindividual. \7 and probably until the fall,| ities her princ) advice given to her by the lead-| ward Mulle and Ernest Sharp. | lers of the government that she|testified on their. own behalf ee tu should remain on the throne for|d uring commission hearings Grand of nti pee Recetas ; | English-Canadians, she sald,, WOULD GIVE POWERS eoserel eleren sane! piaary gee og ae ae tend Mo consider the depressed) The original design of the bill CHAREOR Gh. misconduct. were person abnormal, while French-| was to give the police commis- Canadians consider him nor-| sion powers to interrogate a per- |mal, but possibly over-worked./son thought to have knowledge | of organized or syndicated University (28 ergert ee ne Teachers scheduled bourg's four main, nolitical par-| while police were conducting a 1 aint was ,te}search for a suspected fsex of- prevent the Hbdication 'frém) fender. ' causing political uncertainty in) The rabbi won a $4,000 out-| the pre-electoral period. jof-court settlement. | Although she wished to abdi-; The officers -- Sergeant of) cate as soon as possible, the| Detectives Alvin Sproule and| sources said, she had accepted|Constables Raymond Fast, Ed-; duced the bill in the legislature Thursday along with seven lother pieces of legislation--one of them a measure prov ding for la crackdown. on' unscrupulous jused-car dealers. This act itself |would have provided headlines, but the seven other statutes fell |by the wayside as reporters hit TORONTO (CP) -- Canadian|upon 'the controversial police university teachers have asked|commission measure, buried in the federal government to ne-| the 9!4-page bill, gotiate, in co-operation with the) Mr. Cass at a press confer- provinces, a long-range plan to} ence following introduction of mete costs of the population ex-|the bill was asked whether the plosion on the country's univer-|police bill had been approved sity campuses. by the Conservative govern- A brief by the Canadian As-|ment caucus. He refused to an- sociation of University Teach-|swer, other than to say '"'the e ers, made public Friday, also|principles of the bill have been ' requests greatly increased im-|discussed with my colleagues of ur S CQ) Or |mediate financial aid. the house." | Dr. David Slater, economist} The next day, when condemn: at Queen's University andjation of the measure reached NEW DELHI (AP) -- A Ca-jhad been thrown in a clash be-|treasurer of the pola" its peak, os at gue f nadian Army major and a New ; «expressed disappointment ri-|Park was whether Premier Ro- Zealand pines acting as pei _ re asic se day that recommendations of|barts himself had been entirely United Nations observers in| "* S°M® Gays Previously. jthe brief were ignored in the/familiar with the contents. Mr. strife - torn Kashmir were ser-- | !here has been no sugges-|federal budget last Monday by|Robarts said only that the Dill iously injured by an accidental|tion the grenade was thrown at/Finance Minister Walter Gor- had proceeded through cabinet grenade explosion, it was|them," the spokesman said. don. __jin the same way all leg slation learned tofay. A Pakistani major who had... We Would very much havelis dealt. with by cabinet. A iti ' : stant Major who Nad jiked to see the major proposals} The impression was left, nev- A U.N. spokesman identified) been talking with the two ob- implemented and I personally|ertheless, that Mr. Robarts was them as Maj. E. C. Brunwell of|servers also was injured. doubt that the federal govern-|not aware of the implications of Calgary, who suffered a frac-| The observers, technically as-| ment has as little room for fi-|the bill regarding civil liberties. tured thigh and shoulder, and|signed to police the Indian-Pak-| nancial manoeuvering as the Capt. R. G. B, Coulam of Newiistani cease - fire line farther minister of finance said.' » |BACKED BY REPORT The CAUT brief followed a} This was backed up by a re- Zealand, who was peppered/north in Kashmir, had moved into the Ramnagar area in the | request by the: Canadian Uni-| port in The Globe and Mail that the time being. |Thursday and Friday, with grenade fragments. l Both men- were "'doing well/Southwest part of the state in|yersities Foundation for federal|Mr. Cass presented his bill to and will be fit when they re-|an effort to halt sporadic fight-| grants totalling $300,000,000 to-| the party caucus with no more cover," the UN spokesman|ing between Indian and Pakis-|ward university spending pro-|than 10 members of the 77 Con- said. The officers were taken to|tani troops. 'grams. |servatives present. Some mem- ment refutes the remarks of one of his cabinet ministers then the premier has the fullest obliga- tion to tell that member to re- sign,"" Mr. Thompson said. However, when Mr. Robarts was asked by a reporter whether Attorney-General Cass would resign, the premier said: "No-such thing has been cons | sidered." Ex-Judge Terms Bill Unthinkable OTTAWA (CP) -- Hon. J. T, Thorson of Ottawa, honorary president of the International Commission of Jurists, said Fri- day he plans to send a copy of the Ontario government's pro- posed police legislation to the Geneva headquarters of the jure ists for consideration and come ment, The bill, which would grant extraordinary powers to the On- tario Police Commission, has caused a storm in the provin- cial legislature. One change would allow persons to be de- tained in jail indefinitely with- out trial. Mr. Thorson, who retired a week ago after more than 21 years as president of the Exe chequer Court of Canada, told reporters the proposal is "'un- thinkable, something that might have been proposed in a state such as Ghana." He said the bill constitutes a violation of fundamental princie ples long established for safe- guarding the individual from are a military hospital in the town of Jammu in the Himalayan} 3 He did not set an age in his\such force that they swung back' state. | )seagrgetneg plane and charged|advocacy of an earlier retire- 'f "s sais _ The spokesman said the two| offcers, the first United Na-| tions casualties in Kashmir in) recent years, were pitching al tent Friday when a grenade ly-| ing on the ground went off. It Crankedewres By Police Rapped SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP)--Police crackdown cam- paigns. should not be the result of over-zeal on the part of al police chief-or other law officer, a seminar of Northern Ontario} chief constables was told Fri-| day. | Mayor James MclIntyre ' of| ' Sault Ste. Marie. called on his! 'msgs 50 listeners to conduct, instead,| 2 a consistent enforcement of the law in all areas | He said 'a recent local cam- paign against lotteries had re-! ted' in charges being laid two organizations of the involved in the practice, . Themoayr. said police depart-| ° ménts should guard against un- announced sudden enforcement previously unenforced laws and show no' favoritism toward any particular many to Cuba. Two of the Cubans asked for political asylum. Sheriff Henry Haskins said no charges would be. made x Two:Cubans 'hijacked this helicopter in a bloody battle organization. or, over the Atlantic Ocean today | and landed it at Kev West airport. The pilot was killed Authorities said the pilot's body and a fourth man aboard the craft would be returned bitrary action by the state. \ ~ CUBAN 'COPTER LANDS IN FLORIDA against the defectors, The pit- ture was taken by free lance photographer Dick Ag- new t\ %