Thought For Today A diet could be defined as a plan for people who are thick and tired of it. VOL. 93 -- NO. 73 She Oshawa Time Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy Ottowa' and for poyment OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1964 Authorized os Second Class Mall Post Office Weather Report Cloudy and cold tonight. Sunny and cool Friday with light winds, of Postage in Cash. TWENTY PAGES b 'LET'S GET THOSE CANDLES OUT!" "Oh shucks,' Jimmy Moss, 4, seems to be saying, "'let's hurry up and blow the can- Carol, 2, children of Mr, and Mrs. Don Moss, 310 Elgin street east, were attending a three neighborhood one-yeat- olds. First-Term MPP Named As Attorney-General | TORONTO (CP) -- Arthur; Robarts refused to say whether me if I would acceyt the job |Allison Wishart, 60, of Sault!Mr. Cass resigned his office ofjof attorney-general,"' said Mr. \S.e. Marie, a newcomer to the his own volition or was asked to Wishart. lOntario legislature, was to be step down. ; DP ; act sworn in today as attorney-gen-| Mr, Cass' resignation fol-| Wasn't as precipitate as it might eral. lowed his. presentation of/have seemed and he had no hes- Premier John Robarts an-,amendments to the Police Act itation accepting the job. jnounced the appointment of Mr./that would have given unprece-| 'We worked together on. the | Wishart at a surprise press con-|dented powers of arrest and de-| water resources commission (on jference Wednesday, about 75\tention 'to the Ontario Police|which the premier once served) |minutes after the louse ad-|Commission. and in other ways, He knew my |journed for Easter work and capabilities." He said the premie:'s action dies out." Jimmy and sister birthday party Wednesday for --Photo by Evelyn Jones surprise to the many who had | speculated that the portfolio, va--ment said the appointment o! The announcement came as aS RECOGNITION stat The new attorney general : Pe refused to say whether he would have introduced the ill - fated! | Mr. Robarts' formal ARTHUR WISHART | e I . jeated by Frederick Cass Mon-|Mr. Wishart was in recognition pin 99 in the form that led to 4 S eave jday, would be taken over by\%! a "strong outlook of the hewi his predecessor's resignation. | HIGHLIGHTS OF | T leither the premier or at least|Portance of the north country to; 47,7 going to say what I | ja senior minister on an interim jbasis, Ontario as a whole, and a tri- Z| : bute to the legal background|Would have done. in another DEFENCE PAPER . Lam not sit- UNIFIED DEFENCE FORC Plan To Tri Milit Fat OTTAWA (CP)--A plan to in-|are mentioned in the white pa- tegrate Canadian army, navy|per but it says careful study ig and air services into a unified!/being given to the possibility of defence force, beginning with|building two or three nuclear the appointment of single de-) submarines as anti - submarine fence chief, was unveiled today | weapons, ree my white pa-| this, however, is a large is The white paper, presented to resend oar be decided Parliament by Defence Minis-| de 3 ter Hellyer, also laid down the| The 13,000-word policy state outline of a 10 - year defence | ment contained no major sur- plan stressing the development|prises. Most of its main points of flexible, mobile military/had been predicted. units that could be available for; One item that was missing quick movement to any part Of|was any reference to the Hon- the world. , est John nuclear rocket battery It predicted "'considera- serving with the army brigade ble savings' through integra-|in Europe. Last December the tion of the headquarters,t rain-/Commons defence committee ing and administrative staffs)recommended that the four- now maintained by each serv-\jzuncher battery be taken. out ice, These now tie up about 50,- For UN. Cyprus Duty NICOSIA (Reuters) -- The) Thant said Wednesday in Ge United Nations force to keepjeva that the forces' terms of island) reference peace on this troubled were will become operational Friday) well." when India's Lt. - Gen. Prem| Thant also named Finnish) hand-picked. Only about 45 men Singh Gyani takes command of|diplomat Sakari S. Tuomioja as|of the complete force have not the Canadian and British con-|mediator on the island republic|been in ON service before. And| tingents now on the fsland, the|which has been torn by more/these men served on the Fin-| UN announced today. n- "shaping up) Stay overnight in Athens, leav- ing for Cyprus Friday. Waern said before their de- parture: "The Swedish force is jthan three months of communal/nish side in the Second World The anouncement said the|warfare between' Greek and War." force would initially consist of Turkish inhabitants. Canadian and British troops. Tuomioja, 52, is a former|Cyprus sineme December British troops have been on when An advance party from the|Finnish premier and current/fighting flared between the tra- Finnish contingent was sched-| ambassador to Sweden. The UN troubleshooter, who|over Greek - Cypriot. plans to uled to arrive in Nicosia tonight) and advance omg from the id: "For consist of the Canadian contin-| by the Canadian contingent." hailed his task as a eiting assignment"' , further consultations with "U)were killed before the. British will e ditionally hostile communities "very ex-|change the constitution. An estimated 200-300 persons ( que : ant in New York eafly next) arranged a shaky truce. the time being the UN force will|week before flying to Cyprus. | Thant formally named Tuom-|get the parties to talk out a gem and the British force now|ioja after Cyprus, Greece, Tur- deployed on peace-keeping dut-|key and Britain agreed to his/ lock. les, less those who are replaced| appointment. The first troops of the Swed- The main bodies of the Swe-|i8" contingent left. Stockholm dish, Finnish and Irish contin-| PY air today for Athens. gents are expected in Cyprus) HAS 700 MEN 'within a fortnight or so,' the communique added. UN Secretary Col. Jonas Waern commanded the force of 700 men .and 12 General U/sneior officers. It planned to Reds Still Cool To ' Lookout Posts Plan GENEVA (AP)--Britain put forward today a blueprint for a system of military observer posts in Europe, Canada and the United States to guard against surprise attack by. air, sea and ground forces. prove the military security of |both sides, strengthen interna-| tional confidence and facilitate progress toward further arms control measures, Fisher said. He stressed that the system hould operate openly "in full Peter Thomas, British minis-|view of the host governments." ter of 'state, submitted the pro- Soviet delegate Semyon K. posal at the 17-nation disarma-|Tsarapkin never has rejected ment conference. the idea of observer posts but His plan provided for estab-|a!ways has linked it with a de- lishment of permament. obser-|™and for liquidation of military ver posts at agreed road and bases on foreizn soil and with- rail junctions, airfields and sea-|4rawal of foregn troops; which ports in Canada, the United|@te unacceptable to the west- States, Britain and. throughout ©" powers. continental Europe and the So-| After listening viet Union, speech, Tsarapkin said the Brit- Such a system, Thomas said,|ish plan contained nothing would "do much to ease internew, but was a restatement of national tension" and improve the "same oldvidea of controls the prospects for agreement on Over arms wit hout disarm- general disarmament measures. 4ment. | Canada and the United > Any observer post system in States expressed their full ap- Europe, Tsarapkin said, must A London conference called to political solution ended in dead- Two weeks ago the UN Se- curity Council unanimously ap- proved a UN emergency force to keep peace on the island. Canada was the first to re- spond with troops, sending a force of 1,150 men to the island. The UN force will operational at 5 a.m. (10 p.m. EST tonight) Regiment have been makin 'familiarization patrols" Nicosia's "green . line" cease - fire line between th the city. Military sources expect them to take over this sector from men of Britain's 2nd Regiment|ping, were used on teen-agers,"' Royal wartillery, who have been|former SS Sgt. Wilhelm Boger patrolling the critical area most/testified at thet rial of 21 for-| of the time since they rushed here from England New Year's Day. The UN that' as spokesman more said troops Cyprus--arrive on the island, the British strength will be re- duced by an equivalent number yone day earlier, \tient - jing of the Oakville - | Queen's Park S B d Trafalgar office. t t | Memorial Hospital board | "The premier simply as red) e u ge 's~|On Teenagers: SS Friday Canadians of the Royal 22nd the main defendants at Ger- 8) many's along trials declared.today a torture © apparatus he developed at | Auschwit rat Greek- and Turkish-Cypriot sec- uschwitz concentration camp tors--and in an area south of and experience. of, as well as|™an's position . . ; the public service rendered by factan in judgment on a col-| elected to the legislature Sept {he new attorney-general." | agi . ioe | 125, was deuctliag as a epee The new attorney - general hot beg ig og oy of great stability" by the pre--was not present at the press iy bs ae one hee A havel |mier, conference, but said in an in-| abihin de a ages Behe | At the press conerence, Mr. terview later that the appoint-|S® 8 reiagahdor i | -- at |ment did not come tu him as|Will spend the weekend in his} la complete surprise. sien and return Tuesday to wor He said that althoigh no one ture's 2% week recess prepar-| bad spoken to him about the ing forthe task of piloting. the bailed i the efenior's office| d¢Partment's estimates through) OAKVILLE (CP ealth|Wednesday afternoon, he iat | | Minister all eg of Qhtario|thought he 'might be consid-| The br tara Pe 44 |said Wednesday patientd should|ered for the job." |ceeens koi Bag pore aie fed.| |be discharged from hospitals as| "I feel. very humble, very|0.r; - provincial conference. in soon as possible to provide|proud . . ." said Mr Wishart.|/@4 ae ober ani more bed space, | 'I believe I'can do a good job." eben: nese eee: If each of nearly 1,000,000 pa-| Mr..Wishart was in the Bay tients using Ontario hospitals|Street board room of the On- last year had been discharged'tario Walér Resources Com- S awa. 0 1,900,000 pa- mission Wednesda). when Mir. days would have been Robarts telephoned asking him saved, he told the annual meet-'to come to_ his Mr. Wishart, a lawyer from Sault Ste. Marie riding first throughout the legisla-) Cut Patient Days Dr. Dymond Urges | | | Use Torture Swing| [onight | -| Oshawa's 1964 budget will be |brought down tonight. A special council meeting has been called for 7.15, Details will be carried in Saturday's Boger insisted that no one Limes. died as a result of being on his| Reading of the bylaw setting swing. : the mill rate is all that is "That's a lot. of bunk what a yr an ape + y r 3 Ss know ine council Ss n ihets oo oe have' been S29" / unanimous but it is believed the ing about my interrogations;"| majority is sufficient to pass the he testified in reference to trial) bylaw. | statements by former prisoners} Ald. Finley Dafoe, often an| that his victims usually died/opponent of council budgets, is| two hours after he worked them expected to oppose this year's over. {at tonight's meeting. FRANKFURT (AP)--One of largest. war crimes should be used on teen-agers. "I am of the definite opinion that there would be far less |juvenile delinquency today if my. swing, together with whip- mer guards and Auschwitz func- tionaries. of|"Phooey"' the "UNFICYP"--the designa- tion given to the UN force in| A gasp went up from the 300 or so-trial spectators, Shouts of and '"'No, no, no" came from a number of young people in the spectators' gal- lery. : | "That's right," Boger shouted, "That's exactly what I mean." The defendant developed what to Thomas' TIMES OBSERVES prisoners GOOD FRIDAY The Oshawa Times will not' be published' Friday, March 27, in observance of the Good Friday holiday. Publication will resume Sat- a parade of former Auschwitz have called the most sadistic torture jinstrument, the "Boger swing" or what Boger calls "my talk- ing machine." It consisted of a beam of wood hung from the ceiling of the interrogation centre. Naked male 'prisoners were bound around the beam, their hands that criticism levied by the On- OPP Head Backs Police-State Bill TORONTO (CP) -- Provincial, All the proposed legislation| Police Cdmmissioner Eric Silk/does is penmit the commis-| said Wednesday night the Po-|sioner to designate one of five! lice Act Amendment bill does} assistant commissioners to con-| 'not give arbitraty powers to|duct an inquiry or hearing in| him or his deputies, |place of the commissioner or) Mr, Silk said in an interview |his deputy. fe $ ~ | In the past, assistant com- ario Police Association against missioners have been able to| the government's controversal h shar e z | Bill 99 is a result of a misun-|"@4? charges against police of-| derstanding. ficers but have not been able! In a letter to Premier Ro-|t9 require that testimony be OTTAWA (CP)--Highlights of the defence white paper tabled in the Commons today: Integration of Canada's army, navy and air force into a unified defence service, be- ginning with appointment of a single chief of staff. "Considerable savings" through integration of head- quarters, administrative and training staffs now main- | tained by each service. Ten-year plan for develop- ment of flexible, mobile mili- tary units available for serv- ice anywhere. Nuclear weapons essential for Canada's current roles in North American alr defence: and NATO. All-out thermonuclear war irrational and improbable. Chinese may get nuclear weapons--but not an effective arsenal. New multi-purpose tactical jet plane under study. Future air squadrons to give direct supportt o ground troops. NATO army brigade group to be left in Europe. Two Canada - based army brigades to be re- equipped and retrained as a mobile force for NATO or UN peace- keeping work. Fourth brigade in Canada to be gradually converted into special service airborne force. Air transport capability to be "substantially" increased and navy's sea-life increased. Construction. of two or three nuclear submarines for anti- sub work being carefully stud- ied, with no early decision likely. Possible savings of $1,000,- 000,000 over 10 years from in- tegration indicated by Defence Minister Hellyer. Savings to be used for new military equipment. No mention of Honest John nuclear rocket battery in Eu- rope, Adjustment, in NATO's mili- tary organization perhaps nec- essary as result of air-ground link for Canadian NATO 1000 of Canada's 122,000 full- time servicemen. Unofficial estimates are that savings in this field could amount to $100,000,000 a year on the current defence budge t which runs about $1,500,000,000. The policy paper stresses the continuance of Canada's roles in North American air defence and NATO and says these must of necessity include nuclear weap- ons. The NATO alliance "must continue to possess nuclear weapons in the absence of con- trolled disarmament and as long as hostile forces have them." WOULD DISAPPEAR ibe replaced by a chief of de- fence staff and a single defence staff. Mr. Hellyer told reporters the new defence boss will be Air Chief Marshall Frank Mil- ler, 55, now chairman of the chiefs of staff committee. He recently got a $4,000 pay in- crease to $25,000 a year. The 40-year-old minister also said that savings made in in- tegration would be pumped into new military equipment. He es- timated it would make an extra $1,000,000,000 available over the next 10 years for increased pur- chases of defence weapons. In recent months Mr. Hellyer jhas said repeatedly his aim ts to trim enough "fat" from the defence budget to make 25 per cent of it available for new weapons, Under ourrent plan- ning only about 13 per cent of the budget goes for weapons, the rest housekeeping costs headquarters staffs. such as Under integration, the separ- ate chiefs of the army, navy and RCAF would disappear to being "eaten up in|in traini of the brigade, The statement reaffi however, Canada's intention maintaining the army brigade in NATO's European defence line. The two reserve brigades maintained in Canada and ro- tating to Europe will be re- trained and re-equipped as a highly mobile striking force capable of being sent anywhere in a hurry. CONVERT TO A-FORCE In addition, the fourth army brigade in Canada will be con- force with equipment that can be moved quickly by air or even air-dropped. : In addition, one army battal- ion will be kopt available for | NATO's snpreme: allied com- mander in Europe. It would be on instant call, drawn from one lof the Canadian-based brigades, To achieve this mobility, air transport facilities will be greatly enlarged. The RCAF's eight CF-104 low- level bomber squadrons in Eur- ope will be maintained but not expanded. As they are phased |out during the next decade, they will be replaced by "a high per> formance aircraft that will pro- |vide sufficient flexibility for any task we might undertake from ground attack to alr sur- veillance."' This new plane was not. iden- |tified but officials said there are under study--the American F-4 and TFX designs and the British-developed P-1154, LINK TO GROUND The new plane would be linked close}jy to ground forces "It would have a suf- ficient flying range to allow fast deployment overseas from verted into a small, special - jthree or four years. He said the new plan is ex-|Canadian bases. pected to cut 10,000 adminis-| "Thus, ground and air forces trative personnel in the next} would complement each other |in a manner which has not been No specific. weapons plans! possible in the past." 4 ie i f ; 3 AIR MARSHALL TO HEAD | urday, March 28. The Times forces, proval of the British plan be preceded by making both cou 4 Soe ee Germanys nuclear - free zones WOULD EASE TENSION and withdrawing all foreign will also publish on Easter. tied to their feet, and beaten Monday. March 30 with such force on the geiitals Ais jthat the- victims swung. back 7 land forth. red Ayles- TIME TO REST Pte. Michel Gaudrault; of hotel. They were not ar-| Quebec City rests on a marble a biracial group quickly rested slab with long white columns into action to restore) Some reported) providing an' imposing back- peacc and resolve segregation slack sales as a result of the ground. He is a member of 'issues following three days and|racial troubles, the. Canadian army Contin- gent stationed in Cyprus. This photo was taken for The Canadian Press by Paul Tail- lefer of The Montreal Star. (CP. Wirephoto) a said police 'commissioner or one of External Affairs Minister|troops, his deputies powers to launch Paul Martin of Canada, who sat} an investigation within the de- partment by subpoenaing wit- | nesses and forcing them to tes- F E d T Vi ] tify. cal said establishment of an ob- | Such powers are dangerous! or n 0 10 ence | server post system such as sug-; ~ : ' e and capable of great and un-| : | gested by Thomas would "re- ' warranted abuse, the associa-| JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)-- nights of scattered shootings, a # +su't in a significant decrease in 4 i ur u es ] i i eG & i | " rectly connected with sections) attack and fire bombs plagued|/mounting property damage | to progress on the main polit- of the bill killed by the house this port city even as white and! from fires and rocks. ical problems dividing east and} e e o | Monday: Negro leaders groped for a way). A leader of Negro demonstra- west." | h i | Parts of the bill referred to out-of the racial crisis, tions warned of large-scale ac- U.S. disarmament negotiator| Robbed Britis Tall i | by the police association would | | jallow the provincial police com-|tacked by a gang of Negro|segregation is made. teen-agers, was badly injured.| "If Jacksonville doesn't do) help in advancing the work ofA jury found nine men guilty/robbery in the annals of world|don-bound mail train after ers ui a commissioner under the) Fire bombs ruined a 1955 model/something today or tomorrow, | the conference." today on charges of taking part/ crime. was. stopped by a false Public Inquiries Act as far as auto on'a used car Jot. this town's going to turn to A properly designed system/jin Britain's great train robbery These eight--including three signal at a hamlet near internal 'investigations of the of observation posts would ad----the theft of $7,800,000 from) women--were granted separate bury. OPP are concerned night, but rock-throwing .and|the state and local chapters of| other vandalism subsided. the National Association for the ' A 10th man was found guilty|Another defendant pleaded|banks in Scotland to banks in|@™ended act would be virtually) In hospital with a jagg e d/ Advancement of. Colored Peo- : jof conspiring to obstruct. the/guidy and still another got a\the British capital, the same as the one that has|three - inch laceration of the|ple. CITY EMERGENCY course of justice. directed verdict of acquittal) The 'rial began Jan. 20 and its\been in existence for many The verdict came after three during the trial. nine-weeks length was unusual| Years. PHONE NUMBERS struck by a brick during an at-)tatirants, were turned awa y - tack by 12 to 15 Negroes. from a third place and picketed We 795. Judge: Edmund Davies worth of loot stolen and still' deliver the summation the jurisdiction of the police' Backed, by Mayor Haydonia POLICE 725-1133 he -would defer sentencing 2 for thé gang's mas-- When the jurors filed commission. He said he and his Burns convicted who are beicve court at 9:30 aem. (4/30. a.m have, for some time I in possession of 'the balance.|EST) they had been out for 66 ¢ authority to investigate barts, the association said the given under oath. | bill would give the provincial Bi l | G C ll in on -the conference session : p while in Geneva to attend the! $ : current UN trade conference, STOLE 7.8 MILLION tion said. Its letter was not di-| Violence in the form of a gang/killing, numerous injuries and| "East-West tension. . . and lead Police said a white man, at-/tivities unless progress in de- Adrian S. Fisher said the Brit-} oars : ba ; | ish proposal "'will be of great) AYLESBURY, England (AP)|money snatch, the largest cash|commando-like raid on the Lon-| ssioner to take on the pow- Incessant false. alarms kept}mass demonstrations," said firemen on the run for the third) Rutledge Pearson,' president of vance the cause of peace, im-|the Glasgow-London mail train trials when the case. was) Most of 'he money was in £5. Mr. Silk said there is nothing last Aug. 8. brought to court in January.jnotes being transferred from 4!@stic in the legislation. The forehead was 53-year-old Lester} A few Negroes staged sit-ins| Phillips.. He told police he was | briefly Wednesday at two res- days of deliberation and a trial) The police so far recoveredifor a British criminal trial,| Its effect would be to remove that lasted nine weeks only £258,000 of the £2,600,000| Judge Davies took five-days to/the conduct of hearings from FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 went ~ " HOSPITAL 723-2211 The big haul was made in alhours, 54 minutes. icomplants. under 'oath. into until afte d to leputies businessmen rial of I ther persons { cig z had ti cused of complicity in the giant|