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Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Apr 1964, p. 1

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2 ee ae ee tpl he Thought For Today The truly frugal man lives as cheaply right after payday as just before. Vou. 93 -- NO, 87 Price Not Over. 10 'Cents per Copy yp | Si A ini ein OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, APRIL 13, 1964 Hawa Times night. Variable cooler Tuesday. Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. ' Weather Report -- Thundershowers continuing to- Cloudiness and Winds becoming northwest 20 to 30. EIGHTEEN PAGES | Van Doos NICOSIA (CP) -- Greek- and|mountains by helicopter in a TurkishCypriots fired on one|new effort to arrange a cease-| another again today in ~ the/fire. | rocky mountains overlooking) Both Saturday and Sunday,' the Turkish-held Kyrenia Pass,|the Canadians moved into the while Canadian troops made re-|area of the fighting about 18! newed efforts to bring about a/miles north of Nicosia. It cease-fire. |stopped while they were there| As gunfire sounded for the|but resumed as soon as they! third successive day, Lt. - Col.|withdrew to return to their Andrew Woodcock of Sarnia, camps. commander of Quebec's Royal} A UN pace force spokesman 22nd Regiment, surveyed the si-|in Nicosia said a UN spotter tuation and said: 'It appears|plane flying over the craggy! the honeymoon will soon be/ridge where the two sides are over." jentrenched reported a lot of ac- He said the Vandoos, Que-| tivity. bec's famed French - language} But there was still no indica- regiment, have had a fairly|tion that the Greek side was éasy time since their arrival)making a determined on- three weeks ago as part of a/slaught on the last Turkish for-! United Nations peace - keeping|tifications and strongpoints to force. take the pass itself, "It is evident that mae | not TRY FOR SYMPATHY going to spend three months do-' Col. Woodcock said the Greek- ing nothing," he said, and TurkishCypriots had first There was a grave risk that/of all tried to get to know the the island would experience a/Canadians, Both sides were an-| "blood bath." 'xious for the sympathy of Ca- PLANS VISIT AREA nadians. Col. Woodcock planned a per- Incidents occurred, and on sonal visit today to the scene each occasion, the Canadians did of the fighting. not threaten anyone," he said. The firing started about 7 a.m.| AS @ Tesult, neither of the op-| at a spot about two miles from/P!M8 camps is afraid of us." the camp of the Royal 22nd's c| At the moment, he said, the Company, commanded by Maj.|C@nadian forces in Cyprus do Condemned slayer Jack Ruby walks down the corri- dor of Dallas Criminal Courts Building this morning sur- rounded by. guards-on his way to court. The former night KANSAS CITY (AP)--Dazed |survivors picked through rubble of homes and business Patrick Tremblay of Chicoutimi, |"t instill in the Greek- and] About 9 a.m. a platoon from|TUrkish-Cypriots a fear great the company was flown into the/©?0ush to prevent what he de- |Scribed as a 'blood bath." | There was still no indication, | Indonesian jhowever, that the Greek side slaught on last Turkish fortifi- e cations and strongpoints to take! Police Free "sms | ls oon ae started Satur- ay, meek-Cypriots have ripe es been claiming their action was souri and southwestc m lowa. WS. Reporter csecst sete sete te ren noe te |Cypriots back from a number t least 50 were injured, ; correspondent of|points on a ridge running west|out of thunderstorms that could Searels. er, ee a ' oe , " " 'on en} ' after being held fneommunicadoe magne of Dhikomo, two'could have been preater , for_nearly 29 hours. miles from the pass itself, " ines h , id He told reporters he was) The Greeks have overrun all Be gl ready ! } ede bay questioned about an advisory|Turkish vantage points but one, | northwest. the other southeast-- message he filed to his head|immediately before the pass.|and rolled rapidly to the north- office in New York which read:|They claim they can take the| cast ma "Rumors circulating strong (spe any bev they want to if)" mr. they are ordered to do so. , trowiies Sunday wake Sukac agape of traffic on U.S. 59 five miles " Turks appeared to hav t up|South of Garnett and hurled a am_ covering. i e put up| : McCabe said the military po-|2 NeW firing post about 1,000|°9,000-pound truck, a pickup lice ed t0 | the source|yards from Kato Dhikomo. |truck and six cars in all direc- of his information. He said he|. 1" daring manoeuvres,: 2nq|'#ns, killing these people and was adequately treated by. the Lieut. Pierre Gadbois of Mont-|iniuring eight other persons. military police real led patrols of the Royal! "Tt felt like the truck was He said the police insisted he|22"d Regiment up to the firing|lifted up off the highway," said F : 'on.|during the weekend. The Greek-|seph, Mo., who was hauling 25,. taken into custody for' question- P . Bhe Greek-| ' ' , 6 4, oa r os and Turkish - Cypriots ceased|000 pounds of meat to Dadlas. He said one officer told him fire when the Canadian patrols} 'I could see the trailer stick- he had been detained for his|*PPeared but resumed shortly|ing straight over my head as I own protection against "gubver-|2ter. looked out. of the cab," Miller sive elements." These elements era Sie ENS aU eR i were not identified. order from President Sukarno. SE ATO Members U.S. Ambassador Howard P Jones lodged a protest with the government against McCabe's O f -- pen Conference Earlier Foreign Minister Sub- andrio said McCabe had writ- ten "'faise and inflammatory east Asia Treaty Organization's|ance, "it is only natural that _10th anniversary ministe-|they also accept sacrifices," rial conference went into secret) 'Tp, he i boi a session today for what was es-lteagication teen Bouts viet Naw pected to be the most penetrat-|would be tantamount to deliv. ne ing analysis of the eight-country ering the country, with hands In Feud With gc gg was formed. _, |and feet bound, to its northern wo Asian members, Thai- aggressors." Red Chinese cated today the time has come, (As the talks opened, Reut- for some hard talking on the al-|€TS news agency said there was MOSCOW (AP)--Polish Com- liance's ability to halt Commu- speculation that the British munist leaders arrived in Mos-|nist aggression, backed Federation of Malaysia cow today for talks to strength-| France, which recently recog: leur ate My gh pring sg en Premier Khrushchev in his nized Communist. China and ad- Ry dah: nek' a orth Bor: bitter dispute with the Chinese|vocates the neutralization of au ent seex admittance' to C mmmunist. |Southeast ihathag dl ame was making a determined on- rs (Reuters) -- Ro-|0f peaks and other vantage! Most of the twisters snaked One twister sucked up a line no's speech made rally which I A UN spokesman said the had not been arrested--simply|Sites at three different times|Stephen A. Miller, 29, of St. Jo- McCabe was released on an MANILA (AP) -- The South-|bers are satisfied with the alli- news." land and the Philippines, indi- Asia, also said the|_-- \ RUBY GOES TO COURT club operator, convicted of slaying Lee Harvey Oswald-- the accused assassin of Pres- ident Kennedy -- is seeking a new trial. (AP Wirephoto) said, "But I don't know if it I was up there and just didn't about 35 feet from the ment. Miller suffered only a slight scalp cut. The pickup truck, was flung a quarter-mile. The driver, Chrris- suffered a donee injury. Right behind" Milier's « truc a family. car feet to one side. Another landed) 600 feet on the other side of the} road. The cars were smashed into twisted bits of metal Blinding dust kicked up by strong winds caused at least 15 cars to ram together in one! ipileup on the Kansas Turnpike. | Six persons were injured, none seriously. SAW IT COMING | , Kan.,| de, Students at the University of ~ Independence Splits Kansas saw a twister coming Birth Control | | ALQ Suspects To Appear In Court | MONTREAL (CP)--A fourth |suspected member of L'Anmee ide Liberation du Quebec has lbeen arrested and will be changed in connection with an janmory raid in Shawinigan, Que., earlier this year, Quebec Provincial Police sad today. The 19-year-old whom a po- Ice spokesman declined to iden- tify, was to be arrainged later today in either Shawinigan or St. Jerome, Que. The spokes- jman also declined to disclose the nature of the charge or i\charges. | Two other suspected members Path Of Destruction Ripped By Tornadoes directly toward Lawrence, Kan., the|was really up there or whether|/from the southwest. "Then it veered to the north," buildings today in the wake of|know where the ground was."|said Robert Jones, a senor. "We tormadoes that slashed through| The truck was dropped upside|cow i¢ hit eastern Kansas, western Mis-\down in a 404oot-deep ravine|there was del PaVe-| the funnel." At least 14 homes were dam-|was taken into custody and then| Helen aged or destroyed by that tor-! released. nado, and three persons were injured. A tornado roared over Leav- enworth, Kan., yet quite touch- damage about 75 homes, smash windows in the business district and uproot many trees. Seven persons were injured there Tobacco barns were flattened near Weston, Mo. Farther on, at community Yorktown, a |of the ALQ were to be arrainged lat St. Jerome on armed rob- lbery charges, Asked whether charges are pending against them in connection with separ- atist activities, the spokesman said the armed robbery charge is 'the only one for the mo- ment," FOUR NOW HELD The arrest of the latest sus- pect, which took place at his home overnight Friday, brings to four the number of suspected ALQ members in custody. The fourth man had nothing to do |with the armed robbery, the po- lice spokesman said. The first three to be arrested, one a juvenile, were picked up at a roadblock. The trio, Jean Gagnon, Jean LaSalle, 22, and the juven- ile, were arrested Thursday at Mont - Rolland, Que., shortly after a $5,000 bank robbery staged by five men in that-Lau- rentian Mountains community. Meanwhile, the combined forces of the RCMP, Montreal and Quebec Provincial Police brits houses and / continued their efforts to smash ris at the base Of/the ALQ with a series of 28| j weekend raids in which one man 26,/ RELEASED Newsweek correspondent Robert McCabe who was taken into custody in Indon- esia for writing what Fore- eign Minister Subandrio call- ed "false and inflammatory news". He was later ordered released by President Sukarno after a vigorous protest from the U.S, Ambassador. (AP Wirephoto) Oshawa Girl Shot In Hip A 'for the brother of a man 'sen-ja field near her home. tenced for his de Liberation jwas smashed after a 10-week nightmare of bombings that killed one man and maimed an- other. CHARGED BROTHER Gagnon's brother Francois, Quebecois: in was hurled 6009/8 down, but close enough to! Montreal last spring. The FLQ pat in the terror) Helen of RR 2, Oshawa, was But distribution jtaken to the General Hospital| od where she is in "good condi- tion." who. did not realize anyone was hit Police believe the shot was a |Stray fired by a target shooter] ent to provide them with Doctors CP from AP-Reuters BRUSSELS -- The govern- jment announced today about 94 doctors in the Mechelen area, midway between Brussels and Antwerp, have ended their 'strike. Premier Theo Lefevre's of- fice said the Mechelen doctors signed an agreement with local health insurance associations, thereby breaking with the strik- ing medical union, At strike headquarters Brussels, a spokesman said: "We believe it's another trial |balloon like the one of last week in Seraing, near Liege. Twenty-four hours later; the so- called agreement had blown up again, and things remained un- changed."' ' The possible dent in the united front of Belgium's 12,000 strik- in tists civilian hospitals. HOLDS MEETING The cabinet today held an) emergency meeting to consider the government's next moves in the walkout. ..The defence ministry nounced 2,172 of the 3,600 doc 13-year-old Oshawa girl,|tors affected reported to their Walters, was hit in the! military units, left hip Saturday night, by al Fer act aivaan Police said they are looking|.22 bullet while walking across|recor' any, ors s. . Ito answer mobilization orders. individual of ers. was. reported. slow. itheir cars and medical instru ments. This foreed the govern transportation and equipment. ing physicians and den- came after the govern- ment Sunday ordered the mo- bilization of anmy reserve doc- \tors for emergency duty in an- The defence ministry had no Many doctors reported with jtheir uniforms but left behind 94 BELGIAN MDS | RETURN TO WORK Break From Strikers cal services but 2,000 physicians continued emergency service in hospitals. However, all the doc- tors refused to make house house calls or examine patients in their offices except in the most critical cases. Some of the mobilized physi- cians are part of the strikers' emergency force. After talks with the government broke down early Sunday, the doctors' union said it would leave 'it to the government to man the emergency stations. : In 'addition to announcig the mobilization the government in- voked a 1948 law extending gov- ernmental control over alll doc- tors with hospital connections. The law was originally enacted to be used in serious industrial disputes. Although these steps appeared to be having some effect, the strike leaders insisted the gov- ernment had made a negotiated settlement impossible. They urged the strikers to continue the walkout except where they risked legal action. No new talks with the doctors are planned. The government says it is up to them to take the initiative in resuming nego- tiations. The Belgian Roman Catholic primate, Leon-Joseph . Cardinal Suenens, joined the gi bishops in issuing a new appea to the strikers, Ottawa Asked For Civilian Police Help OTTAWA (CP)--Canada has . _| The strike began 13 days agojreceived a request from the Four years ago Helen was hit/as a protest against revision in]United Nations to send civilian of 146 persons in|19, was among the 18 FLQ mem-|in the eye by an arrow, two/the government's national|police to Cyprus but, while fa- southwest Iowa, a tornado killed|/bers charged with terrorist ac-|years ago a snowball struck|health insurance system. Many/voring the idea generally, likely one woman and injured others. | three years in prison. lsight of an eye, 'Stand 'Cruel' Rhodesia Government Cleric Claims | | TORONTO (CP)--Dr. |Forrest, editor of the United) |Church Observer, said Sunday} jthe Catholic position on mixed) |manriages, birth control and di-| vorce seems "unnecessarily cruel." "We believe that birth con- trol with contraceptives is valid,| that in no way. it contravenes natural law, and we resent and) fear Catholic majorities restrict-| ing our rights and freedom to} secure information and help in} these matters," he told about 300 -persons, mostly Catholics. Dr.- Forrest, speaking at a Catholic inspired series of lec- -|tures to create understanding | Moderate attitude in the face of between Catholics, Protestants| and Jews, said the liberal and| |Progressive Roman Catholics}* jseem generous and understand- ling and are working hard Polish Communist Party Boss|time has come "to do away Wladyslaw Gomulka said on his with myths, to eliminate ambig- arrival with Premier Josef Cy-\uities and squarely to face re- -nankiewicz that the Polish and|alities." Soviet Communist parties "have France wil] face some candid the same views of the tasks of|questioning on its neutrality the socialist camp, of the stra-/proposal, which Fas been ro- tegy and'tactics of the interna-\jected by the United States, tional movement." Thailand and the Philippines. Any actions directed against) U.S: State Secretary Dean eonanence ie the unity of Communist coun- Rusk, in his opening, address, Hi eabaginls (Cc Des A Toronto tries. "are harmful and irre-|cited such major problems of) awyer, expelled: from Portugal Fe sag aid the area as South Viet Nam's|Saturday after he had b sponsible," Gomul b : tho investigate the country's penal The Age yl P ei of Laos, the Indonesian confron- to be the a tartist age tation of Malaysia and economic pel cg, ol Pigpcrve slloroe of Problems of the whole region. Kibrushchev's 70th bicthday Fri- en car tealant's foreign day. = piglet minister Thanat Khoman or Ae ee ee ~... .s@t the theme. Khoman sai -- bg Red: leaders "The 10th anniversary of the woe sempre A Manila pact seems tobe as No other foreign visitors ond os an joule as any to re- no public events have been: an- view whether the strong urge nounced for Khrushchev's birth-" yin, impelled eight nations to day. set up in this region a system of collective defence has kept its vitality or whether, with the passage of time, it has waned to the vanishing point for the sim- ple reason that some may have lost interest in the original con- cept or have been reluctant to discharge their resmonsibility."' Portuguese Khoman said membership in on men SEATO "cannot be conceived asitold him press conferences were 'a one-way street."' Lf the mem- forbidden, Portugal ght War, the ineffective neutrality he arrived in Toronto Sunday Norman FEdicott, 38, and three other lawyers, had been in Lisbon for four days on a side trip from a meeting of the International Association of Democratic Lawyers in Buda- pest They were told to leave the country on the next plane. A government spokesman said CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT, 725-6574 HOSPITAL; 723-2211 ternal affairs view here police called on him vitations to and fo newspaper | | | | Expels Toronto Lawyer The Jawyers met reporters' to tell them the conference had| order, Immediately afterwards, | ainport. He said he learned there are from 1,500 to 3,000 - political prisoners in Portuguese jails, that P prisonment for "danger ous thoughts" and that prisoners can be held 15 months for inter- rogation. He added that three-year sen- tences can be imposed on per- Mr. Endicott, said he~ started! Mr. Endicott said in an-inter-\jnvestigation: at *the. request of /sign. a Paris lawyer who had been| ugee colony in France. He in- They terviewed wives and relatives of| 'actions, "agitation" less Nehru quits by Aug. 15. prisoners, Portuguese lawyers and the ministry of justice, SALISBURY (Reuters)--| Alfred Prime Minister Winston Field|the remova resigned today following a split in his ruling Rhodesian Front party over the question of South-| ern Rhodesia's independence from Britain The 59-year-old Field was suc-| ceeded by lan Smith, a 45-year:| old 'farmer who was finance minister and deputy premier. Field, considered a moderate} in the party, was reported to} have been forced to resign after} a number of meetings of the party caucus and cabinet, Field's opponents were dissat- isfied with his handling of na-| tional affairs, particularly his} Britain's refusal to grant inde-| pendence to a white-dominated| government in the central Afri-| can country. Smith leads the dominant) right wing of the party which} Political observers here said, 1 of Field could bring a complete break with Britain| by the extreme right-wing ele- ment in his party, some of whom have called for a unila- teral declaration of Southern Rhodesian independence. Southern Rhosesia was in the} Central African Federation with} Northern Rhodesia and Nyasa- land before the federation broke up Dec. 31, 1963, after 10 years of existence FAILED IN BID Field went to Britain last Feb-| ruary but failed to get a promise of independence under the pres- ent constitution. | } Both African spokesmen and/have been a major factor in his|ton and charged with leav- the white opposition welcomed Field's resignation. The white opposition was cri- tical of Field's softness toward |the British government but the Africans saw his downfall as an opening for greater African rep- resentation through a constitu- tional conference. | Field said in a statement: | "Serious disagreements have | | jarisen between my party in the| BELLEVILLE (CP) -- Don House and myself, in relation to) policy, and I have been re-| quested to retire in order to} make way for someone else." | At one time he was leader of the opposition to Sir Roy Wel- jensky, the former federal prime|Manysville, minister of the Rhodesian Fed-| eration. | His moderating influence and personal stature was believed to party's first election victory at) the Southern Rhodesian elec-| tions in December, 1962. and released on $500 bail. on Easter vacations with their families at the start of the walkout The traditional Easter vaca- tion period ended Sunday, and this week will show how many docotrs return to normal prac- tice. THREATENS SHUTDOWN The strike leaders threatened a complete shutdown of medi- Road Worker Killed, Police Hold Trucker Trumpour, 38, of Belleville died in hospital Sunday of injuries suffered Friday when he was crusped between his gravel truck and a passing vehicle as he worked on Highway 401 near 14 miles east of here, Leonard Gres}, 38, of Calgary, driver of a furniture van, was arrested shortly after at Tren- ing the scene of an accident. He was remanded to May 14 six|tivities. He was sentenced to{her in the face and she lost the of the doctors and dentists went|/will decline, a government source said today. | This country already has a |battalion group of about 1,100 men serving in the UN peace- keeping force on the troubled Mediterranean island. It has been asked to send an additional |100 to 150 men to serve on the force's headquarters staff. In view of these already - heavy commitments, the source said, Canada is inclined to feel that the UN request for civilian police might be met by coun- tries which haven't been able to field a full military group in the peace-keeping force. Finland, Ireland, Sweden and Britain are represented in the force as well as Canada and also askd for police. Woman Held In North Bay Death NORTH BAY (CP) -- Provin- cial Police are investigating the death Seturday of Robert 'Os? borne, 62, of nearby Trout . Cweek. Police said the cause of death has not been determined, but a woman was being held in Parry Sound district jail. Police declined to release any further information. holds a majority of five in the| F 65-member Parliament. MAY ASK RECALL | Sir Edgar Whitehead, leader} of the Opposition Rhodesian Na- tional party, was expected | ask for an immediate recall of} Parliament which adjourned | last Friday until July. i British-born Field called on Governor Sir Humphrey Gibbs ad begun to|been cancelled by government|Shortly after 8 a.m. and deliv- ered his resignation. system, was greeted by about) police lifted their passports and| Smith drove to Government) 26 Portuguese-Canadians whenlescorted the lawyers to Lisbon|House shortly afterwards to take over the government. Smith becomes the first Rho-} desian-born premier of the coun- try. } ortuguese Jaw allows im-|~ Indian Leaders Urge Nehru Quit NEW DELHI (AP)--Charging they abused the country's hos-\sons who have been acquitted|the Indian government is weak ptalty and he accused them of py a court, and that. prisoners/@%d paralysed, opposition polit- "intervention in Portugal's in-/can-bé kept in jail indefinitely,|ical groups today cailled on ail- ing Prime Minister Nehru to re- Delhi state units of the Social-| in Lisbon after he had sent in-|in touch with a Portuguese ref-'ist and Praja Socialist parties, | plus several smaller opposition warned they will open in the capital un-: \ to| & BRITISH ROYALTY ON OPPOSING SIDES ON POLO FIELD Prince Charles, 15, second ft left heir to the British throne, and rom in white helmet, his father, Prince Philip, ex- treme right in dark helmet and dark glasses, play on opposing sides in_ practice " chukka of the Household Polo Club in Windsor Great Park, Windsor, England, yesterday. It was the young Prince of Wales second day of polo last weekend, (--AP Wirephoto via cable from London)

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