, THOUGHT FOR TUDAY \ Wife: What a man blames things on that he can't blame on the government. Oshawa Times Wednesday. spanner ne OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1964 Authorized as Second Class Mail Ottawa end for payment Post Office of Postage in Cash. Jack Ruby, Dallas night nedy, adjusts his glasses as trict court today. At left is club operator charged with he goes over some material another of Ruby's attorneys, the slaying of the accused with his chief attorney, Mel- Joe Tonnehill. assassin of President Ken- vin Belli, right, in Dallas dis- --AP Wirephoto Medicare Would Pad MD's Pockets: UAW without charge, it is logical to conclude that the medical pro- fession would be the sole bene- ficiary of the proposed legisla- tion. Henceforth, they (the doc- tors) would be paid their full standard schedule fees for serv- ices they have been providing without charge." In addition, the persons for whom the government would buy medical insurance already receive free services under the Ontario Medical Welfare. Plan with Lg B aget getting past payment from government. Under the new legislation the jiums unde: the government: plan, the union said. The 5,000-word UAW brief to the government - appointed in- quiry, a point-by-point indict- ment: of the draft, said it is de- ficient in benefits and peppered with ambiguities that indicate "lack of planning throughout |the whole of the proposed leg- islation." Among 15 specific recommen- dations, the UAW said the full cost of medical care for the needy and half the cost for all other residents should be paid from taxes. Coverage should be TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's doctors will be the main bene- ficiaries of provincial legisla- tion presented by the govern- ment as a method of making protection against medical costs universally available, the United Auto Workers (CLC) said today. The UAW, representing 60,000 Ontario workers with almost 140,000 dependents, told a com- mittee studying the govern- ament's medical insurance plan that the draft legislation's chief achievement would be "'in- creased income for the provid- OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson's cabinet shuffle is seen as a mixture of politics and good business management. The changes he outlined in ministerial responsibilities rep- resent the most sweeping re- forms in government organiza- ition since the Second World War. Mr. Pearson told reporters he supports the idea that there should be a large representa- tive cabinet employing more MPs in ministerial responsibil- ities and a small executive group within the cabinet. Such a system is used in the United Kingdom. What may be the start of this system was his announcement that nine cabinet committees are being set up to deal with various aspects of government business. Each committee would have a chairman, ut Mr. Pearson would not say if the committee chairmen would themselves meet as a committee. Mr. Pearson said he does not think this system will reduce the number of cabinet meet- ings, but it will speed up gov- ernment business. MAKE RECOMMENDATION Matters requiring cabinet de- cision would be brought up by the minister concerned to the docors would get full ment for these services, seems to indicate-a" of creased income for the provid- ers of care." ers us vo else- and ten! beyond physicians' ssoapet Premium rates and benefit payments should be reg- ulated by a public body, rather than by the insurers and doc- Extension of benefits ~ooowhereswould-be- minimal subscribers to prepaid plans now likely face higher prem- appropriate committee of cabi- met where a rec ion would: be thrashed out~for fuli cabinet 'action. In moving Transport Minister PM's Cabinet Shifts Biggest Since WW II George Mcliraith from his heavy department to the new post of president of the treasury board, Mr. Pearson not only strengthens the board in pres- tige, but makes Mr. Mcllraith, as MP for Ottawa West, a more prominent figure i. local Ottawa affairs. Replacing him in the trans- port department with State Sec- retary J. W. Pickersgill will bring a more adept parliamen- tary hand to the piloting of con- tentious railway legislation through the next session of Par- liament. Recommendations of the Mac- Pherson royal commission on transportation are expected to be embodied in legislation: next session. Mr. Mcllraith, a metic- ulous lawyer, has drafted much of the legislation but it is be- Two Charged In Murder Of Metro Youth TORONTO (CP)--Two young men were arrested Monday night and charged with the cap- ital murder of Richard John Dale Spence, 18, found bludg- eoned to death Sunday beside an expressway wail. . Edward Elley, 21, and Neil Collins, 20, both of suburban North"York, were arrested by Metropolitan Toronto police homicide detectives 40 hours tors as provided in the present draft plan. The UAW noted that the draft bill's chief feature is to provide private medical insurance for "the medically needy'? -- "pre- cisely the people whom. the medical profession repeatedly say now are being treated with- out charge." } "Thus, to the extent that) |these people are now treated Glenn Wins | First Round 2 Mayors Admit Getting Free NONG Stock TORONTO (CP) -- Two for- mer mayors of Ontario commu- nities acknowledged today they received free stock in Northern Ontario Natural Gas Corpora- tion and a court was told offi- cialg or former officials of two others were given stock. The acknowledgements came DALLAS (AP)--A psychiatrist described Jack Ruby Monday Jas a man wound up "to attack, ito fight"--and one who did not understand what he was doing when he killed Lee Harvey Os- wald, accused assassin of Presi- dent Kennedy. Cross - examination brought from Mr. Justice Leo Landre- ville of the Ontario Supreme 'Court, who received 7,500 shares after his Sudbury mayoralty term during which NONG got a franchise. there, and Mrs. Wanda Miller, former mayor of Gravenhurst who got 150 shares after NONG was given a fran- chise there during her term in office. | The evidence came at the pre- liminary hearing of NONG Pres-\ without endorsement of incum-| ident Ralph K. Farris, 53, of Vancouver, on three charges of perjury in connection with the long-investigated distribution of NONG stock several years ago.| The promoter was committed| for trial on two of the charges, | and the third was dismissed. | Under Fire COLUMBUS, Ohio, (AP)--Lt.- Col. John H. Glenn, Jr., won the opening round Monday in his first political battle for the Dem- ocratic U.S. senatorial nomina- tion in Ohio. Backers of the 42-year-old space hero forced a noisy ad- journmenrt of the party's first pre - primary convention here bent Senator Stephen M. Young, 74, for re-election. Young called confidently for an endorsement showdown after Glenn entered the Senate race in his native Ohio only last Fri- day following 22 years of mili- tary service. testimony that Ruby had a Rus- sian father and made a trip to Cuba in 1959 to try to sell jeeps. The description of Ruby was by Dr. Walter Bromberg, clini- cal director of Pinewood Psy- chiatric Hospital in Westchester County, N.Y. He . testified for the defence in its effort to have Ruby freed on bond while await- ing trial on a charge of murder with 'malice for shooting Os- wald, | In cross-examination by state lawyers, Bromberg said Ruby had told him of making a trip to Cuba in 1959, nine months after Premier Fidel Castro took over. District Attorney Henry Wade Ruby Made Visit To Cuba Pychiatrist Tells Court berg of trying to sell jeeps to Cuba. The doctor confirmed this and added: "But the deal didn't go through . . . it was an in- volved financial deal in Houston and elsewhere. He wanted to make some money in a hurry." He said Ruby spent about 10 days in Cuba. Assistant District Attorney William Alexander asked if the doctor had learned from Ruby that his father was a_ native Russian named Rubenstein who had served in the Russian Army. The psychiatrist said, "yes," Alexander asked whether this Russian background might have influenced Ruby's state of mind. Bromberg replied: 'It might have had an effect on his or- ganic background." There was no explanation of this answer. Oswald spent several years in Russia; once tried to obtain Russian citizenship, married a Russian woman and, after re- turning to the U.S. handed out pro-Castro pamphlets in New Orleans. after Spence's battered body was found, Spence had made two phone calls the previous day, just hours after he was_ released from the Ontario reformatory at Guelph where he served a four-month sentence for break- ing and entering. One of the calls was to his father, but he did not keep an appointment to meet him that night. Insp. William McNeely had described the killing as the most brutal in Metropolitan Tor- onto in the last five years. lieved Mr. Pickersgill can dis- play more finesse in getting it through the Commons. Succeeding Mr. Pickersgill as the government's House leader is Guy Favreau, a former dep- uty minister of justice, and im- migration minister since last April. His talent as a legal draughtsman has kepe him in touch with progress of impor- tant legislation through the Commons. As a parliamentary tactician, Mr. Favreau lacks Mr. Pickers- gill's experience, but he is the kind of politician who is willing to sacrifice partisan considera- tions to parliamentary progress. The two new ministers in the Commons--Maurice Sauve and Yvon Dupuis--are both young men with considerable records in the Liberal party in Quebec. Mr. Sauve's principal record has been made in small-] liberal philosophy and organization; Mr. Dupuis' as a fiery orator. In the Senate, W. Ross Mac- donald, a former Speaker ° of|li the,Commons and solicitor-gen- eral in the previous Liberal gov- ernment of Louis St. Laurent, is retiring from the government leadership which he has occu- pied with quiet flexibility. The engines LYNDON B. JOHNSON 2-Shift Operation Set Up By Ford Co. WINDSOR (CP) -- Ford of Canada's engine assembly line went into a two-shift operation Monday as announced a week ago. The company said as a re- sult of the added shift 75 new employees have been added to the 229 already on the assembly ne, The labor force increase means engine production will be raised to 950 units a day. are shipped to Oakville for assembly of Ford cars and trucks. Shootings, Again. Hit Tanganyika > NAIROBI, Kenya -- Shooting and looting broke out today in the Arab and African quarters of Dar es Salaam, breaking a calm that had raised hope the capital of Tanganyika was re- turning to normal. The word of the new-~ out- breaks reached Britain's Com- monwealth relations office at midday after Britain ordered nearly 2,000 troops and an air- craft carrier to Tanganyika's borders and coastal waters to meet the threat of a bloody mu- Budget Pruning Hinted In Ottawa OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- ment is making llth-hour cuts in the spending estimates for the 1964-65 fiscal year which be- gins April 1, informants said Monday. The move was an "'after- thought," as one official called it. It came after the year's spending by each. department already had been approved-- well before Christmas--and the asked if Ruby had told Brom-, U.S. MILITARY ALLOWANCE CUT PROPOSED Barbered Budget Presented WASHINGTON (CP) -- Presi-| Congress and the final program sell. off a $11,000;,000,000. batch Because of the total cut in| Bomarcs--which played a ma- dent Johnson = today presented | approved may be shanply dif-jof government assets. Congress with a slightly paredjferent from Johnson's propos-| The much-publicized Johnson $97,900,000,000 budget, including|als. axe-work on federal employ- a planned $1,100,000,000 drop in| Nevertheless, on his estimates;ment wond up as a net cut of defence outlays. It was the first|the government would end the|only 1,200 jobs, or a shaving of U.S. budget decrease in five/next fiscal year with a deficit|less than one-twentieth of one years. The budget, effective .for the} fiscal year starting July 1, as-| sumed early congressional pas- sage of an $11,000,000,000 tax re- duction. Johnson called it a "giant step toward .. . a balanced budget in a full-employment,! full-prosperity economy." The over-all budget repre- sents a $500,000,000 decline from |$52,300,000,000 this year. This|year, Thenceforth space. outlays the current year's estimated) $98,400,000,000. However, th e| government's budget usually) undergoes heavy mauling CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 ES 725 | of $4,900,000,000 -- compared with an estimated $10,000,000,- 000 deficit for the present fiscal year. This would boost the U.S. national debt to a peak of $317,-) 000,000,000. Financing this huge debt: would run to an estimated $11,100,000,000 next year, John- son said, The budget would cut military outlays to $51,200,000,000 from would include elimination of 27,000 Pentagon civilian jobs: All 'told, including stockpiling by|costs and foreign military as-|was the smallest since the pro- sistance, U.S. national defence outlays for next year are esti- mated at $55,211,000,000, down from $56,011,000,000 this year. Other cuts would hit the agri- culture department, the post of- fice, the Atomic Energy Com- mission and the veterans ad- ministration The new fiscal blueprint also would thin slightly the over-all 'ranks of federal jobholders and'velopment of poor countries. jper cent, That would leave 2,- |511,200 on the civilian payroll when the fiscal year ends in mid-1965, And the space budget contin- ued to climb, as Johnson re- committed the United States to put an American on the moon in this decade. He called for a $5,300,000,000 civilian space bud- get, up $600,000,000 from this | iwill level off, he promised. |. Johnson's request for $3,400,- 000,000 new foreign aid funds gram started with the post-war Marshall Plan. This was $1,500,- 000,000 below the present year's original proposal, but only $300,- 000,000 below what a reluctant Congress finally gave. The money would support $1,- 200,000,000 of outlays for mili- tary assistance. to 60 nations, and $2,200,000,000 of loans and outiays to help the economic de-|them. The U.S. investment in theselin spending, Treasury Secretary Dillon told reporf€rs it probably will be possible to balance the budget in fiscal 1967, the gov- ernment year which tsarts in mid-1966. : | The defence cuts would elimi- nate two of the eight U.S. Bo- mare anti - aircraft missile squadrons, gradually phase out older, above-ground interconti- nental ballistic missiles and launch a vast new effort to re- place the present big Minute- man missile complex. with a longer - range, more flexible Minuteman mode! that can reach all enemy targets. Defence officials: said the two Bomarc squadrons to be elimi- nated are the older - model, shorter-range Bomarc A mis- siles, Bomare B squadrons are to remain. Defence Secretary McNamara said a year ago that Bomarc squadrons, de- signed against attacking bomb- ers, have only limited useful- ness but that they will be con- tinued in use for "'several] jyears" largely because the gov-| population. ernment has already paid for| jor role in the Canada-U.S, nu- clear controversy last year--is about $2,000,000,000. Canada has two Bomarc-B squadrons now being equipped with U.S. nu- clear warheads. Another aspect of defence pol- icy affecting Canada is the Pen- tagon decision to continue shar- ing with Canada in the cost of developing the Caribou II trais- port plane, a successor to the Caribou I. This is being done at de Havilland Aircraft of Can- ada, Toronto, A defence official said four prototype Caribou II planes are to bedelivered to the U-S. Army for testing this year. But "it is a very much open ques- tion" whether the Pentagon will approve assembly-line produc- tion of these planes, the .offi- cials said. The budget requests the allo- cation of more than $1,000,000,- 000 in new funds to begin John- son's planned attack on pov- erty, which, he maintains, cov- ers about one-fifth of the U.S. However, of the amount requested, only $250,- 000,000 is expected to be spent the first year, whole package had been sent to press. One report said the govern- ment was trying to "find" an- other $30,000,000 by reducing ex- penditures from thé level previ- ously p Total spending ieey will be around $6,600,000,- All departments were asked to make proportionate cuts, scurces said, Departmental of- ficials spent a good part of last week before treasury board, a cabinet committee. Meanwhile, Finance Minister Gordon returned to Ottawa Monday after a brief holiday in Jamaica and was expected to take'a personal hand in the trimming operation. Speculatior was that he was trying to reduce the anticipated amount of his deficit for 1964-65. For the current year, he ori- ginally budgeted for a $655,000,- 000 deficit but later raised this to $709,000,000 as a result of his decision to implement a new 11- per-cent sales tax on building materials and production ma- chinery in stages, instead of all at once, Mr. Gordon clearly indicated in a recent Toronto speech. that he will have another deficit in the coming year, but said the government still is moving to- ward a balanced budget in the future. Red China Premier Plans Paris Visit BAMAKO, Mali (Reuters) -- Communist Chinese Pre- mier Chou En-lai will probably visit Paris before returning to Peking after his current Afri- rican tour, usually reliable sources said here today. The reports came as Chou left here today for Conakry, Guinea, after he and President Modibo: Keita gave their support for a conference of Afro - Asian na- tions, tiny in the East African na- tion's army, A brief Associated Press dis- patch from Dar es Salaam said earlier that President Julius Nyerere, an African moderate whose hold on the nation was shaken by Monday's army mu- tiny, would broadcast to the na- tion. A Tanganyika government in- formation officer said Nyerere was safe in the white, Arab- style state house of the palm- fringed capital. The state house is the presidential residence. Foreign Minister Oscar Kam- bona also was quoted by Tan- Sanyika radio as saying the president was safe, PATROLS RESUMED Police resumed patrols in the centre of the capital, where mu- tinous soldiers armed with au- tomatic weapons had moved un- challenged at the height of the revolt: F. Stephen Miles, British high commissioner in Dar es Salaam, in a report to the Common- wealth office bore out other ad- vices reaching London that the situation was unstable and sub- ject to changes almost hourly. _ Diplomatic reports trickling ino London said the Tanganyi- kan capital was calm today but under military curfew and the rebellious first battalion of the Tanganyika Rifles, the coun- try's army, apparently had ta- ken over from the police. The reports said at least 14 persons were killed and 120 in- jured in Monday's mutiny, trig- gered by resentment over low pay and delay in replacing Brit- ish officers commanding milit- ary forces of the two-year-old Commonwealth nation. STORES LOOTED, No white casualties were mentioned, and the victims were all believed to be African or Asian. Many were believed to be Indian owners of shops and bazaars that were looted during the disorders, The mutiny, coming only a week after the leftist coup on the nearby island of Zanzibar, brought quick British action to protect the 5,000 British citizens in Tanganyika, The aircraft carrier Centaur sailed from, Aden, the British protectorate in southern Arabia, with 500 commandos as well as helicopters and other aircraft. From manoeuvres in Aden, 800 crack riflemen from the Scots Guards were flown back to Nai- pe and placed on emergency call. | The British naval survey. ship ;Owen was placed on alert off |Mombasa, Kenya. It had 150 [British riflemen aboard. The frigate Rhyl was standing' by off Dar es Salaam with an in- fantry eompany: aboard. ' NUCLEAR ARMS FREE PROPOSED Five-Point Plan -- For Disarmament WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- dent Johnson proposed today that Russia, and the United States "explore a_ verified freeze of the number and char- acteristis" of strategic nuclear|tion posts vehicles. Johnson laid a five-point pro- gram of possible agreement be- fore the 17-nation Geneva dis- armament conference as it re- a plant-by-plant, basis: with mu 3.. The United States will be ready to discuss proposals "for creating a system' of observa: " as a means of re- ducing the danger of surprise attack. " 4. The nuclear powers should agree to ban the spread of nu- clear weapons to juclear sumed sessions after a break of|"@tio several months. In a message to the confer- ba ence he said that by laying the ground-work in earlier years for the limited nuclear test ban treaty it had already contrib- uted more to a disarmament than any other conference in modern history. "Tody your search begins anew in a climate of hope," Johnson told the delegates, in- cluding envoys of Communist, Western and neutralist nations. Johnson's proposal to impose a freeze on the number and types of nuclear weapons, "of- fensive and defensive," was the d of his five points. It was not spelled out in detail. In ordinary terminology of disarmament experts a "veri- fied freeze' .would mean an agreed limitation on the size of weapons, with the agveccieat of i a to be guaranteed by inspection in the participating countries. Other points in Johnson's pro- of the "means Khrush+ 7s I s proposal for 4 agreement banning most ble efforts to revise national boundaries, centred on Johte son's nen earn in that area, suggestions nuclear limitations. Auto Makers Urged To Reduce Prices WASHINGTON (AP)---Presi+ dent Johnson's chief economi¢ version, or ply of arms--to change The prohibition could also ap- ply to any interference with ac- cess to any territory or to any effort to extend control over ter- ritory "by displacing estab- lished authorities." 2. The powers should attempt to develop "a verified agree- ment to halt all production of fissionable materials for weap- ons use." Johnson said the United States '"'is willing to achieve prompt reductions) through both sides closing com- et the clmeti sup caer aries or demarcation lines." | gent cial benefits ig gpg In response @ question, Heller said "the automobile in- ha could well be one of se? 2 He said the electronics indus- try is an example lad bee had sed produ: e- fits a to consumers by reduc» ing prices. facilities on parable prod Resumes GENEVA (AP) -- The 17-na- tion disarmament conference resumes today after a five- month recess amid hopes for a further thaw in East-West rela- tions. As the conference proceeds, the United States is scheduled to introduce a series of hew proposals designed to remove threat of nuclear war, reduce the danger of surprise attack, prevent an outbreak of war by accident or miscalculation and prevent the spread of nuclear weapons to nations that don't have them, An aritcle in the Soviet labor newspaper Trud indicated the Russians would renew their pro- posals for a non-aggression pact between the Soviet bloc and the North Atlantic Alliance, estab- lishment of nuclear-free zones over the world, prevention of the spread of nuclear weapons and reductions in military budgets and military bases on foreign soil, American disarmament nego- tiator William C. Foster was publicly optimistic over pros- pects for the talks--the John- son administration's first major encounter with the Russians at an international conference. But several delegates said the conference suffered its first set- back even before it resumed delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin, at a private meeting with Fos- Turks Set Free Lay Missionary VANCOUVER (CP)--A Cana- dian lay missionary has written his family that he is free again after his arrest in Turkey for spreading Christian teachings. Herman J. Reitman, 24, says he was never brought to trial on the charge of spreading propaganda, He was given a passport and released the day of his sched- formal sessions when Soviet). Peace Parley Today ter Monday, dashed hopes of quick progress 'on a total nu- clear test ban. The Moscow treaty last year outlawed only tests above ground and under water, those that can be detected without an i BALLOONIST DIES : The balloon and body : of Mrs. Barbara Keith, above, were found last night off the California coast. The Hart ford, Conn., grandmother of 10 had been the object of a widespread sea and land search since she disappeared on Saturday during a balloon race from Catalina Island to the mainland. The Coast Guard reported the body and balloon are being brought to shore by a cutter. uled court appearance. « --AP Wirephote x