Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Jan 1964, p. 1

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Thought For Today There are families who start a budget and still go broke, but they do it systematically, VOL, 93--NO. 26 OSHAWA ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1964 Weather Report Light rain mixed with anow te= day. Bo eg gs in Com night. Cloudy and cooler. Saturs Arms Raid May Civil ~~ Enoug firepower to outfit a small has been stolen from a Mon real armory and authorities fear a new outbreak of terrorism by young extremists seeking to _ Quebec from confedera- In an 80-minute raid Thurs- day a gang of some 15 teen- agers of beatnik arance, Jed by a man of about 30, struck at Les Fusiliers Mont - Royal armory and escaped in a red truck with the weapons and ammunition, They left behind nine employ- ees and oillitary personnel, bound and gagged in the cellar, No shots were fired and no Bel-|various news media were tele- breech gian FN semi « automatic rifles. Two of the FNs had no breech blocks, or were not operational, |, The army said the gang stole mortars--but wookas, but no bazooka rockets. The gang also got away with 11 wireless walkie - talkies, Stolen ammunition consisted of 2,44 rounds of .308-calibre bul-|p » | force's Revolutionary Committee), Spark Wa oyal, a French-speaking mil- itia infantry regiment, The armory is a_ turreted architecture at the midtown in- tersection of Pine Avenue and Henri Julien Street, J, Adrien Robert, Montreal's ce dire ctor, said the fm gona investiga- tion showed "'the theft was not carried out by members of the underworld," Word of the raid came when phoned by a French . man who identified himself as member of a movement called Le Comite Revolution- naire du Quebec (The Quebec At about the same time as the raid, provincial police found French - language slogans painted on the outside wall of J Man Denies Burning Babies , J At Auschwitz FRANKFURT, West Germany (AP)--A former medical aide at Auschwitz concentration ca was accused Lage J hy prisoners ive, Seger ror tens -- Josef Kiehr, a former SS master sergeant, of Auschwitz prisoners into trenches filled with burning newborn charged killing thousands of Auschwitz prisoners. Klehr has admitted killing 250 to 300, "halt - dead" and ex: hausted prisoners by giving them injections. He has denied charges that he selected in- mates for the camp's gas cham- bers, killed thousands with his until they died. Pro-Red Force Gains In Laos VIENTIANE, Laos (Reuters) The pro-Communist Pathet Lao forces have gained contro! of the fertile rice-growing Naky plateau in central Laos after ee & fighting during the last two days, according to military sources here today. The Pathet Lao have also pushed to within about 12 miles of the tov n. ! Thakhek on the Laos - Thailand border, said. The Pathet Lao have bees fighting for the control of: the area since last November they do n courthouse, denoun- cing "traitors" and "imperial- ist sympathizers." i The words, in French, were in heavy black paint, Tn Ottawa, Defence Minister gation of the theft, instructing the army to co-operate with the RCMP and Montreal police. | In Quebec City, Attorney-Gen- erat Hamel! sad Quebec provin- ay police would also co-oper: ate, The Montreal. police depart- ment meanwhile threw its FLQ squad into the investigation, The squad was eStablished last year to combat Le Front de Liberation Quebecois, The FLQ, a self-described band of "suicide commandos" seeking independence for Que- bec was responsible for a 10- week campaign of bombings in the Montreal area from March } brick bulding of castle + type| | Hellyer ordered a full investi-/cliff, beach, Police were waiting at FAIRVIEW BEACH (Staff) -- Four men fleeing from police in 'a car believed to be stolen drove at 90-miles-an-hour over a 7% foot cliff early today at Pick- ering into Lake Ontario -- and lived. They were thrown free as the ear crashed through ice into! four feet of water. Three of them dragged their unconscious companion to the base of the Three of the car occupants managed to scramble up the cliff Jeaving their friend on the the top to rush them to hospital and radio for an ambulance to' rescue the fourth man. The chase started when Pro- CAR RIGHTED AFTER 70-FOOT DIVE 4 Youths Survive |0A$ To Hear Pickering Plunge Panama Charge The car smashed through al row of guard posts at the end 'of Fairport Beach road and nose-dived over the 75 foot cliff into Lake Ontario, Norman Lavallee, 18, Sher: bourne street, Toronto, is in critical condition in Oshawa |General Hospital, Donald Mich- ael Hoffman, 19, no fixed ad- dress, has head injuries and is in Ajax hospital, The others, Maurice George) Lussier, 19, Markham street, Toronto, and Michael McCrea, 17, Sherbourne street, Toronto, were treated in Ajax hospital, All four have been. charged with possession of burglar tools and auto theft, Lussier faces an additional charge of criminal! negligence. Ridges Plaza at 2 a.m. As he walked up, the car roared off TURN LIGHTS OUT | He ran to his cruiser and the) 90-miles-an-hour dash over back! roads began, For two miles, the! constable sweated it out as the car ahead sped over the narrow! to May last year, roads with lights turned out. | | CUTS CANADA COACH Swedish | |Karl-Goran Oberg of the Swed- jish national hockey team, today/Edmonton, president of the Ca.) ------ Grade 13 Exam Papers Reduced jwas suspended for one game in ithe Winter Olympics champion- ship tournament for throwing his stick and injuring Canadian} jooach Rev, David Bauer during Thursday night's. 3-1 Canadian victory over Sweden, The International Ice Hockey i\Federation, governing body of jworkd amateur hockey, lealled into special session to Idiscuss the incident. J, F. (Bunny) Ahearne of Britain, president f: the IHF, said Father Bauer "deserves) our protection just the same as the players." Father Bauer suffered a cut was) | threw a broken stick at the Ca. nadian bench Ahearne said no protests had Player Gets Suspension injections or tortured prisoners] INNSBRUCK, Austria (CP)--jbeen received from either | Father Bauer or Art Potter of nadian Amateur Hockey Associ- ation, Potter had indicated he would demand "disciplinary action) and possible suspension" of the Swedish player. Earlier Father. Bauer dis- missed the incident, which oc- curred during the third period "I think Oberg got a bit ex- cited, He's a nice boy, These/students in Ontario will write|of education officials "te rec things happen in hockey. "I would certainly go to batistarting next year, Educationiany changes which appear to} r him if the international fed-/ Minister Davis announced tobe necessary and advisable in| fo eration decided to take any dis- ciplinary action.' Oberg was the first hockey Olympic competition started. While Father Bauer was for-| giving, Potter was furious. VIETNAMESE 'BORED' WITH POWER STRUGGLES SAIGON (AP) -- South Viet Nam's new military strongmanifirst press conference that the|to say good-bye to Gen. Le Van/ouster. today promised a governmentileader of the junta he over. Ty. who is reported going to At LB] Calls For © More Payments To Farmers WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres. ident Johnsen today called tor| broader federal payments to! U.S, farmers and urged efforts for reducing rural poverty, The president sent his views to Congress in a special farm message, | In taking a firm stand in sup- port of federal intervention in agriculture, he may well have! laid down the line for his! party's election-year battle on} the farm issue, He asked for| revival of part of the contro. versial "Brannan plan," TORONTO (CP) -- Grade 13 fewer examination papers) day The further number of papers will decrease in 1966 and on his forehead when Oberg Player Suspended since the/1967 as the department moves/ 3 to rectify what it calls the "problem of Grade 13." Mr, Davis said in the legisia- Cypriots | LONDON (AP)--British and + |American plans for a peace- ~ |keeping army on Cyprus ran _ into a snag in a diplomatic meeting today, with Cypriots. of both Greek and Turkish blood * lexpressing dissatisfaction. Tt was evident that consulta- tions dar So by Prime Min- ister Sir Alec government failed to resolve read differences between the feuding islanders. Diplomatic sources said aew efforts must be undertaken, but no other meeti were ar ranged immediately, US. Ambassador David Bruce said Washington would provide American troops under certain conditions; The international force must receive an invitation to enter the island from Arch: bishop Makarios, the Cypriot president, There is no sign yet that Makarios will issue such an invitation, MUST RESUME TALKS 2. The stalemated London con- Against U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) -- The council of the Organization of American States meets today & hear Panama charge the United} States with aggression, | But the council was expecied to postpone action on a Panam: anian request that the OAS sum- mon the group's foreign minis- ters to deal with the bitter/ference to work out a long Panama canal dispute, jrange settlement of the Cyprus In Panama, U.S, authorities|problem must be brought back ordered special security meas-|t0 life, That conference broke ures Thursday night in the face'down sortly after beginning. its of rumors that Panamanian| work Jan 1. workers and students pl: da! Makarios gave every indica« strike to cripple canal opera-ition of vetoing the plan unless' tions, |the force is answerable to the Panama requested today's|United Nations, something the OAS meeting in a note deliv./ Western allies are not likely to ered Thursday, approve ve it wor' talks supervised wtalve on Mediation Russians, the Inter-American Peace Com:)' Bi Foreign Secretary R. JA. Butler, Commonwealth' Sec- mittee, an agency of the OAS, collapsed Wednesday, 'retary Duncan Sandys and U.S, Correct Aim Of U.S. Moon Shot PASADENA, Calif. (AP) --} "Everything continues to look Space schentists re-almed the|very good," said Pickering, off - course camera - carrying|"On the basis of information Ranger VI spacecraft by re-!radioed back by the spacecraft, mote control early today eat can say that we probably will Jater said "we probably will hit/hit the moon." the moon," | If all goes well, experts hope Dr, William Pickering, direc-/t@ De able to announce later tor of jet propulsion labor which is controlling the flight,) said "'the mid-course correction) seemed normal," | the 8@4-pound spacecraft will strike. Signals pointing the space- erat dead centre at the moon and igniting its small booster jrecket were flashed 101,000 jmiles across space at 12:30 a.m, jalmest 17 hours after the jlaunching at Cape Kennedy, ; At 1 am. PST, officials an- jnounced that the signals had |heen received by the spacecraft heoster recket had ignited, Plans called for this to in ommend for my cousideration|mile-an-hour pi by 2 Bs and thus pull the trajectory te- ward the centre of the moon, 230,187 miles from earth, Prior to the manoeuvre, |Ranger VI was on a course that jwould have missed the moon by 600 miles. ture he is naming a committee the Grade 13 years." One of the major preblems has been the marking of Grade final examination papers in Toronto early enough te al-| low students to make their uni-' Ranger VI carried six televi- versity entrance plans. sion cameras: designed te sna While the number of students! un te 3.000 closeup pictures of writing papers was increasing) ine moon in the final 1@ min. jyearly, the number of teachers|uies of its flight. Javailatle to mark the papers! These would be the closest Coup Boss Keeps Power Khanh also announced' at his coup. He went to Saigon airport gains, as they did after Diem's daybreak, a bomb of national union made up ofithrew, Maj. - Gen, Duong Vanithe United States for medical/ploded inside a U.S. military representatives of al! watks of) Minh, has accepted the position /treatment, life. But Maj.-Gen, Nguyen Khanh, who seized power Thursday from the junta which overthrew President Ngo Dinh Diem, warned he must "apply a large number of temporary measures aimed at effectively safeguard- ing public order." Observers took this to mean Khanh and his 35-man military jof "an adviser" to the new mil- jitary council. The tanks and troops that jhelped overthrow the old junta disappeared from Saigon today. | Most people had paid scant jattention to developments. BECOMING BORED As the new regime slapped posters on walls and broadcast Khanh appointed 17 generals! and 18 colonels te a new compound, Although such bomb- gs are not unusual in Saigon, revo-jit could have been the first/i@ 1966 students will write one tationary ¢ re the three-month-old junta of Maj,' Gen. Duong Van Minh, provi-/ sional chief of state. Minh, popular leader of the; generals' revolt against the late president Ngo Dinh Diem Nov., 1-2, Was ousted after he refused} to continue as figurehead chair. C t reacticn to the coup. Twe Vietnamese girls were slightly injured and an af- ficial U.S. car was damaged. Besides the Communists, Khanh faces grave dangers from within South Viet Nam's restive army. » has arrested several key was not necessarily going up. moon' As a first step, in 1965 only -- ag seal Aen 1m one three-hour paper -- instead) photographed the back side of of two 24-hour papers--will Deine moon in 1959, but from an written in each of the languages! attitude af 4.000 miles. except English and French, Mr. Davis said 'The principal effect of this in CNR Trainmen Agree To New Contract mdst schools would be ty <ut down to one the number of MONTREAL (CP)--The CNR and the Canadian Brotherhoc Latin papers written Mr, Davis said starting three-hour paper in biology in- stead of two separate papers on botany and zoology High Court Jury Locked In Hotei a& new contract. affecting 8,690 union members, j Peace Army Plan Douglas-Home's|Cyp R.lotficers killed ratory,| What part of the lunar surface Capt and that the Stpound thrust/f Scuttle Ambassador David Bruce met at Mar! House with the Turkish, Greek and Cypriot for- eign ministers and representa- tives of the Greek: and Turkish: Cypriot communities, Archbishop Makarios said Thursday the stationing NATO or any other troops rus to prevent a renewal of inter + communal figh be tween Greek. and Turkish-Cyp- riots is "in no way necessary," "If there is a need for the presence of troops on the is- » these must be troops the United Nations whose main objective should be repulsion of outside intervention," he said in la statement, "The in Oflthe Chi of Ore, de Gaulle said it is im. .jt0 have any policy for South. DE GAULLE URGI ASIA NEUTRA French LeaderSays ©. China Key To Peace PARIS--President de Gaville today advocated the neutrall- zation of Southeast Asia and said relations with Red China are necessary to achieve it, The Fre president, speak- ing to a long and crowded press conference, thus defended his decision earlier this week to es tablish diplomatic relations with nese Communist regime. He evaded any comment on the so-called "two Chinas" is- sue, and spent only about five minutes time on the Chinese is- sue, De Gaulle was careful, at two or three Speaking of Red China in gen- possible for France or the West east Asia or even for the Soviet of neutraity i rtf i it i i f ; j iy eg i E34 5 z & / Z AF : Hj FEF | at = ' e- i 33 4 ee 4 i i i hit Union that does not take Chinas influence into account. For Southeast Asia, he men- tioned Viet Nam, Laos, Cam- bodia, India, Pakistan and Burma. De Gaulle sidestepped any direct comment an the Chinese Nationalist regime of President USAF Officers BERLIN (Reuters)--The bo- dies of the three U.S. Air Foree when their unarmed T trans: port was downed over Ger many arrived in West Berlin Ln a U.S. Army spokesman The convoy that went to Bast Germany fer the bodies sisted of four trucks and an am- bulance. q Lorraine, 3, Jacksonville, Fia.; and Capt. os Millar, 33, of Ukiah, =| Police Charge new OAS Official Chiang Kai-shek. AVOIDS HASSLE He avoided men tioning the hassle which has al-/says between Paris ready developed i and Peking over whether France oan maintain relations with Chiang's regime, Speaking. of China--the Chi- nese nation rather than any ee in China--<de "There is no war or peace imaginable in Asia without China's being involved. It is in- conceivable to conclude a treaty prise. to Americans, , whom r to believe they out ale Canadians, 3 'hy id i speech. t , he said in a al Saint Mary's College. "Iceland TOULON, France (Reuters) reported G [Police sources today the arrest of French naval of- ficer Jacques Woringer, 4, head of the terrorist Secret Army Organization's press and "ipropaganda section' in metro. ot potitan France, They said his arrest 10 days age was kept secret to a' alerting his associates. jwas third with about 580." Dr, Charyk, a native of Can- more, Alta,, whe become an Americana citizen in touched on the telephone situa- tion in outtining plans for a gle- bal satellite communications system, The corporation will launch its first experimental - opere- tional satellite next year, said, and this may mean "regular service could be tabi in 1985 in the Atlantic region." 'The plane incident ficial protests from U.S. and Russia, "both the territery. The United States = Ser 'Ontario Aims To Combat Drought Risk TORONTO (CP)--A stepped- up program te insure future wa- ter needs for drought-stricken venom gt ba was ah hou mm legislature Thursday by the provincial lieet's major objective will be }t@ catch and preserve the huge jTumoff and waste of water from rain and snow, jto recharge the water ler'ee combate building dams | b iy and reservoirs and taining Harm --_. = jpanded department of energy jresources management, and de- jslogans over the radio, one Viet: namese official commented "This kind of thing has been going on so long and so often The settlement called for ajsigned to give top priority to iCourt jury, considering charges|five-percent wage increase --/hydro power and water | Neu. {it & $960,000 swindle, was on ee a retroactive te Jan ute aa ogame by Mr . ai : i locked in a downtown)! one per cem next) t combine the we Saigonese are a littlelermment's civilian leader who|Teization of South Viet Nampotel ear today when it could)Sept. 2 and the last twe per! Ontario Water Resources Com: dared has held public office continu.(20% "ts Teumification with North! io: reach a verdict after eight/cent on May 2, 1985. mission and the Conservation! A young lieutenant who Was gusiy since 1930. He wes vice! Viet Nam hours' deliberation. The brotherhood represents Authority Branch. | promoted after the first couP!/ president under Diem In a statement, Khanh said) Ben Smith, 30, a hotel owner, conductors, trainmen, yardmas-| John Root (PC, Wellington. said cynically: the revolt was aimed at purging |is charged on four counts of/ters, yard foremen, yard help-|Dufferin, a member of the wa: 37, left, South Viet Nam's new It I get promoted cach time/COMMUNISTS MAY REACT jsupporters of French president! conspiracy and fraud involving ers and switch tender operators |ter resources commission, said) military strongman, © shakes we have a coup, I figure I/ While the political manceuvr-jde Gaulle's neutratization pol-/Brilund Mines Limited ana the. The CPR and the brotherhood/the concentration ef these con-| hands with Gen. Le Van Ty at should be chief of state by the|ing continued, U.S. military ad-|icy, But most Americans in Sai-/Imperial Bank of Canada, and/announced agreement with an|servation es in one de. Saigon airpert n time I'm 33 visers feared the Communists}gon believe the coup was the/a further count of forgery im-jidentical wage increase on/partment was "one of the great) was the first public appear Khanh today made his first/would capitalize on the confu-jresult of a military power sash |e &@ $960,000 cheque mm Tuesday. In neither case were! ard steps'. planned by the ance of Gon. Khanh since R verament. ipublic appearance since thelsion to make major. miliaryigie. (there any extra fringe benefits.|go \ seizing power yesterday from x ' 4 b junta would be in no hurry to TORONTO (CP)-~\ Supreme give up power to civilian au- thorities man of the new junta. Minh leaders of the old junta, accus- Was hot arrested, however. ing them' of conspiring with | Khanh also dismissed Pre- : |mier Nguyen Ngoc Tho, the gors|Peance to Dring about the CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 ' Maj. Gen. Nguyen the military junta, \

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