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Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Feb 1964, p. 1

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ho +e T ught For Today A dog's life can't be so bad -- at least someone else pays its taxes, VOL. 93--NO. 40 on. | c he Oshawa Gunes Price Not Over Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1964 Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Depa Ottawa and for payment Weather Report 'Clearing overnight and' mainly sunny 'Tuesday. . Milder with winds south-west 10 to 20, tment in Cash, ' of Postage EIGHTEEN: PAGES Judge Rubys For Ac DALLAS (AP)--Lawyers for 'Jack Ruby opened his murder 4rial today with a motion for a directed verdict of acquittal and Judge Joe B. Brown promptly overruled it. The defence lawyers, Melvin Belli and Joe Tonahill, said they based the motion on the result of a neugological exam- ination of Ruby conducted Jan. Ruby is charged with murder with malice in the shooting of Lee Harvey Oswald, accused assassin of President Kennedy. Tonahill said that the ence- phalographic record showed "brain damage." James Bowie, assistant dis- trict-attorney, leaped to his' feet barking objections. Belli then rose and a heated wrangle broke out on the question of what Bowie called "no proce- dure" for this. In overruling the motion for acquittal, the judge said "that is a matter for the jury to de- cide." The defence also offered two motions on grounds of double jeopardy and res judicata--that is, the question already had been adjudicated. These appar- ently were based on testimony introduced in a bond hearing hearing and in a hearing on a motion to transfer the trial to another city. Judge Brown, asked about double jeopardy motion, said, "I don't know. There is no pro- vision for it in Texas law. Of, course, they're basing all their motions on this psychiatric re-|clared The defence lawyers huddled closely with Ruby, leaning over him as he sat at a table in the \ Spurns Bid quittal They held a long, whispered the first motion. Ruby, wearing a dark suit with a brown shirt, looked pale and his expression was grave. The historic trial began for- mally at 9:04 a.m. when Judge Brown, clad in black robes, said from the bench, 'In the matter of the state vs. Jack Rubein- stein, alias Jack Ruby, is the state ready?" District Attorney Henry M. Wade replied in the affirmative and Belli said the defence was, too, "subject to some motions we wish to present." The. next action was the re- quest of Dallas lawyer Thomas Howard to withdraw as a mem- ber of the defence team. The ~ granted this as a formal- y. The courtroom was com- pletely filled, A panel-af 900 jury candidates -- nearly double the normal conversation before they offered © ® MELVIN' BELLI, front, chief defense attorney for Jack Tonahill, another member of the defense staff, follows. Ruby arrives at court for the start.of Ruby's trial today. Joe (AP Wirephoto) Problem Security UNITED NATIONS (AP)-- The Cyprus dispute goes before the UN Security Council today as Britain and the United States seek to head off military inter- vention by Turkey and Greece. | The council debate, requested iby both Britain and Cyprus, was 'for an international force linked /to the United Nations, Its pur- \pose would be to prevent 'an- number--was called in order to qualify 12 as unprejudiced. Ruby, 52, a night clus oper- ator, shot Oswald on Nov, 24, two days after the president was killed in Dallas and Oswald heme charged with murdering im. DISCUSS SEARCH j There was an exchange be-| tween Belli and Judge Brown over the fact that spectators are being searched for weapons and that such a_ procedure might come to the attention of prospective jurors, Belli de- "An. excess o* protection or ms over - zealous protection will make prospective jurors more aware of the atmosphere in area reserved for lawyers. Dallas." b He said the confusion that a bomb!" Rickshaw Man Held SAIGON (AP)--Police seized)from death but he himself felljon his bicycle a few minutes be-| a wounded ricksha driver as a|beneath the flying debris. prime suspect today in a U.S.|, \ theatre bombing that killed GUARD SHOT three Americans including a ma- rine captain cut down by debris she shouted a warning. The shattering blast Sunday|so badly mangled identification} wounded 51 other Americans! was delayed. and nine Vietnamese in loodiest terrorist attack lobby and drop the bomb. which was wrapped in white cloth, The captain ran into the theatre shou' "Everyone the tOling."' said S : foot ing," .said Sgt. date/on Americans in Saigon. ig Caldwell. i mariné captain saw a Viethamese in white shirt and ge down! There's| One of the dead was a milit- ary policeman shot while on guard outside the theatre. The body of the third American was "As soon as we got the warn- Lloyd B. Cage Idaho, "everyone jumped down or started moving away from the rear wall of the dar¥ trousers dash into the the-| theatre," Sales Tax Jump [ Said Nightmare *| "I saw the orange flash of |the explosion, and 1 saw debris {falling from the ceiling. A lot of people were scrambling around under the seats. No one was screaming, bit there was a The captain's warning saved|jot of noise." In Theatre Bombing lfore the explosion. | The U.S, command in South Viet Nam ordered security measures tightened to protect American personnel in the capi- tal from terrorism by the Com- munist Viet Cong. Feb. 9, two bombs exploded under the bleachers of a softball field jnear Saigon airport, killing two /U.S. men and injuring 23 other | Americans, | Although police declined to discuss the ricksha boy's sus- 'pected role in the bombing, the |shooting and blast apparently lwere the work of a highly Ee terrorist team. Dick And Liz | UN OFFI Before Council other general outbreak of fight- ing between the Greek-and Tur- kish-Cypriot communities, The United States and Britain fear that another seious out break would prompt Turkey and Greece to seri in troops to back up their Cypriot kin. The result could be a war between Turkey and Greece, eastern an- chors of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Archbishop Makarios, Greek- Qypriot president of Cyprus, broadcast an appeal to both Turkish- and Greek-Cypriots for restraint, But Makarios warned that his government--meaning the Greek-Cypriots--would "not give in to threats, pressure or blackmail." "We shall fight courageously and resolutely against the de- signs or attacks on our island," he said. Since the communal fighting during Christmas, there has been virtually no govern- mental co - operation between the Greek-Cypriot majority and the Turkish-Cypriot minority. Britain's chief UN delegate, Sir Patrick Dean, was expected to tell the ll-nation Security| Council an international peace force ig urgently needed on the Mediterranean Is land, where about 3,000 British troops have -- trying to enforce a cease- Britain ordered. about 300 GEORGE PAPANDREAU, 76, yesterday led his Centre Union Party to a_ stunning election victory in Greece, His victory will put him in firm control o fhis country at a time of crisis over Cyprus. Hot Water Tub Scalds Infant TORONTO (CP) -- Drew Be- nard, one-year-old son of Mr, and Mrs. Rheal Benard of St. Catharines, was reported in fair condition in Hospital for Sick CER HALTS BATTLE ON GYPRUS Beseiged Town Site Of Parley NICOSIA (Reuters) -- Lt.- Gen. Prem Singh Gyani, United Nations' observer in Cyprus, said today Greek- and Turkish- Cypriots in the southern mining town of Polis had agreed at his urging not to fight each other. Earlier reports said Greek- Cypriots had 'surrounded 700 Turkish-Cypriots in Polis. One hundred British paratroopers were reported heading for the town. A British military spokesman announcing the manoeuvre, said the Turks were inside a school building, dispirited and short of food. Greeks were dug in 100 yards away, There was no shooting over- night but the situation was tense, the spokesman said. The British spokesman Ktima was tense but otherwise the island today was generally quiet following a weekend which saw bloodshed, threatened in- tervention by Turkey and, fin- ally, an appeal for peace by Cypriot President Makarios, Som 170 British troop rein- forcements headed here to bol- ster harassed British forces who have been keeping an uneasy peace on the strife-torn island. Sunday night another cease- fire was negotiated at Ayios said|5 vious cease-fire negotiated by the British was broken. In Sunday's fighting British military sources said one body was found, believed to be that of a Greek-Cypriot, During the, weekend there were reports of Turkish naval movements in the area off Cy- prus, which was interpreted as a threat by Turkey to use their right on intervention on the is- land conferred by agreements reached when the 1960 Cyprus constitution was drafted. MIGHT FIGHT Greek Archbishop Makarios' plea for peace was coupled with an assurance that the Greeks on Cyprus--representing about 80 per cent of the population of 100,000 -- would fight "against evil design or aggression." In a radio broadcast Makarios said he did not object to a large ee on the island to keep the peace--under certain conditions. He believed no military force could carty out its mission on Cyprus if Greek- and Turkish- Cypriots did not show a desire to live together in peace. Three British military police- men. missing since midnght Saturday, were. handed back to Theodoris where fighting be- tween Greek- and Turkish-Cyp- Children today suffering burns to 60 per cent of his body. e child fell into a tub more t , ine! an arm- a gg give is force more mobility. ihospital here Sunday. riots broke out Sunday, A pre- British authorities unharme d Sunday. The Cypriot govern- ment said the incident was a "misunderstanding." © haa, Player After surrounds the tax is as bad as|Many of the 500 persons inside next few days. U.S. Charge d'Affaires Davis} the tax itself--"the variety of . |G, Nes met with Premier Ngu-! MONTREAL (CP) -- dent Leslie G, McKimmie of the Canadian Lumbermen's Associ- Disappear ation said today that the re- cently - imposed sales tax on building materials was a night- mare for industry. "I say to you that I consider it immoral for any government to inflict such a nightmare on industry, and particularly one which is the very backbone of the country's economy." Mr, McKimmie was speaking to the annual convention of the association. The text of his speech was given to the press in advance, Fire Kills 3 'In Maritimes TRACADIE, N.B. (CP) Three persons died today in a fire which destroyed a store and second-floor living quarters. The blaze, believed caused by an exploding propane heater, broke out in a furniture and hardware store owned by Me- dric Arsenault. Dead are Mr. Arsenault's two! younger sons, Claude, 13, and rulings which emanate from various district offices and the| © disadvantages which result in the market place for one section of this country against an- other." Mr. McKimmie predicted a "drab" spring, summer and? fall--so far as economic activ- ity is d--with possibl a pick-up late in the year if the winter bonus is reintro-|* 7 duced for new homes. i MONTREAL (CP) -- Post-| * ter-General Nicholson said] ' today that Canada's export! | trade is built upon wood prod-| © ucts and urged the lumber in-| © dustry to widen its foreign mar-| } ket as much as possible. He told the opening session of the annual convention of the Ca- nadian Lumbermen's Associa- tion that 90 per cent of Can- ada's total lumber export ship- ments go to the United States and the United ingdom. "With our dependency on ex- port, it only makes sense surely that we widen our markets as much as possible,"' he said. "Too many eggs in one or two , 3 [baskets can bever be comfort- Paul, 10, and his mother-in-law,|ing. We must do everything we Mrs. Ernie Hubert, 83. ican to build up an export cush- Mr. Arsenault and his wife es-|ion on diverse markets which] Avalon Telephone caped throgh the ground floor|can help insulate the effects of| president of T. McMurdo and and their eldest son Denis|demand changes." | Company, and a director of jumped from a second floor win-| Text of his remarks were re-| sev°ra! firms including Bow- dow. They were not believed se-|leased to the press before de-| ater Power, Maritime Life and riously injured. livery." the Bank of Montreal. NEW SENATOR Eric Cook, 54, a lawyer in St. John's, Nfld., was appoint- Minister Pearson Friday, Sen- ator Cook is_a native of St. in that city since 1932. He land Liberal Associa tion, chairman of the board of the Company, | jyen Khanh to discuss better se- '|curity measures for the nearly + /10,000 Americans in Saigon. He said Khanh proposed a two-na- jon council of six members to study emergency means of im- proving security, Three U.S. se- curity men were named on the jcouncil, which held its first meeting this afternoon. Vietnamese officials were in- :|vestigating the possible involve- 'iment of police in the theatre es|bombing. One U.S. witness said sihe saw the only Vietnamese |podliceman on duty pedal away 'Anti-SIU TORONTO (CP) -- Actress |Blizabeth Taylor and _ actor {Richard Burton escaped public- jity's almost constant glare dur- jing the weekend and _ their jwhereabouts is still unknown! today. The brunette slipped out of] her hotel late Friday afternoon and went to the O'Keefe Cen- jtre, About an hour later she and Burton left the theatre, both leasually dressed. Liz was in |slacks and 'short jacket--Burton in jeans. Raiding Inquiry Opened MONTREAL (CP) -- The fed-/ment last October giving it au-|\ith an absolute majority in the|!945. He has been elected to manage and control five mari- time transportation unions will John's and has practised law jdirect its attention today to ajofficer for the board, said Sun- secret membership drive being is president of the Newfound- |made by the Canadian Labor|pointed at the CLC's - attitu }Congress against the Seafarers' |International Union (Ind.) The SIU is one of the five maritime unions under the trus- teeship's jurisdiction. The CLC is not under trustee- ship and there is nothing in the legislation passed by Parlia- "TRYING TO WRECK CANADA PENSION PLAN' OFL Raps Robarts NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP), only added to confusion sur-|tions The Ontario Federation of La-|rounding the plan Steelworkers of America (CLC bor has accused Premier Ro-| The statement said Mr. Ro-/said: barts of attempting to sabotage barts' letter was a transparent | director of the the Canada Pension Plan. jattempt to sabotage the plan. Federation Seoretary .,Treas- It said Mr. Pearson has made it urer Douglas Hamilton issued a strongly-worded statement dur-| ing the weekend taking issue) with the Ontario premier's let- ter to Prime Minister Pearson last weex which included in its criticis™ the contention that the federal plan offered no indica- tion of how it would be inte- grated with existing pension plans. Issuec at a federation educa- tion conference, the statement said the premier's criticism tinue the same old way; ou pension plans. He said Donald C. no less than seven paragraphs| Democratic on che subject of plan integra-| Fenwick tion, Mr, Hamilton said, Party, vice-president of th integration of pensions are|gle new idea. either themselves misinformed "All you keep telling us is t or have deliberately set out to/re-arrange the old ideas." h misinform the people, and in| said. : : particular, employers and. em- ployees; who are involved in ex- isting pension arrangements, he added. Mr, Hamilton said the people }of Ontario want constructive suggestions rather than rejec- jtions .on such matters | Two other labor officials at the conference accused labor movements 0. being asleep and qut of pace ments. t on.the labor movement. Union CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 receptive house Workers of Americ "We naven't had. one new idea in years. It is ridiculous to con- \clear the federal plan would not!problems today are vastly dif- require adjustment of private|ferent from those of the past.' MacDon- The prime minister includedjald, leader of the Ontario New and Mike i OFL, both of whom spoke ear- "Those who are talking about|lier; had not come up with a sin- Go. er Markie, education di- »| rector of the Steelworkers, said jtradition, past practice and his- ory can serve as dead weight must become more flexible and| Discussing problems of auto- mation, Giles Endicott, research director of the United Packing- with new develop-|(CLC), suggested a closer ap- |proximation of work to leisure. Murray Cotterill, public rela:' 'Automation requires that we United change the basic concept of no- )}work-no-pay," he said, 'Sedi- tious as it may seem and how- ever counter to calvinisthic eth- ics, we must accept the princi- pal of income unrelated to work."" Mr. Endicott said that while shorter work-weeks without loss of takehome pay have become an acceptable form of income without work, he proposes pay e | community centre. CITES PROJECTS Mr. Edicott's plan calls' for such projects as a_bfewery worker using his company's time and equipment to. brew his own beer or an auto worker us- ing his paid leisure time to hand- build a car. He told the conference that his plan would take care of in- creased spare time and it would counter objections that unem- 0 e $} a sions destroy moral fibre by providing something for noth- ing. the five maritime unions. Clayton. Sinclair, information day the trustees are disap- de |which he described as an intru- sion in the welfare of maritime union members. It is not the type of co-opera- tion promised by the CLC when the trustees first took over the unions, he said, A CLC spokesman was re- ported to have said earlier some jof its organizers and those of \its affiliated Canadian Maritime Union had moved east to be- gin canvassing SIU members and employees of unorganized shipping companies, A concerted drive in the At- lantic provinces and elsewhere could involve more than 5,000 | | seamen, Although the CMU holds the contract for 300 unlicensed crew members aboard Upper Lakes |Shipping Limited vessels, the |SIU is still the dominant union on the Great Lakes The CLC strategy was said to jbe to establish bargaining rights fearly in the season for employ- ees of some shipping companies now under contract to the SIU. | Collective agreements in the for "neu-work"' at the plant or!shipping industry expire at the} end of May. 'French Schools Hit By Strikes PARIS (AP) -- About 45,000 employees of public schools jwent on strike in France today ifor higher pay. ithrough Tuesday, was called by lunions representing employees jwho- tend heating systems and ployment insurance and pen-|<erve school lunches, In many! Arrested with him was Wil- jcases, these jobs were taken over temporarily by other per- sonnel... A The strike, scheduled to last| 'Moderates Take ATHENS (AP)--Elder states- men George Papandreou will form a new Greek government backed by a solid majority in Parliament following his mod- erate Centre Union party's sweeping election victory. The 76-year-old Papandreou }was expec'? dto appear at the /Royal Palace Tuesday to accept King Paul's summons to form a new cabinet. It will be his! third term as premier, Nearly complete returns from the voting Sunday showed the Greek Election ernment can be expected to con- tinue reece's pro-Western for- eign policy, it is not likely to compromise readily on the Cy- prus issue, which threatens the eastern flank of the North At- lantic Treaty Organization, In domestic affairs, Papan- dreou will try to carry out his pledgs to ease the plight of Greece's debt-ridden peasants and to expand the educational system and social programs. Papandreou held his first gov- ernment post in 1917. He headed Greece's government - in - exile | Centre Union had won 175 to 180 seats in the 300-member sin- gle chamber Parliament, allow: ing Papandreou's party to rule ed to the Senate by Prime eral board of trustees named to/thority over unions other than|next four years. The Centre Union cut sharply into the strength of the rightist| |National Radical Union and the| |pro-Communist United Demo-| |cratic Left. About 4,500,000 per-| |sons out of 8,400,000 voted. | The Greeks returned to the} |polls for the second time in four |months, Nov. 3, the Centre Un- lion nosed out the Radical Un- jion, then headed by former pre- jmier Constantine Caramaniis,| | but lacked 13 seats for a ma- \jority, Papandreou |government but resigned after jonly 50 days in office when his jfirst vote of confidence demon- strated that he could govern only with Communist. support. Since then , Prime Minister Ion- nis Paraskevopoulos has headed a caretaker government. \TOUGH ON CYPRUS? | Although Papandreou's Dick Gregory Jailed After Cafe Sit-In PINE BLUFF, Ark. (AP) -- \Negro comedian Dick Gregory land a white civil rights organ- lizer were arrested early today iwhen they refused to leave a 'segregated restaurant. The sheriff's office said they were in the county jail. ""They could have made bond if they had wanted to," a deputy said. He said bond would be $300. Gregory, whose home is in Chicago, became widely known for the barbs he hurled at sez-| regation in television and night! club appearances. ' gov- liam Hansen, a field secretary for the Student Non-Violent Co- formed al } during the Second World War and was the country's first post- war premier, until January, Parliament 13 times. The election also carried into Parliament Papandreou's son Andreas, a university teacher, who recently renounced U.S. Jugular Cut. TORONTO (CP) -- An ama- teur hockey player whose jug- ular vein was severed by a skate in a hockey game Sunday was revived by a team of doctors in Toronto General Hos- pital after his heart had stopped. Harvey Clarke 33, was still reported in critical condition today. He lost about one-third of his blood before arriving at hospital, He owes his life to Dr. D. S. Vozoris, called to Varsity Arena from a nearby restaurant, who applied pressure to the severed vein until the ambulance reached hospital. There the heart stopped. A team of five: doctors restored the heartbeat by external car- diac massage and'an injection into the heart. Mrs. Clarke and the player's teammates waited outside. The accident occurred during a game between West York Motors and A. D. Gorrie. Lim- Arms Flow Into Cyprus Irks Sandys LONDON (Reuters) -- Com- monwealth Secretary Duncan Sandys said today he made "a most vigofous protest" to Cyp- riot Foreign Minister Spyros Ky- prianou Sunday about the flow of arms into Cyprus. Sandys told the House of Commons: "T explained to him that we had ample information to show that this import of arms is tak- ing place with the full knowl- edge and approval of the Cy- prus government." - Sandys, who was reporting on the latest situation in Cyprus, also said the British govern- ment remained convinced the revised Anglo - American plan for an international force on the island afforded 'the most rea- onable and rapid means of cre- citizenship to enter Greek poli- tics. ited. Clarke played for West York. ating in Cyprus a peace-keep- ing force." Police check 'another resi- dence after evacuating Mrs, Ethel Calland, 76, from her home in Hough's Neck sec- ordinating Committee, tion of Quincy, Mass., yester- ROWBOAT RESCUE day at the height of a North- east snow storm which sent water crashing over sea wall inundating homes in area, The storm that swept across New England deposited up te 18 inches of snow in some areas, (AP: Wirephoto) '

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