Thought For Today- It's suspected that what passes for a clean mind often is merely @ sterile one, VOL, 93 --NO. 60 Over 10 Cents per Copy She Oshawa Times -- Price Not OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11 1964 Authorized os Second Class Mal Ottawa "ond "for payment Weather Report Occasional light snow tonight. Sunny Thursday with a few cloudy periods, Winds light. fe } 1 Post Office Department of Postage" in Ci oth. FORTY-SIX PAGES Reds Told To Return 3 Flyers WASHINGTON (AP) -- The _ ae apology and denoiinced Rus- United States combined an apol-|sia's shooting down of the T-39 ogy with a protest in asking)as "a callous and inexcusably Russia to help speed the return| brutal act of violence against an of.an American reconnaissance| unarmed aircraft." wat a gr ne There was no explanation --and | e-man crew shot) here of the much softer wording pre Tuesday over East Ger-'of Tuesday night's statement. . | There was some suggestion that The crew parachuted from). officials were puzzled if not the plane after the shooting, the)embarrassed by the fact that defence department said, but! the RB-66B with a pilot and two their fate was not known. The/navigators aboard had strayed Plane was described: as un-| across the dividing line in Ger-| armed and on a training flight.| many and got over Communist Holland, 35, the pilot, Capt. Melvin J. Kessler, 30, instructor navigator, and Lieut. Harold W. Welch, 24, navigator. The plane was from Toul-Ro- F sieres air force base, France. The request for Soviet help Case or was made Tuesday night by orgi M. Kornienko, minister Defence counsellor of the Soviet em- bassy. |. DALLAS (AP)--The defence The statement department an-jin Jack Ruby's murder case} nounced that Tyler "delivered|rested today in the first mo-| a strong oral protest' to the | ment after the jury filed into! Soviet diplomat against "the | the courtroom. | precipitous action" by Soviet; As soon as the jury of eight EXPRESSES REGRET jasked chief defence counsel) At the same time, Tyler "'also| Melvin Belli who he was call-| expressed the U.S. government's|i"8 as his first witness today. | regrets that the plane became| "The defence rests, your) lost and inadvertently crossed/honor," Belli said. | bc ee ae _ 'ett This marked the end of direct) r publ: 6 '|testimony. Both the defence and bees v) ene mernene. the prosecution have lists of pending on what each side does in the battle over Ruby's guilt .|or innocence in the slaying Nov. 24 of Lee Harvey Oswald, ac- jeused assassin of President pagaenz... gi gb ie Rha The last witness for the de- fence was Dr. Manfred Guttma-} cher, Baltimore psychia- The air force identified the) territory. three men as Capt. David 1.|----@ ----__________ Belli Rests William Tyler, U.S. assistant secretary,-in a message to Ge- military forces in shooting down|men and four women was the RB-66B. |seated Judge Joe B. Brown) This 'was thes sehient rebuttal witnesses, They may be called later this week, de- trist. Guttmacher was on -the stand through most of Tuesday. w of southern Ontario Tuesday to create a motorists' nightmare of chaos, confusion and stalled ears on highways and streets. li was'the second spdgenenps. short-lived storm to batter the! province within a week. swept into Ontario from the FIRE RAZES WHITBY FIRM A "$100,000 fire: swept. started the blaze. A frozen through the Continental Yacht hydrant hindered firefighters Co. factory on Charles efforts to s ? Ms quell the fire. (See street south in Whitby last icy, cleire on Page 6) night. Whitby Firefighters be- ; lieve an over-heated oil heater --Oshawa Times Photo ond Short Storm Batters Ontario By THE CANADIAN PRESS |midwest United States and left A wind-lashed storm dumpedia trail of broken power lines, early a foot of snow in parts|uprooted trees and shattered windows. Tuesday's storm also moved up from the U.S., driven by winds ing to 65 miles an hour. It blanketed Erie and Lake Ontario she from Windsor to the border. Up to 11 inches fell in the Toronto-Hamilton area and huge drifts were piled up by strong winds. city | Last Thursday, héavy rains! hipped by gale-force winds TORONTO (CP)--More than 50 Owen Sound residents are ex- pected to arrive here today to continue a search for their friend, Joe McCauley, missing since Feb. 26 while attending an Ontario Good Roads convention. The 32-year-old Owen Sound meat packer was last seen leav- ing a downtown hotel in the early morning of Feb. 26, head- ing back to a room he shared flood waters swirled portions of seven middle west- with another Owen Sound busi-jern and eastern states today,}| nessman, Laverne Sprung. forcing thousands of persons to Last week a busload of friends|evacuate their homes and leav-; came here and toured streets,|ing death and extensive dam- restaurants and other public/age in their wake places without success in search) At least 19 persons died as of Mr, McCauley. They plan to/torrential rainstorms, heavy continue their search tonight. .|snow and strong winds whipped Mr. McCauley is married and through hundreds of cities and has two children. |communities. Portions of Kentucky, Penn- sylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Mis- souri, Illinois and West Virginia lay under flood waters. | The Red Cross sent disaster workers to Cincinnati and Louis- jville. . The flowed its banks |Ohio and Kentucky and threat- a f s' 1 Metro Jews Pay Back Anti-Nazi TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto's a b S$ flood in Ohio Valley. history. support for a 51-year-old immi-|Allegheny, Susquehanna and|Y grant from Greec: who claims|Ohio Rivers surged into streets) to have saved 32 Jewish fam-|and homes. ilies from the hands of the Ger-| Hundreds of families in } mans during the Second World'souri and southern Illinois War. their homes as rivers overflowed Theodorus Karakatsoukas, his|and sent water edging to door-in wife and three children ar- steps. rived here three weeks ago,! - broke and unable to speak ate as the Ohio River reached\e English. ---- a They carried a letter of in- 'troduction which Mr, Karakat-| sOukas said was signed by} WORST OF WINTER The resulting traffic jam in Toronto was described as the the Lake Feud Denied Coroner Orders Probe Into 2nd Clamp Death TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's| He said: "It is obvious that) Miss Morgan's doctor, Dr. Ken-| supervising coroner has been or-| dered to conduct an inquest) linto the death of a Palmerston) |woman who died after a surg- | ical clamp was left in her body. It will be the second such in-| vestigation in Ontario within a month. The investigation of the death of Ena Noer, 54, last Saturday,| eight days after she was oper-| ated on for removal of gall) stones in Palmerston General] Hospital, will be conducted by Supervising Coroner Dr. H. B. Cotnam aided by Inspector H. M. Purdey of the provincial po- lice and lawyer John A. Hooli- | han. | Mr. Hoolihan acted as Crown) | counsel at the inquest last) jmonth into the death of Patri-| |cia Morgan, 32, who died in Tor-| onto East General Hospital. The} inquest found that Miss Mor-| gan's death was due to a sur-! gical instrument being left in) her body after an operation. Attorney - General Frederick! Cass announced Tuesday he had| ordered the latest inquest and) said Wellington County Coroner} Dr. Frank H. Farmer would! have conducted it except for the| pressure of his own work as a} sungeon. | Johnson, RFK | | | | | | By White House WASHINGTON (AP) -- Some administration sources sought jtoday to soft-pedal talk of a smoldering political feud be- 19 Killed In U.S. Flooding worst in this winter. Traffic on|tween President Johnson and highways outside the city was|Attorney - General Robert 'F. lined up for 10 miles in some} Kennedy. places, aa | One White House official on Blowing snow. reduced visibil-| close terms with both men in- ity to almost zero and motor-|sisted. that relations between CHICAGO (AP) -- Surging;flood stages from Pittsburgh to th through! Wheelig, W. Va. | worst flood in the state since| Ohio River over-/tial rainstorms, snow and blind-| in Indiana,|ing winds. ened to become the fourth worst/three in Indiana, three in Mas: |his SON WEIGHS FIVE LBS., SEVEN OUNCES ; ists drove most of the day with eir headlights on. | Public transportation was dis- Some 5,000 families in Ohio|rupted and hundreds of down- nd Kentucky were.affected by|town Toronto workers were lood waters. Some 900 persons|hours late in getting home. the night in the city. In Indiana, waters reached; The storm ended after night- the tops of some house -roofs|fall, Cloudy skies and above-|4ampshire primary. in the southern portion of the|freezing temperatures were é Althoug! tate as the Ohio threatened its|forecast for today. Overnight clearing operations 945, The Ohio crested at 32 feet--land highways and transporta- asements and some streets. Some flights were - grounded Many parts of the United/at airports Tuesday and others tates were struck with torren-| were postponed, At Strathroy, about 20 miles : _ |from London, Sarnia pilot Five persons died in. Ohio,|George C. Capern, 33, wrecked $55,000 Bonanza aircraft sachusetts, three in Missouri,/when he made a forced land- F Red Cross shelters were es-|two in Mississippi and one each Jewish community has rallied|tablished in Pennsylvania as the|in Alabama, ling in blinding snow. He walked Vrginia, and New|away unhurt. 'ork as a result of the weather.| Snowfalls ranged from six|Great Lakes Air Services Lim- jinches to a foot in most sec-jited, said he was flying from| International Missions of upstate New York/Sarnia to Toronto at 7,000 fect! tion, eft|through central New England./when both his engines cut out. Trollip announced today, Hundreds of Oshawa-area res-/ The minister told Parliament|U.S. PROTESTS Tornadoes rumbled through} orthwestern Alabama. Nearlyjidents called police for assist- 10 inches of snow stranded hun-|ance and Kingston police said enced in its decision by Residents prepared to evacu- dreds of motorists in northwest-|the traffic snarl was the worst/cumulation of hostil rn Arkansas. 'ever in Kingston. many of the,persons he saved. | Myer Sharzer, executive di-| rector of the central region of | the Canadian Jewish Congress,} said Tuesday night his office has} been swamped by offers of aid ving publicity given th = Pes LONDON. (CP) -- Britain) In addition to financial aid, he| broke out her. flags and fired said, Mrs. Karakatsoukas was|2!- and 41-gun salutes today to given a job.in a shoe factory celebrate the birth of a five-| and two Jewish clothiers have|P0UNd, seven - ounce son to offered to outfit the entire fam- ues Euaae. ily with new clothes. Both the 37-year-old monarch Mr. Sharzer aid that, to be|and the new prince--her fourth ot. the safe side, the congress is| child and third son--were re- arranging verification of the|Ported doing well. The baby role Mr. Karakatsoukas said bell th -- agg played in helping Jews. earlier than expected, But' "'it | was an easy birth,"' said Sir | John Weir, the royal. physician "Everything went well; there were no problems,' reported the anesthetist, Dr. Vernon Hail. The baby was the smallest of the Queen's four children at birth. Prince Charles, the eld | est, weighed seven pounds, six ounces, Princes~@ Anne six d n h A m CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE. DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 Pp Ww ti Q i fortable night. Her majesty and the baby are both well." public speculation vid also were mentioned, Queen's Baby Week Early pounds and Prince Andrew| It was the second British| gynecologist who attended the seven pounds, three ounces. royal birth this year. Princess} The Queen's husband, Prince| Alexandra, the . Queen's first Philip, went ahead with: plans cousin, had a son Feb. 29. Prin- to represent her at the funeral} cess Margaret, the Queen's Sis-| since 1857--when Queen Victo-| of King Paul of Greece Thurs-|ter, expects her second child ria gave birth to Princess Bea- ay. next The child, whose name _has| Kent, ot yet been announced, month. The Duchess of Alexandra's sister-in-law, | is}expects her second child in third in line to the throne be-| May' ind his brothers Charles and Prince Philip, 42, telephoned) ndrew the news of his new son to! A medical bulletin issued this} Queen Mother Elizabeth, Prin- norning said: cess Mergaret and other mem- "The Queen has had a com-) bers of the royal family, Princess Charles, 15, oldest child and heir to the The names to be given the throne. His sister, Princess rince were the subject of much| Anne, 13, is fourth in line to The favorite the throne behind the three James, in tribute to Scot-| boys. Andrew is four. Stuart ancestors of the! The baby. was delivered by a ueen. Robert, Rupert and Da-| team of five physicians. headed 'by Sir John Peel, 59-year-old! is the as sh ¥ |Johnson and Kennedy are ex-) | cellent. | | Others, hawever, insisted there has long been per friction between the two and/ that garner vice - presidential votes | for Kennedy in Tuesday's New | | to discourage efforts in his be- seven feet above flood stage--|tion was getting back to normal) half, the write-in drive for Ken- | members in Pittsburgh, flooding many|across the province early today. nedy certainly was an embar- rassment to both men-- and) helped inspire talk of a party feud, South Africa Quits | World Labor Group | | jdecided to withdraw from the Labor Organiza- Labor Minister the government had been influ- against South Africa. | _ relations were further br --500 of them children -- were|Some suburban residents spent|strained by organized efforts to taken to shelters. world," and "perfidious Albion we are having a spate of these|neth Brown, was responsible for cases and I want all the infor-| leaving the clamp in her mation brought out that can be) ppctors have been failing to brought out." report the causes of deaths and Dr. Morton Shulman, Tor-| coroners have been hiding the onro's chief coroner who} discoveries when reported, Dr. pressed for the investigation of/ Shulman said. The medical pro- Miss Mongan's death after rela-| fession "has been covering up tives of the woman complained) for a long, long time." to him they were unable to see) The announcement of the Pal- a report of the autopsy, com-| merston inquest was made while mented in an interview Tues-| tuneral services for Mrs. Noer day that deaths involving SUT-| were in progress. gical clamps have been going} on for a long time. |NO MENTION The Toronto inquest ruled that) Funeral director Jack Miller a -------------- | said Mrs. Noer's death certiti- cate made no mention of a sur- gical clamp. He said it gave the cause of death as peritonitis. Outlining the circumstances, |Mr. Cass said that when the | autopsy showed the sungical in- strument in the abdomen, Dr. Tass Terms Goldwater As Wild Man's Idol Fs: ws: wea MOSCOW (AP) -- Tass today|pervising coroner and it then reported the defeat of Senator|came to the attorney-general's Barry. Goldwater in the New| attention. Hampshire primary, calling) him the "idol of the wild men." The Soviet news agency also noted the defeat of Senator Margaret Chase Smith, saying: "This Goldwater in a skirt, as she is called in the United States, collected an insignificant number of votes." Tass correspondent Leonid Velichansky, in a dispatch from Claremont, -N:H:> sata" Henry Cabot Lodge, the write-in win- her of the primary, favored a tough foreign policy 'but not being an official candidate, he did not publicize his home and foreign policy program." with the coroners." Palmerston General said in a statement: death of a patient in the hos of Wellington County. No infor vestigation." Cambodians Sack U.S., British Posts PHNOM PENH (AP)--Rioting| Relations between the United Cambodians sacked the Amer-|States and Cambodia have de- ican and British embassies injeriorated in recent months and nom Penh today and the|the government of Prince No- S. Information Service Li-/rodom Sihanouk has moved ary. |closer to the Communist camp. Several thousand Cambodians} 'The Cambodian chief of state rampaged through the buildings|has recalled his ambassador U, during three hours of disorder./from Washington and refused e h Johnson outpolled The flag over the U.S. em-|to accept further U.S. aid, ac-| A British military spokesman Kennedy in New Hampshire|bassy was hauled down and|CUSing the United States of sup-|said the ultimatum, which set a "This shows how the Coron- er's Act works when these deaths are reported," Mr. Cass said. "There is nothing wrong Arlene Little, administrator of; Hospital, Bo Mee General Hospi oard is aware that }there is an investigation into a pita] being made by the coroner mation is at present available to us as to the course of this in- CYPRUS WAR NEAR UK WARNS U THANT Stop Arguing, Give Aid Duncan Sandys Warns UN LONDON (Reuters) -- Brit-| deadline for the evacuation, was ain has warned United Nations| withdrawn but he did not give Secretary-General U Thant it) any further details. cannot much longer carry the' Turkish - Cypriots in the vil- burden of her peace - keeping lage asked Monday to be evac-. mission in Cyprus alone, Com-juated. They said they were monwealth Secretary Duncanjfired at with bazookas Sunday Sandys told Parliament today. night. He said Britain is exerting all! British military spokesmen its efforts to help the secretary-|said the evacuation would be general set up a United Nations|carried out. t force which. could be sent to Cy-| Earlier today about" 10,000 prus "without further dangerous|Greek - Cypriot students, stag- delay." jing an anti-American, anti-Brit Sandys added: 'We havejish, pro - Soviet demonstration asked him to inform us Thurs-|here mobbed the British ambas« day of the progress he has|sador to Cyprus. made and of his assessment of} No fighting was reported in the prospects of success. In the|Cyprus during the morning to- light of his reply we will re-iday but there was sporadia |view the position. |shooting at the village of Tem- "We have warned the secre-jblos in northern Cyprus Tues- tary-general of the United Na-/day night, a British spokesman tions that we cannot much said. longer carry this burden alone, not onl; unaided but actively Cine brite Blok" asco pr ta ely whom We sioner, Sir Arthur Clark, was on 5 ow. y 4 jc all our éf- his way to the airport to see we are B Cypriot, President Makarios off forts to assist the secretary- to Athens: "Greapes wie: tiie general to establish a United mond Gwareied uvounl aaa Nations force which can be sent The students, carried nanaere ed bs gia without further dan-| it) such slogans on them ae erow ay: "Americans, you cannot BOTH HIT BRITISH us," "British, go home," and Sandys said when British|"Long live the mighty U.S.S.R., troops tried to sq@parate com-|great defender of peace and juse batants in Cyprus. and protect/tice. ne ; case ey Save been actnsa| went th Serie Aviat, Seale » "the e m accus' ; of partiadite ond have been bit-:Tios left for Greece for the fu- terly abused by the press and|neral of King Paul of the Hel- radio, lenes, , ; "As recent incidents. fas now reached the where British troops, while at- tempting to discharge their duty, are held up by Greek- Cypriot police and the Turkish minority generally as rebels who must be forced into sub- mission.' Sandys said: | "Both communities have at) a passed a resolution calling for self-determination and "Enosis" (union with Greece) the only solutionst ot he Cyprus problem. Panama Agrees one time or another acted in a provocative and unconstitutional manner and neither can reaso- jably claim it has legal authority To Renew Talk' WASHINGTON (AP) -- A La- tin American diplomat reported Tuesday that Panama has re to impose its will on the other. | "In any case this is no time to argue about legal rights and |wrongs. Cyprus is in a state verging on civil war." NICOSIA -- Greek - Cypriot |forces today withdrew an ulti- |matum to British troops to eva- jeuate the northern Cyprus vil- jlage of Kazaphani a half-hour | before it was due to expire. agreed to resume diplomatic lations with the United States and confer on differences over the U.S>controlled Panama Ca- nal Zone. The diplomat, who would not permit use of his name, said an official announcement was being delayed by consultations in Washington. Panama broke relations with the U.S. Jan. 10 after rioting in the Canal Zone. '3 p.m. local time (9 a.m. EST) Democratic primary and the at-|burned and the mob ran up the| Porting Cambodian rebels. lopened up all main city streets|t0rmey-general acted last week|Cambodian flag. | cars belonging to of the British em-| bassy were burned and several| American embassy cars were overturned. | The mob shouted such slo- gans as:"U.S. go home," "'down with imperialists and the tree Several Stands (England)."" | (In Washington, a state de CONCORD, N..H (CP-AP)--| said no Americans|Johnson's man in Saigon, stayed ere reported injured in the riot|put, said nothing and still won Republican _ presidential |primary by a handy margin al- |though his name wasn't on the { ballot. Thus, the U.S. ambassador to (Cramer said U.S. Charge an "'ac-d'Afiaires Herbert D. Spivack/South Viet Nam received the|write-in votes for .Governors ational -- e acts' had protested to 'the Cambodian mandate to be the state's nom-|William W. Scranton of Penn-\Democratic and Republican government. jinee as Republican candidate} (A British foreign office|for president at the nominating) Pat And Silent, Lodge Takes Primary With about a dozen of the 302|stores or race tracks, produced : partment press officer, Martin\Henry Cabot Lodge, President|voting districts left to report,{a lopsided yes--about 3% to 1. : CAPE TOWN (Reuters)--The|Cramer Mr. Capern, 'chief pilot for|South African government has w ' |Lodge was the winner with 30,-| In all, 18 presidential prefer- 863 write-in votes--or about one-/ence primaries are scheduled in but several demonstrators were|New Hampshire's first - in - the|third of the poll. Goldwater was|the United States this spring: cut by shattered glass from|U.S. E. E.}windows stoned by the mob. jsecond with 21,174, Rockefeller) They serve the dual purpose of \third with. 18,807 and Nixon| allowing voters to check off or fourth with 15,101. Mrs. Smith|Write in their choice for the polled 2,733 and Stassen 1,251, |Patty's nomination for president There was a scattering of 2nd also elect delegates to the conventions of the rties. sylvania and Geor; ; Convention delegates, ! ge Romney of|P# Michigan, | how= spokehman in London said the|convention in San Francisco! Despite the snowstorm, the °Vet, aren't always bound by is mobs wrecked the British con-/next July 13. ular offices and damaged the| Lodge' also had the entire| |ground floor of the British Em-|slate of the state's 14 Repub-/casts had placed it at 90,000 to! bassy.) jlican delegates to the conven-| The rioters broke through po-|tion on his bandwagon. New Hampshire's voter s| lice barriers to sack the U.S.| scattered through the streets. | Group Asks 3 Ottawa To births of Charles, Andrew and Anne, It was only.the second time) trice -- that a child had been born to a reigning British sov- ereign, Andrew was the first. Crowds of office workers, 4 tourists, soldiers and blue-hel-| Buy Uranium meted Bobbies stopped in front | of Buckingham Palace today to) OTTAWA (CP)--The federal read the notice, posted at the government was asked Tuesday gates, proclaiming the birth. | 4. continue buying and stock- Pop ged from world leaders/ piling uranium from mines in »gan to pour in soon after the t birth announcement, Bancroft and Elliot Lake after The bulletin, issued by the five| July 1: attending physicians, said the) A Bancroft delegation headed Queen gave birth at 8:20 p.m (3;20 p.m. EST) Trade Minister Philip said after the birth "I)and was told its am delighted."' 'be considered. Sharp's office | t .|they chose Lodge by a margin/ney-General Robert F. Kennedy | tician - soldier - diplomat -- as) hey can under state law--and| of more than 9,000 votes Tues-| day: : It was a grim defeat for ultra-| conservative Senator Barry, Goldwater of Arizona and lib-) eral Republican Governor Nel-! son Rockefeller of New York,| both of whom had spent lots of} time and money campaigning in the state. FINISH BEHIND Goldwater ran second and) |Rockefeller third. Both their|shire names' were on the ballot, For-| mer vice-president Richard M.| Nixon, another write-in candi- date, .finished fourth. Senator! former: Harold and governor barely in the race, | Republican turnout totaileq the results of the preferential some 90,000 votes. Advance fore-|P0ll. ; Through his son, George; Lodge relayed his thanks té New Hampshire voters but gave them no hint of his plans, King called "'an expression and | recommendation" that Attor- | 100,000. The record is some 96,-| 0. New Hampshire Dinu Embassy and the information| braved a snowstorm to write in|staged a write-in drive of their library. Embassy papers were|the name of the veteran poli-jown, in what Governor John W, become the party's nominee for vice-president. Its leaders had some |!ast- minute qualms, fearing a Ken- nedy write-in that topped that for President Johnson would embarrass the president. : The outcome quieted those fears. The figures read Johnson 21,898; Kennedy 14,265. APPROVE SWEEPS At the same time, New Hamp- voters approved their | state's big gamble: A sweep- stakes designed to raise money for education, The local option vote on the by Rev. Henry Maloney visited|Margdret Chase Smith of Maine|sale of sweepstakes tickets, con- ducted throughout New Hamp- request would|Stassen of Minnesota were|shire but effective only in the 42 communities with state liquor a