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Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Apr 1964, p. 1

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"Assassin Shoots sae ae ae alin i ie ie led le ie aie aoe | r) Thought For Today Some people talk without stop- ping to think, and others with- out thinking to stop. VOL. 93 -- NO. 81 Cee en ee ee ae ihe cai cerie ater lie ie ees eal coe el nee ee eee ee he Oshawa Times vo Class Mall Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy payment OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1964 Weather Report Showers, clearing during the evening. Variable cooler Tuesday. Post Office of =P Department ostage in Cash. cloudiness and TWENTY PAGES Belgian Bab As MD's Strike, 'Two Doctors BRUSSELS -- Two Belgian|Liege area were today received doctors from Herentals, in|by Interior Minister Arthur Gil- northern Belgium, have beetijson. They called on the govn- placed under 'provisional ar-|ment to give them powers to rest" following the death of a|"rquisition" striking doctors to 15-months-old baby in a clinic/ensure the population's health. here Sunday. Public Health Minister. Ernest A court was investigating the|Leburton told reporters: '(Many causes of the death on the basis/doctors realize now they made of reports there was a delay/a mistake in striking." in obtaining medical treatment) He maintained a solution for the child, Eric Moons, the!could be found if the doctors re- youngest of a family of five chil- dren, as a result of the six-day doctors' strike. two doctors were in charge of the skeleton emer- gency service in the Herentals area organized by the medical unions to deal with the most serious cases needing medical attention during the strike. Reports before the court said that Eric's father summoned the family doctor who, since he was on strike, called the emer- gency skeleton service at Her- entals, about 10 miles from the family's home at Tongerlo. BABY DIES The two doctors arrived and took the baby to the clinic at Herentals, where he died Sun- day morning..according to the derly. Anger. over the mounted steadily. many doctors have threatening phone calls and let ters, and hospitals against squads" of doctors persuade specialists the strike. to were jammed with patients Emergency hospital were being set up by the army turned to their offices and lios- pitals and resumed their treat- ment of the ailing and the el-/sort of Valenburg, where 300 of Strike has Doctors' homes have been defaced and received| In the Mons area, near the|in a Brussels newspaper inter-|, French border, unions called on! yiew: their members to defend clinics "flying | trying to 4 © in the suspension of the 26 articles All hospitals in the country]. . facilities| brains, y Dies Held In Brussels, hundreds of civil- ian patients were placed in a military hospital, : The doctors threatened a com- |plete boycott of the health in- surance plan set up by the gov- ernment unless _ parliament makes drastic revisions in the law. | Many of Belgium's medical men have fled to nearby coun- jtries to avoid demonstrations jagainst them by angered Bel- igians. Police in the Dutch re- |them have moved, ordered j\drastic security measures to protect the doctors from pos- |\sible kidnapping back to Bel- gium. Dr. Andre Wynen, spokesman rt he medical profession, said lto "If Parliament does not vote the guarantees we ask, namely |we oppose in the law, we wovld . ignore the health insurance Without us, without the health insurance . would cease to exist... ." system. reports. All judicial investigations on deaths which have occurred since the doctors' strike started last Wednesday so far have ex- onerated the doctors concerned from any direct responsibility. Meanwhile, Belgian labor un- ions prepared a mass counter- 12,000 doctors. Thousands of workers demon- strated today against the doc- tors in the French - speaking Walloon provinces. jing segregationist, goes to court today for a retrial on charges he killed Negro integration leader Medgar Evers. The first trial of the fertilizer i ae ure ween ae salesman from Greenwood, streets of mining or factory Miss., ended Feb. 7 with a dead- towns near Liege. locked jury. The all-white jury A group of mayors from the'had deliberated for 11 tense Race-Death Trial Hearings Opened offensive in protest against the| JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -- By- strike by most of Belgium's/ron De La Beckwith, a crusad-|six. HE WALKED AWAY Racing veteran, Bud Tin- came involved in this spectac- the 30-lap feature race at El- f Dayton, Ohio, be- ular flip on the second lap of dora Speedway Sunday. The car came to rest upside down but Tingelstad walked away hours, finally splitting six to) : uninjured. (AP Wirephoto) gelstad 0} '\pay out more than $2,000,000 in OTTAWA (CP) -- The unem- ployment insurance commission has scraped up enough money to get part way out of its finan- cial crisis. Labor Minister MacEachen said the commission will have enough money on hand today to cash benefits to some 48,000 job- less workers. But insurance benefits for an- other 36,000 unemployed Cana- dians, normally mailed out by UNEMPLOYMENT FUND ESCAPES CASH CRISIS | Cheque Benefits Will Be Delayed proval and be given royal as- sent tonight. The government will then have the power to advance up to the depleted fund over the: next two months when claims for un- employment insurance are gen- erally heavy. $55,000,000 in loans to tide Indications are the loan will be made within minutes of royal assent, thus paving the way for quick mailing of benefit cheques to claimants. cheque instead of cash--will be held back until the government gets legal authority to make an emergency loan to the bankrupt unemployment insurance fund. Mr, MacEachen said Satur- day that the post office will turn over money it has collected from the sale of unemployment insurance stamps and meter credits to the unemployment in- surance commission today--24 hours sooner than usual. This revenue will help meet demands for cash benefits when the 206 UIC offices open for}; | | | Robber Fires As Boys Give Chase TORONTO (CP) A man armed with a revolver and blackjack robbed a restaurant owner Sunday night and es- Bhutan Premier GANGTOK, Sikkim -- An un- known assassin shot and killed Bhutan's Prime Minister Jigme Dorji Sunday night near the frontier of the little Himalayan kingdom which has become a buffer zone between India and Red China. . There was no indication "only knows that he has been killed and we know nothing more." "We are stunned to hear about it,'"" Nehru said, "He was not only a great statesman but a friend of ours in many ways." Bhutan, a country of 18,000 told Patliament the government! jeaped with $3,800 cash. The bandit fled on foot and fired a shot at two youths who |CAUSES CRISIS jment insurance fund was The crisis in the unemploy- caused when. Conservative Sen- ator Grattan O'Leary stopped the Senate from giving speedy approval Friday night to a $130,800,000 appropriation bill, which included the spectal loan' to bail out the empty insurance kitty. Barring the unexpected, the gave chase to him. measure will get Senate ap- LONDON (AP)--Prime Min- ister Douglas-Home started a whistlestop tour of eastern Eng- land today under heavy pres- whether personal or political motives lay behind the slaying of the 45-year-old prime minis- ter, who has been described as strongly anti - Communist de- spite Chinese pressure. The prime minister's 20-year- square miles and 700,000 per- sons, spreads across the Him- alayas between Chinese - held Tibet and the Indian states of West Bengal and western sam, The Chinese, reported to have As-| sure from his divided Conserva-| tive party to name the day for| national elections, He can choose any day before his government's five-year term expires in early November. May, June or October are con- sidered the likeliest months, Whites and Negroes alike ---- ie cea oh Ae gasped with surprise. Most had} expected a quick acquittal. Beckwith, 43, is accused of| usc ev eG] LOU! ices jgunning down Evers from am-| F bush when the Negro leader re. turned home last summer from| % | a civil rights meeting. Evers, 1n 37, was state field secretary of Red Ch '@ | S Le aders the National Association for the : saat a KAZINCBAROIKA (AP) --jwould not be a bad to,that do not show an overabund- The slaying Yast June 11,/ Premier: rushchev said today/have a war--ong half of the| ance of brains, but rather a lac! Beéckwith's arrest 11 days later|\ohly a child or «n idiot~does/peopie in the world would- be)of 'them: ; and the impact of the first trial|not fear war and that people/destroyed and the other would) Khrushchev said he had been stirred deep racial passions in|who think like the Red Chinese/survive," Khrushchev said in ajaccuseq by the Chinese of be- this southern state. |leaders about war 'do not show|speech to several thousand/ing afraid of war. 'an overabundance of brains."|workers of a chemical plant in| "I say it is only a child or WILL BE SEARCHED |He said he thought President|this Hungarian industrial cen-|an idiot who does not fear Stringent security precautions|Johnson had similar views to|tre. _ jwar," he. said. "If Hitler had have been ordered, As before,|those of resident John F. Ken-| "They. say that after some known how World War II would spectators entering the small|nedy, which he called reason-|time women again would bearjend and that he would shoot courtroom will be searched. |able. children and mankind would be/himself, he probably would not A possible clue to the emotion-| 'The Chinese leaders say it'as before. People who think like/have started the war." | ally charged atmosphere was Khrushchev made his re-| bhai tigen decision Py e marks after discarding a pre-| st roning 300 persons for pos- Ch Ss. t pared text. "a tp Agr taagpcticrig sd nese, ovl1e Ss "The United States is an im- which (our dave' were daa hk perialist country, but its govern- Ipick the Jury ys 0 R I H a the gee 7 oe ee ty soberly, e said, an ae ia | OW n ungary that President Kennedy"s| D k H : |speech at Washington Univer- uc. un er | BUDAPEST (Reuters) -- Thejier to build socialism.alone than sity last summer in which Ken: Sino-Soviet ideological dispute|}by using the possibilities and nedy called for a peaceful so- lution to East-West problems Home Pressured To Pick Poll Day Hanging on to October, on the other hand, might allow the party to bury its internal dif- ficulties and give time for the anti - conservative tide to change. Douglas - Home will have a week of powerful pointers to help him decide the election date. Voting starts today in county councils across the coun- 790 Escape Orphans-Aged Home Blaze LEVIS, Que. (CP) -- Orderly evacuation of 630 children and 120 aged persons and fire walls that prevented the flames spreading quickly were cred- ted with averting tragedy Sun- day as fire raged through a home for orphans and the aged. Only one of the 75 Grey Nuns who operated the 85-year-old Institut St. Joseph de la De- liverance had to use an aerial ladder to escape from her fourth - floor room., The chil- dren, aged persons and 75 other nuns were escorted out quickly. Firemen from Levis, Quebec City and suburban Sillery wera, sti pouring water into. the smouldering five - storey build- ing late Sunday night and bat- fling 30-mile-an-hour winds and 20 degree temperatures that had hampered them since the fire was first noticed at 9 a.m. Fire doors saved a portion of the institution and kept intact the wing where the children and aged were assembled in a large hall. US. Plane Hits Tokyo Suburb TOKYO (AP) -- A U.S. Ma- rine Corps jet interceptor plunged into a residential area old son Paujor, studying law in London, told reporters there he had no idea who might have wanted his father killed, C t ce moved troops into Tibet's Shumbi Valley adjacent to Bhu- an in recent weeks, have been 'laiming Bhutan territor | Found Dead WESTMEATH. Ont. (CP) y along|The body of a Deep River, Ont., support of the fraternal com- munty of people who had prev- liously taken the road," The Peking delegation dra-| appeared to be more bitter than ever today following Soviet Pre- mier Khrushchev's latest blast at Communist China and the The prime minister was be- lieved to favor an early poll. But powerful figures in the party were advising him to was a reasonable one. "Some people have criticized me for praising this speech," Khrushchev said. 'It is primi- 20 miles southwest of Tokyo Sunday, killing four Japanese and injuring 26 others while flattening 10 homes. try. The. party is divided ideolog- ically, So-called "high Tories" the Tibet frontier. Nehru has warned that any Chinee asttack on Bhutan would be -considered an attack on In- dia. Dorji had tried to retain for Bhutan the benefits of close as- sociation with India, yet~main- tain independence. Cypru Dorji had been reported con- cerned that the thousands of ref- ugees from Chinese - occupied Tibet in Bhutan might include agents from Peking Sketchy reports reaching the neighboring kingdom of Sikkim said Dorji was struck by a sin- gle bullet in the back as he sat in a travellers' bungalow in the town of Phuntsholing, near the Indian border. FIRED AND FLED The assailant fired through an open window and escaped, offi-| cials said. Dorji died two hours later. Shortly before he was shot,/ the prime minister had talked with Avtar Singh, India's politi- cal officer in Bhutan and Sik-| NICOSIA -- The Cyprus cri- km. sis today appeared to be headed In New Delhi, Indian officials|for new showdowns both on the responsible by treaty for Bhu-|political and military fronts tan's defence and foreign affairs) Reaction was awaited from said they had no detailed infor-|the Greek-Cypriot- government mation. Prime Minister Nehrujto Turkey's denunciation of | President Makarios' move to jabrogate the 1960 treaty of al- liance among Cyprus, Greece and Turkey, A Turkish government spokesman said Turkey won't Southern States accept Makarios' decision to} NEW ORLEANS (AP)--Tor-cancel the treaty. He added nadoes ripped through north-/Turkey would continue to exer-| ern Louisiana and easternicise its right under the treaty Texas Sunday, leaving wide-/t9 keep troops on the island spread damage. Makarios notified Turkish In Montana and the Dakotas,,Premier ismet Inonu Saturday! stockmen and motorists were|thatt he Greek-Cypriot govern-| warned Sunday night of heavy|ment considered the treaty snows, strong winds and plung-| dead. But Inonu and his cabinet! ing temperatures decided Makarios' move was| At ornado near Ruston, La.,.contrary to international Jaw! damaged seven houses and de-|and carried 'no legal signifi-| stroyed five barns Sunday. No|cance whatsoever," the spokes- injuries were reported. man said One of three international agreements under which Cyprus won her independence from Britain in 1960, the treaty gives Turkey and Greece the right to} station troops on the island. The! Turkish garrison numbers 650 troops, the Greek 950 The Turkish press said the government considered 'Makar- 'ios' attempt to cancel the treaty| Twisters Sweep CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 New Showdowns ft walkout of 'the Chinese delega- ; matically marched out of the tion at an internatiorfal confer- final plenary session of the Communist - dominated Inter- national Association of Demo- cratic Lavyers' congress here duck hunter missing since last Nov. 23 was found in the Ot- F tawa River near here Sunday, /ence in this Hungarian capital. Dennis John Beaver, 19, was| In an indirect but scathing at- one of twa hunters presumed|tack, Khrushchev told a crowd hang on to the end. Their reasoning wast hat the Conservatives now are too far behind Labor in the opinion polls. tive to think that we are more prudent than all the others. I think that President Johnson has similar views: to: his prede- cessor." led by former health minister Enoch Powell are campaigning for an unashamed return to un- fettered capitalism as the par- ty's first principle. ii The pilot of the plane, Capt. R. L. Bown, ejected at 5,000 feet. He was bruised on land- ing on an automobile but was re- ported in good condition. early today. The woman leader of thé del- |egation, Han Yu Tung, fiercely attacked the Soviet Union for 'ipservicing" the suppressed people in their struggle for in- dependence, "This is complete capitula- tion," she said. She also charged certain peo- ple were attacking China at this congress and said they were al- lies of the imperialists. Shouting at the top of her jvoice she said: "Come on, at- tack us! This does not worry us. We fight to the last.' After this, the members of the Chinese delegation stalked out. | The session, which earlier de- |feated a Chinese resolution at- jtacking U.S. imperialism and |the. Moscow nuclear test ban dead when their canoe over-|of about 80,000 in the Hungarian turned in the river about twolsteel city of Miskole Sunday that) miles from the point where the,"'only a complete idiot could body was found. pretend to prove that it is eas- In his 'speech at American University in Washington last June 10, President Kennedy said total war in the nuclear age 'makes no sense" and assailed those who believe war inevita- ble. As for U.S.-Soviet relations, Kennedy said the people of both nations had a "mutual ab: horrence of war." It was in this speech that Kennedy announced that the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union had agreed to ne- gotiate in Moscow on what even- tually became in August the treaty limiting nuclear testing to explosions only underground. Oswald Trial | s Moves To a prelude to abolishing other|a bridge connecting Pahyam-| agreements, which include the|mos and the Turkish - Cyprist! right of Greek, Turkish or Brit-|town of Kokkina. ish intervention to protect the! The Greek-Cypriots sent in re- Cypriot constitution, Under one|inforcements. They have suf- of the agreements, Britain also|fered a number of casualties in dog ret on the island. {shooting incidents in the area ne Turkish cabinet member|in recent days. be- clon said to. have warned that if} Greek - Cypriot fighters 20 ee Se : there is any attac kon the Turk-) moved into the Greek village of Last Tuesday the Peking ish troops "Turkey will vio-|Alevga. British officers de-icommuhist Party newspaper Lawyer Claims lently repulse this aggression."'|scribed this as an attempt to a : A N E id The government called backlencircle Ayios Theodhoros, cet ont an taeane, ew V1 ence ° Best save Vi neg ont which also has been the Scene) whom it described as "the! BUDAPEST (AP) A New of: Iskenderun, miles north- ing | i neelery : 1 rel éast of Cyprus. aheaty -Gen. Prem Singh|Steatest capitulationist in his-|/York lawyer appeared before d 4,-Gen. ; tory jthe Communist-controlled Asso- | | nr. Mrs. Elizabeth McGarvie wel and daughter Joyce, 18, were "| granted 30-day extension of visitors' permit two days be- | fore having to return to Scot- On the military front, vio: |Gyani, the UN force comman-| . Hired oe Pas Ban eh i lence continued' for the fourth|der, flew into the area by heli-| : ~ lation of Democratic Lawyers consecutive day despite the ef-|copter. 2 . Sunday and said the killers of forts of British and Canadian| Although the rest of the is- Five Perish In president Kennedy are still at United Nations peace forces land appeared calm, the Greek-| jlarge. ; A Greek-Cypriot auxiliary po-|Cypriot press trumpeted the} . | Mark Lane said he hoped the iceman was killed by machine:/story of the capture of 20 Brit-| Glace Ba Fire | association 5 annual congress gun fire near a Turkish-Cypriotlish paratroopers by Greek-( y jhere will provide the first step roadblock in Nicosia. It was the/riots in the town of Kato Pyr-| .. ,.., Pe ges in establishing an international first fatality in the capital in| gos Sunday. Newspaper reports _GLAC E BAY, N.S. (CP) --|\commisson of jurors to meet more than a month, although|said the soldiers were detained|Five Persons, including ajand evaluate" the crcum- both sides often shoot at each|for more than two hours for al-|Mother and her three children, | stances of the assassination. of other at night llegedly shooting four village|@ied in.a fire that destroyed a/the American president last No- In western Cyprus, an inci-|fighters in an exchange of fire|two-storey home here today. : | vember. dent involving a Greek - Cypriotjearly Sunday. Dead are Mrs. Francis O'Neil,| "I will appear, if requested, armored car at Pahyammos| An anti-British campaign. ap-/het three children, Reginald, 3,/and present all the evidence in threatened to touch off a new|peared to be building up again,|Mary, 1, and two - month - old/my possession," he said. Lane, outbreak. of village warfare (Some Greek-Cypriots are de-|John, and Miss Annie Deveaux|37, said: there was no evidence A UN spokesman said Turk-|manding a withdrawal of Brit |who boarded with the O'Neil|that the alleged assassin, I ish-Cypriots. fired a bazooka atjish troops. Under the UN: plan,|family H. Owald, was "in any the armored car, stationed at a/British soldiers will comprise Mrs. O'Neil was reported in/involved." bridge outside the Greek-con-|half of the 7,000-man peace/her early 20s, Miss Deveaux in| Lane until recently was law- trolled village, and also mined/force. her early 40s. lyer for Oswald's mother. land. Immigration officials had told them earlier their ar- rangements to stay at the Van- couver home of Mrs. McGar- vie's son Hugh were "unsalis- A HAPPY REPRIEVE factory". Extension came af- ter another son, William of Stittsville, Ont., guaranteed "full responsibility" for his mother during her year's stay in Canada. (CP Wirephoto)

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