we "Weather Report -Not much change in tempera- ° Thought For Today ' That spring seed catalogue shows beautiful pictures of everything except the backache. _ Arrest 7 _ In Racia - Protests By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Police arrested 76 persons in racial demonstrations at "Nash- ville, Tenn., Wednesday as civil rights leaders pushed efforts to remain out of school and join the demonstrations. There have been 98 arrests at Nashville this week and a few minor injuries were reported as Li dragged trat- integrate the city completely. A civil rights leader, Rev. C. T. Vivian of Atlanta, called the Nashville demonstrations the start of "the long hot summer of discontent,"' and appealed for support of new demonstrations at a mass meeting Wednesday night. The arrests came in the third day of demonstrations this ors out of a street before a seg- regated restaurant. Nashville Mayor Beverly Bri- ley appealed for calmness and said police have been instructed to maintain law and order. A seven day moratorium jagainst demonstrations at Ches- jter, Pa., was announced to give jcl.y and state officials a chance week. Demonstrators are|to settle Chester's months-long mostly Negroes but a few white persons were involved. Among those arrested was John Lewis, chairman of the National t dent Non-Violent Co-ordinating Committee. He and Lester Mc- Kinnie, another civil rights leader, were charged with con- ing to the delinquency of minors by encouraging them to Order Inquest Mother's Death After Abortion TORONTO. (CP)--An inquest racial dispute, A three - judge federal court threw out sections of the Vir- l-|ginia constitution and laws re- designation on | quiring racial state poll. tax lists, voter regis- trations and property records, Negroes seeking to desegre-| gate schools at Charleston, S.C., charged in a petition to U.S.) district Court that a pupil as- signment and transfer plan| sanctioned by the court 'only masquerades as one granting/ freedom of choice' to Negro pupils. Lawyers for the Negroes pe-| titioned U.S. District Court) Judge J. Robert Martin of Greenville, S.C., to vacate his order of April 13, which allows school authorities at Charleston was ordered Wednesday into the death of a | 3l-year-old mother of three who died of brain damage following a sep- tie abortion. Dr. Morton $hulman, chief coroner, set the inquest for] May 13. Police. are investigating the death of the woman, who was to i t the placement plan this fail. | The Civil Liberties Union of| Cleveland, Ohio, said support of} the civil rights movement even) by Communists need not dis-| credit the movement itself. The} group said in a statement: "'If| and against sin, this does not discredit those views." CATHOLIC NUNS of differ- ent orders join Notre Dame and St, Mary's College stu- dents in a protest demonstra- tion against Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace who spoke Wednesday night in the Uni- versity of Notre Dame field- one of several that took place during the Wallace visit, was staged outside the N. D, house. This' d stration, Fieldh (AP Wirephoto) Missile Firm Reaps An 'Excessive Profit' LONDON (CP-AP)--The Brit- ish government that one of its major missile|in builders reaped an "excessive and unjustified profit" of 63 per cent on a contract for Bloodhound anti - aircraft mis- la Communist is for motherhood | <i). The admission came ' from jthirds done. Ferranti still in- the job and managed to » profit, Amery said, of This |make £5,400,°00 ($16,700,000). on costs. When the Commons accounts |committee asked to examine admitted to hospital April 18, shortly after the accident. The woman was released, from hospital Tuesday morning and te-admitied two hours later A 40-year-old Negro business- man of Columbus, Ga., George W Ford Ill, qualified as a can- didate for the Muscogee County | commission. He 'will oppose .a Aviation Minister Julian Amery|Fefranti's books, the firm re- oomtthaneting, mameiainad of head- aches. She died early Wedncs- day. Officials said they did not in- form police of the case until Wednesday because doctors thought the abortion was self- induced. When criminal abor- tions are suspected, hospitals are required to notify police im- white commissioner, P. B. Mas- primary election. | stration interrupted Governor) George C. Wallace of Alabama for 10 minutes as he spoke at sey, in the Sept. 9 Democratic A marching, singing demon- the University of Notre Dame in a House of Commons debate Wednesday night on the con- itract with Ferranti Limited, ajnounced Wednesday. night the major defence firm. Memtbers of the opposition, Lia- bor party- sniffed election-year. paydirt in the affair. James Cal- laghan, Labor's spokesman on finance, told the House: "One thing is clear -- this myth of the Conservative party being good businessmen and ad- ministrators has been de- |fused. i committee has no { But this dispute melted away has admitted|sisted it had taken high risks|when Callaghan contended Brit- ain had never shied away from building its own weapons. He waved toward Sir Winston the| represented a 63-per-cent return)Churchill, sitting in his place on the Conservative' side, and said: "The right honorable gentle- Man was one who prepared us for the first war when he was Quebec MDs Deny-Move | On Naessens. MONTREAL (CP)--The Que- bec College of Physi ns and Surgeons said in a statement |Wednesday it does not oppose |the use of French biochemist /Gaston Naessens' leukemia vac- icine, providing '"'the effective-| ness of this product has been recognized by the federal au-| thorities."' | Mr. Naessens, who claims his |vaecine--called anablast --can| cure leukemia, arrived in Mont-| real earlier this week accom- panied by Montreal restaura- teur, who asked him to use the 'Vaccine on his 3% - year - old son Rene. | Doctors have given the boy| four months to live. | "It is wp to the federal gv: | \ernment, charged with protect- ing public health, to define which drugs or medicines can} be put on the market," the col-| lege statement said. 'That's| \the intention of the © federal) |Food and Drug Act. | "The responsibility of the col- lege lies in another domain, that) of the practice of medicine. The jcollege, after having granted GI WELCOMES INSTANT HOLE COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP) -- The U.S. Army has come up with a successful device des- tined to gladden the heart of | every infantryman -- an in- stant foxhole. | To lig a proper foxhole in the past, a soldier needed a pick, shovel and stamina. A team from the U.S, Com- bat Develoy infantry agency put the new development on display Wed- nesday at Fort Benning. The one-pound. foxhole dig- ger comes in two parts--the first part for blasting a small hole two inches in diameter and several inches deep. This is known as a pilot hole. The second part of the de- vice is placed in the pilot hole, a primer is set, and the soldier gets out of the way for about 30 seconds while a cratering explosion digs the foxhole. A demonstration showed the device works best in hard, rocky, clay-type soil or frozen ground. This is because dirt blasted from soft, loam-type soil tends to cave in along the sides and the soldier has to pitch in with a shovel. The ithstant. foxhole varies from 20 to 36 inches deep and about two feet in diameter. |posts in the Kyrenia Mountains |Greeks clashed Wednesday) gnt Command's | *| manning the UN posts would be TROUBLE Van Doos Man | | 20 Peace Posts NICOSIA -- The United Na- tions peace force in Cyprus to- day set up 20 permanent UN where Cypriot Turks and) inight and today. A UN spokesman here said the posts would be manned mainly by Canadians, He said tain tops around St. Hilarion Castle and in villages on both the sout hern and northern slopes of the Kyrenia range.. New fighting in the 'Kyrenia .Mountains broke out today de- spite the cease-fire announced by the Cypriot government Wed- nesday night unilaterally for the Greek-Cypriot forces. - The UN spokesman and Tur- kish-Cypriots on an "attack or patrol" from St. Hilarion Cas- tle, clashed with Greek-Cypriots during the night. MAY SHOOT BACK Under the UN peace forces operational orders the men lallowed to shoot back if fired | upon, | } | St. Hilarion Castle is a Turk- lish - Cypriot strongpoint over- | | lthe right to practise, is then| they would be located on moun-), |power of subpoena. Amery an- first Jord of the admiralty, thank God, by using to the full the re- sources of nationally owned en- terprises.' firm. would turn its books over |charged with supervision of the| manner in which a doctor prac- |tises his profession, The doers does not have the right, to use| 'NO SECURITY THREAT' to. a special committee ba into the matter. The committe: Ys headed" by" Sir John' Lang, secretary of the admiralty when the contract was negoti- ated. One Labor member at- jtacked Lang's group as "a | stooge committee." Conservatives had planned to at South Bend, Ind., in support|stroyed. I wouldn't. trust them |Counter-attack by accusing La- of his candidacy for the Demo-| mediately. cratic presidential nomination. | Church Slayings Trial Nears Jury © OTTAWA (CP)--The trial of| 18 - year - old Reginald Binette, | charged with the capital mur-| der of Paul Mercier, 24, is | pected to go to an Ontario Su- preme Court jury late today. } Defence counse} Louis Assaly} completed his case Wednesday after calling four psychiatrists All four said Binette is men- tally ill and has been for some time. } Both the Crown and the de- fence sum up their arguments today before Mr. Justice Sam Hughes delivers his charge to the jury. Mercier was one of four per- sons shot to death Dec. 22 in a Roman Catholic Church rectory during an abortive abduction at- tempt b: two youths. Other vic- tims were two women employed at the rectory, and Roger Bi- nette, 22 - year - old brother of *Regina'd, who shot. himself Dr. Claude McKnight, a psy- chiatrist ai the Penetangui- shene hospital where Reginald Rinette was taken fo. observa- tion, told the court in his opin- ion Binette "is suffering from schizophrenia and has been) since at least December, 1962, and perhaps longer." Dr. John Graham of Ottawa Pay Legislation Dissatisties OFL Secretary TORONTO (CP)--The Onta rio government's minimum wage levislation introduced Wednesda, was described as} "too little, too late' by Douglas Hamilton, secretary - treasurer e° the Ontario Federation of Lebor Mr. Hamilton welcomed the minimums for the low wage areas, but maintained $1 an hour for men was inadequate CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 > tary today for brief talks with Prime Minister Pearson on the inter- national Canadian ministers entered.a second day of discussion on joint. economic affairs. the Martin joint economic committee a re- |view of the world situation, He said: he had found such talks a speech la preted as ithe U.S. said Reginald is suffering from schizophrenia and undoubtediy | was a schizophrenic at the time} of the shooting. He repeated the} evidence of two other defence| psychiatrists who quoted a'fan-| tastic plot'? Reginald told them| about in separate interviews. This involveq kidnapping the priest of Christ the King Church! and forcing him to take the Bi- nette brothers to see wealthy men, These men would be robbed, the money to be used foi a bizarre plan to seize brain surgeons and have them plant electronic controls in the brains of important men and women Dr. Graham .said Reginald was so devoted to this plot 'he would have done violence to anyone in his way. He quoted the youth as saying: "Even if my mother had gotten in the way, I woud have done away with her." % RUSK ARRIVES IN with a Sunday school collec- tion."" CENSURE BEATEN But Labor's motion of censure was beaten 302 to 236, a govern- ment majority of 66 The government ordered the Bloodhound in 1957. First de- liveries were made the next year, but the final contract for payment was not negotiated un- til 1960, when the job was two- Boy Slain With Own Jack-Knife HULL, Que. (CP) -- Police said Wednesday night that 11- year-old Rejean St. Denis was stabbed to death with his own knife The schoolboy had taken his hunting knife with him Monday when he went out to play in Fairy Lake Park near his home on the city's southern outskirts. | His body was found there Tues- day He had been stabbed nine times by the knife found by po- lice after a long search which ended late Tuesday. A 17-year-old youth is being held as a material-witness An inquest is expected next Tues- day bor of preparing to nationalize all defence contractors if the party wins power in this fall's elections. | HYDRO BILLING | YIELDS SHOCK LONDON (AP)--Rita Mc- Kend, 24, opened her elec- tric bill for three months and got a shock. Britain's nationalized elec- tricity industry had billed her for £99,999 15 shillings 5 pence--$279,999.35. Rita, a secretary, has small | apartment. "T thought I was seeing things," said- Rita, "and then I knew that I was see- ing them. My head zoomed as if several hundred volts of electricity had hit me." | The electricity board's | bookkeeping depart ment, after inves tigating found | Rita was entitled to a credit | of four shillings seven pence | (63 cents). A spokesman said wasn't a human error, computer made it "It was the first mistake in over 8,000,000 computed accounts,"' he reported. it a After. that) nothing more. was |heard of nationalization. Amery said the government was determined to find out ex- actly what happened and to take steps to prevent its hap- p-ning again. He admitted the profit on the 11960 surface-to-air missile con- tract was by "any standards excessive and unjustified.' But full detalls could not be known juntil the investigating commit- tee. under Sir John Lang, had |studied the Ferranti books and jreported. Labor should wait un- Iti this report.is available "It is possible the Lang .re- port will reveal laxity -- if it |House. will no doubt 'see that appropriate measures are taken," TORONTO (CP) -- A. New Democratic member of the leg- islature learned Wednesday that the government has made grants of almost $40,000 to |sportsman - industrialist E. P. |Taylor during the last two years to encourage thonoughbred |horse-breeding. In reply to a question by Ken Bryden (NDP-Woodbine), the government tabled in the legis- lature a list of the names of all breeders who had received OTTAWA Joint OTTAWA (CP)--State Secre- Dean Rusk arrived here other States situation while and United Mr. Rusk arrived by jet plane at 8:45 a.m. EST and entered the prime minister's office about 45 minutes later. He was expected to spend up to an hour with Mr. Pearson, External Af- fairs Minister Martin and a few advisers from each side Mr. Rusk told airport that would later reporters at he and. Mr. give the 'extremely worthwhile." He was asked to comment on t Saturday by U.S of State George ome have suggesting a form of free trade between Canada and Undersecretary Bal' which inte ¥ Government Pays Taylor Stud Cash ldrugs ol seientifically recog- nized, That is, for the moment, the case with anablast. .. ." Toronto-Man Dies In Car-Bus Crash TORONTO (CP)--A 24-year- j}old'man was killed and his fi- lancee seriously injured when} ltheir small car was in collision| |with a bus Wednesday night. Johan Bernard Bulten was thrown from the drivers' seat of the car onto the street when the| |@ar was pinned against a steel | hydro pole. | 'Jenny Van Zelm, 22, trapped minutes, suffered multiple frac- |tures and head and internal in- ' juries. | {grants of more than $1,000 dur- jing 1962-63 and 1963-64. | The matter came up March 5, | }during consideration of the es- timated expenditures for 1964-65) of the provincial treasurer's de- partment. The estimates in-| jcluded $70,000 for grants to} members of the Canadian Thor-! oughbred Horse Society in On- tario. Provincial Treasurer Allan} said the government makes grants to Ontario breeders on the basis of five per cent of the | purses won on Ontario tracks by Talks Continue Mr. Rusk declined comment but. Mr. Ball, standing nearby, said "that was a very bad in- terpretation of what I said' and walked away. Meanwhile, the joint cabinet committee began its last three- hour session. A communique was to follow in mid-afternoon. Delegates remained officially silent late Wednesday after the first seven hours of talks re- ported to have ranged from in- ternational trade to Great Lakes water levels Ministers from both sides ev- idently reached a pact early in the conference to say nothing to the.press -- they wuld not even mention the topics dis- cussed--until the pos{-meeting briefing is held today, likely in mid-afternoon. However, this known much was Wednesday the ta'k included situation on the Inte Secretary da WAS vater-level Great La Stewar io eportet! o have called for studies on the |Canadian rivers into th elakes, External Affairs Minister Martin told the Commons he too intended to raise the issue. TALK OF TRADE There was further : discussion of the position both countries will take in the "Kennedy round' of tariff-cutting under the General Agreement on Tar- iffs and Trade, opening in Gen- eva Monday, as well as in the United Nations trade and eco- nomic conserence already in progress there. Mr. Udall was believed to have raised--or will today--the question of Canadian action on the U.S, proposal to finance most of the $1,000,000,000 Pas- Samaquoddy power project to harness the Bay. of Fundy tides for power development, In the Commons, . Fisheries minister Robichaud said he ex- pected to have separate discus- sions with Mr. Uda'l on this sub- ject. adding he intended to make clear "that notwithstand- to ensure protection of our fish- eries."' MAY RAISE HEAT Possibly the most heat in the \meeting was likely to be gen- erated by U.S. complaints about the Canadian scheme, inaugur- ated last. year, to boost auto- motive exports to the U.S. by offering. Canadian _manufactur- ers tariff rebates on imports in return for increased sales to American customers. Industry Minister Drury, en- tering the meeting Wednesday, gave reporters a flat "No" when asked whether he thought the Canadian program has dis- rupted U.S. automotive produc- tion. Mr. Drury said the object of|called on the United States gov-| tive the program was to "rational-)ernment Wednesday to re-eval-|son, Churchill's automobile production in|uate its export control system | bodyguard fering ey: The only personsmissittg was} ize"' North America and _ increase the efficiency of the Canadian on trade with Iron Curtain coun-|the star of possi- the pro- making it to. achieve larger-scale producers by ble 'or them economies of duction horses bred by them. The} money did not go to the own- ers, Last year 160 breeders bene-| jfitted from the grants, Mr, Al- lan said, Most of these were not| jeaene persons but "small peo- |ple."' Mr. Bryden put a question on the order paper asking for the} names and amounts of breeders who received grants of more than $1,000 in each of the last two years. The answers: For year ending March 31,| 1963 E, P. Taylor $18,958, | Conklin Farms Limited $4,750, Mrs. R. A. Dew $2.914, Stafford Farms $1,883, E. C. Pasquale $1,762, W. R. Beasley $1,443, Conn Smythe $1,439 and Mrs. F. Maclean $1,277. Ask Government | Ease Trade Bars WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. Chamber of Commerce} and consider easing restrictions tries About 90 per cent of the dele- gates to the annual mecting of the business! organization if eX. Probes WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S, Air Force has investigated more than 8,000 reported uniden- tified flying objects in 16 years "and has yet to discover any evidence that they represent a "threat to U.S. security. It also said today that inves- tigations. of such sightings back to 1947 have failed to turn up any evidence that the objects are "alien interplanetary space vehicles under some form of in- does the government and the|in the crushed car for about 15/tepjigent control." This report was furnished to The Associated Press as the USAF looked into a new epid- emic of strange sightings in the skies over New Mexico. A leadnng civilian consultant has gone' to Socorro, N.M., to investigate the latest reports. He is Dr. J. Allen Hynek, di- rector of the Dearborn Obsery- atory at Northwestern Univer- | sity. The latest report on Project|é Bluebook, the congressionally ordered study of unidentified flying objects, extends through 1963. It shows that in that 16-year span, 7.7 per cent of the 8,128 reported cases have remained]: unidentified. . The air force is not conced- ing that there is anything sin- ister about the unexplained sightings. It just says, in effect, they can't be corrolated with any known objects or pheno- nrena, It was stressed that a "'great majority of the unidentified cases occurred durin gthe first five years of the project,'"' be- Finest Hour LONDON (CP)--A cavalcade of one-time warriors, diplomat and just plain friends of Sir Winston Churchill trooped into US. Air Force Winnie' Misses | UFO's fore analysis techniques were sharpened. Last year. there were 382 uni- dentified flying objects reported and only 15 are still listed as| unidentified. | These include 'two objects described as an ear of corn and a banana (which) performed a series of manoeuvres near Van- diia, Ohio' last Sept. 15. Others involved "an unusual observation of four pink wheels" moving west over New Jersey, an object that exploded into a ball of fire near St. Ga- len, Switzerland, and a recur- ring series of flashes near War- looking the strategic road north from Nicosia to. Kyrenia. AUN. spokesman said the fighting was still going on at 8:30 a.m. ~ He said Greek-Cypriots on tht southern slopes also opened fire downhill on a Canadian pa- trol of the UN force in the Turk- ish-Cypriot village of Aghiroz. A Swedish UN patrol in south- ern Cyprus Wednesday traded shots wjth Greek-Cypri- ots during .a Turkish-Cypriots in the village of Timi, No casualties were Tre ported, the spokesman Both the UN and the Turkish- Cypriots said they were not in- formed in advance of the Cyp- riot government cease-fire an- nouncement. ' Greek-Cypriots said they had achieved their objective in Kyrenia area and Turkish "% surgents" had ceased to bé A threat there. we Bad Back Beds Judy LaMarsh | OTTAWA .(CP)--Health Min ister Judy LaMarsh. is' under- going treatment in the. TrisServ- 'ice ital here for an.undi- agnosed back ailment. i The 39-yearedid Niagara Falls lawyer has been in pain for the last two weeks and entered the hospital Wednesday. for obser- vation. and treatment, Her office said today it Is not known how long she will have to remain in the hospital, a de- fence department establishment which handles military person- nel. Miss LaMarsh was @ wars time member of the Canadian Women's Army Corps. Government sources, mean- while, discounted a published report that Miss LaMarsh had handed in her resignation to Prime Minister Pearson and the prime minister had con- vinced her to stay in office. The report said Miss LaMarsh was dissatisfied by changes in the Canada Pension Plan and the fact that the pension legis- lation had been removed from renville, If. her list of responsibilities. the Royal Festival Hall Wea-| nesday night to watch the world premiere of The Finest Hour, a film version of Churchill's life. The guest of honor was Prince} Philip, but the spotlight con- centrated on the great names of} 20 years ago -- Ismay, Slim,| Dowding and Eden, Lady Churchill with Mrs. was was there, Christopher Soames; so 73-year-old former detec- inspector Walter Thomp-| much-harassed| film himself.| Churchill, 909 in Novembe r,| could not attend the opening but} saw. the documentary privately two weeks ago a' his home in ing the importance of the de-| ;He said that in his opinion pressed': approval. on, a voice|Chartwell and gave it his seal , gy enn: of diverting northernivelopment mentioned, we wish|the scheme is working. | a vote. ' \ of approval. Ry her daughters Sarah and|§ TOGETHERNESS This Laotian boy wearing soldier's cap. was said to be lost in an emergency reftigee camp at the airport near Vien- tiane, Laos, early this. week. He may have. lost his family but he still. has. his pet. dog, The camp Houses soldiers if detention since the recent coup in Laos and refugees az riving from Plaine Des Jarres after new fighting broke ont there. ~ -CAP ' Wirephoto via radio from . Tokyo) & y ef but fiercs gunbattle between =