Weather Report Mainly cloudy with occasional showers overnight and Satur- day. Not much change in tem- perature, Thought For Today Remember 'when a teenager went to the garage and came out with a lawn mower? | -- e . | Oshawa Cunes QUEEN'S PARK T0 PRO ONTARIO HUMAN RIGH Inquiry Springs From Cass Bill ~~ TORONTO (CP) -- Premier|upon the principles of the orig- Robarts announced today thes Great Charter.'"' Envoys Rap s | UN Inaction has appointed a royal Premier Robarts said the | sion to undertake "'an exhaus-| questions he had outlined were UNITED NATIONS (AP) ~ \tive inquiry" into civil liberties |far above partisan. politics, Any. Diplomats said Thursday that) anq-human rights in Ontario. jaction that resulted from the Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy VOL. 93 -- NO. 103 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1964 TWENTY PAGES. | Russia Unveils 'New Missiles | At May Parade By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS|Defence Minister Marshal Ro-|U.S, imperialist policies of ag- 'The Communist world held|dion Y. Malinovsky warned that/gression and war." its annual May Day observ-|the Russians are strong enough) Chou urged the peoples of ances today with massive out-jto smash any attacking impe-| Asia and Latin America to rally pourings .of people in Moscow |rialist: state. ltegether and said: 'The' united and Peking and the usual tough} Red China's Premier Chou|front against U,S. imperialism talk 'about the invincibility of|En-lai told a reception for 1,300]is steadily expanding and we communism. |foreign visitors on the eve of the| hall unite ever more closely But the great schism between/big rally in Peking's main and continue for the victory of the Soviet Union and Red China| square that his country -- our common cause." cast its shadow over the galajwin its quarrel with the Rus- i : me or celebrations. The Russians re-|sians and other Communist jaar tbe voriuae 90 fused to attend the Peking rally | critics. | co ' aod withdrew an invitation to a) Boasting of China's new)?2¢-tung, Marx, Engels, Lenin Chinese labor delegation to view|strength, Chou also lashed out/@Nnd Stalin, the annual parade in Moscow's|against the United States, de-- Communist Chinese gunners Red Square. clar'ng: were ovdered to halt their on- East Germany, Bulgaria,) "A new upsurge has appeared|of* artillery ~bombardment of Cyprus Fight PP Hungary and Czechoslovakia/in the struggle of the people of the offshore Nationalist Chinese at. least four countries told the) Mr. Robarts said the single|royaj joined the Sovi in their boy-|the whole world against the|islands. eott of the Peking festivities. Many non -/Communist coun- tries also h May Day cele- brations to hor their labor force, But there were few such) activities in the United States) and Canada where labor's big holiday occurs) in September. The Soviet Union unveiled a} new anti + aircraft twin rocket) 3 during a parade through Red) TORONTO (CP) -- Education, Square in which tens of thous-|Minister Davis indicated Thurs- ands of soldiers and workers|day the government may look problem of finding room for stu- marched, Western observ-jinto the legitimacy of private|dents in university and could Govt. May | Probe Matric Schools He told the legislature such college z ers said the 2-foot rocket -ap-| schools offering short-euts to se-|answer the demand for more} Sco. ll seins peared te be for field use nior matriculation. |technical, vocational and indus- against planes at medium or; Mr. Davis, replying to ques-|ttial skills. low altitudes. ing by Premier Khrush-|knows personally of two or|)made no comment in the leg-/ ltihree persons who had been/islature but said later he had |misied by advertisements of|been to California and Florida correspondence schools. But the |to investigate similar ia @ | Hands Off Cubans - | KToUS. | MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Soviet Premier Khrushchev warned) the United States today that) threats to Cuba and continued } ltions in the legislature, said he) Education Minister Davis in those_ states. jhe department of education had} nothing to do with the policing) or regulation of such schools. | "Perhaps it is an area that we should take some look at," told Robert Nixon Brant). A. B. R. Lawrence (PC--Rus-} {i WANTS DEPARTMENT Mr, Lawrence said the gov-| ernment should establish a de-| partment of senior education to} handle the proposed new col-| |leges. | Their courses would provide} would help solve the}; le | | United Nations of their concern jcommissioner will be Chief Jus- TWIN ROCKETS ROLL THROUGH RED SQUARE over new' fighing in Cyprus be-itice J, C. McRuer of the Su- fore UN officials spoke out/preme Court of Ontario. The [senate it. |premier described the chief jus- | The four 'were Canada, Tur-|tice as being . "eminently |key, the United States and Brit- ain. \quiry, News dispatches from Cyprus! In his statement to the legis- said Greek-Cypriots started anilature Mr. indicated offensive Saturday against Tur-|that the establishment of the kish-Cypriots holding St. Hila-\ro yal commission emanates rion Cagtle in the Kyreniajfrom the public controversy Mountains. \caused by the governmert's But Indian Lt. - Gen. Prem|Bill 99. He said: Singh Gyani, commander of the| 'In the debates of recen equipped" to conduct the in-) commission could have far-reaching effects on the peo- ple of Ontario. |_ "They are not matters to be jdealt with in the heat of polit- jical partisanship but should be jbrought under the close seru- tiny and cool judgment of the judicial. mind," he said, Kicked Out UN peace-keeping force, waited}weeks concerning a it until Tuesday to issue state-|te the Police Act, I assured the ments against the offensive. legislatute and the people of UN SecretaryGeneral Uj|Ontario that I personally, and | | OTTAWA (CP) -- Treasury; , Secretary Douglas) Dillon sug-|at a press conference following ington Threatens |Thant on' Wednesday, followed|the government which I have |up Gyani's statement with a re-|the honor to head will not for port to the Security Council crit-/one moment tolerate legislati ical of the Greek-Cypriot attack,|which infringes upon or jeop; A member of the Canadian |dizes in any way the rights Flying Home PARIS (Reuters) --' Vasily jtion, Retaliation On Tariffs Mr. Dillon made the remarks concern of the U.S. administra-|ing with UN officials and their|testify: in secret about crime, | delegation said Canada had told|freedom of the individual." A, | UN officials of its concern both|ny LED BY HOUSE before and after the Greek-| Section 14 of Bill 99, which} added vigor afterward." He said|tario Police Commission to im- the Canadians had been discuss-| prison persons who refused to |Tarasov, the Russian reporter ordered expelled from Canada, .|arrived here today by plane pfrom Montreal, Cypriot action started but "with) would have empowered the On-|,, Tarasov, 36, who works for the Soviet government newspa- per Izvestia, had his visa. can- celled Tuesday after Canadian colleges to provide up to three) years of education beyond) |Grade 12. a ' |Grade 13, and in some cases up|... t 70- joi U.S. sel s Ontario es-| : UPlsested Thursday the U.S. may|the two-day joint re gaging peinaeiad nd second-year university eauiv-|Secide to seek "'equivalent con-|cabinet committee meeting on jalent, for students who wanted) cessions" if Canada goes ahead|trade and economic affairs. It |to continue on in. university | with its proposed tariff mreas-|was the ninth such meeting since Also included would be com-|yres designed to protect Cana-\the committee was set up in |mereial, vocational, industrial, qian magazine from American|1953 and cnother is to be held pera neha airspace by. re- 'was Day luncheon for foreign guests' who had.earlier stood with him to watch a massive display of Soviet rockets and armor across Square. He said the Soviet Union is jtechnical and home economics) competition. within a year, thougiriao date \training and general liberal arts) Meanwhile,he said the,Amer-|hag yet "been 'set. i bate ) jean import quotas on Cahadian| se meeting -anparen¥iy- ipro- lead and zinc -- against \whichiduced a stand-off on whatnow Canada has protested for sev-ihas become the most }trouple- Mr. Davis said (nat a special c ittee is ¢ idering e However, questioning to say whether he) effective. jfelt the Canadian program jamounted to an export subsidy, ja' step which some feel would! |be a breach of the General 'Agréement)on Tariffs and . and. could gpen~the }U.S. "to inypdése counterva' nd. Chief 8 | this week. delegations ways to make the|was killed by the legislature he declined under) peace - keeping operation more External Af fai rs-Minister Martin took the matter up with Thant Thursday of last week clegate-Paul. Trem- a' tblay add olhers had faiks about ~ We act Frfday and every ante | authorities said he was. caught trying to get a, federal civil servant to give him details of disclosed industrial pr 5 Airline officials in Paris saiq they booked pasages for Mo- ' elationsip wetween the|cow, for Tarasov, his wife and goverhment andgthe people, arid guarantees gh liberties | ty last month, Attorney -,-General Cass, who introduced the bill, resigned. < Premier Rob& rts. said it seed Vthely 0 examine the duties on Canadian. auto idea of doing aWay with prov- ince-wide departmental exami- nations for Grade 13 students, except for those interested in scholarships. | For Ripping Voter's List eral years--are to be re-studied|some economic issue fbetween and, while he could not) fore-|the two countries: the Canadian cast the result, he was "'hope-|auto manufacturers; by increas- ful there could be some in the present situation." ; earn tarif{-rebates on gn equiv- alent volume of imported Amer- change|ing exports to the U.S., ,can| Pentagon Backs ministrative their investigative> striving for peaceful coexistence) OTTAW/'. (CP)--Justice Min- between states with different|ister Favreau said Thursday in-| social systems but some states-|Vestigations are being made to) men p te ij d stand|See whether there is any way to) this as being confined to the|S¢t free an Indian who has been) safeguarding of peace between|it a Quebec jail since last May| big nations. jfor tearing down a voters' list. Khrushchey declared they| He told Gerard Laprise (Cre- think one could still threaten|ditiste--Chapleau) in the Com-| small countries, not their sovereignty or interfere in| cipyj their domestic affairs. Russia would net-accept this and "will 58-year-old former resi- dent of the Huronia who tarry out such a policy, he said. eral justice department. Lady Astor Said Close To Death LONDON (AP}--Nancy Lady| "TE love politics and I love a Astor, the Virginia beauty fight," she once said. whose tongue became the ter- ror of the British House of Com- mons, was reported near death great aversion, today. She. is. 4. "My mother is sinking fast," said her 'son, the third Viscount) Ae 3 eS Lady Astor sin 1919 became |, -ghipition, aig "Abe el enter the} Churehill, most other members, to speak to her for years after she ent-red the: House. Later she asked him why, "Madam," he replied, 'Super Baby' Girl Born To Margaret respect 5 "as Jules) LONDON--Princess Margaret; The bulletin was signed by "tgs sal oem ion, birth today to a girl, the!Sir John Peel, Dr. Vernon Hall, jsecond child for the Queen's sis-|anaesthetist John Brudenell and reserve|ter and her husband. actively fight" against those/"ear Quebec City, had not been} It's marvellous news," said . formally brought before the fed-|Lord Snowdon--former society |ing | photographer princess, Antony | Arm-|called early to the . jstrong - Jones, husband of the|at the palace. | Women's rights. were her jgreat crusafle and drink her| "you "She' looks a super baby." The Queen's sister and Snow- don already are parents of a son, Viscount Linley, born in November, 1961. Snowdon said both mother and child were doing well. }. The baby was the fourth royal birth this year. Earlier, Prin- cess Alexandra, the Queen's cousin, had a boy, the Queen herself had a boy and the Duch- ess of Kent, wife of Alexandra's brother, had a girl Tuesday For 25 years the Commons|night. enjoyed her affectionate feud) Margare"s baby takes sev- with Winston Churchill, no fer- vent admirer o: feminists orjcession to the throne, displac- jenth place in the.line of suc- ing the Duke of Gloucester, an in common with|Ucle of the 33-year-old prin- refused |€°SS- The birth was announced in an Official bulletin from Ken- singtén Palace, where Margaret|two major airlines have been/the discussions, The transportiworth of automotive supplies and Snowdon live. The bulletin said: ican cars and parts. Mr. Dillon told reporters that 14 or 15 U.S. auto-parts manu- facturers feel their business has been da d by this e and it could result in unemploy- ment in their plants. Hence the) | HAROLD BANKS | FOUND GUILTY MONTREAL (CP) -- Hal C. Banks, deposed presi- dent of the Seafarers' In- ternational Union of Canada (ind.), today was found guilty. of conspiring to wound,. maim or disfigure Capt. Henry Francis Walsh, Dr. Ronald Bodley Scott. It was a brilliant spring morn- when the doctors were apartment Snowdon had been. up since| early morning when the doctors were summoned by midwife Sister Anne Thomson. another union official, in H vaited downstairs -| 1957. tnd Y ee ae cal Judge Celaude Wagner fixed May 5 as the date for sentence. | Thén Sir John Peel came out| Of the room and told him he had a daughter. | Order CP,TCA To Co-operate OPTAWA (CP) -- Canada's)ate up all the time alloted for asked to cut out their duplica-|minister later read the state- jtion' in the international field|ment to reporters in: his offic Canada\On Parts WASHINGTON (CP) -- The[$33,)00,000, U.S. defence department has/thay Canada incurred a deficit thrown its support behind Can-jin is trade of anywhere from ada, rejecting the contention of |$400))00,000 to mere than $500,- Senator Vance Hartke that Can-/000:090 in 1963," the department ada is engaging in unfair nF gay oa petition through encouragement; '"'Ca padian importation of ve- of domestic production of auto-|hicles 'and automotive parts mobiles and parts. \from' the U.S, continues 'to be The Indiana Democrat wrote|the larges(.single item in Can- President Johnson last month | ada's bilateral trade with the claiming Canada's automotive|U.S. and the \Jargest factor in tariff-rebate plan has led to/the imbalance jin Canada's cur- heavy layoffs in U.S. auto parts|rent accounts," the department plants while the Pentagon con-\adds. tinueq- to place large defence} "The fact remains |&U | Mr, -Robarts said" he Santed ja close study of means that can be devised, or strengthened, to rantee no infringement on civil rights. STUDY PUBLIC DEFENDER The royal commission "would study the desirability of 'creat- ing a public defender or of de- veloping a compretensive civil rights code. Another alternative might be \"'the adaptation of the Cana- \dian Bill of Rights in relation to the powers of our province," the premier said. "In short, we may require a Magna Carta of our own based Minister Reveals _ TORONTO (CP) -- Amend- ments to the Ontario Labor Re- lations Act have been an- nounced by Labor Minister Rowntree. They were given first reading in the legislature Wednesday. One change would speed up the provision of government conci- liation services in contract dis- putes by granting the minister power to distribute the services, now exercised by the Ontario Labor Relations Board. contracts in Canadian factories. Hartke appealed to Johnson to' slash Pentagon orders in Canada. The president promptly turned over the senator's letter to -Defence Secretary Robert MeNamara. i The defence department has not made a public ) announce- ment of its position, However, a copy of a department. letter, now on its way to' the Senate, has. come to the attention «of The Canadian Press. ~ lh. this letter, the department says it found no evidence that Catiada's automotive plan is having any perceptible effect on cross-border trade in military | popekes. Moreover, epee: it estimated Can-| . lada imported about $550,000,000 and equipment from the U.S. st year. made me feel as if a woman had entered my. bathroom, and I had. nothing fo. protect myself with except a sponge." f Between the wars' she was hostess to the great names of " > vin epee Maroaret |and operate under a single, in- The Pfincess Margaret, eatuted: plan; Countess of Snowdon, was " safely delivered of a daughter) 2 ¢ orders came from a new " gdvernment air policy, handed) at 8:20 a.m. today. Her Royal " | ; "hi "i, /f0 the heads of. Trans-Canada eae are dee omlid are: Bott Air Lines and Canadian Pacific a "In the international field, air! with Canadian shipments to services provided by Canadian|jne U;S. amounting to less than airlines should serve the Cana-| dian interest as a whole; these} services should not be Pompe:| titive .r conflicting, but hould British' polities at Cliveden, . the Astor. family's estate west of London. Some Britons. viewed the Cliveden Set "as a government within the government, the real source Of policy in the years that led. tothe Second World War, The group was popularly supposed to favor co-operation with the 'Axis: and oppose col- Taboration: with Rus sia, but) 'tly' Astor called this "a myth ter Pearson said Thursday that finventéd by 'the Communists." lif the' Commons does ngt make| During: the. war She~turned|more .progress with Jegislation| thé immense Thames-side man-|thar it has so far thig Session,| No Progress Says Pearson |sion into a 1,600-bed* hospital for|the "House may "have to' sit] | Canadian 'soldiers. jthrough the summer' without a | Lady Astor was the daughter|holiday. } of Chiswell Dabney Langhorne}. The subject camé up in the POLICE 725-1183 FIRE: DEPT. 425-6574 'HOSPITAL 723-2211 "Charlies Dana Gibson and was)the of Greenwood, Va. She and her|question period when Eugene four sisters were known 4$ the/Rheaume (PC--Nérthwest Ter- "five: beautiful Langhorne sis-lritories) asked when legislation ters." Otte mafried. the artist) would be introddced to set up promised Indian ithe model for the Gibson girl. |commission; wt } No Holiday |TCA and privately-owned CPA, | OTTAWA (CP)--Prime /Minis-| well, [Airlines Monday and publicly jannounced Thursday night by |Transport Minister Pickersgill, | The result could mean com- |plete amalgamation of the over-| seas services of publicly-owned by amalgamation, by partner- Ship or 'by a clear division of} fields of opération," | | Then, he antrounced the do- jmestic policy: | "In the. domestic mainline} field, while the principle of! competition is' not rejected, any| How they do it, said Mr. Pick-\developmei't of competi-| ersgill; has been left up tojtion should not compromise or them, What they decide to do/seriously injure: the. economic under the basic government|viability 9' TCA's mainline do- principles "is almost certain to|mesti¢ operations which repre- be agreeable to the govern-|sent the essential framework -of ment," jits network of doméstic 'serv- No deadline for the agree-jices. i ment was set, but*the transport, 'In other wortls, .there, must minister.thought that "'very con-|not be the kind of competition siderable clarification" could be|which would. put TCA into the! expected by the end of May. jred; and, in the event that] Mr. Pickersgill-wasyto havejcompetition continves, the Air announced the new air polley in/Transpert Board should. ensure the Commons during the .ad-jan 'ojportuhity for growth to| or they might maintain their present identities and - co-oper- ate under their existing colors. claims|journment debates. But a pre-/both lines above this basic min-| whether Miss LaMarsh had ol- broke out. andjimum."* |fered her resignation, cedural wrangle LaMarsh Away represent a single integrated| plan, which could' be poe About. 7 Days OTTAWA (CP)--Health Minis- ter Judy LaMarsh, undergoing hospital treatment' here' for a back ailment, is expected to: be away from her desk for at least another week, it was reported Thursday : night. | Miss .LaMarsh, 39, had been| in pain for two weeks when she entered the Tri Service Hospital| -- Wednesday for observation. and treatment. ; Officials. said Thursday. night the exact nature of\the ailment Still wa:: not known. : Earlier Thursday,,. Alan - Macnaughton as the Opposition learn. from Peavson in speaker intervened sought | to Prime. Minister the Comm ons HANDS REACH OUT ed injuriés 'to. his. left foo ~ and right leg: 'He was work- ing; in-a (15-foot, diteh. with Bobby Lee. Ray,.21, also. of Emest Meers, 29,- centre, is shown. being - rescued | after having been. trapped" for © 45 minutes' in a cave-in-Thurs- day, Meers. of Atlanta, suffer- Atlanta. Ray -was' not hurt, The accident occurred. in thé Southwest section of the city, (AP Wirephoto)>