Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 May 1964, p. 1

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»_, foreign day Thought For Today ' Love is like a mushroom -- you never know what you've got until it's too late. VOL. 93 -- NO. 112 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1964 he Oshawa Time Weather Report Scattered thundershowers over- night and Wednesday morning. Cooler with sunny periods Wed- nesday afternoon. Authorized os Second Class Maj! Post Office Department Ottewa and for payment of Postage in Cosh. TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES U.S. Warns NATO To Prepare For New Red Threat THE HAGUE -- US. State/latest world trouble spot--the;not expect to gain from a policy Secretary Dean Rusk today|South Arabian federation--also| of militancy." : warned NATO to adapt itself to) are expected to be discussed. Dirk Stikker, retiring secre- meet the Communist threat! Rusk, honorary chairman of|tary-general of NATO, told the coming in 'more diversified|/the meeting, told the opening) meeting that the alliance has and more sophisticated forms.' session that NATO's successful| reached a new and challenging He said the 15-year-old North| defence of the Atlantic Commu-|phase in its history and the Atlantic Treaty Onganization nity "has somewhat deflected) whole future of mankind may must adapt to a. situation "in| the Communist threat against depend on how it discharges its which the cohesive element in| Europe itself." | widening responsibilities toward the alliance must depend upon! «The Communists are con-|the rest of mankind. | something more than an immi-|centrating their expansionist ef-|. Stikker also warned the min- nent military threat." lforts on other areas of the|!Sters that it would be unwise Rusk spoke at the opening of) worig. |to derive too much comfort the three-day spring meeting of) jfrom the current NATO's council of foreign min-| HITS RED TACTICS | dispute. isters. | "Tt is essential to the security| 'The Sino-Soviet dispute is an The session is expected to dis-|of the free world that aggres-|argument not about ends but cuss many key issues, including|sion be eradicated--aggression| about means. They are arguing a call from the United State|everywhere by whatever means/about the best way to bury us." for public support, both moral|including subversion, terror, in-| Stikker spoke of pressures on and military, for the war/filtration of arms and trained|Western positions and interests against the Viet Cong in South|men and guerrilla warfare. It|which have multiplied all over Viet Nam. lis essential that Communists|the free world--in Southeast Cyprus, Cuban trade and the! eveywhere learn that they can-|Asia, in Latin America, in Af- V ie tn Ai d B 1 d COMMON DEFENCE URGED Faces Ministers Dutch Foreign Minister Jos- eph Luns stressed the import- ance for NATO of integrated defence and common political concepts. "Without broad agréement on THE HAGUE (Reuters)-The annual spring meeting of the Atlantic Pact opened here today with discussion expected on Cu- ban trade, Cyprus, the war in South Viet Nam and rebel activ- Sino-Soviet France, which has proposed the neutralization of South Viet Nam with the help of Commun- torn by strifé on racial lines. Speaking at the opening ses- sion of the conference, Stikker Integrationists lie on the ground as Maryland National Guardsmen. move in after tear DEMONS TRATORS gas grenades burst over their heads. The demonstration oc- curred shortly after Alabama T BAY governor George C. Wallace spoke to supporters of his Civil Rights stand. --AP Wirephoto Take 92 MANILA (AP) -- Ninety-two] UK, U.S. Crashes Lives the wreckage and another two died in hospital. | Ten Perish In Crossing Crash MESA,.. Ariz' (AP). --.' Two women and eight children were | killed Monday when a Southern Pacific express train sliced |their station wagon in half at a West Blind To Problems Prober Says MONCTON, N.B. (CP) -- An- dre Laurendeau, co - chairman of the royal commission on bi- lingualism and _ biculturalism, | Oshawa By GEOFF HUSSEY Metro Toronto detectives to- day arrested an Oshawa man in the police station here in con- nection with the wounding of a Don Mills building contractor | Said Monday English-speaking |Canadians, especially in the | West, do not appear to under- |stand clearly the need for the {royal commission. | Mr. Laurendeau, editor - in - |chief of Montreal Le. Devoir, jtold a press conference the ;main immediate reaction of | English-speaking Canadians at |commission hearings seemed to |be that "everything is fine, there is no problem." Commission members accom- panying Mr. Laurendeau said |newspapers. generally have been exact and sympathetic in faithfully reporting royal com- mission proceedings. and an eight-year-old girl in a wild shooting incident Monday, Gregory Shevachenko, in his early 50's, 881 Myers street, jwalked into the Oshawa: Police |station this morning with his |minister - interpreter, Rev. R. Ponchenko, of St. John's Ukrain- ian Greek Orthodox Church. Ponchenko, speaking for the mild-mannered plumber, said the story of the shootings and threatening "are full of baloney. "Mr, Shevachenko says these things are completely untrue and he wants to get the whole thing straightened out." Oshawa. lawyer Tom. Greer Said the two men came to his FANNY HILL IN COURT No Test: TORONTO (CP)--Chief Jus- tice Dana Porter said Monday corruption of children:is not a test of a book's obscenity. He was speaking on an ap- peal 'filed ene bovkstores following an obscenity ruling of the novel Fanny Hill by County Court Judge E. L. Weaver ear- Child's Reaction Judge of a book on childrn or those of immature mind. "No one knows, Otherwise everyone would be confined to reading children's books," the judge said. The case, regarded as a key one in the field of censorship, continues today. The court agreed that the CITY MAN ARRESTED: N METRO SHOOTING Surrenders To Police office today and he advised Shevachenko to give himself up to the police. Mr. Greer. said he has made arrangements for bail in Toron- to -- "If it is to be allowed." The shooting occurred in front of Leo Herdoon's home in sub- urban Don Mills. A shot, believed to be from a rifle, was fired from a pickup truck and grazed Hardoon and an_ eight-year-old girl, Emily McLaughlin, who lives next door. They suffered minor wounds, The sniper then leaped from the truck and chased Hardoon into his home. He followed Hardoon upstairs, threatened to shoot the three Hardoon children, then re treated to his truck and drove off. Police said the shooting was a result of a business disagres- ment with Hardoon. : The incident occurred while Hardoon was watching several children playing on the lawn. Norman Rothschild, 14, said: "The man was screaming and swearing when he ran into the house. He went inside.and came out about 20 seconds later." Simma Godfrey was in the front bedroom of the Hardoon home, looking after their baby boy: x Race Violenes: issin ' ' - Z : ist China. ats persons are dead or missing} victim was an|Cossing about 244 miles south|/!¢* this year. | | affirmed their conviction that a} fair solution based on self-de-| Stil | B Secretary Dean Rusk. sive--issues to come before the Tr cS, Greeks Rusk was pumping for NATO|meeting was the American: bid| in the hall where The Nether-| lands Parliament stages its for-| discussed by Rusk in individual|spring ministerial meeting meetings with foreign ministers|opened here. ministers started Sun- and culminated Mon-| 36 axpected to come fromigether for peace on the island, TORONTO (CP) -- A McGill University scientist said Mon- attended bythe United States,| the objective and the policies of France, Britain and West Ger-|the Western world our neces- many, |sary solidarity would weaken," The four governments re-|he said. ity in southern Arabia. terminatien would be found to The three-day, 15-nation min-/be the problem of Germany. isterial session convened under; One of the most important-- the chairmanship of 'U.S. State|and potentially the most explo- backing for the war against the/to seek NATO backing for the| To Co-operate Communist Viet Cong guerrillas'war in South Viet Nam in the! in South Viet Nam.- form of public support, both} THE HAGUE (CP --Th Today's meeting, which began/moral and military, | gnawing probiem of Cudide ane This was one of the key topics|mentioned today when NATO's mal opening, was preceded by two days of hectic diplomatic!nefore the begnning of the full] Dirk Stikker, retiring secre- activity. NATO ession. tary-general, i : 'cian , |tary-general, issued' what was The private talks fen) The main opposition to sup-jinterpreted as an appeal to ight \port forthe. American position|Greece and Turkey to work to- day night with a 34-hour dinner Orbit Object | day Canada may become the first country to fire a satellite into orbit from a gun. Dr. Gerald V. Bull, originator of the university's High Altitude) Greeks and Turks to submerge|nonsense. A blow to the American plan| was struck Monday when De-| fence Secretary Robert McNam- ara failed to win West German public support for the war in a meeting with Defence Minister Kai-uwe Von Hasse and Chan- cellor Ludwig Erhard. in Bonn. Another key issue will be the degree to which the NATO coun- cil discusses the Cyprus ques- j|tion--which involves two NATO partners, Greece and Turkey. Behind the scenes, leading statesmen sought to bring NAT) authority to bear on the 7 Pearson Slams following four military plane} 'The other | crashes around the world. Most) American serviceman riding in} of the victims were American|a taxi which the plane struck) military personnel, | Defeatist Talk' 'Against Unity | OTTAWA (OP)--Prime Minis-| ter Pearson saiqd Monday that current '"'defeatist talk" about the future of Canada and its parliamentary in's ti tutions is }supersonic fighter, crashed in the Philippines today but the |pilot parachuted to safety. | \o Manila, A fifth plane, a U.S. Air Force! The four fatal crashes oc-| urred Monday in the Philip-| pines, off Spain, in southern England and in Alabama. At Clark Air Base north of a US. military air trnsport jetliner with 83 per- sons aboard crashed short of a runway and burst into flames.) |C-135, the air force version of| Research Project in Barbados,)their animosities for the com-| Speaking to a 'group of 243 told the Canadian Aeronautics)mon good. The would-be con-|high school students from and Space Institute's annuallcjjiators hoped to arrange alacross Canada who are taking meeting that previous non-orbi-| meeting between the Greek and|part in the Rotary Club's an- tal shots have been considered/Tyrkish foreign niinisters, Stav-|nual Adventure in Citizenship, successful. ros Kostopoulos and Feridun/the prime minister said: Studies show it is theoretically|Cemal Erkin. "There is a great deal of neg- possible to put a 100-pound pay-| Kostopoulos told Rusk, Can-jative criticism in Canada today load into orbit by firing it from/ada's Paul Martin and others|about the decline of our parlia- a 16-inch naval gun, he said. |that Greece opposes any discus-|mentary institutions. We are Dr. Bull said such a method)sion of Cyprus inside NATO. Helalso subjected to defeatist talk of launching would be inexpen-| was echoing the view of Cyprus|that our- citizenship will not sive enough to allow Canada a| President Makarios, the Greek-|stand up to the problems that more active and independent!Cypriot leader. are before us. role in space research. Erkin, however, vowed that) 'This is nonsense, Our young Total cost of 84 non-orbit shots) he would bring the Cyprus issue|Canadians will be equal to the to be completed by the end of|before the council. He said Tur-|test, just.as they were equal to July will be in the neighborhood|key had stood about all it could/the problems of founding Con- of $1,000,000, compared with the|from certain powers which| federation." $15,000,000 cost of launching Can-\claimed to be allied but which Calling Canada "'a great ad- ada's first satellite, Alouette,/he said had shown neither good- venture in nationhood," the with United States rocket and|will nor support for the Turkish-| prime minister told the students missile range facilities. Cypriot minority. that its future depends on them. UN ACTS TO AVERT REVENGE SLAYINGS Famagusta Sealed Off NICOSIA (AP)--Irish troops|shut down as a result of the "We were on the way out] A Turkish Army contingent | of the UN peace force sealed|shooting which the Greek gov-|when armed Turks (Cypriots) jcame under fire once but no one | Seventy-three persons died in LUGS 'N' THUGS | BUG WHITTON | OTTAWA (OP)--Baseball is played by "big lugs" and "big thugs," Mayor Ohar- lotte Whitton said Monday night, and she doesn't want it played in city parks on Sundays. She won her point as the city's recreation and parks committee rejected a pro- posal by Recreation Com- missioner Ralph Dulude that he be allowed to issue permits for Sunday use of city ball diamonds, off the old walled Turkish areajernment denounced as "cold-|stopped us and ordered us out! was hit. of Famagusta today to prevent blooded Turkish murder." of the car," said Capt. Panayio-| Haat ' Greek-Cypriot revenge for the) Most Greek - Cypriot docks|tis Tarsoullis, 38, 'Three Turks | wave of aa 'ate fa Fama slaying of two Greek Army of-|workers, fearing they mightlin uniform and a Civilian all gusta. A Turkish-Cypriot riding| ficers and a Greek - Cypriotjcome under fife from thejarmed with submachine gun|, scooter was badly wounded. | youth leader. nearby Turkish quarter, stayed| opened fire at us without giv-lGreeK - Cypriots seized seven A UN spokesman said 10| away from the waterfront. Tur-|ing us a chance." |Turkish-Cypriots See TurkishCypriots were reported|kish-Cypriot dock workers all; Tarsoullis said he was not poles * oo missing in the Famagusta area.|stayed off the job, armed. e po Begg Irish UN contin- Most of them were known to) Fearful of an influx of armed BELIEVE ALL FIREI gt ait ed ag the main gates have been taken hostage by|men, the UN set up roadblocks Ho i ty i os ; Bs ie Se ges quarter after un- Greeks after Monday's. shooting] on all approaches to both Greek _ ate bel = eadquarters _ inmed reports that the in which a third Greek officer|and Turkish sectors of Fama- said it elieved all four men|Greek - Cypriot national guard) was wounded and a Turkish-/ gusta were Areed and that evidence|had mobilized north of the Cypriot killed in the cross-fire.. All roads between the mod- gathered by Irish tropps indi-/walled city to attack. POLICE 725-1133 Secretary FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 5 y Outside the Turkish sector,jern Greek sector and the Turk- abi 'er had fired, heheh aes, a. Famagusta, biggest and busiest|ish quarter, hidden alle sepa a i who had sources in Ankara said 14 more port on Cyprus, virtually wasisive walls 50 feet high, were) we : e. Greek nationals will be deserted except for patrolling!. Turkish sources said that dur-|pelled from Turkey soon_ be- UN troops. armed with machine.|i"8 the shooting an aged Turk|cause they were CITY EMERGENCY | guns. drinking coffee in a shop near matte rs "detrimental to na-| the gate was shot dead. tional interests." They said! PHONE NUMBERS SzeELts or arrack It was, the first time the|Most of the 14 owned industrial The wounded survivor of|Greek Army garrison on the is-/Plants in Istanbul. Monday's shooting said he and|land has suffered casualties in| Meanwhile, UN his three companions drove into the Turkish quarter by mistake lin Civilian clothes but in 'Greek Army Car. |Cypriots, officer in Cyprus, r as it headed for the runway, the} air force said, The eight perso who survived the crash were in| hospital. The Filipino cab) driver and another American} passenger in the taxi also were in hospital. Aboard the four ms on board) engined the Boeing 707, were nine air| force men, a flight nurse, 48) air force passengers, 19 navy; men, four coast guardsmen and) two Nationalist Chinese. CAUSE UNKNOWN "T don't think anybody knows what caused this thing," an-air force spokesman said. No indication of distress came from the pilot as he brought the big jet in from Hawaii. Landing in a rainstorm, the plane struck a 42 foot antenna- like aircraft navigation aid just inside the base fence, hit the taxi on a road running along the base perimeter and broke up in flames. The C-135 was on a troop air- lift mission from Travis Air Base, Calif. In the other fatal crashes: A 24-hour air and sea search failed to find the 10 crew mem- |bers of a U.S. Navy long-range patrol plane that crashed at sea 20 miles off Cadiz, Spain. The plane, based at Jacksonville, Fl., was taking part. in man- oeuvres off the U.S. Polaris sub- marine base at Rota, Spain. Four men were killed in the crash in southern England of a British Vuican bomber, one of a type that can carry Britain's H-bombs. Two men parachuted and were injured. Another Brit- ish H bomber, a Valiant, crashed last Thursday in Eng- land and five men were killed. Police Hunt Hit-Runner In Fatality PEMBROKE (CP) -- Police ; |are seeking the driver of a red-/ Memorial Turkish interior ministry|painted car or truck following|Burlington, -since he left her the discovery early today of the ex-| body of Elmer Pappin, 53-year-/more than a week-ago. old camp cook from Pembroke, involved in) beside the highway across the|in an interview with the Hamil- nearby Interprovincial Bridge. Pappin's body was found on the roadside by an Ottawa truck driver near the Quebec -, end of the bridge across the Ot- the communal fighting which)General U Thant named Galo tawa River between here andiabout two weeks ago into the| of Mesa. The victims were identified as Mrs. Lola King, 26, of Phoe- nix and her two children, Vicky, 4, and Shelley, 3; Mrs. Ina |Lowe of Winkleman, Ariz., and| A full bench of the Ontario Court of Appeal is hearing the case against the fictional ac- count of an 18th century prosti- tute. % Chief Justice Porter's remark her six children, Clifford, 10,)agreed with defence argument Michell, 8, Linda, 7, Karen, 5,| that it would not be possible for Mark, 3, and Gregory, 1. anyone to determine the effect Sask. Vote Count | | | REGINA (OP)--The make-up jof Saskatchewan's next goverm- }ment may still be in doubt when |the official count of votes in the {April 22 general election is com- |pleted some fime this week. | The Liberals won 33 seats on the basis of an election night count of 640,000 ballots while the OCF government won 25 ang the Progressive Conservative one. However, eight seats were de- cided by less than 100 votes. Premier Woodrow Lloyd, who has been staying in office, will have two alternatives when the final count, which begins Wed- nesday, is completed. If, after am estimated 25,000 declared, absentee and advance votes are counted for the first time, he believes he has enough seats to continue to lead the government or because he be- lieves the outcome is still doubt- iful, he may stay in office. Mystery MD' Not At Home Since May 2 | HAMILTON (CP)--Mrs. An- dre Couture, wife of a man be- ing sought by police on a charge of impersonating a doctor, said in a telephone interview from Hawkesbury Monday she hasn't jseen her husband since May: 2. | Mrs. Couture said she han't heard from her huband, who is jalleged to have worked for two years as an intern at Brant Hospital parents' home in Hawkesbury "I'm all mixed up," she said |ton Spectator. "For the moment I'm staying here (in Hawkes- bury) with my parents. I don't in nearby . Still Gives Doubt Alternately, he may advise Lieutenant Governor R. .L. Hanbidge that he believes he no lmger has the confidence of the legislature and Liberal Leader Ross Thatcher should be asked to form a government. question of obscenity centred on whether the novel was un- due exploitation of sex. George D. Finlayson, eounsel for Coles, said that Lady Chat- terley's Lover, a D. H. Law- rence novel ruled not obscene by the Supreme Court of Can- ada in March, 1962, is more ex- plicit than Fanny Hill. He said there are no four-let- ter obscenities in Fanny Hill, but Lawrence found 70 oc- casions to use them in his book. Because Fanny Hill is about a prostitute, the lawyer said, the description of 28 sex acts in the book is necessary in telling the story. He said the only standard for the . judges' ruling should be the manner in which the story is presented, adding there is no evidence that the novel offends existing standards of decency and morality in the community, Follows Attack On Rights Bill CAMBRIDGE, Md; (AP)--An outburst of violence in the wake of a presidential election cam- paign speech by Governor George C. Wallace of Alabama left this centre of racial strife in the grip of new tensions to- day. Two demonstrators arid five national guardsmen were in- jured in a battle touched off Monday night when about 200 singing, hand-clapping integra- tionists. tried to march on the arena where Wallace had spoken. They met a cordon of some of the 400 national guardsmen hurried into this sensitive spot just to prevent such an act. " SNIPE' GETS LIFT have any money." | An investigation was started] | | tute at Burlington, This World War One fighter plane is'dwarfed beneath the has caused the death of hun-|/Plaza Lasso, former president|Allumette Island, Que, Particles|quaiifications of the man who| massive tail of an Air Force aldreds of Greek- and Turkish-|of Ecuador, to be UN political) of red paint were found on his|called himself Dr, Andre Cou- 'clothing and on the road. ©123 plane yesterday at Kiss- immee airport, Fia., as it is wn % being loaded, with other an- tique planes for transport to Duluth, Minn. for an air show. The 200 horsepower' combat plane is a British Sopwith h "Snipe", favorite with Amert can and British pilots in World War One, "AP Wirephote

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