Thought For Today A small town is where you can chat on the phone after dialling a wrong number. : She Oshawa Fi VOL, 93 -- NO. 123 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, MAY 26, 1964 Authorized os Sécond Closs Mall Post Office Ottawa ond for poyment of Postage Weather Cloudy overnigh Report t with scattered thundershowers. Mainly sunny and cooler Wednesday. Depor 'tment in Cash, southwest. They fled from area where Communist forces have battled neutralist forces A CLUSTER of women and the Plaine des Jarres sector children and Meo tribesmen in Laos for transportation to wait Tuesday af an airstrip in Viemiane, 100 miles to the U THANT | Chrysler Plans BIGGER WAR SE Ottawa House Hears Warning | OTTAWA (CP) -- United Na- tions Secretary-General U Thant warned today that a total break- down in Cyprus "could ail too easily lead to a far wider and more lethal conflict." In an address to a joint sit- ting of the Commons and Sen- ate, he appealed to the Cypriot) leaders to arrest and reverse) the "vicious circle of accusation! and counter-accusation, of inci-| dent and reprisal." Mr. Thant said the local news- papers in Cyprus and the infor- mation media of both the Greek and Turkish communities do lit- tle to lessen "the hatred or to calm the fears of their readers and listeners." Monday that Indonesia would re. The UN spokesman said the FIRE AGAIN New Foundry incident occurred in the Temlos "Rather, they tend to fan the flames of violence and suspicion) ances," said. Mr, Thant also said the UN force in Cyprus is not conduct- ing a punitive expedition. ; "We are trying to help the: people of an embattled and em- |bittered island to live in peace and prosperity again. "We are not guided by mar- al criteria, however glamorous the secretary-general | ti jand momentarily decisive they may seem, but by the deep de- sire to solve a human problem by civilized means. "It may take a little longer-- perhaps very much longer--but I have no doubt that, in terms of the present and of the future, the effort is..worth it and the results will Be enduring." Mr. Thant spoke as reports ar- Firing stopped at 8:55° a.m. but the Canadians came under | i when shooting broke out | again an hour later, | The spokesman said the sit-|¢, uation in the area was "'reason-| ably calm" at 10:15 a.m. He} by sensational reporting and) propaganda and thus aggravate And Factories thus a the very conflicts and disasters NEW, YORK (AP)--Chrysler| which have brought death and 'orp. will build a 700,000-| suffering to so many of the peo- square-foot foundry in Detroit,| ple of Cyprus." The facility will be the major} part of three projects to be oot | eC ee tignde "an bp Me Bd el ie fF sides, whatever their offi- area on the western side of the t Kyrenia Pass road as the Cana- COLD WATER as iS i § , i S y } nounced that Indonesia wed ' ON COMPUTER eter "qereaacanen spear pestenan start the withdrawal when the) LONDON (AP) -- The tem- |near Greek-Cypriot gunposts. lof $30,000,000 foreign ministers of Indonesia,| perature of the Buckingham | The rest of Cyprus was quiet.| aise pig : |cial status, serve no interest, the Philippines and Malaysia) Palace swimming pool is back | In Athens, Greek Defence Min-| The other units will be a 177,-| "except perhaps their own self- meet June 5. | to normal and so, it may be ister Peter Garoufalias an-|900-squarefoot addition to the) esteem, by random shootj#€, "| Cash Shortage Indonesian-backed forces have| assumed, is that of Prince | nounced that Greece will not Plymouth assembly plant and a! abductions, terrorism, hat'ass- rived here that Canadian troops jserving with the force were |fired on again in the Kyrenian Mountains, Mr. Thant gave his support to Canada's. plan for organizing an international peacekeeping foree to be held in readiness for UN service when called upon. Philppines| ighti itis Malay-| Philip. take part in a joint NATO naval 100,000-square-foot building ad- ment and material demonstra- psig eos Decoes ae ay The prince addressed the jexercise in the Aegean Seajjacent to the new stamping|tions." last 17 months. | opening of an International |June 2-13 because of "'technical|plant in Sterling Township,| 'The world is long past being In Moscow, the Russian gov- | : Indonesian President Sukarno| Automation. Exhibition Mon- | teasons,"* . jnear Detroit. limpressed by such perform- jernment said Monday the 14- nation conference on. Laos, NICOSIA (Reuters) --Cana-,dians were escorting Greek-Cyp- in recent days. |Nations Cyprus peace force) The party scattered and took | Kyrenia Mountains this morning|truck was hit by bullets and The spokesman said C Com-| began when prolonged bursts of Doos--fired two bursts with an) from Turkish-Cypriot ppsitions o.®8 | Recaptures Position Fer Conterence' terete "Ri Woodcock, was negotiating with! officer of C Company, Maj. Pat-| The announcement was madejinto the hills surrounding the|the Malaysian crisis ran high to- captured the 'central. Laotian 'i . Ngee Premier Prince Souvanna TELL OF MESSAGE | withdraw its troops from Ma-| A senior Laotian official said die : " ives reversals during the last two|Peking said the Communist Chi-|haq jnsisted as a pre-condition in a counter-attack Monday. a ens to gobble up Laos. jtian crisis. Lebrado Cayco, Tacres: hod aaat 125 miles |¢rnment last week calling on carrying out further attacks. STILL IN TROUBLE king were unable to give any) s s n 0 cies serious difficulties on other United Nations Security Coun- als calling of the UN to deal The US. chief delegate was deploring recent violations of} sponsibility should pay repara- Seydoux Monday opposed Ste-| South Viet Nam and Cambodia dian troops of the Royal. 22nd|riot workers engaged in harvest- (AP. Wirephoto) |¢ame under heavy fire from|refuge under cover of a build- | Sukarno Move and returned the fire, a UN/abandoned. | Lat weapon at the Turk-|on hilltops in the Kyrenia-Bel- | i | stopped and that the regimen-| A number of shots hit near a} KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) VIENTIANE (Reuters) -- La- ithe Turkish-Cypriots for a cease-|rick Tremblay, who deployed| by Gen. Amkha Soukhavong,|town. day following an announcemet town of Muong Kheung from the : i, {Phouma. The neutralist victory, On the diplomatic front, mean-ijgycian Borneo. the neutralists recaptured the ; lweeks at the hands of the Pa-|nese government today sent) fo, summit talks that the troops ig ' Adlai r Muong Kheung is about 15|, The message was in reply tO) acting foreign secretary, north of the administraitve cap-| China to use its influence in dis- However, the sources in Pe-| But Gen. Kong Le, the neu- details ebout China's re, fronts, UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- cil late today following France's with the Cambodian border dis- expected to answer France's re-} Cambodia's frontiers and pro-| tions."" venson's proposal that the UN| cannot agree on joint border In Hill Fighti | Regiment serving in the United] ing. |TurkishCypriot positions in the|ing. A Greek-Cypriot civilian | spokesman said. The spokesman said the clash | aos eu rd rm V | Raises Hopes |-pany of the Royal 22nd--the Van| automatic: fire were reported | | ish-Cypriot positions. |lapais area towards Greek-Cyp- rl tal commander, Lt.-Col. Andrew|jeep carrying the commanding) Hope for a summit meeting on 'otian neutralist forces have re- scout cars in the area. military adviser to neutralist pro-Communist Pathet Lao. ay t cing was the first after a series of While, authoritative sources in| The Malaysian governmen town, which fell last weekend, se thet Lao movement that threat-/Britain a message on the Lao-|\he withdrawn. miles north of the Plaine des|*" appeal by the British gov- UN C ne ital of Vientiane jsuading the Pathet Lao from tralist army commander, faced Adlai E, poregee as to. re- apiece: GS paler in th Viet Nam ore the rejection of American propos- pute. quest for a council resolution; posing that "those who bear re-| French Ambassador Roger} police the disputed frontier -if| patrols linked to the UN. Splitting with the United) ger, former foreign minister ofjin the 1962 Geneva conference States and Britain, Seydoux also supported Cambodia's -- request from his new temporary. com- Laotian army sources said Kong Le might have to retreat mand post at Ban Na, a moun- tain village 10 miles southwest of the plain. The sources said forces of the Pathet Lao, con- tinuing their push against Kong Le's battered army, were only six miles from Ban Na, The recaptured town of Mu- ong Kheung formerly was base for tanks and other arm- ored vehicles of the neutralist forces. Two weekends ago the Pathet Lao launched an attack that forced Kong Le to retreat} Ex-Minister, Spy Freed In Berlin BERLIN (AP)--Georg Dertin- East Germany, was released} whi ch France proposed; should be used to buttress the position, of -neutrasist Pehite Souva: Phouma's coalition government. mma NOH has vowed to crush the British- backed federation of Malaya,| baits aie TA Peking Moves For Laos Meet PEKING (Reuters) -- Com- munist China has proposed that a foreign ministers conference on Laos be convened in Cam- bodia ext month, it was leared) today. A government message to this effect was reported to have been handed to the heads of diploma- tic missions of all countries rep- resented here which took part which guaranteed the independ-| ence and neutrality of Laos, | said the Chinese government to- day sent Britain a message re- plying to her appeal last week for China to influence the Pa- thet Lao to halt their attacks in central Laos. Inquest Urges Abortion Study day and threw a chill into the assembled gadget makers. He told them: t thermo- sity at- the He "Was supposed to automatically reg- | ulate the temperature of the | water "but the water kept getting colder when it was supposed. to be getting warmer." "I discovered. the thermo- | stat was working exactly the' | wrong way. around," said | Philip. "'We rang up the mak- | ers for a replacement but they) said they were not making | this thermostat anymore. "Which may have been just | as well." Today, a palace spokesman | announced that "the thermo- | stat is now working properly | and we're glad to say all's | well at the pool," i He wouldn't say whether the thermostat had been repaired | or replaced. LONDON (CP)--Now Ontario)that former premier Leslie; may be getting a flag of its|/Frost had favored the ensign| own. for a provincial flag. | This emerged today from a| Asked about adoption of O| Robarts Hints-Ontario: May Adopt New Flag ter of state for Commonwealth relations, He is scheduled to meet Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home late Wednesday press conference with visiting|Canada as national anthem, the|jand then fly to Duesseldorf Premier John Robarts, said there is a "distinct possi-jlegislation many Canadians bility that we'll develop" an On-|likely would continue using both tario flag. |O Canada and God Save the Robarts and Stanley Randall,| Queen. provincial economics and de- vélopment minister, tell reporters booming prospects but questions| veered around to the proposed} new Canadian flag. | Robarts said he didn't know) | 4 i jail t years to reconvene the 14-nation Gen-| em Jail _ " a "| eva conference on Indochina to| °f 8 15-year term for espionage. guarantee Cambodian neutral-|Dertinger, 61, was granted) ity. lwhat design would be proposed by Prime Minister Lester Pear- son. Questioned about a pub- jlished design for a flag bearing TORONTO (CP) --A coron- er's jury inquiring into the death jof Lee Ann Clark, 32, of Toronto} has recommended the establish-| Reports said China's long message hinted she might also raise other Indochinese issues at 'Scab' Laborers there. The premier plan also to visit the Canadian brigade in the |Soest area of West Germany, | Robarts met reporters at On-|the Royal Canadian Regiment,| i wanted to|tario House before lunching with}whose home base is London, | Somehow," Hoffa said Monday, about Ontario's|the Duke of Devonshire, minis-'Robarts' hometown. Ottawa Digs In oe Py aaie President James R. Hoffa has -- said he has been forced to sell some of his stocks, bonds and real estate to finance the legal fees for his $20,000,000 mail fraud and conspiracy trial, The cost of legal counsel for Hoffa in his recent jury-tamper- ing conviction and the current trial is estimated at up to $1,- 000,000. He recently instructed the Teamsters union to stop who|premier said that regardless of/Thursday to visit Ontario House | paying his legal fees until the jquestion of whether he is en- titled to financial aid from the junion is settled. "T've got to earn the money | He was in New York City Satut- day at a fund-raising luncheon for his benefit. Hoffa' and seven other co-(le- fendants are accused of fraudu- lently arranging $20,000,000 in loans from the Chicago-based pension fund, In return, accord- ing to the charges, the eight got |clemency. Suspect Strangler Drowns | TORONTO (CP)--Police 'said\10 years ago, had been Miss talks today Norman MacDonald, sus- ; n Harbor Payne's friend for seven years the proposed conference. The government already had |said, before the latest outbreak of fighting in Laos, that it would favor a new Geneva conference to discuss not only Laos but the whole of Indochina if 'U.S. criminal activities' did not cease. Since then, France and the So-\therapeutic abortions be revised|@ housing project being reno-jbanner. viet Union have proposed new pected slayer of bank teller El-/He had two married daughters SAME AS FRENCH sie Payne, 44, committed sui- and two nephews in Toronto. He cide by jumping into Toronto|\was described as a heavy harbor. The case was termed a mur-| MacDonald was not carrying full scale conference, which 1s disrespect for the law. der-suicide after the 51-year-old cabinet maker's body was re- covered Monday by police about 10 minutes after a. woman _re- ported she had seen a man drop off a pier. Inspector William McNeely said MacDonald, originally from Nova Scotia, is. believed to have strangled Miss Payne in apartment Sunday night. The inspector said Miss Payne had been hit on the head with a wrench but that death was caused by strangulation. A ny-| lon stocking was. found knotted around her neck. NEPHEW CALLED Her body was discovered after a nephew, unable to reach her by telephone, called police. Po- lice learned that a man had told her apartment superintendent last week she was leaving town fora few days . A bank official said a man had called last Week to say Miss Payne would be absent from her job due to illness. Inspector McNeely said Mac- Donald, separated from his wife CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 { drinker, identification, His body was identified by relatives in Tor- onto. Miss Payne was described as a quiet-mannered and respected Reports said today's message basically followed the Soviet- backed French proposal for a opposed by the United States. The message blamed the U.S, aby : in harsh terms for the present;knows of abortions performed|--locks smashed, drainpipes|Scotia, for instance, has flown force the government into an)}, Laos crisis. It said American|in hospitals, including therapeu-|ripped out, kitchen cabinets and|its own flag for two centu reconnaissance flights over Laos|tic abortions, no directly contravened the commonly broken, ment of a federal government committee to study abortions. Mrs. Clark's death occurred in a Toronto hospital April 29 as the result of an abortion. The jury, under Coroner Dr. Morton Shulman, also recom- mended that laws pertaining to/4"g of about 100 men burst into|he would like to see on the new/play will end. to protect doctors further, Dr. Shulman saiq that al- though the death rate by crim-| inal abortion has Mecreased, the main problem is that the law is encouraging Peter Rick- department Crown Attorney said if his charges are Ge-|placed. The difficulty of gath- employee of a downtown branch|neva agreement and made thelering evidence in hospitals made|the invasion lasted about five adopt one." Spark Violence In Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA (AP) A |vated by non-union labor Mon- day and began swinging clubs, axes and sledgehammers, po- jlice said. Six men in the 35-man_ non- union force of carpenters, paint- ers, plumbers and bricklayers were injured as they fled a bar- rage of bricks and stones. Twelve houses were damaged iron rails torn loose. Builder Roy Fuiman, 32 of the Canadian Imperial Bank) situation extremely dangerous. it almost impossible to prose-|minutes. He estimated damage of Commerce. | Earlier, authoritative sources'cute in such cases. AFTERMATH OF SOCCER MATCH MASSACRE at, between $12,000 and $15,000.;made, Robarts added, noting|the flag legislation. evoked deep feeling of loyalty. but Ontario never had a distinc-| strategy cannot be worked out|/that a referendum might be said|tive flag and "it ma shea ds For Flag Debate clared: . | ; "From a. personal point of! OTTAWA (CP). -- Within a Since last Thursday Mr. Pear- view, it doesn't thrill me."' |day or two Canada's proposed|son has said only that the flag! - He stressed that the national) maple leaf flag will be unfurled] will involve the maple leaf. He} flag falls under federal jurisdic-|--at least a drawing of it--andjhas refused to say how many tion and declined to say what| Parliament's great suspense|maple leaves. | However, the design Mr, While there seems little doubt|/Pearson was known to favor that a majority of MPs would -- of sy aoe -- : 4 A ac back 'a new flag if they werejleaves on a white backgroun mis personal feeling was tt aed to vole now, thee also| wih vertical Bie Barat each tive flag and with this I cer-/at@ indications on Parliament/side of the flag. Hé said Mon; tainly agree," On the other} Hill that some are prepared to| day ™ "ep SU eee that hand, Canada has had the Red dig in for a long, hard fight on quotes 2 'high governanent offt- Ensign a long time and it the issue, [cat AS. saying the flag would | Some Conservative MPs are| have one leaf was "'purely spec- | sayi ivately they want to| Uative." | Non | Ae 2 Dieters ot Opposition Leader Diefen- aker wanted to know whether there was any truth to rumors leaves, he de-| back $1,000,000 from those who received the loans. WANTS DISTINCTIVE On the provincial level, ries|election on the issue. But their] y be we'll until it becomes known how the/held on the question "'so that |Canadian unity will not be bi- n| government proposes to handlelrcoted or even fragmentized by the strict adherence to what No. decision has yet bee | | | | | | | | LIMA--Feelings ran high in this Peruvian capital today and police were on the alert for more disorders in the wake of the sports world's worst dis- aster at a Sunday soccer game Police announced an official toll of 328 dead in the panic after police fired tear gas to check a riot among 45,000 peo- ple in Lima's National Stadium Police said 122 of the victims iad not been identified. . At least 1,000 persons were re- ported injured The International Soccer Fed- eration--with headquarters in Switzerland--asked the' Peruv ian association for detailed in- formation. The rioters were pro- testing a Uruguay cision against the Peruvian team in a pre-Olympic match iwith Argentina. referee's de- Unrest Goes On In Peru Capital Meanwhile, fresh rioting|when Peru scored a goal on anjin one corridor, were crushed erupted here Monday night with accidental kick by an Argentine|to death by the press of the|said, Rojas darted back onto the air and'player with four minutes left.|mobs behind them. police firing in the using tear gas against students But referee Eduardo Pazos dis- protesting in front of San Mar-/allowed the goal because of a cos University against excessive) foul. |police ."'energy"' in halting Sun- day' stampede: Disturbances were reported in corted Pazos and the players|tie which tightened around his\gg¢ee@y fFederation's offices from the field. Pazos declared neck as he joined the stampede several parts of the city and police made several arrests. Police reinforcements repelled a Lima mob headed toward the home of Commander Jorge de Asumbuja. They accused him of Argentina the victor As part of the mob surged to- ward the playing field, police they set fire to buses and cars fired tear gas into the crowd. In an attempt to escape the ordering tear gas shells, fired|fumes, the mob surgéd toward into the crowd pouring onto the soccer field. Asambuja said none of the gas grenades was fired into the stands. He blamed locked -exit gates for the mass suffocation and trampling of the victims Hundreds of persons FS) TRANGLED BY TIE | A police spokesman said a Fighting broke out among traffic policeman watching the again Monday amid reports agi- some of the fans and police es--84me was strangled by his own|tators tried to loot the Peruvian| question period since the cabinet, from the stadium. Once the mobs got outside windows, A group of 31 convicts escaped from a Lima prison in the general confusion, Lima Police Chief Ern and hurled stones and bottles. Police arrested a husky soc- exit gates, but they were locked °¢? fan they identified a Matias --to keep non - paying youths (Bomba) Roj from sneaking in to watch the game. reputation for referee baiting. Investigators said Rojas was/grant of aid to victims includ: includ- the first out of the stands. He ing ing women and children, died made for the referee but was penses. It said women widowed beneath the feet of the enrush- grabbed by police and dragged |in the ai Argentina was leading 1-0jing hordes bay particularly|Off the field, ifield and immediately was in the thick of the rioting. 5, who has a/Gomez resigned. |state pension, | So far there has been no in- jdication vof the method Prime Minister Pearson will use to seek parliamentary approval-- it could be by. a one-stage reso- lution, or by, the regular pro- |cess of legislation which would |give members five different de- bating stages. endeavoring to push this pen- STILL SECRET nant down the throats of the This question, and the actual/Canadian people?" | design of the new flag, still wa Again np reply. a cabinet secret Monday after)--------------- - : another round of Commons Police rushed to the stadium) questioning, | It the is becoming generally known as the 'Pearson pennant.'" NO REPLY The prime: miister did not reply, Later, Mr. Diefenbaker asked: Was the prime minister consid- ering a referendum "rather than As soon as he was loose, they was third. Commons decided on a flag design, and again Mr, Pearson hid his hand there, on what may be expected Wed- In other parts of the city|nesday or Thursday, youths threw stones and broke|- scammarmectaae See etNTES N | Nineteen Lost «to! In Belgian Fire port NEW TOWER AT FALLS A 500-foot observation tower Will be the focal point of a new development planned for Niagara Falls, Ont, The 10- \/acre project has.a dual pur- The government LIEGE (Reuters) -- Nineteen} persons were feared dead here today in a fire at a new Belgian would receive a| vacation centre in an ancient jmanor near here, 4 pose: as a tourist attraction and as a showcase for Cana dian industries. ~ : --CP Wirephdte payment of- funeral ex- riots