Thought For Today If you think twice before you speak, someone else is sure to hog the conversation. Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy VOL, 93 -- NO. 146 ~-- She Oshawa Cimes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JUNE 22, 1964 piotonde Authorized a3 Second Class Mai Ottawa and for payment Weather Sunny with Report cloudy _ periods, Warmer and more humid Tues- day. Chance of showers, i! Post Office Department of Postage in Cash. late thunder- EIGHTEEN PAGES r Guerrillas Launch Massive Attack In Borneo Jungle Rahman naid the talks col- lapsed because Sukarno 'was not prepared to give anything." KUALA LUMPUR (AP) --In-| The state security council in, donesian guerrillas made one of|the Malaysian Borneo state of the biggest attacks of the Bor-'|Sarawak scheduled an emer- neo jungle war Sunday night, | gency meeting today. Indonesia|He said Indonesia had failed to only 23 hours after the collapse| continues a military buildup and) fulfil the requirement for nego- of the second Malaysian sum-'the situation on the frontier is|tiations -- withdrawal of her mit conference a security forces| grave, Chief Minister Stephen| troops from Malaysia Borneo, spokesman announced in Sara-|Kalong Ningkan said. Rahman said he would have wak, Ningkan added, however, that|agreed to The Philippine pro- Five Gurkhas were killed and the British and Malaysian se-|posal that a commission of five others wounded in the six-/ curity forces could handle the|Afro-Asian nations mediate the hour battle near the frontier! situation if Indonesia tried to dispute. about 50 miles west of Kuching,| send more guerrillas into Sara-- Macapagal said he still be- the spokesman said. wak. lieves Afro-Asian mediation is The number of guerrilla cas-| [ndonesian President Sukarno, possible. He urged Malaysia and ualties was not known. The who stalked out of the Tokyo Indonesia to settle their dispute dead and wounded were re-|syummit meeting, then returned|peacefully for their own na- ported carried back across the|for a final futile session Satur-|tional benefit and to build a frontier as security forces! qay has not commented on the|bulwark against the expansion- ---- cca 4 ee conference breakup. ist plans of Communist China. he spokesman said the at- ee ' | Se a tack on the Gurkha patrol con- But eae oatace taae FY ' Z news x si rs, until 2:30 : ' ' ; tinued for six hours, until 2 |nesian guerrillas "will continue a.m., in some of the fiercest), . ; : operated : A their struggle in North Kaliman- fighting of the anti-guerrilla {an Odalavaiin Borneo) ax Tne campaign. Se: ; : | '6 thie donesia's determined answer to seas ede Sets a ae neo-colonialist subversion and donesian guerrilla campaign a gutianan i following collapse of the peace| Foreign Minister Suban ol.| In Indonesia conference Saturday in Tokyo. |S4id Indonesia considered col-| Radio Indonesia predicted a|!aPse of the Tokyo negotiations ss 5 tougher new stand against Ma-| Satisfactory" because Indone- JAKARTA (AP)--First Dep- i - " *"! sia was no longer bound by pre-| uty Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan ftikovan Tilts | With Peking laysia. __ | vious commitments. jof Russia began an 11-day visit| | "We now feel free to carry on|to Indonesia today, apparently . | with this confrontation policy,"| anxious to curtail Communist} CMA Chie |he said. ". . , Our confrontation| China's influence in Indonesia's| Calls For But Philippine President Do|went into a conference with In-| | sdado Macapagal, whose efforts/donesian President Sukarno. | |brought Sukarno and Prime} Mikoyan, who heads' a dele-| | Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman| gation from the Soviet parlia-| Tax as of Malaysia to the conference|ment, was expected to. discuss} Itable, continued his efforts for) Soviet military and economic * turers' Association today called) nesia and Malaysia to sendjcompeting for influence in In-| for taxation relief and warned)their 'foreign ministers to an-|donesia, Southeast Asia's most the federal government to| other meeting to seek an end to|populous and potentially weal- watch its step during the talks|the undeclared war. | thiest country. involving the General Agree- }and crush Malaysia policy will)Communist party. peace. assistance to Indonesia as well) ment of Tariffs and Trade at| Topless 'Shock Frocks' |be intensified with all conse-| Shortly after his jetliner | quences entailed." landed at Jakarta, Mikoyan OTTAWA (CP) -- The presi-| An aide said Macapagalias the Moscow-Peking split. dent of the Canadian Manufac-|would mail pleas to both Indo-|Both Communist powers are Geneva, Switzerland. A. A, Cumming, also presi- dent of Union Carbide Canada Ltd., Toronto, was speaking to) the Rotary Club of Ottawa. | Text of his address was given| to the press prior to delivery. | coe PN. | | | | | Chief Justice Of Ontario | OTTAWA (CP)--Mr. Justice |George Alexander Gale of the |Ontario Court of Appeal has been appointed chief justice of |the High Court of Ontario to re- place Chief Justice J, C. Mc-| Ruer who has resigned. | RUSS BOSS GETS SN FROM 'COOL' SWEDES Gale Picked | 4,000 Spectators, Only Few Cheer. STOCKHOLM -- Soviet Pre-, mier Khrushchev got a cold re-| ception today when he arrived) cial visit to Sweden. Only..about six persons in the} crowd of about 4,000 onlookers applauded as Khrushchev sions.' Police hauled the banner down. : There were more police than jhere to start his five-day offi-| spectators gathered at the en- trance to .castle park, where Khrushchev will live while he is here. : However, he appeared in goog |stepped ashore from a Swedish|SPirits. Prime Minister Pearson, an-/Navy topedo boat that ferried|SECURITY ELABORATE nouncing today the acceptancejhim in from the Russian liner} The elaborate security pre- of Chief Justice McRuer's resig-|Bashkiriya in which he travel-|cautions aimed at protecting nation, said the new chief jus-|led from Copenhagen, Denmark:|the 70-year-old Kremlin boss jtice will take over July 1. Chief Justice Gale, 57-year- been with the Appeal Court! since last Oct. 31, He was first appointed a judge of the Su-! preme Court of Ontario and a member of the High Court of; Justice for the province on Oct.| 30, 1946. | He graduated from the Uni-| versity of Toronto and Osgoode) Law School and was called to the bar of Ontario in 1932. He was created a King's Counsel in 1945 while practising law in Toronto with the firm of Mason, Faulds, Davidson and Gale. | There was dead silence as the) Russian leader drove away old native of Quebec City, has/from the waterfront in a bullet-|central proof Lincoln limousine. | During Khrushchev's brief ar-| rival speech, Swedish Air Force| jets circling overhead occasion-| ally drowned him out. Police boats constantly patrolled the harbor. Earlier, as Khruschev's ship! hove into sight, youths on aj hilltop overlooking the channel] unfurled a banner 60 feet long) on which was written, in Swe- dish and Russian, "Disarma- ment demands mutual conces- 'Doctors Pondering Health Proposals VANCOUVER (CP)--The 16,- |000-member Canadian Medical /Association, representing the bulk of the country's medical profession, believes in medical health insurance. went into high gear. Massive traffic jams choked Stockholm as police closed roads along the route. "Wanted for murder" leaflets bearing Khrushchev's picture were distributed anonymously before he arrived. They accused him of having personally con- ducted Ukraine purges '"'esti- mated to have cost more than 400,000 lives." ; Swedish officials on hand for the arrival saiq that if Khrush- chev was tired, he gave no sign of it. However, when the re- ceiving line showed no sign of ending, he did stop shaking hands and waved to those 're- maining. Khrushchev gave no reason, but Swedish officials: privately hazarded the guess that the So- viet leader was weary after his visit to Denmark. The Swedish trip was the second leg of a Seandinavian tour. compulsory for all, 'is neither necessary nor desirable." | In its brief to the royal com- mission the CMA said that if| recognized that 'the benefits of comprehensive insurance cover- Erlander, in a speech of wel- |come, said Khrushchev had often called for peaceful eoex- istence among different -coun- tries and peoples and that "Swe- den's neutral foreign policy has | FRIGHT OR DELIGHT? it believe in the/48¢ should be made available tothe same aim." Mr. Cumming said the "prof- itless prosperity" now in evi-| dence is a reflection of the| "fiercely competitive world in} which we are now living." | "One of the things we will never be able to understand is why the government last year imposed a sales tax on Cana- dian manufacturers' production machinery and apparatus," he said. "How long is the Canadian manufacturer going to be able to absorb this extra cost burden; and still remain competitive internationally?" LONDON (AP) -- A store selling Britain's new shock frock--the chestless dress -- sold its scanty stock within 30 gninutes of opening today. "We've already sold the only ones we had," said Wal- lace Peters, the manager, "and we've asked for some more." 'He refused to say how many of the bare-the-bosom dresses he'd sold but said: "We had enough of them to prove that some women want eM. 64." Politicians Eye One vf the first sales was to a 19-year-old wife and mother, Mrs. Margaret Paw- ley, who was accompanied by | her architect husband. Said the husband: "After hundreds of years of frustration, this is a release for women. It's going to be like a waterfall. You won't be able to hold it back." "T like it," said Mrs. Paw- ley, "and I shall wear it ata party --- accompanied by my husband." Her vital statistics are 36- 24-34. In the London models, the bosom is completely hare, without even a transparent net covering. They expose the 2 By-Elections BY THE CANADIAN PRESS The Liberals have offered high rewards if they break a Progressive Conservative stran- glehold on Saskatchewan -- the only province not represented in) the government -- in one of two federal byelections today. Prime Minister Pearson has promised a cabinet post to Lib- eral candidate Sid Buckwold if he captures Saskatoon riding where the Progressive Con- servatives swept to an easy victory in a landslide that gave them all 17 Saskacthewan con- stituencies in the last general election. The situation is reversed in) the other byelection in Nipissing where the Conservatives hope to gain a foothold that the Lib- erals have denied them in the northern Ontario riding since 1921. The vacancies were caused by the deaths in March of Harry Jones, who 'represented Saska-| toon since 1957, and of Jack Gar-| land, former revenue minister in the Pearson government, who had represented Nipissing since 1949. The New Democratic Party is the only other party contesting the byelections. Mr. Pearson's promise of a} portfolio to a Liberal victor in Saskatoon, where a Liberal was last elected in 1935, stirred the only real controversy in cam-| paigns in both byelections. It rasied a cry of "Bribery from supporters of Conservative candidate Dr. Eloise Jones, widow of the former member, but Mr. Buckwold, 47, largely CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS | POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 7 23-2211 | avoided the issue arguing that as the province's only Liberal! representative he. would be a logical cabinet candidate. A former mayor of Saskatoon who won popular support as a civic leader, Mr. Buckwold trailed Mr. Jones by more than 12,000. votes in his first attempt on the seat last year, but this time he has been given al] the support federal and provincial Liberals could. muster At one rally last week he had) Trade Minister Sharp, Saskat- chewan Premier Ross Thatcher and National Hockey League star Leonard. (Red) Kelly, a Liberal member of Parliament, on the same platform at a rally attended by about 1,000 persons -- almost as many as| turned out for Opposition Lead- er Diefenbaker when he cam- paigned in support of Mrs. Jones a few nights earlier. wearer to a few inches above the waist. A spokesman for Britain's home office--which has juris- diction over the police--said the fashion had not shocked the home office. MAN PERISHES IN 401 CRASH A 2l-year-old Tamworth man, Donald Brown, was killed in a collision between the car in which he was a passenger and a_ tractor trailer shortly before noon today. The accident occur- red in the east-bound lane of Highway 401, west of the Waverly road cut-off. Driver of the car, Dale Stanley Wright, 23, of RR 1, Tamworth, received slight scalp injuries and was re- leased from' the Bowman- ville Memorial Hospital after treatment. The driver of the truck was uninjured. Mike MacKay, chairman, Oshawa Rover Round Table, appears shocked at this prac- tical demonstration on how to keep cool in the hot weather. The girls, Susan Waite, and Linda Hamilton, members of the ist Oshawa Ranger Crew, decided to relieve their leader with cold buckets of water as temperatures soar- ed into the eighties Saturday. They were among 80 Rangers and Rovers who attended the Co-Ed '64 activities at Camp Samac, Oshawa, over the weekend, --Times Photo by Joe Serge Senate Rights Fight Nears Final Round WASHINGTON (AP)--The fi-;months ago by the House, Injfiled along one side of the street|with a CMA statement of pol- But does | |brand recommended by the} jroyal commission on healt hy | whose report was released ae \day? | The officers of the association |burned the midnight oil during \the weekend seeking the answer to that question. They were to make their sec- ond statement to a press con- ference today. They said Fri- day that, on the basis of press reports, the medical insurance features of the commission rec- jommendations did not - conflict | nal stage of the year-long bat-|general, the two versions are|while the integrationists walked|icy in 1960. | tle to pass a strong civil rights|virtually alike; But the new Sen-|down the other. bill opens in the House of Rep-jate bill gives states anc cities) There were some shouts such lresentatives today with south- ern opponents determined to de-| lay its fina] approval for an- other week, The opponents are down to} their last round: of ammunition,)ers and unions from discrimi-| streets more time to. deal with com- plaints. The Senate bill bans ra- cial discrimination in most pub- lic places; bans major employ- as "they there, white nigger" from the group of, about 275 white persons but the demon- strations were peaceful, | Both processions left the in advance of the however, and Speaker John W. nating racially in jobs or mem-|8:30 p.m. curfew placed by Gov- |MeCormack has promised Pres- bership; bars vote registrars} ernor Farris Bryant on racial |ident Johnson the bill will be at from using different standards|/demonstrations. | the White House by July 3. in disqualifying white and Ne- Earlier, four Negroes and a | The delay in bringing the gro voting applicants; gives the| white youth were arrested for sweeping, Senate - passed civil) lrights bill to a final vote in the itiate suits in school desegrega-|a Methodist church, {House is made possible by a requirement that the rules committee approve a res- attorney-general power to in- tion and other discrimination funds to federally aided pro- trying to integrate services a At Dallas, Tex., a disturbance House cases; permits the cut - off of/broke out at a bowling alley, when integration demonstrators olution sending it to the floor.,grams where racial discrimin-|and other patrons started roll- Chairman Howard W. Smith, Virginia Democrat who o 7 | the bill, can block action on ice resolution by simply refusing to} call a meeting. He can only hold out for a week, however, as the} rules permit a majority of the committee to-schedule a meet- ing within. seven days of re- questing 'one, if the chairman fails to act. House action in necessary be- cause the Senate passed a sub-) | stitute for the bill approved four'anti-civil rights bill placards,| ation is allowed to continue. nce the bill gets to the flook\ its passage is certain. ST. ASGUSTINE, Fla. (AP) Both white\segregationists and 276 integrationists again took their campaigns to the streets in St. Augustine 'Sunday night but walked past each other with- out incident. The segregationists, waving Confederate flags and carrying VOTE COUNT TO BE THE TEST Election Gossip Hushed OTTAWA early general election has been|which puts power tn the Con-|seeking an election mounting on Parliament Hill, but a lot still hangs on the out- tions Monday. Political pundits will be; watching the results of voting! authority from the Commons tojof bilingualism and bicultural-|tive - Any protracted|ism, the country would be torn would prevent adoption of guch't and in Saskatoon, Sask., for in-|debate on this can bring Par-japart. for a generation, he has/vote-getting : Canada in Ontario's Nipissing riding Servative opposition to force a parliamentary stalemate next »icome of two federal byelec-) month. By mid-July, the 'government must obtain interim spending meet its bills Opposition Leader Diefen- baker has pointed to the danger} of 'another federal election at! this juncture in national affairs (CP)--Talk of anja combination of circumstances |denied any intention of himself\administration and the present Pearson regime are vivid in the minds of electors. They believe the Conservatives would emerge favorably in the balance. The Liberals, on ing balls at each other. | They also said there had to be an order of priorities and the) government should not impose a) medical plan on the profession without discussions with it. | | HAS 14 POINTS The 1960 statement of policy outlined 14 points which should be considered in a medical in- surance plan. It said the asso- ciation could support an insur- ance plan that did not violate these principles. And it said: "While there are certain aspects of medical serv- ices in which tax-supported pro- grams are necessary, a tax sup- ported comprehensive program, Cardinal Holiday Trouble MONTREAL (CP) -- French Canada, celebrating the feast of its patron saint with a week- jlong program of activities, has been warned against using force lor violence to gain its rights. | The warning came from Paul- |Emile Cardinal Leger, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Mont- |real, in a Sunday sermon at his- |toric Notre Dame Church at downtown Place d'Armes. "If a nation really wishes to be strong and respected," the cardinal said. during a mass celebrating. .St.. Jean Baptiste Day festivities, 'tit must serve the other|the cause of. justice by insisting) WASHINGTON the issues of the flag andjside, contend that a Conserva-|on the possession of all its rights dications of voter trends that/liament to a standstill and force! warned might be interpreted as apply- try. Beth ridings elected person- ally-popular MPs in recent gen eral elections and their deaths} the government to call a gen- ing in other parts of the coun-/eral election while meeting its | financial commitments through Governor-General's warrants Seeing this situation develop,jis a case of now or never if|for a clear majority on virtually/human groups, the language of|said there is always a possibility of However, there are which see the opportunity to inspired stalemate: which measures as. 'the Pension They believe the Liberals with 'energy. . while * respecting hose. of others with fairness." No one could obtain real and forees|only rebound to the benefit of|cial struggles. a the Conservative party] the government party. "This applies' to nations as well as individuals," Cardinal 4 Fearing - ne have been going on since Friday. | The festivities reach a climax Wednesday night with a giant torchlight parade along mid- town Sherbrooke street. Twenty- four floats, depicting various fields of endeavor, are included in the parade. Court Slashes Passport Bar (AP) -- The U.S. Supreme Court ruled un- constitutional today a section of the Subversive Activities Con- trol Act that denies passports Plan would|lasting'benefit from hate and so-|'® members of officially desig- naged Communist tions. Justice Arthur J, organiza-| Goldberg, | force an election and believe it/could appeal to the voters now|Leger said.""'Between persons or|speaking for the court majority, | . {the Conservatives hope to re- this spring opened the way 'o'the government itself calling an|gain power more-partisan contests Election talk has been ,zrow- election and blaming the oppo sition for obstruction These forces want the contest telling Prime)to be held while 'comparisons initially heading a mipo. that the section too} the same- grounds that Prime|reason and' patience must be/broadly and indiscriminately re-| le all Canadians."" Then it said there should be subsizidation for lower income groups who can- not afford to acquire medical in- surance. But before there was any medical insurance scheme there had to be improvements in med- ical schools to provide more doctors, improvements in hospi- tal facilities and improvements in mental health and rehabilia- tive facilities, | The 180member association) general counci] -- the "'parlia-| ment of medicine" with repre-| sentatives from each province-- was expected to consider the royal commission report today or Tuesday and the matter will come before the 1,500 delegates Friday. The general council will meet) for two days. Tuesday the scientific ses- sions will start, featuring a closed circuit color television hookup with the annual meeting of the American Medical Asso- ciation for one hour for three Khrushchev replied that he considered this a "'good neigh- or" visit. Pravda Blasts 'Ingratitude' In Peking LONDON (Reuters)--Pravda, the Soviet Communist party or- gan, today levelled a new blast at Communist China, accusing the Chinese of ingratitude for past Russian aid. 3 The new blast reported by Tass news agency followed an editorial Sunday by top Pravda commentator Yuri Zhukov, who hinted that unless the Chinese stopped their "dirty, anti-Soviet campaign," they might not be able to count on Russia in case of war. The editorial in today's edi- tion of pravda commented on days. a recent editorial in the Chi- nese press. ; FOR A 'LOVE' GAME Tennis-playing sisters Linda, ft, and Cathy Crosby of Minister Diefenbaker did with)chosen in place of 'recourse to/stricts the right to travel and; Arcadia, Calif., score back-to- @ffect 1958 after y gov- in ing in Ottawa as the result of|Minister Pearson, however, has' between the former Diefenbaker\ernment in the Commons, force and violence." St thereby abridges the liberty Jean Baptiste Day falls|guaranteed by the Fifth Amend-| line dresses and |Wednesday, 'June '24; but cele-|ment'"" of the Constitution, back hit with. these Prineéss lace: slips | designed by Teddy Tinling, English designer Tinling ait. ed the dresses in pre-Wimble- don fashion show at Hurling- ham outside London today. --(AP . Wirephoto) i