Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Dec 1964, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, December 12, 1964 Police Pushing Big Hunt For Bazooka Triggermen | NEW YORK (AP) -- Police pushed a massive hunt among New York City's many Cuban exile groups today in hopes of turning up the persons respon- sible for firing a bazooka shell at the United Nations head- quarters building. The shot fell short of its mark and exploded harmlessly in the East River Friday. The Federal Burequ of In- vestigation, the Central Intel- ligence Agency and the intel- ligence services of the army, navy and air force were re- ported in on the hunt. The bazooka firing. which may have been the work of anti-Castroites, came as a Cu- ban' minister was addressing delegates inside the UN build. ing. a few moments later, from a crowd of some 50 antt-Castro pickets in front of the UN, a woman brandishing a hunting knife sprang toward the build- By CARL MOLLINS TORONTO (CP)--Crimes of violence can be reduced if the community takes steps to re- Reduced Aggressiveness Cuts Violence: Experts tributing to the relatively lower rate of violent crime in Britain include the facts that British police generally are unarmed, ing, bent on assassinating the Cuban minister, Ernesto (Che- Guevara. She was subdued by police. GUEVARA COOL Guevara reacted coolly when he learned he had been her target. He said he forgave her, adding: 'It is better to be killed by a woman with'a knife than a man with a gun." The bazooka was found on a Queens pier, a paper Cuban flag pasted on it. The shell was lobbed about 850 yards before it fell into the water about 100 yards from the Manhattan shore and the UN building. The blast sent up a 15-foot geyser witnessed by some UN observers in the building and by boatmen on the river. The General Assembly ses- sion, which Guevara had been addressing at the time, went on undisturbed by the muffled roar outside. At 12:10 p.m., the four-foot- long bazooka -- which fires an 18-inch-long rocket containing high explosives--sent its mis- sile whistling across the river. It was the second time an explosive device had been di- rected at the United Nations. July 22, 1948, a light plane dropped a home - made bomb on UN headquarters, then at Lake Success, Long Island, but it exploded harmlessly about 100 feet above the structure. WOMAN IDENTIFIED Almost simultaneous with the bazooka firing, a woman later identified as Gladys Perez, 27, of Jersey City, N.J., a Cuban native, sprinted toward the building, knife in hand. Two policemen overpowered lher after a struggle. She said her intention had been to kill Guevara. She was dragged }screaming to a police car. ravi PHOTO DIAGRAM LOCATES AREA it is more difficult to obtain) 1, Miami, a Cuban exile| She was charged with as- HOME-MADE MORTA TIED DOWN ON BO WEATHER FORECAST Cooler Sunday Light Rain Due TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at 6:30 a.m. Synopsis: Sunday's weather will see colder air invading northern regions with some snow associated. A disturbance now in Kansas will cross the lower Great Lakes Sunday giv- ing some light rain then turn- ing a little colder by evening. Lake St. Clair,.Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Southern Geor- gian Bay, Niagara, Lake On- tario, Haliburton, Windsor, Lon- don, Kalloe, Hamilton, Toronto: Cloudy with a period of light rain likely during the morning or early afternoon, then partial clearing and turning cooler. Winds light. Northern Georgian Bay, Al- Lakehead .... Sault Ste. Marie .. Kapuskasing Earlton .... North Bay: Montreal Quebec .. Halifax .... Chicago .sseees New York ... Miami Los Angeles ...... duce aggressiveness on both sides in the war between soci- ety and the criminal, experts at a criminology conference said Friday. The criminal may be discour- aged from using weapons, for example, by reducing aggres- siveness in law enforcement, altering patterns of sentencing in the courts and making sure systems of punishment and cor- rection work, the experts sug- gested. Law professor Norval Morris, an Australian expert in crime prevention and treatment now at the University of Chicago law school, and Thomas S. Lodge, director of criminology research for the British govern- ment, both stressed the need for more studies to increase knowledge of crime and to make the treatment of crim- inals more effective. Here for a seminar at the University of Toronto's centre of criminology, Dr. Morris and Mr, Lodge were guests at a luncheon held by Allan Gross- man, Ontario minister of re- | form institutions, In an interview, the visiting experts noted that crimes of violence are much less prev-| jalent in England than in North} America and said. this results| partly from less aggression in the English society. Mr. Lodge said factors con- Sushiateliiveanl. eee. Timagami, North Bay, udbury, Cochrane, White River: Cloudy with occasional snowflurries and colder. Winds light. Western James Bay: Cloudy with snow tapering off to snow- @urries by afternoon. Much colder. Winds northwesterly 25. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Sunday Windsor ..csssseess 35 St. Thomas A London ...:. ' Kitchener ....+0+56 Mount Forest ..... Hamilton St. Catharines .... Toronto Peterborough ..+... 35 Trenton .ccvececcse 9 Kingston . Killaloe .. Sault Ste. Marie .. Kapuskasing . White River . ee Moosonee ......006. 22 Timmins .....+++0. 28 - Observed Temperatures Low overnight, High Friday Dawson . -56 Victoria ... . 36 Edmonton +22 Regina . 4 2 HEADS FEDERATION BRUSSELS (Reuters)--Prince be nominated as Tax Cuts Due | Philip will president of the International Equestrian Federation when the federation's general assem- bly meets here Monday. This was disclosed Friday by a member of the federation's bu- real, which met here in prep- aration for the meeting. REGINA (AP) -- Saskatche- wan's Liberal government will start its first legislature ses- sion Feb. 4 with wide-ranging tax cuts and a record budget likely items on the agenda. Opening date of the session, the first of the 15th legislature, was a ed Friday night in Saskatoon by Premier Ross Thatcher. Standing in the 59-seat as- sembly is Liberals 32, CCF 25, Conservatives one and one va-| cant. A byelection will be held| Dec. 16 in the vacant seat of| Hanley. | The Liberals, who have} pledged to go all out to attract new industry to Saskatchewan, | County has been approved by|took over the provincial gov-| Municipal Affairs Minister Wil-|ernment in the April 22 elec-| frid Spooner, it was learned|tion after 20 year of rule by/ Friday. the CCF. Bruce County Clerk W. §.| Mr. Thatcher has suggested a Forester said that, after ajrecord budget of more than) New Aenean Bylaw Approved WALKERTON, Ont. (CP) -- Establishment of a single com- mission to handle all assess- ment work throughout Bruce 1, townships, towns and villages | about $12,000,000. He promised in Bruce County no longer will | to save $20,000,000 by stream- appoint or continue to employ|lining government operations in their own assessors. his first year in office Everett J. Finnigan, county; He has also promised an in- assessor for the last 12 years, |crease in school grants to $45,-/ has been appointed assistant/00,000 from the current year's) commissioner. He will employ|$42,000,000 and a 30-per-cent in-| other commissioners and staff|crease in the. University of Sas-| to handle assessing work in the|katchewan operating budget to| guns in Britain than in North America and the courts sys- tematically impose much heav- ier sentences on those who carry arms than on unarmed offenders. Dr. Morris noted that the Australian contingent with the United Nations peace-keeping force in Cyprus decided to op- erate without guns on the ground that the likelihood of violence was thus reduced, Both experts agreed that dif- fering social patterns in Britain and North America have more to do with the different rates of violent crime than such fac- tors that the British police are unarmed, "North America has a more complex social structure than Britain, there are more tensions and therefore more aggres- sion," Dr. Morris said. source who declined use of his|saulting a policeman, resisting name, said the bazooka firing|arrest, disorderly conduct and was the work of an anti-Castrojillegally carrying a weapon. group called "The Black; In Union City, N.J., Friday,| Front." police and the FBI arrested/ A 7 | 'CHRISTMAS PRESENT' four anti --Castro Cubans and| The source said he was confiscated two. machine guns, | 4@/ammunition and a hand gren-| member of the group, that the ade. | shot was directed at Guevara} --_-- eneenincincgememninen | | to the enslaved Cuban people." Police and UN guards had begun searching the midtown world organization headquart- ers before dawn after a 6:45 a.m.- FBI tip of some planned "bomb activity." At 10:37 a.m., a man with a Spanish accent phoned police headquarters, and said: "I and was "a Christmas etengt 'Newsmen Solve Freedom Issue MONTREAL (CP) -- Marcel |Pepin, secretary general of the Confederation of National Trade Unions, said in a state- have put a bomb in front of the| ment Friday that Montreal La UN building, Keep people away|Presse and its newsroom em- between 11:30 a.m. and 12:30/ployees have agreed on con- p.m. Long Live Cuba!" OTTAWA (CP) -- The cab: inet ordered the retirement of two RCMP officers convicted by an RCMP court of mis- handling funds, it was learned Friday. In effect, the cabinet's decis- ion modified the recommenda- tion of RCMP Commissioner George B. McClellan that the two officers be dismissed. Justice Minister Favreau is expected to make a statement on the case in the Commons, probably next week. Meanwhile, there were only meagre details of the circum- stances which led to the sep- aration of the veteran officers from the force. The officers -- Chief Super- intendent Rene Belec and Sub- Inspector J, H. M. Poitras -- were tried. under the RCMP Act and found guilty. Beck Back Home Town Cabinet Ordered RCMP Retirements. Their appeal was rejected and, after reviewing the cir- cumstances and their evidence; Commissioner McClellan rec- ommended their dismissal last Sept. 3. Since then Mr. Favreau has been under pressure in the Commons to wind up the case. |ditions covering freedom of ex- pression by the journalists. The issue was raised during negotiatons intended to bring about resumption of publica- tion by the big daily newspaper which has not appeared since June 3 It was announced Thursday that agreement had been lreached between the newspaper |management and its journalists 'and printing trades employees |belonging to unions affiliated }with the CNTU. The statement by the CNTU jofficial said the conditions jagreed upon to cover journal- lists' freedom of expression in- lcluded the following terms: "News will conform to the He made a recommendation to} cabinet some weeks ago and|facts and will be such as not the cabinet order was approved|to deceive the public. The good last Tuesday. \faith of journalists is presumed ; Still undecided are the pen- sion rights of the two men. It is understood the RCMP pen- sion board is to meet soon to make a recommendation to treasury board on the men's pensions. Their conviction was. the first in the force's 91-year history in- volving commissioned officers. No figure was available for the amount of the pensions that could be paid the two officers. However, the contributory scheme under which RCMP personnel are covered provides for a pension based on the average salary of the contribu- tor for the best six years of 'his service, The annual amount is based on two per cent of this average multiplied by the num- SEATTLE (AP)--Dave Beck, former president of the Inter- national Brotherhood of Team- county bylaw takes effect Jan. |$214,000,000 despite tax cuts of|Sters, was back in his home| Left-Wing Revolt town today--70 years old, jparoled convict, but still jaunty as ever. released Friday from McNeil Island federal penitentiary in Puget Sound after serving nearly 24% years for income tax fraud. The former union leader was sentenced to five years for fil- a aS Beck was ber of years of pensionable jservice up to 35 years. May Not BRIGHTON, England (Reut- ers)--The left wing of the rul- | | |by the employer who will have to prove the contrary before jan arbitration board if he ques- tions it." | No "ideological influence" by} |the management over the. news| jcontent of the paper will be exercised, | | Journalists writing comment- jaries, analyses or columns may |not express views hostile to the jmanagement or its "'ideologi- jcal views' although they may jexpress contradictory views. | La Presse editorials will con- |form with management policy. | hen they are not on duty, jjournalists will be free to ex- press their own opinions but may not take public attitudes hostile to the management. | La Presse will resume publi- cation after settlement with its 'composing room staff. Develop many and opposed by Labor's) left wing. | }presented its new colors as air| Buddhists Threaten Renewal Of Suicides of prayers for the govern- ment's overthrow, The main Buddhist school in Saigon issued a pamphlet today condemning British Ambassador Gordon Etherington - Smith for his Dec. 3 speech at his home, praising Huong, who was the guest of honor, 4, Monks in Darlac Prov- ince, 160 miles northeast of Saigon, said they were await- ing orders from Saigon to begin protest suicides against the government. Originally; Buddhist leaders supported Huong but objected to several members of his cab- By PETER ARNETT SAIGON (AP) -- South Viet Nam's Buddhist leaders em- barked today on a weekend of fasting and praying and threat- ened a renewal of suicides in their drive to topple the har- assed government of Premier Tran Van Huong. Saigon Buddhist headquarters told of a multi - pronged anti- government campaign on the heels of the Huong regime's announcement that more United States aid would be forthcoming to help South Viet Nam's armed forces and econ- omy in the war against the Viet Cong rebels. These developments marked the end of two weeks of rela- tive calm in the capital and the beginning of the Buddhist cam- paign: 1. Buddhist monk Thick Tinh Khiet, nominal over-all leader of the Buddhists, and several ranking aides said they would conduct a 48-hour hunger. strike, 2. Buddhist headquarters been affiliated with the Diem regime. the cabinet, and. the Buddhist leaders turned their attacks on Huong himself. officials say Viet Cong agents have groups, seeking to tional rule into chaos, The Buddhist heirarchy, in a M inet on grounds that they had Huong refused to reshuffle South Vietnamese and U.S. infiltrated the Buddhist turn na- well D. Taylor, called on the United States for support in a campaign to oust Huong's re- gime., But the Huong government Friday issued a communique announcing the American agreement for an increase in assistance. A proclamation of joint plans hinted the war soon will be extended beyond South Viet Nam's frontiers. Fighting in South Viet Nam claimed the life of another American Friday. A U.S. army officer killed in a Viet Cong ambush was the seventh U.S. combat fatality in four days. A U.S. spokesman eaid the officer was killed as he at- tempted to guide armed heli- copters toward Viet Cong mor- tar positions, j A series -of Communist at- tacks on three district towns 'in OChuong Thien Province, about 100 miles south of Saigon, re- sulted in 'heavy South Vietna- mese casualties. A U.S. spokes- man said 30 South Vietnamese were either killedd or wounded at Duc Long district alone. opened for a continuous round letter to U.S, Ambassador Max- Kenya Celebrating First Independence Anniversary | NEED Mortgage Money? CALL Reol Estate Broker Day or Night - 728-4285 From AP-Reuters NAIROBI (CP)--Kenya cele- brated the first anniversary of its independence today by be- coming a republic within. the British Commonwealth of Na- tions, Jomo (Burning Spear) Ken- yatta, who as prime minister steered the East African coun- try through its first year of in- dependence from Britain, colon- ial status, became its first pres- ident. Kenyatta . and his cabinet were sworn in at a ceremony |republic it no longer will be constitutionally tied to the Brit- ish monarchy, Kenyatta, believed to be 74) years old, is its undisputed) master. A British colonial gov- ernor once called him a "'leader to darkness and death". but dur- ing the last few years he has won respect as a leading Afri- can politician. In 1952, he was sentenced to seven years in jail for alleged Mau Mau terrorist activities. It was nine years before he was freed. : PAUL RISTOW LTD. REALTOR 187 King East - 728-9474 in Nairobi's Jamhuri Stadium where the republic's army was force planes flew overhead. At midnight, the packed sta- dium watched a lone soldier raise the standard marking the | former British colony's repub- lican status, A giant roar from thousands | greeted the republic as the! Kenya flag fluttered from a/ floodlit flag post in the stadium. Representatives from. more than 60 countries and thousands jof people of all races attended | FUEL Householders! Save On 16 OIL € PER GAL. PHONE 668-3341 county. ja level of $9,300,000. Winnipeg . 24 : _ a jing a false income tax returnjing Labor party was called It was announced in Bonn by|the ceremony beginning with a| INTERPRETING THE NEWS Pearson, Wilson Discuss | NATO Nuclear Command By DAVE McINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer Canadian governments have often been accused of slavishly following American or British lines in foreign policy. 'A case may soon develop where an accusation of toeing France's foreign policy line thay be made against the Cana- dian government. The matter arises out of Brit- ain's proposals for a new or modified NATO nuclear com- mand now being discussed in alliance capitals. British Prime Minister Wilson talked over his proposals with Prime Minister Pearson in Ot- tawa Wednesday. At the same time, British Foreign Secretary Patrick Gordon Walker went over the same ground with Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Martin. CANADA OPEN-MINDED Mr. Pearson in a brief. talk with reporters after his meeting with Mr. Wilson didn't rule out Canadian Participation in a re- vised NATO nuclear force. This was a contrast to Can- ada's quick opting out last year from the U.S.-proposed NATO nuclear-missile fleet of 25 sur- face ships. France has: been hostile to the American plan. The U.S. proposal is aimed at giving its European allies some degree of control over the use a publicly recognized NATO's con- tinuing reliance on American nu- clear striking power as a deter- = rent to war. Canada has also criticized France's current creation of an) independent, national nuclear) force . | But it has added that NATO fF without France is unthinkable © and that any policy which would | | tend to alienate France from the|~ alliance is a bad policy. Mr. Martin told Mr. Gordon Walker that any nuclear ar- rangements must unite and not divide NATO. BRITISH PLAN This is apparently one objec- tive of the British Labor govern- ment which is seemingly willing to place its own independent nu- clear force under NATO com- mand as long as it gets some- thing tangible in return, such as genuine share of controi in a NATO nuclear arm of strategic nuclear weapons,| If the British proposals. lead although it is still clear that the|to development of a NATO nu- /U.S. would maintain its absolute|clear force which would not lveto in this field. Control is the|arouse France's hostility, Can- key.to the whole issue. ada might be willing to partici- Only east Germany has|pate despite its reticence about} shown any enthusiasm for the|any nuclear role. proposed nuclear fleet. But if France were as hostile | as it has been to the nuclear! CANADIAN CRITICISMS fleet idea, Canada probably} Canada has said that the U.S.|would opt out again on the |proposal doesn't come to grips;grounds that it would not be |with the problem though it has|party to isolating France, | A HON. PAUL MARTIN . + +» Must Unite in behalf of a union subsidiary. As he served only half of this sentence, he will be under fed- eral parole for 2% years. He also will be subject to state parole regulations, as he was concurrently serving a_ state term for grand larceny for sell- ing a union Cadillac and al- upon today to "close ranks' despite its uneasiness over the defence policy aspects of Prime Minister Harold Wilson's. talks with President Johnson. Party chairman Anthony Greenwood warned the left wing of the party today that legedly converting the $1,900 in proceeds to his own account. Beck draws a' $50,000-a-year| pension from the Teamsters, whom he served as president} from 1952 to 1958, His fortune| is estimated over $2,000,000. | At one time Beck was a re-| gent of the University of Wash- ington, a member of the state parole board and a Seattle civil service commissioner as well as heading a union with 4,500,000 members. Peepholes Stay Says Spokesman OTTAWA (CP) -- The postal department has no plans for eliminating the 'observation stations' that allow postal in- spectors to look into men's washrooms in large Canadian post offices, a spokesman said Friday. He was commenting on an order issued in Washington Fri- day by U.S. Postmaster - Gen- eral. John Gronouski to rip "| or block up these peepholes in|" American post offices. The spokesman said there is. little or no chance that the Ca- nadian postal department will take similar action. Washrooms| were a sensitive security area because thieving employees could get rid of evidence imme- history would not "lightly for- give any of us who make the task of the government more difficult, or its life shorter." | The prime minister was scheduled to speak this after- noon at the party's annual two- day conference here, and was expected to talk about his meet- ing this week with Johnson. | The Brighton conference was not expected to produce any left-wing revolt over Wilson's defence policy, but the left- wingers were expected to listen to Wilson's speech with critical ears. Forecasts of the speech said the West German foreign min- istry that Wilson will go there sometime next month. NATO| nuclear policy is among the| topics Wilson is expected to dis- cuss with Chancellor Ludwig Erhard. | The opening convention| speech today was made by party chairman Anthony Green- wood, also colonial secretary and a prominent left - wing member of Parliament. In an appeal for party unity he said "we are holding, and only just holding, the ramparts 68 years of British rule. As a | floodlit display. of dancing. Prime Minister Pearson cabled congratulations. "The Canadian government) values the friendship and co-| operation of our two countries! as fellow members of the Com-| monwealth and we look for- ward to a_ strengthening of @ OIL BURNER SERV' @ PREMIUM QUALITY FUEL OIL @ AUTOMATIC DELIVERY DX FUEL OIL ICE DEPARTMENT these ties between us," Pear- son said. President Anastas Mikoyan of} » Russia also sent his country's | best wishes. | Kenya got its independence} as a dominion last year after) against a revival of reaction throughout the world," Greenwood surveyed the Oct 15 election and called for bet- ter party organization to obtain a landslide victory for Wilson's Socialists at the next general election, expected in the next year or so. NEED A NEW... OIL FURNACE? Call PERRY 723-3443 Brewers Day or night |Wilson was likely to reaffirm {his opposition to a West Ger- |man "finger on the trigger' in any Atlantic nuclear force and his determination to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons Observers said this approach | is largely aimed at taking the sting out of any left-wing criti- cism in the party of Wilson's new defence policies. These add up to an alternative to the U.S proposal. for a mixed-manned seaborne NATO nuclear force, which is backed by West Ger- pensar nar Mere es Stat FACTORY FOR SALE OR LEASE 5000 SQ. FT. Clear, reinforced floors, 3 doors, 16-ft. ceiling, 3 washrooms. PHONE RA 728-2075 or 827-2225 lorge offices, diately, | OAKVILLE THANK YOU sincerely CHRISTINE & TOMMY THOMAS durin 1B this peak en 4 A message from your neighbourhood Retail As the holiday season approaches, adverse weather conditions sometimes place a maximum burden on our staff to maintain our high level of service to our customers. To avoid serious congestion sales period, we respectfully suggest that our customers purchase their requirements as early as possible. | Operated by Brewers Warehousing Company Ltd, cee ret

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