ai sisi dine cle cals "aul cali ae Sali ele Il TN ae ae hee ln ee { The Hometown Newspaper Weather Report Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Overcast, clear and cooler tonight. Snow Pickering and neighboring centres. Wednesday P.M. Low tonight, 25. a Tomorrow, 85. VOL. 94--No. 63 Soe Per' Wesk anaes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1965 ae aS ern one oe Fob ogres Department EIGHTEEN PAGES EQUAL VOTING RIGH 4 FOR ALL, LBJ PROMI Federal Order Allows Selma: The Turning Point March To Courthouse In Man's Freedom Search state and local elections, restric- months," Johnson declared, in SELMA, Ala. (AP)--An order WASHINGTON (CP) -- Swift from a federal judge permitted/tions which he said 'have been assage of legislation which willla reference to fight almost 4.000 persons, including}used to deny Negroes the right sive all iperonn equal voting|pass the 1964 civ its law, many clergymen, to march onjto vote. rights in national, state and lo-|against which southern congress- men waged a filibuster. "We have already waited 100 years and more." cal elections was urged pas- sionately Monday night by Pres- ident Johnson. the Dallas County. Courthouse Monday for a memorial service honoring a Boston minister, 3. The U.S. Supreme Court re- fused to grant a speeded-up hearing of a justice department slain after he came south t0/appeal from dismissal by a fed- 'a . waiti ; join the civil rights drive. eral judge of major charges in wae ce Aig - min te DRAWS APPLAUSE ae The eight-block march brought|the killing of three civil rights appearance before both houses His 44-minute address was in- to an end a prayer vigil which|workers in Mississippi. of Congress. "The cries of pain, terrunted more than 40 times had continued in the streets of] 4. House of Representatives and the hymns and protests of OF pa rp Nay was the 'most Selma since last Wednesday|Speaker John W. McCormack oppressed people" must be an- peta -- hed the -- when police halted an at-|heard a demand by 12 demon- swered without delay, hesitation] isan erty ce he took of- tempted, march on the court-|strators in the House corridor | or compromise, he declared. per whe 4 on aa house. that Alabama's congressional » He told the crowded chamber| Johnson sai d the rv The marchers walked three|delegation be reduced on * of the House of Representatives abreast on the sidewalk, as|grounds of discrimination that" last Week's vVidlente * at bn yoy po ste Wednes- specified in an order from Mo-jagainst Negroes. The demon- Selma, Ala., where state troop-|yniform standard" = ers used billy clubs and tear gas to halt'a. march by demonstra- tors on behalf of Negro civil rights, was "a turning point in man' s unending search for free- strike down restrictions to vot- ing in all elections -- federal, inlene and local--which have n used to deny Negroes the right to vote." strators threatened to remain in the Capitol until some action was taken. McCormack told them he would accept no_ulti- matum "from you or anyone bile by Federal Judge Daniel H. Thomas. Negro leaders mapped plans today to resime their tear gas- Dr. Martin Luther King vos, archbishop of the Greeley, Boston, president |delayed highway march to Mont- Ise.' Jr., carries a wreath on a Greek Orthodox Church, of the Unitarian Universal- |gomery, capital of this state|@'Se- dom." Eight weeks of Negro demon- march to the courthouse for archdiocese of North and ist Association of North |they claim has denied them vot- His proposals drew strong sup-|strations for voting rights cul- a memorial service in Sel- South America; King; America; Walter Reuther, |ing and other rights. port from both Democrats and|minated in Selma in bloody dee ma, Alabama, today for the © Revs. Ralph Abernathy and president of the United Au- | standing in the way of the 50- Turk-Greek Republicans in Congress, butjlice suppression of a Rey, James Reeb. From left, Andrew Young, _ aides; toworkers of America. mile march is a federal judge's some southerners threatened to|march and then the cing front; His Eminence, Iako- back: Dr. Dana McLean --(AP Wirephoto) | injunction, plus state and county fight them. Senator Allen J. El-lmurder of a white Protestan Wied lender, a Louisiana Democrat,|clergyman from Boston, 'Rev. sgshieratva said he would filibuster against|James Reeb. Four Selma whites Tension Up NICOSIA (AP) -- Turkey and the Greek -Cypriots swapped threats today as tension on Cy- vrus continued to mount. The Greek - Cypriot national] guard headquarters said a Greek-Cypriot soldier was killed Monda Others were the proposed legislation. "We cannot wait another eight Plea Made For Understanding have been charged with mir- | A hearing is under way now der. lin Montgomery in the judge's court over whether to permit the march. Governor George C. Wallace says he will abide by the court's decision. KIND IN THE LEAD The memorial march fromj|,~ to the was led by Dr. "by Turkish-Cypriot fire' wag 74 Lather 'King Jr., joined bylin the degfna area on the north- Some leading U.S. clefgymen.|west céast, Saigon Will Increase Heide Drastically North: Viet Nam, again fo the interetiend ek arm- istiee control commission and » RRESIDENT 88, HISTORY, |, j HISTORY, |. voting 'Communists have only one way to escape. eT | po on North Viet Namito withdraw their cabres, army and arms to the north, to free the young men whom they have exploited for the last 10 years. troops and arms from the south.|. . ." and Hanoi's " was to withdraw "only way of es- its He was speaking at a cere- mony welcoming the' last of 2,000 South Korean engineering, transport and infantry troops to South Viet Nam. Thieu's_ remarks came after was against the Phu Qui ammu- nition depot 100 miles south of Hanoi, Nam, "That is to stop aggression, Monday's two-hour U.S. strike capital of North Viet again warned the United States it "must bear full responsibility for from its aggressive acts." control commission is made up of India, Canada and Poland. all arising The consequences The Hanoi' Daily Nhan Dan, which speaks for the Commu- nist party, said it was the 30th air strike against North Viet Nam since last Aug. 5. the deepest yet bombing raid into North Viet Nam by United States aircraft Monday. The South Korean troops, in- tended for non-combat duties, join-some 27,000 U.S. troops in South Viet Nam, including two U.S. Marine battalions which landed at Da Nang recently. Thieu said South Viet Nam could not naively sit at the con- ference table and accept the "false peace" offered bythe Communists. 'As air strikes on the north- ern part of Viet Nam have be- gun and will continue more dras- NEWS HIGHLIGHTS March Still Needed, Negro Leader Says! SELMA, Ala. (AP) -- A Negro leader said today that a 50-mile pilgrimage to the state capital of Montgomery is needed to keep alive the right-to-vote issues of a drive which has brought new legisiative propdésals from President LONDON (CP)--Soviet For- eign Minister Andrei: Gromyko today conferred with British and other key issues. Gromyko, were accorded a warm wel- down at London Airport. Johnson. "We must march to keep this issue before Ne- groes and white people everywhere," said Rev. James Bevel. Peron Followers Win 35 Seats BUENOS AIRES (CP) -- Followers of ousted dictator Juan Person scored their biggest popular vote since their leader was forced into exile 10 years ago, returns from Sun- day's congressional elections showed Monday night. The Peronist Union Popular won 35 House of Deputies seats of the 99 contested, just five less than President Arturo Iilia's People's Radical Party. NO COMMENT FROM BUCKIN Gromyko, Stewart Discuss Viet Nam, Other Problems Foreign Secretary Michael Ste- wart on the Viet Nam crisis|' his wife and son come when their plane touched Stewart, who personally. wel- comed Gromyko and his family, said in Parliament. Monday night he hoped to discuss. the 'possibility of action' to solve the Viet Nam problem with the| Soviet minister. Gromyko is scheduled to meet| Prime Minister Wilson' Thurs-} day and return to Moscow Sa-| turday. |MINISTERS ATTEND | Three British ministers | state for foreign aituiea-Adootge| Thomson, Walter Padley and Lord Chalfont, who deals spe- cially with disarmament -- at- | tended today's talks. Britain and Russia were co- jchairmen of the 1954 Geneva |Conference on Indochina. British proposals designed to see if there is a basis for re- calling the 14-nation Geneva con- | ference on Indochina were put to |the Russians last month but jhave remained unanswered. | The visit of Gromyko, ar- | |ranged some time ago,.was or- liginally designed .to make prep- arations for the planned trip of |Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin |to Britain but' it is clear that jthe Viet Nam situation also is |high on the agenda. Gromyko is |scheduled to see Prime Minister Wilson Thursday. GHAM PALACE Almost 4,000: persons walked to the courthouse behind King after the Nobel Peace Prize winner said the Boston minister, Rev. James J. Reeb, 'demonstrated the conscience of the nation" by coming here. Reeb was fatally beaten a week ago by a white gang as he and two fellow ministers emerged from a Negro cafe in |Selma. Four white men have been charged with murdering him. While tension relaxed some- what in Selma, there were these other racial developments: 1. Police broke up a. street demonstration in Montgomery after the demonstrators began throwiiig rocks and bottles. 2, President Johnson called on Congress to eliminate quickly, restrictions to voting in federal, i! Gen. George Grivas, told reporters in Athens: smashing answer." vres. Turkey warned Monday would against the Greek-Cypriots weekend near Lefka, on 20 miles west of Nicosia. Com- mander-In-Chief of the Cyprus Army. flew to Athens to confer with Greek military leaders. bo Turkey bombs Cyprus, it will receive an immediate and Turkey's armed forces went on the alert. Air force pilots were ordered to stay at their bases. Press reports said a 33-ship na- val force sailed for the Mediter- ranean from the port of Izmir. Government sources said the ships were on routine manoeu- it resume air attacks if they did not withdraw from, po- sitions they occupied during the the northwest coast of Cyprus about To Destroy TORONTO (CP) -- Michael) Starr, former federal labor min- ister, said Monday night he was warned after his party's victory in 1957 that the Liberal party would have to destroy John Diefenbaker to return to. power. Mr. Starr, in an interview fol- lowing an address to a Toronto "Greenwood Progres- sive Conservative nominating convention. identified the source of the threat as Paul Martin, present minister of external af- fairs in. the Pearson govern- ment "It's a sorry day for us,"' Mr. 'Free Assemblies 'Can't Block Road WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- dent Johnson told Congress and the U.S. public Monday night that "free assembly does not carry with it the right to block public thoroughfares to traf- ne. In -his to a joint session of Congress, he said: '"'We must preserve the right of free speech and the free assembly. But the right of free speech does not carry with it, as has been. said, the right to holler 'Fire' in a crowded theatre. We must preserve the right to free assembly, but free assembly does not carry with it the right to block public thoroughfares to traffic. "We do have a right to pro- test and a right to march under 'conditions that do not infringe voting-rights address| right of} the constitutional rights of our neighbors. And I intend to pro- tect all those rights as long as I am permittéd to serve in this office." Starr quoted Mr. Martin as say- ing after ihe Conservative. vic- tory. "One man is to blame for this, and that man is John Dief- enbaker. If there is one thing we've got to do it is to destroy this man so we van get back into power." He told about 250 persons that Conservative party members helped the Liberals destroy Mr. Diefenbaker. "They just had to spread the Starr Was Told Of Try Diefenbaker rumors and we carried them on." he said, He told a silent audience that there is a power struggle now within the Conservative party, waged by. persons who have selfish aims. The convention nominated Mahlon Beach, 47, a. school trustee for 444 years, to repre- sent the party in Greenwood in the next federal. election, He was unopposed. THE TIME $4,325,000 Budget OK'd By S today... Education Trustees -- Page 9 Council To Study Free Texthook Ruling -- Page 5 Oshawa Horseman Looking Ann Landers -- 11 City News -- 9 Classified -- 14, 15 Comics -- 13 District Reports -- 17 Editorial, -- 4 Financial -- 16 Forward to Racing Season -- P 6 Obits -- 2 Sports -- 6, 7, 8 Teen Talk -- 12 Television -- 13 Theatre -- 12 Whitby News -- 5 Women's -- 10, 11 Weather -- 2 Has Royal Meeting Ended Exile? cess Elizabeth met LONDON (CP) Bucking- Mrs. ham Palace had "no comment" to make today on press specula- tion that the Queen's Monday night meeting with the Duke and Duchess of Windsor might lead to the end of the duke's 28-year exile from Britain Court officials were more than usually reticent about the im- plications of the historic meet- ing in The London Clinic, where the 70-year-old duke is recover- ing from three eye operations. It was the first meeting be- tween the Queen and the duch- ess since the 10-year-old prin- twice-divorced man since the then her in December, mostly in France and States. -- Wallis Warfield Simpson in 1936. And it was. the first sign of an official rapproc' tween the British court and the American ward VIII gave up his crown for 1936 Since the abdication, the duke and duchess have lived abroad, The story of the meeting dom- inated the front pages of Brit- ish newspapers today. "The big question now,' the then The Sun, hment be- to Windsor after "is whether the exiled couple will live in Britain, "The Queen may invite them the duke leaves tion .. "The news that the Queen has visited the Duke of Windsor will he warmly approved by the na- . the visit derives special Bri ma tish papers maintained si- lence over the controversial ro- nce that was rocking the North American and continental the clinic. If they are allowed to importance fromthe circum- press. wo- stay in the country it would be stances of the duke's exile." Th 7 " , % e Queen drove through rain- King Ed- a roo -- : The late Lord Beaverbrook, swept London. streets for the ut the Buckingham Palace Canadian-born publisher of The meeting in the duke's sitting view remains that such specu- lations are. not since nobody ca the United The Daily Exp British national comment on the meeting with * gays an editorial: the Queen will do in this "purely private matter." solidly based, n predict what ress is the only newspaper to Express group, always sympa- thized with the Windsors' posi- tion and occasionally over the years. his papers suggested it was time to heal roo the breach With chair, minutes, and her aunt were alone. Offi- m at The London. Clinic. the duke sitting in a the three chatted for 25 The Queen, her uncle caused by the abdication. cials at Buckingham Palace In 1936 it was mainly, due to knew nothing of what they an appeal by Beaverbrook that said. poeewananna MP Foresees Election Soon SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP)-- Lucien 'Cardin, federal public works minister, said Monday night there will '"'probably" be an election within 'the next few months," Speaking 'at an organization meeting of the Sherbrooke rid-| | ing branch of the Liberal Fed- eration of Canada, he urged party supporters to get set quickly for an election. Justice Minister Guy Favreau told the meeting Opposition Leader Diefenbaker would have "split the country"' if the gressive Conservatives had not been defeated in the 1963 fed- eral election. As it turned out, he said, Mr. Diefenbaker has split his party. Mr. Favreau said the Liberal party is the only one in Canada which preaches the same pol- icy in all parts of the country. Girl In Cage Seven Years SUSONOMACHI (AP)--A Jap- anese farmer kept his mentally- ill daughte: locked in a cage for seven years until her death last week, police said today. The cage was five-foot, three inches hign and five - foot - 10 square, Police said Susaburo Ichi- kawa, 64, caged his daughter because she was considered a hopeless mental case. She was 34 when she died Thursday. The woman earlier was in two public mental institutions near this village. west of Tokyo. She was discharged in 1955 because doctors decided she could not be cured. The farmer told police he lacked the money to put his daughter in a private institute. Ichikawa said he fed his daughter through an opening in the cage. Ichikawa was held in police custody, but no charges were others--will be forbidden. He praised leaders on both sides in Selma for a remarkable display of responsibility in recent days and he was at his most per- suasive in seeking bipartisan support for his voting - rights bill. ANNOUNCES PLANS Representative Emanuel Cel- ler (Dem. N.Y.) said his House judiciary committee would start hearings on the bill one week from today and predicted House' action by early next month, Sen- ate leaders were uncertain about a timetable for its consid- eration. by anybody--demonstrators or/pres' said: this would reed ae the states of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Virginia, Georgia and South Carolina. Fewer than 50 per cent voted in Alaska, but officials blamed this on cold weather rather than discrimin- ation, Johnson called on Congress to work nights and weekends if nec- a? to pass the voting rights Johnson had come under fire last week--first for refusing to send federal troops and mar- shals to Selma and for delay in The bill will call for appoint- (See 'BILL'S AIMS" page 2) BEGORRA! I'M Little Kevin Cassidy, suit- ably spruced-up in top hat and emerald green, breaks from the crowd to join the annual St. Patrick's Day Parade in Montreal. A show- filed pending' an investigation, stopper, he nevertheless NOT ALLOWED didn't organizers too much -- they shuttled him back to. his impress parade parents, who left ° Ireland only one year ago to live in Montreal. f (CP Wirephoto)