* seca. Sete Thought For Today The overweight are good na- tured because they can neither fight nor run, VOL, 93--NO, 33 Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1964 il Oshawa Cine Authorized as Second Class Mall Ottawa end for payment aie alin ee ey oe eT Gay aga Weather Report Clearing this evening. Variable. cloudiness and cold Sunday with -- occasional light Post Office Department of Postage in Cash. snow, TWENTY-TWO: PAGES UK. Beefs Army Size On Cyprus CP from Reuters-AP agreed on a compromise form- NICOSIA, Cyprus -- An addi- tional 550 British troops landed in Cyprus from Malta today amid reports that Britain and the United States had agreed on a compromise plan for a peace- keeping force here. A military spokesman empha- sized that today's airlift would not mean any increase in the number of British troops en- gaged operationally, but was in- tended to provide a rest for men who had been on continuous duty for six weeks, Soviet Premier Khrushchev accused the Western. powers Friday of trying to organize a "military intervention" in Cy- rus and warned the Soviet inion could not remain indif- ferent to the situtaion. Informed sources in London said Britain and the U.S. had Dnieper Says Dief Reneged On Promise TORONTO (CP)--Magistrate Robert Dnieper said Friday promises made in 1962 by then prime minister John Diefen- baker and then immigration minister Richard Bell destroyed the usefulness of a confession made to police by a man charged with making a false statement on an immigration application. But he convicted Mah Chong, 68, of Toronto on the testimony of his brother-in-law. bg was fined the minimum Mah was charged in. Febru- ary, 1963, by RCMP investigat- ing wide-spread racketeering in Mane 0 Const tle tee coeles GGEMouinn tore oe Ti onto in April, 1962, to have his|complications fiancee enter Canada. He de- scribed himself as a widower and listed two sons, both now Hong) fighting ula demanded by President Makarios that would link any Cyprus peace force from NATO nations with the United Nations Security Council. In London the defence min- istry said the increase in Brit- ish troops here was to give re- lief to troops already on the is- land enforcing the British-ar- ranged truce that followed communal fighting between Greek- and Turkish - Cypriots before Christmas, Khrushchev sent messages to} United States, British, French, Turkish, Greek and Cypriot leaders, urging them to "show restraint" .and prevent a fur- ther increase in tension. GUNFIRE ERUPTS Gunfire erupted again here) Friday when Turkish-Cypriots in the foothills of the Kyrenia Mountains were reported to have opened fire on a Greek- Cypriot police unit. The police had taken officials of the water and electricity ser- vice to the village of Djiklos. The Greeks went for cover but were reported to have re- trained from shooting back. The 5,000 British troops ai- ready on the island have been trying to hold the traditionally hostile Greek-and Turkish-Cyp- riots apart, arranging for cease- fires where necessary. British troops Friday evacu- ated the entire Turkish popula-| tion of the village of Ayios Soz-| omenos, 15 miles south of Nico- sia, where 11 persons died in Thursday before the the British intervened. ACCUSES THE WEST Khrushchev, in his note, ac- coing before the UN Security Council He said the situation could lead to "serious international "The Soviet government calls upon all governments con- BEATLES SPARK BATTLE ternational Airport Friday as she tries to get a look at The Beatles, Britain's new singing A screaming girl tries to climb. over New York Port Authority policeman and fel- sensation, low spectators at Kennedy In- here, CONFLICT-OF-INTEREST they arrived (AP Wirephoto) as Viet Nam Boss Forms Cabinet SAIGON. (AP) -- Maj.-Gen.|sault on Viet Cong positions in Nguyen Khanh, South Vietjan attempt to recapture a ring Nam's 36-year-old strongman,|of hamlets, five miles from the announced the formation of a/Cambodian border, Five Viet new government today with|Cong dead were found, himself as premier, Unofficial reports said nearly Dapper in paratrooper's fa-|200 civilians also were killed or tigues, Khanh read the list of|wounded in government artil- cabinet officers from the steps|lery and fighter-bomber attacks of his office building and vowed|before the rebels slipped back to "bring forth all our strength|toward the Cambodian border. to repel Communist aggression, Only Friday a terrorist bomb to bring security to our people,|/exploded in a Saigon bar, kill- especially those in the country-|ing five Vietnamese, including side." ja bar girl. Six U.S. servicemen Khanh named the popular)were wounded, none seriously. Maj.-Gen, Duon Van (Big) Minh} The explosion at the Playboy as chief of state. However,/08r was the worst terrorist act Minh, leader of the deposed|in the capital in more than a military junta, is expected to|year. The night spot, often fre- have only nominal power. jquented by Americans is near Minh will live in Saigon's;@ big hotel for U.S, enlisted Gia Long Palace, formerly oc-|men, cupied by the late president) Intelligence sources reported TORONTO (CP) -- Laws coy- ering conflict-of-interest issues for municipal councillors are full of loopholes, the Ontario section of the Canadian Bar As- sociation was told Friday. A panel at the group's mid- cused the West of trying to pre-jwinter meeting agreed sections vent the Cyprus issue from/|of the provincial Municipal Act Loopholes Irk Lawyers Panel Ngo Dinh Diem, Minh led the coalition of generals that ousted| the Diem regime Nov. 1, but) was overthrown by Khanh's swift and bloodless coup Jan. 30. Even as Khanh pledged a re- vived military effort against| the Communists, official cas: Toronto law professor claimed|yalty figures' showed Vietnam-| that bail for accused persons|ese forces had suffered one of has outlived its usefulness. their heaviest poundings Thurs- Prof, Martin L, Friedland, as-|/day. sistant professor at Osgoode| A U.S. military spokesman Hall Law School, said bail no|Said $4 Vietnamese troops were longer assures that the accused|killed and 32 wounded in an as- that high - ranking Viet Cong sabotage. and assassination agents have been moving into Saigon from the provinces since Jan. 1 for an all-out terror drive against Americans living here. National .police sources say they believe the Viet Cong is jactively plotting to assassinate U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot odge and other key Ameri- cans, Security for top Ameri- cans here has been increased. STRANGLER'S VICTIM Georgia Hillis, 16, of Mal- den, Mass., was the victim of an attempted strangling last night in a wooded residential area. Police said Georgia col- lapsed in the doorway of a home with two nylon stockings knotted around her neck, She was reported in fair condition have been 11 unsolved strangl- ings of women in the greater Boston area in the past 20 months. Maiden is less than 10 miles north of Boston, (AP. Wirephoto) CASTRO TELLS U.S. cerned, primarily the perman- ent members of the Security living in British Columbia. The Crown alleged the two men listed were young Chinese who came to Canada in the late 1950s as a result of Mah hav- ing said they were his sons. The brother-indaw, Dr. Fred- erick Pon said Mah married his sister in China about 1027 and he knew them to have one "ia son, His sister died in 1 | Robert Chow, editor of a Tor-| onto Chinese newspaper, testi- fied for the defence that Mr. Diefenbaker and Mr. Bell told Toronto Chinese at a banquet Nov, 17, 1962, that anyone who volunteered information to the RCMP would not be prosecuted. Council which bear the basic responsibility for the preserva- tion of international peace and security, to show restraint, to take into consideration realisti- cally, all consequences which an armed intervention on Cyp- rus may entail, to respect the sovereignty and independence of the Republic of Cyprus." In London, the British foreign office described Khrushchev's note as a "gross misrepresenta- tion of the situation." "It is impossible to believe it is intended to be a construc- tive contribution towards solv- ing the Cyprus problem," the foreign office statement added. TV Commercials Face BBG Knife Jopen for public examination. | the poor, keeps too many per- sons in custody and is difficult to administer, He: said he had studied the subject for nearly two years and found the concept of bail out- were ludicrous and unworkable. Vernon Singer, Liberal member of the Ontario legislature for Toronto Downsview, suggested it should be broadened to take in all areas through which a councillor could personally gain|moded. through his council influence, Crown Attorney Henry Bull of The panel, which included|YorkCounty and Metropolitan Mayor Victor Copps of Hamil-|Toronto argued that bail was a ton, opened discussion on the} wise middle course between problem of conflict of interest|!ocking everyone up or letting after a committee of lawyers|everyone go. In fact, it was rec- reported on changes it would)0gnized as a fundamental indi- recommend in the act. jvidual right. Among its suggestions were: | 1. That all councillors pub-| licly disclose any business in-| terests on the theory that an) informed electorate could then decide who was using his office improperly. 2. That all ----. poral it . dates for municipal office W h E g should declare his campaign ex-! i n neers penses, naming contributors. MONTREAL (CP) The 3. That all councillors notify) seneral chairman of the Broth- the municipal clerk of any buSi-/¢rhood of Locomotive Firemen ness connection which could) sng Enginemen (CLC) decided give rise to conflict of interest/rriday to start a new drive and that this information aimed at merging the union with the Brotherhood of Loco- 4. There should be some pro-|motive Engineers (Ind.) hibition on gifts 'for appointed) Department of labor figures municipal officials, |show that the firemen had 7,362 5. No councillor who is a pro-imembers and the locomotive Firemen Start Merger Talks OTTAWA (C » -- Telev.sion,ing broadcasters mv.e- flexibil-} commercials. will be fewer andjity in arranging their Canad' n farther apart if the Board of|programming time. | Broadcast Governors gets its; Under thi plan, stations way. could, if they wished, devote an The BBG announced Friday|¢ntire prime month to Ameri- that it is going to propose en cee programs. There is no rule amendment to the broadcasting|against bunching Canadian or reguietions that would | the amount of tine TV stations) "Od set for computing contenj/ and new rks mey devote to} The BBG also_proposes "0 commercial messages. grant permanent relixathmn of It didn't reveal the amount poten g. tall ea during nH the proposed reduction. The an-| Pe oa "or . a 15, It bi qd nouncement said these details|ii. normal summer slump in| will be made known prior to. a|the eee public hearing in Ottawa March) 10 at which TV broadcast» s/, will be invited to air their! views. a Present regulations limit TV). stations and networks to 20 commercials each hour. Their total time must not exceed 16 BG has granted this summer jrelaxation on a temporary ba- reduce; American programs in the pe-)- For the last two years the|the deportation of six university jof Ghana faculty four of them Americans -- for)promote the 'advantages. of un- subversive activities | fessional man--lawyer, account-jengineers 8,897 members - in ant, planner -- should be per-| 1963. mitted to appear in that capa-| The officers of the firemen city before the council or any|opened a three-day meeting Fri- appointed council body. Such alday in Montreal. ban should continue for two} John Graham of Montreal, years after a councillor ends his|vice-president of the iremen, said in a statement the aim of the drive is to have the unions the next two membership on council. In another panel discussion, a ~'merged within 4U.S. Teachers |": Ousted By Ghana He said jt "stands to reason" that one union could represent all the members more effi- ciently at "much less expense' to the individual member. ACCRA He said six members of the government today|firemen and enginemen union will visit every location in Can- ada of locals of both-unions to Ghana (AP) -- The announced members -- lity."' CANADA TO PURCHASE US. TROOP TRANSPORTS minutes of the hour. If the announcement was 3 bitter pill for TV broadcasters, the board tossed out a couple of sweet ones at the same time. ON CANADIAN TIME | 'AWA (CP) -- Th " Both involve revisions of the ae pir --* department will purchase be- sales in this country of $9,807,-|the venerable C-119 flying box- 500 May Axe Flying Boxcars cars, in RCAF service since Rather, it discriminates' against Kate Smith | Breaks Foot ' At Ist Date MIAMI BEACH, Fila, (AP)-- Singer Kate Smith, making her first night club appearance in 33 years of professional enter- tainment, broke her foot before rehearsal but made it to the stage six hours later in a cast. "You can't say I didn't fall for you," the 54-year-old song- Not Act HAVANA (AP) -- Premier Fidel Castro says Cuba has no jintention of using force to evict jthe United States from Guan- jtanamo Bay. "We are not planning a fight for the Guantanamo base," Castro told reporters Friday night. Castro said Cuba's only rea-| stress told the audience at the) i Miami Beach nightspot Friday.|son for halting the flow of fresh | She came on stage in a wheel-|water to the big U.S. navy in- chair but stood for her num-|stallation was to seek the free- bers. , Miss Smith fractured her left |foot in two places when she| Slipped on the marble floor of ja hotel lobby. Kidnappers Seek $175,000 In Singapore SINGAPORE (AP) -- Kidnap- pers of the heir to an Asian movie fortune were reported to- dom of Cuban fishermen seized off the Florida coast. | The Cuban leader rejected an loff appeared to be the first step in "a concerted campaign" to evict the United States from) |Guantanamo | "We are fighting for the lib- leration of the fishermen," Castro said, "The problem of the base is |part of a series of circumstance ithat constitute a source of fric- |tion and tension between the United States and Cuba and that have to be dealt within the gen- day to have demanded a ran-jeral aspect of these relations." som equivalent to more than! Castro. met reporters on & $175,000. ldockside at Havana Harbor Sources close to police said|where he introduced a 22-year- the first ransom contact wasjold American fisherman who believed to have been made Fri-/said he had come to Cuba to day night, following the arrival/seek political asylum. ; here of the victim's father, The fisherman identified him- movie tycoon Run Run. Shaw. |self as Dennis Kirby, of Vallejo, Curb On Water Of War pensate Cuba for the seizure of the four Cuban fishing boats. Kirby was promised asylum. However, Castro said the shrimp boat will be returned because "Cuba respects inter- national law and we don't prac- tise piracy." manent water supply for Guantanamo Naval mier Fide] Castro. Americans, White House .sessions on the of four Cuban fishing boats al- leged to have been in Florida waters and Castro's subsequent action in cutting the Guantan- amo water supply. At the same time a White dangers of carefully weighed. by all na- at a Malden hospital. There tions "The reckless and irresponsi- clared, will be Wi The U.S. also will start re- placing some of the 3,000 Cu- bans employed at the base with The actions were announced by President Johnson Friday night following two emergency Cuban situation, which wors- ened this week with the arrest House statement warned of the "further provoca- tions by Castro" and declared that the prospects "should be ble conduct of the Cuban gov- ernment remains a _ constant) threat to the peace of this hem- isphere,"" the White House de- there for the foreseeable fu- ture," Rusk told a press con- ference Friday. "We shall certainly not dis- cuss the future of Guantanamo with a regime which does not ng for the Cuban peo iGcavert The 10,500 Guantanamo resi- dents are to have enough stored water for about 10 days or two weeks, with re- duced quantities available from an existing sea-water conver- sion ship and more to be moved by tanker from the Florida coast, The U.S. also has asked American firms to speed up proposals for further sea-water conversion schemes to add to base supplies. In Cuba, President Osvaide on Guantanamo, that when Cuba decides to take the base, it will do so through inter- national institutions. "We will claim the base in discussed with other|make clear that ; meg eae mes een ts ae the of States-and--with the NATO al-' lies, HOPE TO TIGHTEN BOYCOTT This was taken to mean the! U.S, will make new represen- tations to its allies to tighten the American economic boy- cott of Cuba. Johnson let it be known through State Secretary Rusk' years ago. "The basic fact is that we are in Guantanamo and will remain that the U.S. will not be pushed jout of Guantanamo, a base the/ciatm. U.S. acquired through treaty 61 Of the $,000 Cuban employees at Guantanamo, 500 live on the base and 2,500 live in Cuba proper. MADRID -- The Spanish na- tional radio broadcast a state- ment by Prince Carlos de Bor- bon y Parma today which said he and Princess Irene of Hol- land were formally engaged "and the date of our wedding will depend on conversations with the royal Dutch family." Carlos said he expected to go to Holland soon to meet with Queen Juliana and her royal consort and discuss a date for! the wedding. The prince said he and the princess had been friends "'for a good many years and we have met frequently, but our understanding was not formal- ized until recently." At the time the announce- rule by which TV stations m t have 55-per-cent Canadian con- tent in their programming. The board now computes this tween 20 and 30 Hercules trans- port planes from the U.S. Lock- heed Aircraft Corporation dur- percentage every four -eeks, It/ing the next four years, respon-|,embling 120 more for the U.S./boxcar can lift five tons a max- is proposing to enlarge this/sible authorities said Friday. | mutual aid program imum of 2,000 miles at 200 schedule to 1 ver'ss, thus giv-| Cost will be around $2,000,000/INCREASE MOBILITY miles an hour. each The Hercules purchase will be) The RCAF wants the Her- The RCAF has operated four CITY EMERGENCY [Hercules since 1961 and long/ment's plans to provide thejcan land and take off on short has wanted more of them. armed forces with more mobil-jrunways, rough ground and, PHONE NUMBERS Lockheed, which produced itsjity. In 1960, when Canada sent)with skis, on snow. It can fly }600th Hercules last year, is ex- jpected to place contracts in ;Canada of equivalent value. In 1963 the company placed $15,-/; 217,013 worth of orders in Can- POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 the core of the defence depart-jcules in particular because. it 300 men United Nations duty, they hadi'Command headquarters at to be flown in U.S The RCAF air division in Eur-| 1952. ope flies the Lockheed CF-104) The four-engine Hercules can nuclear jet bo. ver and Cana-jcarry 15 tons of cargo 4,000 dair Limited, Montreal, is as-|miles at 340 miles an hour. The to The Congo forjnon-stop from RCAF Transport Air Force"Trenton, Ont., to Europe, NEEDS FIRM BASE The RCAF Yukon planes Acquisition of the Hercule \ No details were given. .. There was no immediate con- firmation from police or the) family of 31-year-old Shaw Vee Ming, managing director of the vast Shaw organization Young Shaw was kidnapped) Wednesday by four gunmen, who wavlaid his chauffeur ldriven sedan, The chauffeur |was also seized } | Trenton to Europe but it must operate from well - equipped airfields, Commercial airlines are ex- pected to object to enlargement of Transport Command, which already moves 15,000 passeng- ers and 600 tons of cargo a month, "he Command's main job is supplying the air division in Europe and remote stations in the Arctic. The commercial operators say the RCAF is carrying out many routine jobs they could perform. The Hercules will provide the army with a modest airlift. The plane can carry . 64 fully- ; transport/equipped paratroépers or 78 in-|to be jada compared with Lockheedjlikely will mean retirement of,can carry 22°tons non-stop fromifantrymen. ' Calif, He said he arrived Fri- day night from Key West, Fla., in a 25-foot shrimp boat owned by his employer, the Morgan Sea Food Company of Savan- nah, Ga Kirby said he wanted to com- Senate OKs Tax-Cut Bill WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Senate passed Friday the long- awaited $11,600,000,000 tax - cut bill -- the biggest in U.S. his- tory. It is expected to put more money into the hands of just about every U.S. individual tax- payer and business. The roll call vote was 77 to 21. The Senate, mostly going along with its finance. commit- tee's recommendations, made several major changes and a batch of minor or technical ones --about 150 in all--from the $11,100,000,000 tax - cut version passed by the House of Repre- sentatives last Sept. 25. A con- ference committee of senate and house members will seek to compromise the differences. It's expected that the bill will be wrapped up for President Johnson's signature in time for jment was made, Princess Irene and Carlos had arrived at Ma- drid airport, where the tall Dutch girl presented her suitor to her father, Prince Bernhard. PRINCESS DROVE The princess, who drove her own car to the airport from the prince's Madrid home, was smiling and told the reporters: "We are very happy." Prince Bernhard _ flew here earlier to bring Irene home. He left the royal plane in which he had waited more than two hours to greet his daughter and her choice for a husband. He squeezed his daughter in a big hug and kissed her soundly. Both were smiling as Prince Bernhard turned and gave Prince Carlos a big em- brace. Then ali three entered the plane. U.S. Player Given Match Misconduct INNSBRUCK, Austria (CP) The United States wound up its poor: showing in-the Olympic hockey championships with a 7-3 vic- tory over winless Switzerland today but earned an unwanted distinction of having forward Dave Brooks become the first take-home pay of U.S. workers fattened starting next} month, of player of the tournament to be banished with a match mis- Conasct penalty, Today's developments cli- maxed days of conflicting state- ments and rumors that started with an announcement last week that the princess had been converted to Roman Catholic- ism. Then earlier this week her mother, Queen Juliana of The Netherlands, said the "happy possibility" of her daughter's engagement would not take place. Carlos was identified as a son of Prince Xavier, traditionalist pretender to the Spanish throne. (Just before Irene's emer- Engagement Still On ieee et ani te aor oe Spanish Prince Says The Hague quoted the Dutch government information service as saying the suitor was "Prince Hugo of Bourbon," sec- ond son of Prince Xavier. an Almanac de Gotha, a erence work on European royalty and nobility, mentions ja Prince Hugo as the second child and eldest 'son of Prince Xavier, It says Prince Hugo was born on April 8, 1990, in Paris, It appeared that the Dutch spokesman was refer- ing to the same man who ac- companied Princess Irene te gence, a Reuters report from the airoprt here.) PRINCESS IRENE of The . Netherlands and. her fiance, Prince Carlos de Borbon Parma, 34, of Spain sit to- gether at the~prince's home | in Madrid today. The Spanish national radio broadcast the prince's statement which said he and the 24-year-old prin- cess wer> formally engaged. : --AP Wirephoto via cable from Madrid y ahaa LEAVE BASE ALONE LBJ WARNS CASTRO US. Hopes To Knot Boycott WASHINGTON (CP) -- The United States has decided to find ways of establishing a per- its Base on Cuba without ever again rely- ing on its traditional fresh wa- ter source now shut off by Pre-