Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 May 1963, p. 1

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' WEATHER REPORT Sunny with a few cloudy inter- - vals today and Tuesday, little = = change in temperature: THOUGHT FOR TODAY. A beauty. salon is a place where they make young colts out o old 45s. Oshawa Cines Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Ottawa ond for payment of Postage Bb OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, MAY 6, 1963 aa 'Two Fires | Kill Seven _ InSudbury SUDBURY (CP)--Seven per- sons--six of them children--died in two separate weekend fires in this Northern Ontario mining ety. A woman and two of her six children died only a few feet from safety early Sunday when fire destroyed their two-storey frame home on the city out- skirts. About 24 hours earlier, all four children of another Sud- bury family died in a fire in their two-storey frame home, Gloom Cast Over Visit By Nasser ALGIERS (AP)--The death of Algeria's foreign minister the worst Nile River tragedy in modern history cast gloom to- day over the triumphal visit to Algeria of President Nasser of the United Arab Republic. Festivities in Nasser's honor were called off as the Algerian government proclaimeda day of national mourning for Mo- hamed Khemisti, the foreign minister. isti, 33, died Sunday, 24 days after a fanatic assassin fired a bullet into his Egyptian villagers mourned 216 people who were drowned Saturday when an overloaded ferry capsized near Maghagha, on the upper Nile. A political plit in Syria also clouded Nasser's mission to drum up Algerian support for Arab unity. DOUBT WILL JOIN Nasser would like to include In Sunday's fire, Mrs. Freda McNeil and her children--Letty, 10, and Billy, 8--were trapped in the flaming house after the two children ran back upstairs, apparently to find their mother. George McNeil, 37, rescued the four other children but was restrained by firemen from go- ing back' into the house. He and his wife had thrown Deborah, 9, Ronald, 6, Francis, 4 and Jean, 3, from a secomd-storey window. Firemen said McNeil raced downstairs to find the two other children but could not because of smoke and flames. The body of Mrs. McNeil was found with one child in her arms and the other a few feet further inside the door. The dead in Saturday's fire were the only children of Mr. and Mrs. Clement Neville: Claudie, 5, Willy, 3, Brenda, 2, and Sandria, nine days. Two other children were res- cued. by passersby from the and porch roof of the Neville house as flames shot through a bed- room window. Firemen said Claudia might have been saved along with Garnett Gilbert, 8, and his brother yy, 6, if the girl had been willing, to crawl onto the porch roof. wouldn't be- cause she was sed only in panties. The Gilbert children are the sons of a relative of Mrs. Nev- ille, Mrs. Neville suffered burns to her face and arms. Her hus- band was working at his mine job in adjacent Copper Clift at the time of the fire. Garnett said he woke up when he heard the nine-day-old baby cry. "I saw smoke and then flames. My brother and I Then I saw Claudia and called to her to come out. She told me she couldn't because she only Algeria in the new United Arab Republic which Egypt, Syria and Iraq have agreed .to form _mext September. But the Ba'ath Socialists froze had her panties on. Then, when she tried to get out, she couldn't. The fire caught her." The Gilbert boys were pro-Nasser ele-icued by Maurice Menard and of the Syrian govern-| William Kusyk, who had heard week, and there is|cries for help. boys from the porc! out Atter they had pulled the two come from a blowtorch." Although Algerian crowds hailed Nasser as "'E) rais'"' (the chief) on his triumphant arrival here Saturday, Khemisti's death served as a grim reminder of the difficulties in the path of Arab unity. Khemisti was shot shortly after he returned from the Mid- die East, which he criticized to friends and reporters. He indi- cated that he preferred the path of co-operation with France for his country. "I punished the traitor of the revolution," screamed the as- sassin after he shot Khemisti on April 11. YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Two Hurt In Weekend Accidents Page 9 Naval Vets Honor Fallen Comrades Page 9 Toastmasters Club Presentations Judo Club Wins Three Titles ... Miss Teenage Road-E-O Chosen seeee -. Page 9 crawled out @ window to a roof.| off the A HAITIAN SOLDIER, right, who is a member of the Tonton Macoute -- the Bogey- men -- stands with another guard outside the President- By ISAAC FLORES SANTO DOMINGO, Domini- can Republic (AP)--More than 7 Dominican troops sup- ported by tanks and rocket- firing planes massed near the Haitian border today awaiting orders to strike. In. Washington a peace mis- sion of the Organiztaion of Aderican States was reported seeking wider powers to head threatened clash bet the Dominican Republic and Haiti. Describing the situation as "highly tense," Gonzalo Facio of Rica, president of the OAS council, called an execu- T€8-| tive session of the council today to study the four-nation mis- sion's report on its survey last tial palace in Port au Prince, Haiti, yesterday. A tank has been brought up into position for further protection. The Tonton Macoute is the civilian to all foreign diplomatic mis- sions in Port au Prince. The letter quoted U.S. Am- bassador Raymond Thurston as saying he had inforamtion Du- valier had ordered his civilian militia, the Tonton Macoute, to invade the embassies harboring opponents of his regime ap- peared threatened, The letter added that Duvaiier would kill the refugees if Haiti is invaded. 'GONE BESERK' A former Haitian army offi- cer just out of the country said "Duvalier has gone berserk.' The ex-officer, is Moise, hid in the Venezu Embassy in Port au Pyince and arrived in Kingston, Jamaica, Sunday, He week of the situation. The Dominican troops were wine} mShed_to the border town of Jimani Sunday night amid un- confirmed rumors that Presi- dent Juan Bosch would order an invasion unless Haitian Pres- ident Francois Duvalier's re- gime made good on its promise to give safe conduct out of the country to 15 political opponents who took refuge in the Domini- can embassy in Port au Prince. WANTS EXCUSE One highly placed source said Bosch was ready to "use any excuse" to set off an armed clash with Duvalier's forces. The Dominican charge d'af- faires in Port au Prince, Frank Bobaidila, returned to Santo Domingo with a letter the Hai- tian political refugees had sent Aid To Flooded Towns Discussed By Cabinet FORT SMITH, N.W.T. (CP) The federal cabinet will decide this week what assistance it will provide two northern communi- ties over-run by flood waters and massive ice floes. Northern Affairs Minister Ar- thur Laing said the work of re- Hay River, N.W.T. and eg Re Ag N.W.T., 500 and 625 miles north of Edmonton, respectively, will begin as soon as flood waters recede. About 150 persons, mostly: women, applauded the minister here during the weekend when he told them claims for dam- age in the hard-hit town of Hay River will be paid by the fed- eral government when approved by a team of assessors to be flown to the scene. He added about 50 homes de- stroyed or damaged in Fort n will be repaired or re- stored on high ground. The minister estimated dam- age at Hay River at $1,600,000, two - thirds of the .timated value of property in the town of 1800. S. W. Hancock, Fort Simp- son administrator, estimated damage in his centre at more than $750,000. A trailer camp will be estab- lished near Hay Bay and 50 trailers moved in by the federal government this week. Floor victims evacuated from the set- tlement will begin to return by Wednesday. Tents will be set up at Fort Y s Mayor W. R. McByran of Hay River said he was satisfied with the federal government's plan- ned assistance program. At Fort Simpson, officials said they felt the worst was over. But some uncertainty remained b of meagre and conflict- Simpson to bl evacuated by air last week to return to the region by the end of the week. About 1,600 residents have been evacuated from the towns. Ice on Great Slave Lake held back the spring thaw on the northward - flowing Hay River and .ons of ice and billions of gallons of water swept across a delta-shaped island at the mouth of the river upon which the town was built. At its worst, the water rose 20 feet above normal. It now has receded but in its wake floating sewage from cesspools has created a health hazard. More than 1,100 doses of ty- phoid vaccine were given in Hay River and an area five miles around the town was placed under quarantine, No person will be permitted to einter or leave the quaran- tined area without permission. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 ' The federal government said Saturday it would move out all but essential people from the flooded section of Hay River. Mr. Laing said a study will be made to determine whether relocation of Hay River, a key distribution centre in the region, would be desirable and, if so, what cost would be involved. ing reports from sparsely-set- tled regions. Further flooding threatened the community Saturday night but did not materialize. Early Sunday a skeleton task force was taken to the island and found the water level un- changed. More than a third of the town still was under water. The community was his when ice on the mighty Mackenzie, more than 1,000 miles long and key to the Makenzie River sys- tem, backed up the run off from the Liard, one of its main tribu- taries. First tents to be established at Fort Simpson were taken in by RCAF aircraft Sunday. Mr. Laing said the emergency would be over sooner at Fort Simpson than at Hay River and the tents would not be needed for more than a week or two. Temperatures in t he regions ranged between 40 and 50 de- greees Sunday, but there was no indication when the Mackenzie would break up. The sky was clear and there was little wind. Mr. Laing had high praise for the emergency flood operation. "It is almost incredible that such an operation would be 'car- ried out without injury." Weekend Congo Death Toll 5 ELISABETH VILLE, The Congo (AP)--At least five peo- ple were killed here during weekend incidents involving the Congolese amry, United Nations troops, police and civilians. On Saturday night an uniden- tified man attacked a police station in the Negro township of Albert, fatally shot a policeman, 1 army of strongman President Francois Duvalier. (AP Wire- photo via radio from Port au Prince) Dominica Army Mass Near Haitian Border said there is a torture chamber in Duvalier's palace. Four Haitians who had been hiding in the Chilean Embassy flew to Jamaica Sunday. They; brought to 24 the number who had sought asylum in foreign embassies and were allowed to leave. Eighty are still inside the embassies. Duvalier broke diplomatic re- lations with the Dominican Re- public last week, and the Do- minican embassy staff has returned home. Colombia has taken over the Haitian refugees in the inican Embassy. Duvalier has declared martial law: and imposed a night cur- few. Apparently his chief target now is Clement Bardot, organ- izer of the Tonton Macoute and an underground leader. CITY UNEASY An uneasy calm was reported in Port au Prince. Immigration officials halted correspondent Nathan Miller of the Baltimore Sun at the Port au Prince airport as he was buying a ticket for the United States. He was told to report today to the ministry of in- terior. No reason was given: Two other American corre- spondents--Paul Good of the American Broadcasting Com- pany and Al Burt of the Miami Herald--were deported Satur- ON TALK Guard MONTREAL (CP) -- An au- topsy has shown that prison guard Raymond Tellier was killed by bullets fired by his would-be rescuers and not by knife wounds during a melee at St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary last week. Tellier was grabbed by two prisoners and held while they demanded that they be trans- ferred to another prison. He was slashed and stabbed while he was being held. Prison guards charged the cell where he was being held, opening fire with pistols as they moved in. One of the prisoners, Marcel Marcoux, 34, was killed and his cousin Claude, 21, was wounded. It was announced Thursday that Tellier, 35-year-old father of three, had died from the slashes and stab wounds. A mongue official said today the autopsy showed that he had been hit four times by bullets-- twice in the heart, once in the head and once in the shoulder. The autopsy report said he might have died in any event from a stab wound that pierced his lung. An inquest into Tellier's death and the shooting of Marcoux is to resume shortly. It was started last week but adjourned after the bodies were formally identified. Meanwhile, Warden Michel LeCorre said '"'a feeling of ex- treme tension" has built up among the prisoners since the incident. He said 20 members By Rescuers Killed sent a message to Warden Le- door, , the legs while he was being held. the guards as they raced in. most instantly when he was hit in the head. His cousin was wounded in the arm. Officer Shot As Convict Recaptured REGINA (CP)--An escaped convict was captured and a Re- gina policeman seriously wounded Sunday as gunfire and a wild car chase shattered the early-morning quiet. Thomas William McCauley, 25, of Calgary, described by po- lice as an escapee from the British Columbia Penitentiary at New Westminster, was charged after his capture with two counts of upted capit: murder and iwo of breaking anu entering. Mary Ann Connelly, 19, - of Vancouver, captured with Mc- of the ROMP and 11 Queb provincial police were called to the penitentiary to help main- tain order. The Marcoux cousins grabbed Police Investigate Nairobi Attacks NAIROBI, Kenya (Reuters)-- British military and civilian po- lice are investigating reports that British troops roamed Nai- robi during the weekend attack- ing bars and taxis after last Thursday's murder of a soldier. British East African Com- mand headquarters said five day. soldiers were under arrest. seriously wounded a Congo soldiers and slightly wounded another policeman. For almost an hour he pinned down a platoon of Ethiopian United Nations soldiers, a pla- toon of police and an army pa- trol. UN troops finally sur- rounded and killed him. In the township of Kenia, a barman was shot dead by Con- golese soldiers and several ci- vilians were injured when the soldiers opened fire at point- blank range inside a bar. United Nations armored cars patrolled the troubled areas and established onder, Today all was quiet. Red Guerrillas Execute U.S. Lieutenant SAIGON (AP) -- A United States Army lieutenant was ex- ecuted by Communist guerrillas 30 miles north of Saigon in broad daylight today, a military spokesman said. He added that two Viet |been made in the last four days No Easing Seen In Racial Riots BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP)-- Negro integration leaders say there will be no letup in mas- sive racial. demonstrations in the wake of a Sunday march by more than 1,000 Negroes who sang and prayed in a park as policemen stood by with fire hoses and dogs. Police Commissioner Eugene (Bull) Connor reversed his tac- tics and permitted the peaceful march from a c to a nearby park and back to the church. It was one of the largest planned demonstrations of the southern desegregation movement. More than 1,400 arrests have of stepped-up racial activity. Still in jails or detention quar- ters are about 1,000 Negroes, including more than 500 school children under 16. changed and we will move right on Monday," said Rev. Wyatt Tee Walker, top strategist in the movement. Plans would be changed if bi- racial talks start, he sai.d Efforts to ease the brewing threat of major trouble con- tinued as Burke Marshall, head Cauley after their car hit a light standard, was charged with at- tempted capital murder, and breaking and entering. City Police Const. Donald W. Coulthard, 25, was in hospital in serious condition wth two bullet wounds in the left side suffered when he surprised a man and woman in a drug store, When detectives later chased a speeding car, shots were fired at them and police retaliated with two shots "'tire-high" and then three more shots that blasted the back window out of the fleeing vehicle. The car veered off the street and crashed into a light standard. Police arrested a woman in the car and Det, Sgt. Robert Connell chased a man who leaped from the car and cor- nered him, The man fired point- blank at the detective and missed. The cornered man eventually was persuaded to surrender and police seized firearms and a quantity of merchandise, McCauley, serving a six-year term for armed robbery, at- tempted armed robbery and breaking, entering and theft, escaped from New Westminster; with Eddie Beaver March 5.| Beaver was captured in Van- couver April 10. of the U.S. justice department's civil rights division, worked in secret to settle the issues, He conferred with white and Negro leaders. Scheduled to join the desegre- gation forces today was Negro comedian Dick Gregory, who participated in voter registra- tion efforts at Greenwood, Miss. In the demonstration Sunday, the huge throng of Negroes| walked from the New Pilgrim Baptist Church, about a mile south of the spot where such marches were broken up by fire "Our plans for continued demonstrations have not. been hoses and police dogs Friday and Saturday. military men travelling in a jeep with the. American were also executed by the guerrillas, who had blown the jeep off the road with a grenade. The guerrillas forced. all three men out of the vehicle, then ex- ecuted them with small arms, the spokesman said. The bodies were found later by a miiitary~ patroi. Military authorities here spec- ulated that all three persons on the jeep may have. been injured in the initial explosion. Commu- nist guerrillas have a record of killing all wounded they find, but taking unwounded prisoners. The lieutenant was the 73rd American killed in the Vietna- mese war since late 1961. The weekend toll among South Vietnamese forces was 22 dead, seven missing and 35 wounded in scattered Commu.- nist raids on isolated outposts. t M- LATE NEWS FLASHES Thousands More Troops At Border SANTO DOMINGO (AP) -- The Dominican government sent thousands more troops to the Haitian border today for a possible invasion 'of the neighboring Negro republic, government sources. reported. President Jian Bosch was reported ready to order the invasion at the siightest pro- vocation from Haiti. Chrysler To Lend Gas Turbine Cars DETROIT (AP) Chrysler Corp., which has an- nounced plans to: build 50 gas-turbine powered cars this year, said today it will lend them to the public for con- sumer testing. : Civil Service Pay Study Planned OTTAWA (CP) -- The Civil Service Federation of Can- ada will make a national study of regional pay rates~to compile information for a.possible policy decision on the issue, President Claude A. Edwards said today. '|34, of Regina--said he was de- Six Prisoners Hold Regina Guard Hostage REGINA (CP)--Six prisoners held a guard hostage, tore toi- lets from walls, smashed win- dows and spread torn paper about in a new wing of Regina jail Saturday night in an appar-' Prince Albert Penitentiary. Prison officials said another 22 prisoners in the corridor of the new wing where the riot took \place apparently did not take an active part in the riot- ing. The guard -- Sulo Salminen, tailed to watch the 28 prison- ers as they watched television in the corridor. He said the prisoners turned off the teievision set about-$ p.m. and he started locking them in their cells. | Several had been locked in when one pulled a knife. and threatened him into an open cell. Other prisoners stood by with razor blades, Salminen said. ' Six prisoners then began riot- ing and shouting "transfer." Mr. Salminen said that in the course of the rioting he man-' aged to close the cell door and lock himself inside where pris- oners could not get at him. ister Pearson has returned to Ottawa almost bubbling with' Tellier during the supper hour|enthusiasm over what he re- at the grim stone institution.|gards as the signal success of They forced him into a cell and|his trip Corre and it was decided 'o|pbrief his Tush the cell after Tellier was/senior advisers today on the} heard groaning and blood was/substance of his conversations seen seeping under the celliwith Prime Minister and Tellier had been' slashed in|leaders. sporting a new pair of bright yellow pig- A volley of shots was fired by|skin gloves, and Mrs. Pearson, in a new flowery spring hat, ar- Marcel Marcoux was killed al-|Tived at Uplands RCAF station while he was away, Affairs Minister Martin, andjsion to Viscount Amory, British high)|farther for ent attempt to gain transfers tol PM Shrugs Off Reports - Of London Bomb Hoax OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Mio- in of the Gener Agreement on Tartffs meeting in Geneva. to London last week. Mr. Pearson was expected tojneva, cabinet colleagues and' Macmillan other British and NATO il The prime minister, ili i late Sunday afternoon and were' met by Justice Minister Chev-|i rier, actimg prime minister)" External | Britain' A ; push out to commissioner to Canada. There|nadian government were about 100 others, inclading|ing how it canbe done without other cabinet ministers. ea its ay friends. SHRUGS OFF BOMB HOAX to 'reporters' ooameas that Mr. Pearson shrugged off alcloser AngloCanadian ties in Fo Sage a ag to be | trade and defence were the e rm, a bomb principal topics discus been placed on board his RCAF! siong, oe Yukon in London by the Feder-| ¢ + ation de ion Quebecois. | meeting After a smooth landing, the big turbo-prop aircraft was parked at the end of a runway, far from' the air force hangars and the waiting crowd, and the prime minister's party disembarked! there. "It was just a hoax of course, but it is a nuisance, and » ple who penpetrate this kind of hoax are to be condemned," Mr. Pearson said. "It could 'be dangerous because of the nerv- ousness it 'might cause in the air to people who had weak hearts, I'm not one of them." Of his talks in London, he said they were: "very pleasant, and very successful from Point of view." "I did what I ha i ff E i s ' ii i i wt F i a ge if g f . i ge | a7 Bees Hi He af if = i g 43. B33. fe Ban8 "eBEE ~ q my friends in London. We had mss i of Gage ten tk ona S, will. I've been very interested it was mutually helpful. to get from the Prime Minister 'I think the new government] of the United Kingdom. his view has established its. relations/on the value of this with the government of the/and that will help in making the United Kingdom on a veryldecision which we have to make friendly basis | and that's what/before the council meeting." T hoped to do. There were also "some very HOPES WILL BE INFORMAL|S00d talks" with British minis- On specific subjects, Mr. ters about U.K.-Canadian de- Pearson said: fence production sharing. 1. He hopes to. make the same}. "We are anxious, as every Ca- kind of informal visit with Pres-/nadian government would be, to ident Kennedy when he goes to|get the British interested in Hyannis Port this weekend. Canada as a source of supply 2, There has been no planning|for military equipment. That r a Commonwealth prime|means, of course, that we will ministers conference and itjhave to take the same interest wasn't discussed in London, but|in the U.K. as a source of sup- Commonwealth trade ministers|ply of defence equipment." PRIME MINISTER AN if D WIFE LEAVE UK.

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