Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Jan 1964, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

sae ae oe eT THOUGHT FOR TODAY Bridegroom: A: husband who aske his wife if she has enough money to carry her through the day. Pshawa Zune Mainly. sunny and colder Tues- day. Winds southwest veering to northwest 20, VOL. 93--NO. 22 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JANUARY, 27, 1964 uteerond op Pane Cian el, Foe, Ofte Bteerinest Guerrillas Kill US. Preacher LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (AP) -- Guerrilla fighters at- tacked two American women missionaries in strife-torn Kwilu Province and killed one with an arrow, a Baptist missionary re- ported here Sunday. He said the other woman was wounded, Rev. Peter Buller identified the slain woman as Irene Fer- rell, a Baptist, The wounded woman, Ruth B, Hege, was till in the area of the attack and was last reported alive, Buller said. He came here from his mission in Mukedi with his report of the attack. iss Ferrell and Miss Hege were withthe Baptist Mid Mis- sion of Mangungu, They were the sole white occupants of Mangungu, which lies east of Kwilu's capital of Kikwit, about 500 miles west of here. Miss Ferrell was the first re- ported Protestant missionary to be killed in The Congo since ce from Belgium in 1960. Her death brings to four the number of victims of guer- rilla gangs led by former ¢du- cation minister Pierre Mulele. The Congo government said it has documents proving Mulele's band had Red Chinese support. SOUGHT HELP Buller, who reached Leopold- ville Sunday with his wife and two children, Jeanette, 8, and Charles, 4, said he saw Miss Ferrell signalling desperately "She and her friends were out on the lawn," he said. The mis- ion can only be reached from y helicopter because no landing strip. got a letter telling dead--killed by an said, California, who Ley poured Leopoldville Sunday from The Congo Inland "s station War Decla _ TORONTO (CP) -- Hundreds of babies and small children are being sadistically beaten or maltreated by their parents or brothers and sisters in Ontario) every year, the province's 8 coroner, Dr. H. B. Cotnam, said today. He said his department has opened an ali - out assault on this major social and medical problem "Since I took office 13 months ago, we've held inquests into 12 battered-child deaths. And T'm not counting obvious mur- ders where a child has been or shot. "For each child that comes) to me dead, there are probably) 100, perhaps more, being ham-; mered to a varying degree, "Many--who will be perma- nently crippled, mentally de- fective or seriously psychologic-| ally disturbed--might be better| dead," he said. | The children are victims of an extremely common, although re-) cently discovered, phenomenom doctors call the battered - child) TORONTO (CP) -- Harry Al-| Miss Taylor began buying len, 46, died of carbon monox-|winter clothes Wednesday. syndrome, Dr, Cotnam said he has in- strife-torn western to Mulele. Last reports said it was garrisoned by fewer than 50 Congolese soldiers. Mulele's men were reported to have en- circled the town last week, began his revolt in Kwilu last at Kamayala, said she had been forced to flee because Mulele's men had set fire to the sav- annah (grass prairie) and the flames were sweeping dowa on the mission, Buller told how he had helped er three Belgian Roman atl Mulele's guerrillas and local villagers at Kilembe mission last Tuesday night, WAS HORRIBLE . "It was horrible," he said with a shudder. The priests were hacked to death with machetes and their bodies mutilated, The missionary said his Mu- kedi mission, a few miles north of Kilembe, had not been at- tacked, "Mulele's men gave us per- mission to leave," he said. 'The local chief took our side." He said all villagers either sided actively with Mulele or followed him for fear of being killed by his partisans. Until recently, Mulele was es- timated te have between only 400 and 600 men under arms. But latest reports from Kwilu indicated his forces were grow- ing rapidly since he unleashed wholesale attacks on mission stations last week. Refugees said he was apparently trying to wipe out all traces of lw and order in the region, Congolese Planning Minister Cleophas Kamitatu declared that Mulele had captured the town of Idiofa to the east of Kik wit, Kamitatu's partisans control Kwilu's legal govern- ment and he is in close touch with the area, LAUNCH OPERATION Meanwhile, the United Na- tions began launching an armed-helicopter operation to evacuate all remaining mission- aries who want to anes the ce, Army. Tdiofa is the first town to fall olic priests slaughtered by), France Gives Official Recognition To Peking ificially recognized the Commu- nist Chinese regime, the gov- ernment announced today. announcement, 8 agreed to establish diplomatic relations and exchange ambas- sadors, dication of how this step will affect the and the Nationalist Chinese re- Noyaiee of Treseet Coleg "on A POINT FROM HOME British Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home points out something to U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy on doorstep outside the prime minister's official residence, No, 10 Downing Street, in Lon- don today, They had just com- pleted a conference inside the residence, Kennedy is in the PARIS (AP)---France has of- Peking radio made a similar The French announcement aid the two governments had There ws no immediate in- ties between France the assumption was that France could therefore maintain rela- tions with both: regimes. This is called the "two Chi- nas" policy, which both the Communists and the nationalists have theretofore steadfastly op- posed. Each claims to be the ltrue representative of China, The nationalists have threat- ened tosever relations with France although the United States has counselled Chiang not to do so, radio said France and ee. 6 French officials previously had said that Peking had not demanded that France break relations with Chiang as dition for diplomtic ties and con-| Th 34-year-old rebel leader -- A western diplomat who visited Kwilu last week de- scribed the rebellion as a "'text- book" Chinese Communist-style peasant uprising. Mulele spent several months) in Peking. Earlier he had been; envoy to Cairo of imprisoned separatist leader Antoine Giz- enga, whose 1961 Stanleyville regime was backed by the Com- munist bloc. In the last few days the re- volt has begun to spread into neighboring Kwango Province to the south of Kwilu, where both Roman Catholic and Pro- testant missions have been at- tacked, Fumes Kill Man Sleeping In Car ide poisoning Sunday while beth Taylor and Richard Bur- ton, mum on their plans for travelling to Toronto but shop- ping on a grand scale in the meantime, were still in Los An- geles as day dawned today. Taylor-Burton Hang Fire On Travel Plans LOS ANGELES (AP)--Eliza- The couple had train reserva-| tions for Chicago Saturday but| cancelled a few hours before de-| parture because Miss had gone shopping. Taylor Cracked Burton: "One of the reasons we made tional inequity with all the en-|rely firmly on such support. reservations. by train is because| suing dangerous consequences."/The time of colonial regimes I don't think a jet could get all jof Elizabeth's luggage off the|ment, distributed by the news/power on earth that can save | ground lagency Tass, contained no open/them, The clothes were bought with! structed Ontario's 500 coroners;running his car in his garage.jone eye on the weather in Tor- and pathologists to increase|Police said he apparently felljonto where Burton starts re-|Khrushchey as saying: "Every their vigilance in investigating/asleep while letting the motor/hearsals Thursday for his mod-|people that has fought against any child death. warm up. AFRICAN MUTINIE S QUELLED other wi three months. t a_have agreed In Washington the state de- partment called France's action "an unfortunate step' and re- affirmed U.S. intentions to stand by the nationalist regime. France is the second major U.S. ally to recognize Commu- nist China, The other was Brit- ain, which opened diplomatic relations early in 1950, before the Korean War, But the Chi- nese have never agreed to ex- change ambassadors with Brit- ain, The top official of the Brit- British capital to tell British officials of his piesr-aeree mission on the Malaysia dis- pute, --AP Wirephoto via cable from London ish mission in Peking is a charge d'affaires, The state department said French recognition was partic: ularly unfortunate since it came "at a time when the Chinese Communists are actively pro- moting aggression and subver- sion in Southeast Asia and else- where." President de Gaulle's govern- ment had informed the United States that it would soon rec- be oe the Peking regime, U.S. icials thade no secret of their opposition, and President Jobn- with an estimate of its general effect. on the Atlantic alliance and the free world in general. One cause of U.S. concern was the likely effect on the French recognition on Commu- nist China's long battle for a seat in the United Nations. But it seemed doubtful that enough nations would switch votes to give Peking a seat at the next session of the general assembly in the fall, 'UK Plans Invasion In Zanzibar: Tass MOSCOW (AP) -- Denounc- ling alleged British plans to in-jof other socialist states, Today vade Zanzibar, the Soviet gov- jernment declared Sunday this|hear that the peoples fighting "would be an act of interna- The official government state- rocket - rattling or pledges to spring immediately to Zanzi- bar's side with military aid. However, it quoted Premier r-- Master Plan Hinted NAIROBI, Kenya (AP)--Brit- ish' troops quelled an uprising|will be no compromise on this! stations i a - jand I do not intend to meet| Seventeen ,Africans died in them or allow any of my minis-jers marched to their barracks|ynits and ish and African officers ques- tioned rebellious native troops at Lanet camp in Kenya. after an appeal by President Julius Nyerere, Oth. in Kenya, Tanganyika and rioting after the initial flareup)ters to negotiate with them, We/to surrender, About 100 were de- Uganda Sunday in an effort to|in Tanganyika last Monday fol-|shall:not act out of fear." learn whether there was a mas- inies. More than 3,500 British troops lowing the coup that toppled the lier At Jinja, Uganda, where 454, A spokesman at the British/hay ter plan for their brushfire mut- sultan of Zanzibar a week ear-|British soldiers disarmed. 1,000|East Africa command eee at oe men of the Ist Battalion of the At Lanet, 300 Kenyan soldiers; Uganda Rifles in a dawn r:'dida tained for questioning. s post in Nairobi said "This has been a y of settling in for British were in firm control in the|were held in a barbed-wire/Saturday, 20 mutineers were|troops in East Africa, Every- three East African Common-jcompound as one by one they|said' to have been arrested.|where is quiet." wealth countries after disarm-| ing the mutinous African sold-| jers in almost bloodless opera-| tions. Mopping up continued in! the Tanganyika bush. Four African soldiers were killed in the week of sporadic! fighting. Three were killed when | + ore questioned by officers, some of them British, Similar screenings to determine a master plot for the troop ton Obote, who called in the Command of the battalion was) handed over to an African. Uganda's Prime Minister Mil-| |FIND NO LINK The spokesman said no evi- jdence had been found that the/ volts were under way in Tan-\British forces, imposed press/three mutinies were concerted ganyika and Uganda, The entire Lith Battalion of the Kenya Rifles at Lanet was 'eensorship in his country. The main buildings in Kam- la, the capital, were guarded Commandos put down a mutiny|disarmed. The barracks were|by . steel-helmeted police andj) at a barracks outside Dar esjpatrolied by British armoredifars were checked at police} Salaam, the Tanganyika capital, cars and infantrymen with au-| dblocks on the highway to! rebellion but investigations were continuing, Asked how long British troops were likely to remain in their present positions in East Africa, and the other died when Brit-/tomatic rifles and sub-machine-| Jinja, One company of the Staf-|the spokesman said: "Our stra- | CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 guns, fordshive Regiment is holding) 'sic reserve already is badly Key buildings in Nairobi were Jinja Barracks. The remaining|Stretched and we want to get also guarded by British troops British troops pulled back to! or police, "Those who took, part in the! Lanet incident have gravely|barracks near Dar es Salaam/of broken military discipline and|following mutiny Jan. 20 were|/Tanganyika and Uganda, aboutitime. He was must be dealt with firmly," said/reported searching for about 70/2,300 of them in Kenka, the Jomo) African soldiers with their weapons. Kenya Prime Minister Kenyatta. "They will be dealt with ac-) 'cording to military law. There'g Kampala and Entebbe. Commandos who attacked the Seme Tanganyika soldiers jave themselves up at police! % m Out as soon as security re-) quirements will allow," Britain normally has a total about 2,400 troops in Kenya,} bout 1,000 Commando rein- forcements have been flown in|rested and charged with wound-|s from Britain for the emergency.) : fairs of Zanzibar sinc ern-dress version of Hamlet. 'the colonialists felt the firm! re eg Pog jsupport of the Soviet Union and |we declare once more for all to ifor liberation may continue to jhas passed, and there is no (A spokesman for the Com- monwealth relations office in London said today that Britain never has had any intention of intervening in the internal af- there, An estimated 3,500 Brit- ish troops are maintaining or- der in Kenya, Tanganyika and Uganda at the invitation of the Commonwealth governments of those countries.) The Soviet statement, issued by the foreign ministry, al- leged: "British troops stationed in areas of Africa adjoining Zanzi- jbar have been put on a com- bat alert; more and more army aviation" are being rushed to military bases near the island. British warships the shores of |Zanzibar and continue to stay jin the territorial waters of the republic, against the resolute jprotest oft he Zanzibar govern- jment,"" | turday government' had!p: given its Wiews to France along CHINA MAY GE Royal Visit To Canada This Fall OTTAWA (CP) -- The Queen and Prince Philip will visit Charlottetown and Quebec City Oct. 6 to Oct, 12, it was offi- cially announced today, The formal announcement said: "It is announced from Gov- ernment House that the Queen and th eDuke of Edinburgh have accepted the invitation of the government of Canada to attend special centennial celebrations in October commemorating the eration to Charlottetown and Quebec 'City in 1864, in Quebec City about Oct. 12." A. Government House spokes- Man said the seven-day visit will not include any other Ca- nadian city, No visit would be made to the United States, Detailed plans for the visit now are being drawn up by the Canadian government and will be submitted later to the Queen for approval. GM Earnings For 1963 Break Record NEW YORK (AP) -- General Motors Corp. in 1963 earned $1,892,000,000, a sum never be- fore-equailed in a calendar yy any corporation, Sales, wise a record, totalled $16,500,- 000,000, GM reported today. In summatizing what in many ways was an unprecedented year in the automobile indus- try, General Motors also re- ported new high marks in car and truck production, payroll, dividends paid and profit per share of common stock. The only earnings achieve- ment approaching the GM 1063 figure was the $1,474,404,000 in net income reported by Amer- ican Telephone and Telegraph Co. for the 12 months ended Nov. 30, A. T, and T, has not yet given its figures for calen- dar 1963, In 1062, General Motors, the world's largest manufacturing concern, set its previous highs Of $1,459,000,000 in net profits and $14,600,000,000 in sales, Low Pay Said Mine Subsidy TORONTO (CP)--The United Steelworkers of America told a conciliation board today that the low wages and "depressed" working conditions of its Tim- mins-area members are netting McIntyre Porcupine Mines Lim- ited an extra. "subsidy," The CLC affiliate claimed in a brief that. the gold-mining company is receiving tax revy- enues paid to it by the govern- ment in the form of subsidies and is also obtaining gains as the result of low pay and poor fringe benefits paid to its 1,000 employees, visits of the fathers of Confed-| "The visit will begin in Char-| | lottetown about Oct, 6 and endif year) like- SNAKE VICTIM Jerry DeBary, $7, Salt Lake City Zoo director, died today in a Salt Lake hospital after being bitten by an African puff adder, considered to be one of the world's most dead- liest snakes. He had been about to clean the snake's cage when it bit him on fore- arm last night, Antivenin, flown by a Navy jet from San Diego, Calif., was admin- istered to the victim, Canada Crushes Yugoslavia: 14-1 INNSBRUCK, Austria (AP)-- eae Yugosiont ref | Bt y to advance inte the medal a play, The smooth-skating Canadian players showed they would be a powerful threat for the gold medal as they eliminated the hapless Yugositavs, making their first appearance in Olym- pic play. Canada led 5-1 after the first! (luke 'ithe United Nations at the UN toda: Olympts}tries CANADA'S VOTE | Canada Seen Favoring -- UN Seat For Red China Canada ad- to OTTAWA (CP) will vote in favor of mitting Communist China General Assembly this fall, a iy S| highly-placed informant said to- However, Canadian diploma- tic recognition of Red China would not follow immediately or , it was said, presence of The usual September meet- ing of the UN General Assem- bly ts expected to be postponed Japs Ease Off Chinese Trade TOKYO -- Japan told the United States today it does not anticipate any significant in- crease in trade with the Com- munist bloc and promised not' to extend unusual credit terms to Communist China. The Japanese assurance on credit terms was given at the third session of the U.S.-Japan cabinet committee on trade and economic affairs, The Japanese said they would give Peking the same terms European coun- Bi ofticials told the committee that because of the limited capacity of the Commu- nist bloc both in output and for- eign 'exchange, there was a na- tural limit to its trading ity, The Japanese said only, about four per cent of their present trade is with the Com- period and 11-1 after the sec- ond. munist bloc and only 0.8 per cent of this is with 4 have abil-/Front Republicain Pour I'l, until mid-November, after the United States presidential elec- ion, ; This will tend to keep: the is- meg pmeretien it e lon cai is hoped, It is tol beret that Canada would not take any ac- tion in this regard which might embarrass President Johnson in the middle of his campaign. ment has urged more cultural and other contacts with China, It is that agreement will be Diplomatic quarters. here say they expect that France's rec ognition of Red China will fluence the French - states of Africa to take similar action and to vote in favor Chinese membership in the oe in the UN at the sion, wae ee be " to be on the arring some taterveuieg crisis.such as a new Chinese invasion of India, an informant said, Front Formed By Separatists voir a ® group ey Codeaiens ponaee tare lence clandestinely. cS An important faction of u Parti Republicain du ATLANTA (AP) -- Day - long racial demonstrations in down- town Atlanta resulted in the ar- rest of scores of persons Sun- day in the wake of an inspec- tion tour by a United Nations anti-discrimination group. At least seven were injured in the demonstrations which flared anew Sunday night. A Negro trusty suffered a broken when he was involved in scuffl- ing among demonstrators at the city jail. 86 Arrests Follow Georgia Race Riot leg crimination and protection of cond ance. Most of those arrested were Negro students: But they also included Negro comedian Dick Gregory, who for a time di- rected the demonstration at the restaurant, Members of the UN. subcom- mission on prevention of dis- uct and ereating a disturb- evoir says, Marcel Chaput re- signed a week ago as president of the Republican party. Mr. Chaput said he would do re SS SS newspaper quotes an un- identified member of a provi- sional committee gem fee | front as saying the group its anony- distribute mously, "Bullied as they are daily by the authorities in their respec- tive circles who exert and threats of all kinds," Le De- voir says, "several militant sep- aratists have elected to make their propaganda anonym: ously." The unidentified committee minorities watched Negro and Kin Klux Kian pickets in action ercion that several of our mem- bers suffer today." A policeman, H. A, Wagner, was pushed to the pavement as segregated restaurant. about noon Sunday and con- Most of the 86 arrested had to be carried bodily to jail, They were all released upon their own recognizance after they were charged with disorderly WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S, Surgeon-General Luther Terry eral government will need any 'Denied Job, Youth Stabs Storekeeper: TORONTO (CP)--A 52-year-/ old variety store owner was stabbed in the back Sunday night when he refused to hire a youth who asked for a job in| his store, } Police said Harry Horovitz! was alone in his. store, at the stabbed when he) j ' : nubjturned around after taking! thou who escaped of British power in East Africa.jmoney for a chocolate: bar Joseph Biondolillo, 16, was ar- ing. new legal weapons against the health risks pinned to cigarette § oking, Terry added that he - expects jthe public health service which he heads will find its chief work in the area of anti-smoking edu- cation, The surgeon-general, whose special advisory committee in- dicted cigarettes as a major cause of lung cancer and short- ened life, was interviewed on a radio and television program by a" Kenneth Keating (Rep. "We have not recommended Qire the work of everyone-- any legislation at this time, and gh I'm not certain, I doubt that we will need additional leg- islation to carry out our respon- ibilities," Terry said, adding: "I think, really, one of the | Smoke Laws Discounted In Favor Of Education principal approaches (to reduce smoking danger) . , . is ica said Sunday he doubts the fed-/ti , sits \* ion, "I know that some people|# who have smoked for a long period of time are. going to give up smoking because of this and|" other inform them. "On the other hand, I think by far the strongest manner in which we can be effective is to educate the youngsters as to the dangers invyolved and therefore discourage them: from starting) smoking." However, it is not a problem for the federal government alone, Terry said, It will re- ation that comes to smokers and non-smokers, he added, "and particulanly the parents of smaller children, particularly the private physi- clan who is counsel to his indi- vidual patients." suffered a head injury when he/p Negroes attempted to enter ait The demonstrations began tinued until shortly before mid-/ PQS ht, SS i DRY RUN IN NEW YORK A replica of Christopher Columbus' Santa Maria moves on flatbed trailer through bor- ough of Queen's World's Fair. The replica, built in a Barce- Jona, Spain, shipyard, weighs 80 tons, is 90 feet Jong, 32 feet high and 25 feet wide, It will be outfitted with four masts and other equipment and will Stand offshore at the foot of a floating dock, part of a 15th Century bazaar, at the fair. (AP Wirephoto)> Chine

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy