Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Feb 1964, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, February 24, 1964 India Loses Patrol In Frontier Clash NEW DELHI (AP)--Twenty- three Indian policemen are 'miss: after a new outbreak of violence between Pakistan 'and India in the troubled state fof Kashmir | The Indian defetice ministry 'lodged a protest with UN ob- 'servers, charging that troops froin the Pakistani sector of 'Kashmir crosséd the 'cease-fire line dividing the Himalayan State and attacked the Indian patrol Friday. Indian officials were able to account for only 'one member of the patrol, ' The ambush occurred hear 'Keran, about 70 miles west of 'Srinagar, Kashmir's summer Chiari Predicts New Canal Pact: Or More Riots | NEW YORK (AP) -- Presi- dent Roberto Chiari.of Panama said Sunday riots and demon- strations against the United capital, the ministry said, Pak- istani troops crossed the cease- fire line along the Krishen Ganga River and, fired on the patrol while othér Pakistanis Opened a barrage from the op- posite bank, the ministry said. A spokesman for Prime Min- ister Nehru's Congress party said Pakistan may have delib- erately staged the ambush to impress Communist Chinese Premier Chou En-lai, currently visiting -Pakistan. Indian officials expressed no surprise over a joint communi- que by Chou and Pakistan's President Mohammed Ayub Khan Sunday pledging Red China's support of Pakistan in the Kashmir dispute. BOTH DSLIKE INDIA A government spokesman said nothing startling could have emerged from a meeting "the government leaders whose common denominator is dislike of India." Ayub, who has always pic- tured himself as a_ strong friend of the West, held three days of talks with Chou in the old Punjab city of Rawalpindi, States will inevitably eruptigg jpiles west of the Kashmir again in his country unless aj frontier. new Panama Canal is adopted. "And it will be worse 'every time," he said, "because the dis- tance between the two countries treaty : The president dispute that led to riots last month in an appearance on an/sistance from the United States,| onders ( rc ' ' | S& subs 7 "0V- ABC television program filmed'the communiquc ubsided after the recov in Panama last week. | | will be widening and widening.) In the communique, Ayub promised "friendly co + opera- tion" with his Communist neigh- bor to the north and said he would return Chou's visit with a trip to Peking. Although Pakistan has re- discussed the ceived more than $3,000,000,000| in economic and military as- contained swipes at Washington for the Chiari said the disorders were) $60,000,000 in U.S., military aid rooted in the 1903 treaty, which|to India following the 1962 Chi-) gave the U.S. a perpetual lease/nese border attacks. on the Canal Zone, and unless it is revised they will occur again, within weeks, months or) several years. | The president also said that} if a meeting with President; Johnson "could bring any re-) sults," he would be glad to talk| with the U.S, leader But he added that the '"'ques-'., tion is how far can the (U.S.)} he is willing to have an open and frank discussion and nego- tiate with Panama on a treaty, tions t ' answer to international differ-|istan but without a third party ences,' dispute as the principal president go and really how fat|hotween them, and fears Indialtural and scientific co-operation {will use the U.S. military aid|/between jagainst Pakistan. Since the flow| 1964-65. 'NOT THE ANSWER' "Massive military have never prepara:| been the) the communique said.| "They only create new ten-; sions and bring added burdens|/for New Delhi to repay al to the people."' | Pakistan regards India as its} ief threat, with the Kashmir} issue began to India, Pakistan has in- dicated growing reservations about its membership in the anti-Communist Southeast Asia Treaty Onganization (SEAGO) and the Central Treaty Organ- ization (CENTO). With the communique, Pakis- tan served notice on Washing- ton it will follow a more inde- pendent foreign policy and edge closer to Red China. Chou repaid Ayub with sup- port for a plebiscite in Kash- mit, the chief Pakistani demand since the dispute erupted in 1947 with massive bloodshed. Moslem Pakistan assumes that) Kashmit's predominantly Mos-| lem populacé would vote to break away from Hindu India.| India has refused to hold a! plebiscite, claiming Kashmir as its legal territory. |SUPPORT IN BID Pakistani newspapers said |Ayub agreed to support Red |\China's bid for a seat in the United Nations in return for Chou's backing on Kashmir. In New Delhi Indian Educa- \tion Miniser Mohamed Ali Cur- © timbhoy Chagla told Congress |party leaders Pakistan may be | |deliberately creating "situ a- jtions" along the Kashmir fron- jtier to bring the issue before the UN Security Council again Chagla led the Indian delega- tion at the last Kashmir meet- jing of the council Feb. 10, which was requested by Pakis- tan after the theft of a sacred! |Moslem relic touched off new) Hindu-Moslem rioting, The dis-| school in Switzerland to see King Paul of Greece who un- derwent emergency -- surgery last week for an ulcer. The 3-year-old Constantine was Crown Prince Constantine of ireece greets his 17-year-old fiancee, Danish Princess Anne- Marie, on her arrival in Ath- ens Sunday. She came from éry of the relic--a hair believed to be from the prophet Moham- ed. | Council members urged both jsides to agree to a negotiated jsettlement of the old dispute.| Chagla said India was willing] to begin direct talks with Pak- Meanwhile, a delegation from the Supreme Soviet left Moscow} 1962 visit, by an Indian parlia- mentary delegation. Another So- viet delegation left Moscow for New Delhi today to discuss cul- OTTAWA (CP) -- A week of, The government won its first general debate during which the,confidence test of the session government can expect to face) Friday when the Commons de- in'repeated non-confidence votes feated 134 to 87 a non-confidence lavs before the House of Com-/motion of the New Democratic the two countries on a new basis." In Washington, Joseph Far- land, former U.S. ambassador to Panama, criticized U.S, han- dling of the negotiations seek- ing to end the Panama crisis. "T feel that the situation deteriorating rapidly," Farland told Senator Kenneth Keating is in New York State. emphatically that failure Pakistan Happy After Peking's Support Move i r A d (Rep. N.Y.) in an interview! LAHORE (Reuters) -- Pakis-|tween President Mohammed t taped by Keating for broadcast}tanis today \winning The former ambassador said|nese Communist support for a were jubilant at) long sought-after Chi-| to|self-determination plebiscite in|E reach a solution 'does not indi-/Kashmir, | cate that our policies aren't ef-| fective and our position what it should be." The joint Sino-Pakistan an- isn't nouncement came Sunday night following three days of talks be- WEATHER FORECAST Turning Colder; | Cloudy Periods | Forecasts issued by the Tor-;Toronto onto weather office at 5:30 a.m.|Peterborough ..... A new disturbance/Trenton . is expected to move into North-|Killaloe . bringing] Mv xoka some show to nortuern regions|North Ba Sudbury .. Windsor: |Earlton Winds|F' .puskasing . dight tonight, southwest 15 Tues-|White River.. Moosonee ., Lake Erie, Niagara, western|Timmins ... Synopsis: ern Ontario Tuesday and cloudiness further south Lake St.. Clair, Mostly. cloudy Tuesday day. Hamilton, Tor- Huron, southern 'Lake Ontario, onto, Lake C .orgian Bay, London, eastern Lows. overnight, highs Sunday: munist China. Haliburton: |Dawson ©......... 2 | Lake Ontario, Cloudy with clear periods Tues-| Vancouver ... «day. Much colder. Winds light) Victoria .... tonight and southwest 15 Tues-|Edmonton ... Calgary .. Cloudy | Saskatoon day. Algoma, White River mouaon oo wo oe n Observed Temperatures 29 40 18 0 | 20 fee 11 | donight and Tuesday with a few) Regina periods of light becoming easterly and Tuesday snow 20 Cochrane, North Bay, agami, James Bay, Winds | Winnipeg . tonight Lr' White River Northern Georgian Bay, Tim-/Sault Ste. Marie . western Kapuskasing . Sud. Earlton *head .... bury: Mainly cloudy tonight and North Bay. Tuesday with a few periods of Sudbury . ' i - ry | asterly 20 to-| Muskoka Windsor .... I Toronto ,. 33 | Trenton Jight snow. Winds mig!' and Tuesday. Forecast Temperatures 'Lows tonight, highs Tuesday: sondon eeeee | _jand mons |Party criticizing it for not in- No important legislative ac-|cluding medical insurance in its tion is expected to be taken injlegislative program the new session: until the first But the opposition parties can week of Mareh, after the gen- introduce other non - confidence the legislative proposals in the first four days of the: week. The only limita chal- tion is that not more than two motion can be before the House at any eral debate on program ends The main opposition lenge, a Conservative ecrying the government's . ax on building materials and Ayub Khan and visiting Com-\manufacturing machinery, will munist Chinese Premier Choujbe called far a, vote Tuesday), n-lai in Rawalpindi, capital of Might. ae : Ayub also announced accpet- L F ] ance of an invitation to visit esage ee 5 Communist China, 0 en F re Uptimism For Until the announcement, that king had admitted only rs | Confederation sales time, CAN CONTINUE FRIDAY non-confidence can then be made debate must end on or before |Monday, March 2. Efforts may be made to conclude it on Fri- day For the rambling discussion, in which anysubject- matter is | RCAF Chief Sees mo- Th nh no further Pakistan. tions Kashmir was a disputed terri tory between India and Pakis- tan. The area has been in dis- pute since 1947. tion of politicians and journal- S Responsible circle here noted|ists from Quebec, headed by No udden A-Veto Chou conceded support to Pak-/Premier Lesage, ended a good-| ... ie 2 istan while the joint commun-,wil) visit to Ontario Sunday ¢ or sacra « The ique disclosed no Pakistan back-|with Mr. Lesage expressing op- Prospect 0 ais bias or the ing for Communist Chinese poli-'timism for a united Canada United States vetoing the use of cies not already announced. | The premier said_ the Vint eee manner he etatnell TAI wergr lsuch as the weekend trip, or-|8C"CY Cann e visualized, BACKED BY U.S. lr edinea ny ie Quebec press|Marshal Clarence R. Dunlap Pakistan, a U.S. military ally,|?. ; : mae a,|said here today : OPN : gallery in return for a similar y : (6g % . F gency e Canadian and U.§ ; vonage ty "do more to help Canadian un-j8ency Me € 5. heavily backed in Washington lity in. diversity 'than overnments would agree on a Foreign Minister Zulfikar lthat has been done up to now." increase of | the Bhutto said the Chinese support} Daniel Johnson, Quebec oppo- state of alert, This would mean for Pakistan on the Kashmir is-| ition joader ve.(that the use of a veto would sue was "an advance" on the) aiation "for one not come into the picture, he previous Chinese position. Inectedly warm said Bhutto said no date was set! tions Dunlap spoke to reporters for the visit-of Khan to Com-| mr. Lesage guarded by When he arrived in) Canberra nolice until hig departure early|{rom New Zealand on a: short Chou, who has been touring/Sunday for Montreal. The rest!ViSit as guest of the Royal Aus Asian and African countries the|of the Quebec party followed in tralian Air Force last two months was due tothe afternoon by chartered leave Pakistan 'for Ceylon Wed- plane. nesday. At a given by EXPECTS WARM WELCOME |Ment, th. premier OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min.|tat the next federal - p ister Pearson said Wednesday cial fist al confers nee will start he is sure Queen Elizabeth wiil/im Guebec Cty March 31 receive a warm welcome in e said details of the confer- Quebec in October. Mr, Pear. @nee will be innounced by son was replying to Robert Prime Ministey Pearson Muir (PC -- Cape Breton North Premi*r Robarts of Victoria) who suggested Said at the din that the Queen visit Nova Sco- Would demand t : tia insead of Quebec in view Pension plan be fully discuss of some expressed opinions that/at the conference. Mr. Lesage she will not be welcome in the said he "supposed it will come TORONTO (CP) -- A delega- Ontario last year anything |& progressive expressed appre:| of those unex-} Toronto recep. was res SCHOOL WON'T CLOSE dinner Saturday' VANCOUVER (CP) -- Simon Ontario. govern-|Fraser University in suburban announced Burnaby will operate on a g provin- | three term year, making ft the first university in Canada to adopt the principle of year round operaion, chancellor Dr Gordon Shrum said Wednes day. He said the ~ university Ontario 3chéduled to open in 1965, wil that hejhave three I6-week terms o the Canada Which stuéents will normally at eq tend two out of the three state the Government Wil Confidence Gauntlet GREEK PRINCE GREETS FIANCEE made regent of Greece for his ailing father, --(AP., Wirephoto from: Athens) 1 Ru via in order, the House will sit longer hours, holding morning, afternoon and night sittings on Monday, Tuesday and Thurs- day, Vednesday is always a short arliamentary date. The fore- noon is kept free for party cau- cus meetings, and the evening for social engagements. The Commons normally sits Friday morning and afternoon but starts its weekend 'withFriday vening off In the lenges, any P. chal- wins non-confidence motion that Under the rules, the thtone desthe Support of all opposition par-|-- fite can continue on Friday, but|ti¢s could upset the government and precipitate a genéral elec- tion. The 128 voting Liberals-- xcluding Speaker Alan. Mac: naughton--face a 136-man oppo- sition of 95 Conservatives, 17 New Democrats, 13 Creditistes, and 11 Social Credit MPs, ne | Pp, te " ie : cable |28-year-old Walpole Indian Re-|ynidentified white man pushed | Pakistan Leans" Towards Peking of the TORONTO (CP) -- A protest meeting of engineers voted Sun-| day to demonstrate at Queefi's Park Thursday when a bill con- cerning operating engineers) comes before the standing com-| mittee on labor, legal bills and municipal law, RAWALPINDI (AP)--Smiling|munist defence Indian affably, President Mohammed|subcontinent. Ayub Khan of Pakistan has) Ayijb sounded like a neutral spelled out charges that United|observe eager to mediate dif- States diplomats have been/ferences between the U.S. and A union official told 1,500 en. d'e2ding to hear. iRd China. He offered hig gineers at the rally here the bill, It is clear, Ayub said last) 'good offics." would permit the replacement|Week, that Communist China) Commenting on Chou's nines of operating engineers at boiler,|has only peaceful intentions in)gay visit to Pakistan, Ayub compressor and refr'geration|ASia but that new tensions are)caid Communist China's "ine plants by automatic controls, {being created by U.S, foreignitensions are poaceful. The Chir "We have no intention of be-/Policy in India and massive/nese are prepared to bo rear ing cast aside by machines that\U-S. and Indian military prep-/sonable with ahyone who is will make a profit at the ex. arations. ,__ |prepared.to be reasonable with pense of public safety," said) Coming between long sessions | them," John Parker, president of the of secret talks with the visiting Ontarlo Provincial Council of/Pr°mier Chou En-lai of Red the International Union of Op.|China, Ayub's statements crating Engineers (AFL-CIO), |seemed to the official stamp Complaining that U.S. mili- tary a'1 to India will be tsed "against sma'ler -- neighbors," Ayub said, is ; ehouga lo cope with any threat from its norther' borders with Chita, and India is going to use its in- creased strength "to try and in- timidate people."' "The United States effort," he said, "only is creating more problems." At no time during the wetk he squired Chou around did Ayub refe. to the U.S. program |serve resident, has been charged|+is way out of the entrance of that has given Pakistan $3,000,< jwith car theft. Three other men! , segregated restaurant which|900,000 worth of food, clothing jare being sought by city and|was blocked by some 200 Negro@nd industrial equipment and |provincial police demonstrators, most of them/More than $1,000,000,000 in mili- army, no pind ig Sabictante wrad Oyud told reporters: Ai aa scr tage of approval n Pakistan's grad: "During the last couple of ' jual swifg away from Strongly oar the United States. h Police Hunt |pro-American stand to a mid-\) oo) "soins eaten thing nag "st dle-road diplomacy with a defi-| 4:0 ii rt think 8 ind ' nite leaning toward Peking, [&% Wilch we tink are agains' M | Heavily larded with a warn-(lt Security. Serving global in- an armia ine haa nak shboring India| {rests is all very well, but if LJ |thnoatens Pableian Ayub's|it, |s done at the cost of your Kidnap Gang Istatements also scemed to Hip gp! gr aE de not all ldoom Washington's diplomatic | lat good a thing, SARNIA (CP) -- A 19-year- goal of linking Pakistan's 100,-. REFERENCE T OAID old girl was rescued by police|90,000 persons -- with India's This was a reference to the Sunday from-an abandoned Sar- 450,000,000 in a joint anti-Com-'U.8, argument that its $60,000,- nia Indian reserve house where ie pits /000 military aid program to In- she had been held captive by an dia also is helping Pakistan be- abductor, F A t d cause ft protects the subconti- The rescue ended eight terror- our rres e nent from the Communist Chi- filled hours for the girl when nese her boy friend was knocked un I M ] d India's conscious and robbed and she n ary an tha ag abducted by an armed. man Py n the boy friend's car C f S t-I She told police she had been a e l n sexually assaulted. Police al-- pRinceSs ANNE, Md. (AP) lowed her to go home after a our Negroes and one white 4% hour interview, They said) man were arrested and a state She was not seriously hurt but/police captain was slightly in- had gone through 'quite an or-|d>monstration erupted into fist- deal. i 3 swinging violence Lawrence Clifford Kiyoshk, a 'The fighting started when an i | The girl said she was, parked s{uden's at nearby Maryland|tary aid. |with her boy friend,Arthur Ber-| state College. Ayub promised Chou support need. 20, of Port Lambton,! 'The white man began swing-|for Communist China's efforts Por Lament as northeast of in and a fight erupted. Capt.|to gain a seat in the United Na- anaes an and stomped bead ha Paul Randall, a state police|tions and to assemble an "'anti- \Bernard | car 4 nulled Bor.|Commander who was in the/imperialist" conference of Afris ined: tha the hace iieceine middle of the crowd pleading|can and Asian nations. him and leaving him prepay with them to disperse, stepped | oe jscious on the roadside. They between thé atsedianihad and ltook $140 from his wallet, |W8S hit in the face. |. Sydney, Australia, had its sun. The girl said one of the men, |e called for dogs and tWoiniest January in 25 years. in brandishing a shotgun, abducted 9, them were quickly launched|99q° with an average 8.7 hours her in Bernard's car. He drove|mto. the ra pidly: dispersing) of sinlight a day, but its lightest toward Sarnia; then abandoned|"'OWd Of demonstrators. Club! rainfall in 18 years, the car and forced her to walk stongger oo 4 MOV | 914 mile , oan, into the swirling crowd, naan 2% miles to the vacant One of the Negroes arrested | She was held captive by the copa at Pp nt pada man for the rest of the night ahd the Maryland Gnapter vt shh sald Folios were called } * the National Association for the Piahwe ico "were called DY) Advancement of Colored People |Bernard after he regained con-|, mptly protested "police bru- jsciousness and made his way " 7 tity. oe to a telephone. Bernard was not) _f jseriously injured. lee A. E. JOHNSON 0.D. OPTOMETRIST @ EYES EXAMINED @ PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED 14% King St. E. 723-2721 SUNNY AND DRY SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, relieble Ges Decler in your eres. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 | NETS CAUSE INJURIES | Of 185 tagged salmon caught off Norway's Finnniark coast |with nylon nets, only four per jeent were found to haye suf- lfered no net injuries. 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