Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Mar 1964, p. 1

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Thought For Today Many men are generous to a@ fault -- especially if the fault is their own. VOL. 93 -- NO. 62 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MARCH 13 1964 Oshawa Zines Weather likely, - Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment o # "Postage in Cash, Report Mostly cloudy and mild Satur- day with scattered showers "TWENTY PAGES Ruby Waits To. Hear DALLAS (AP)--The jury in Jack Ruby's murder trial waited today to begin deliberat- ing his fate, after an 11th-hour defence manoeuvre delayed the end of the historic case. Defence lawyers won permis- sion from Judgé "oe B. Brown fo call another witness today --after the trial officially ended y. In a dramatic scene, Ruby's lawyers told the judge that Dr. Frdeerick A. Gibbs of Chicago, an authority on epilepsy, 'is coming to Dallas" to testify. At almost the same instant, District Attorney Henry M. Wade said the state rested its ease. Chief Defence Counsel Mel- vin Belli and his assistant, Joe Tonahill, heatedly demanded that Dr. Gibbs be permitted to testify. After a lawyers' wran- gle in Brown's chambers, he gave permission. Earlier the judge had said "we'll go on un- til midnight, if necessary" to) complete testimony. | FACES CHAIR Ruby faces the electric chair for killing Lee Harvey Oswald Nov. 24. Oswald was the sus- pected assassin of president Kennedy. Ruby's lawyers contend he 'suffers from psychomotor epi- lepsy, and was legally insane when he killed Oswald. Belli said Dr. Gibbs is the world's leading authority on psychomotor epilepsy, variant, but "he felt that he didn't want to come into a courtroom and testify where adversary proce- dure is followed." Gibbs agreed Thursday to @s an independent wit- ness, the lawyer said. Several expert witnesses, tes- tifying for the state, said they Jur MD on Ruby. But the defence places great electro - encephalograms (brain| wave tracings) made in tests|® weight on Gibbs findings." The trial, which began Feb. 17, developed pretty much into a battle of psychiatrists. Those called by the prosecu- Ruby was legally sane when he killed Oswald. Those summoned by the defence gave the oppo- site opinion. This is the key question that women may start weighing to- day. The jurors, clearly, are tired.| For days, they have been con- centrated on complicated psy- chiatric testimony. Thursday, several were fighting to stay awake. Legal procedure, when testi- mony ends, calls for Brown to read the charge to the jury and) explain the law. For a conviction of murder| with malice, Ruby could get a suspended sentence, a term in prison ranging from two years to life, or death in the electric chair. Living Costs UpFor |. Metro Brea in Canada rose between Janu- ary and February in six major! unchanged in the remaining disagree with Gibbs' conclu- psych amara Sees Viet Nam Win WASHINGTON (AP) -- De- fence Secretary McNamara re- turned from South Viet Nam to- day to give lent Joh The index movements ranged |0.1 per cent to 0.6 higher in St.) John's, Nfld., Saint John, N.B..| Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto and EdmontonCalgary. the jury of eight men and four! Canadian cities, declinedjat Cincinnat slightly in one other and were|Louisville, w | tion expressed the opinion that e UNIDENTIFIED GIRL SLEEPS IN REFUGEE CENTRE U.S. Flood Damage Tops $50 Million LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)--The gate in the floodwall clankedjof one hu Ohio River, bloated by rain andjinto place Thursday afternoon. |Thursday, cresting at some of the highest/The wall was prepared to stand ) 1 points * years, moved swiftly|a 48-foot crest, or 1.6 feet higher|Ohio, Pennsylvania and West |westward today and left several/than the predicted crest, states with damage already es-| There appeared hope the timated at more than $50,000,-|worst was over. Downstream-- 000. The floods killed nine per-|to- the west--water began edg- sons. jing toward riverfront buildings The Red Cross estimated 110,-/at Owensboro, Ky., but only a |thousands of that number we: were few. fected. Many|few families were expected to Prod coe mag adie mie routed, A floodwal! protects ldriven from their homes. In|Paducas, near where the Ohio} jother human terms the flood|joins picture was ene of wading evac-| t 0 luations and dog - tired flood|homeless in Indiana. OTTAWA (CP)--Living costs| workers and refugees. Injuries} the Mississippi. At least 4,000 were made There was no official esti- |mate on Kentucky evacuees but Flood crests were due today| residents of 30 counties were af- i, upstream, and here a final stcel jfected. Southwest of Louisville, officials said about 95 per cent Piste Bomarc Loses' To m price indexes in 10 regiéna cities. } Jet Interceptor WASHINGTON (CP) -- Maj.-,has two squadrons of the solid-\ism ge subdivision fled by | Other states affected were | § | Virginia, | Army engineers gave prelim- inary estimates of $40,500,000 damage along the Ohio from Cincinnati to. Paducah--a hig way distance of about 350 miles --and more than $9,000,000 from jfour other Kentucky rivers. |. Of the deaths blamed on high |water, seven were in Ohio and jone each in Kentucky and In- jdiana. 10,000 Parade , ed s Liying Nehru y J pons . To Quit Post NEW DELHI (AP) Ten thousand demonstrators pa- raded through New Delhi be- hind the red banner of social- today, shouting demands Prices declined 0.2 per cent|Ge: Robert Friedman, director|fuelled Bomarce-B missilesithat ailing Prime Minister in Vancouver while those in| Halifax, Winnipeg and Saska-| a first-hand report on how the war is going against Communist guerrillas . there. McNamara told reporters that during his swing through the war-torn country "I did not meet a single responsible offi- cial who doesn't believe that if a proper effort. is made" vic- tory can be obtained. He added, though, that "the! path of victory may be hard." | oton-Ri were hi d | oy | Food prices fell in seven ofiter off trying to develop an im-|script of subcommittee hearings| The in-/held Feb. 4 and made public|ized : : ; i asked|Party ostensibly to protest the|to an international peace force|Thant's request for financial But it| for Cyprus--as soon as the force|reasons, but the secretary-gen- the cities, decreases ranging) from 0.2 per cent in Winnipeg, | Saskatoon-Regina and Edmon-| ton-Calgary to 0.6 in Halifax. Incraeses in food prices ranged from 0.5 per cent in Saint John to 0.9 in Montreal. up in nine of the cities and| down in one. of the U.S. Air Force's aero-| |which have a range of 400 |Nehru resign, 'Nehru is para- space program, told a congres-|miles, twice the distance of the/lysed,. the government is para- sional committee that the USAF |liquid-fuelled Bomarc-A. proved interceptor plane |stead of the Bomare anti-air-|\today, craft missiles. Last January, Defence Secre-|keep the Bomarc-B missiles or| quickly took an anti-Nehru turn, |is an-|eventually remove them also. A Friedman said the air force {fom public life(since suffering|Martin made a surpr tary Robert McNamara |nounced that 195 Bomarc-A mis-| Transportation and recreation|siles are to be removed from/exp jand reading indexes both were|U.S. bases this year, only 188 Bomarc-B weapon Friedman was |)whether the air force intends to aot ores & s to hold them, but "the llaunchers at six bases, Canada Growth Substantial I Chartered Bank Assets OTTAWA (CP)--Central bankjance-of-payments deficit on cur-;ments in foreign securities cre-| |the inventory of an improved manned interceptor." "If you had this to do over jagain,"" asked Chairman George |Mahon, Texas Democrat, |"would the air force seek an jimproved interceptor rather than a Bomarc capability?" "T would think so," Friedman replied. "On hindsight, I think jthat would be the answer." Feb. 2, President Jiohnson Policy in 1963 was aimed at sup-jrent trade in goods and serv-jated "a wave of uncertainty/disclosed that the U.S. secretly & porting ecerfomic expansion injices and substantial inflows ofjand apprehension" in Canadian|developed a 2,000-mile-an-hour|_ COPENHAGEN (Reuters) -- Canada with easy credit, Bank|capital were needed to cover it./financial markets. of Canada Governor Louis Ras- minsky reported today. RATES DECLINE Capital inflows did develop|emption for new Canadian secu- jplane which is being tested as lysed," the demonstrat- obably would have been bet-| In a heavily-ce -|0rs shouted, | é 8 i pi nd epg a bye demonstration was organ-\Canada has informed the United|that have been asked for troops.| by the Indian Socialist jrising cost of living, Nehru, 74, has withdrawn a stroke Jan. 7. Most of his du- leaving/final decision, insofar as the air|ti¢s are being handled by sub- s on/force is concerned, will be con-|0rdinates, and some of his clos- tingent on the introduction into|€St advisers are manoeuvring to} }succeed him. | Police prevented the crowd {from entering the parliament grounds. The demonstrators |then attacked the statue of Lord) \Irwin, British viceroy of India jin the 1920s, | Denmark To Set Up 950-Man UN Force | | Denmark will set up a 950-man Even with the promised ex-|a possible interceptor. No de-|peace-keeping force for use by lcision has yet been made to jthe United Nations under a gov- But he made it clear in his|strongly, the central bank re-|rities issues from the tax, it was|manuiacture the plane for that/ernment bill placed before par- annual report tabled in the/duced its bank rate to 3% perjevident that due to uncertain-| purpose. Commons that this policy de-/cent from four per cent and Ca-|ties U.S. investors wouldn't buy| In his testimony, pended on the strength of Can-/nadian interest rates generally sufficient new Canadian securi-|indicated ada's international position--its trade earnings and foreign cap-| ita] inflows, fell. Mr. Rasminsky said the mid- July announcement of the ties until the U.S. equalization|problems associated with tax legislation was passed. ' | The result was a downward) The direction of monetary pol-| United States interest equaliza-|pressure on Canadian Friedman certain the use of the Bomarc against the ed bomber threat, 'but there are Mann icy in 1963 "helped to prevent|tion tax on American invest-'prices and higher interest rates.!eliminated by the censor. the credit demands associated) with the continuing growth in| economic activity from giving rise to an inappropriate tighten-| ing of credit conditions," Mr.| Rasminsky said | The result: A "substantial"| growth in both chartered bank} assets and the money supply.) Chartered bank assets rose by! $1,350,000,000--914 per cent--in-| cluding a 17-per-cent jump in| personal loans by the banks. | The money supply--bank depos-| its and currency held by the ublic--rose nine per cent to! 16,861,000,000. | _ Tracing the course of mone-! tary policy through 1963, Mr. Rasminsky said that at the start of the year, the prospects for| fu'ure capital inflows influenced} "the pace at which' the bank felt it could move in encourag-| ing-easier credit conditions." The reason for this view: Can- ada was running a large bal- CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 : Hine's tracks th \liament here today. | The troops--infantry, signal- jlers, a medical company and | military police--will form part }of the proposed Nordic corps of about 4,000 to be set up by bond|most of these remarks were|the Scandinavian countries, in- 'cluding Finland, Ontario PC Raps 'Que. Moderates WATERLOO (CP) -- George Hogan, secretary of the Onta- rio .Progressive Conservative Association, criticized Quebec leaders Thursday night for fail- ing to condemn separatist ex- tremists, "Their silence creates the im- pression that separatist out- bursts represent the popular voice of French Canada," he Lutheran University. Mr. Hogan said the attitude of some moderate leaders -'only serves to make separat- jism respectable." | "There seems to be an atti- |tude that the only way to beat |the extremists is to go the same |way, only more slowly." | He issued a word of warning for English-Canada. | "There is certainly a major {social revolution going on in rench-speaking Canada. And if |English-Canada reacts with -hos- jtility of even indifference, we jhave the makings of a very |dangerous situation." | Mr. Hogan called for a realj jand applied acceptance by all |Canadians that this is bicul- country with one bicultural province. Discussing the symposium's title Two Canadas or One he came up with another answer-- five. He suggested five groupings of provitees within' mee : tural country, not a unicultural) ie country, each with its clear-cut authority and the fi-| |nances to support that author- ity. The groups would be the At-) lantic provinces, Quebec, Onta-| rio, the prairie provinces and} British Columbia. | At the same time a strong) federal government would be} maintained to deal with mat-| jonly, he said. Russia Holds Three Flyers | BERLIN (AP) -- Russia will | release three captured air force | officers if the U.S. government jadmits it ordered them to fly lover East Germany, an in- formed source reported today. The three officers parachuted from an RB-66B reconnaissance plane shot down by a Soviet fighter over East Germany Tuesday. The informant said if the | United States does not issue a public admission that they were ordered to fly over Communist territory, the three will be tried on espionage charges. The United States has thus far maintained that the plane was on a routine training flight and blundered across.the Iron TURKEY ISSUES WAR WARNING Greek-Cypriots Given Invasion Ultimatum NICOSIA, -- Turkey issied an| ultimatum to the Greek-Cypriot| warning that it would take uni- lateral action unless a cease- fire was put in force through- out the island and all acts) against the Turkish - Cypriot community were stopped. The ultimatum, which car- ried the implied warning of a Turkish invasion of Cyprus, was contained in a note delivered to- told a symposium 'at Waterloo|ters of national importance|day to the government of Greek-Cypriot President. Maka-| rios by the Turkish embassy in| Nicosia. | A reliable source said the Cyprus government drafted a rejection of the warning. The note was delivered by Turkish Ambassador Mazhar Ozkol. It called on Greek-Cyp- riot 'authorities to cease all acts which it claimed were being perpetrated against the Turk- ish-Cypriots, Otherwise 'Turkey would take unilateral action in Cyprus. At the same time Greece stated it would "react decisively by all means" to any Turkish unilateral intervention. Turkey, Greece and Britain are guarantors. of the 1960 con- stitution which granted Cyprus independence, Three months of sporadic fighting between the hostile Greek and Turkish communes on Cyprus has threatened to bring intervention by Greece or Turkey on behalf of their na- tional groups. | |. UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- |Nations that it will contribute set up. External Affairs Minister ise flying trip to New York Thursday to put the Canadian position be- fore Secretary-General U Thant. The two held a 90-minute eve- jning conference against a back- ground of reports from Cyprus that new, fighting was threaten- jing to break out between the Greek and Turkish factions. An hour earlier Thant had reported that negotiations on jraising troops for the force> |were "coming to a head," and jthat he was confident the force {would be established 'in the lvery near future," Martin told reporters Canada lis prepared to send a battalion of some 1,000 to 1,100 men as soon as the force {s constituted. He indicated this would be |when one more country, besides |participate. Parliament must approve the action, he added. Sweden has said it will con- tribute under certain conditions, least one other neutral country must join in. Two Ex-Railway Workers Face Bombing Try Counts FORT PIERCE, Fla. (AP)> Agents of the Federal Bureau Pater Vo of Investigation arrested two % former railway employees early today on charges they attempted to blow up a Florida East Coast Railway train with 50 pounds of dynamite Thursday. The two were identified. by FBI director J. Edgar Hoover jas John Wesley Davis, 28, who jlives near here, and Joseph Leo Vetter, 32, of Miami. Hoover said 15 sticks of dy- |namite were found wired to the jrails at the north end of a rail- way bridge in Indian River County, north of here. The explosives were wired so they would detonate when a train's wheels passed over the tracks, the FBI said Saboteurs have blown five freight trains off the _ railway is year, two late JOHN~ WESLEY DAVIS A son was making a speech on a Florida tour. 4 he incident 23 last month a few miles from Palatka where President John- The FBI said another hearing was set for 2:15 p.m. before Al- + derman. prompted the | ) president to call on the FBI and | labor department to do all pos- ; sible to solve the sabotage and | séttle a 1344-month strike by 11 * non-operating unions. CALLED ON FBI The FBI dispatched a 30-man team to work on the bombings. Hoover said Vetter, who was armed with a .38-calibre pistol, was arrested in a car near 4 where Davis was apprehended. _No further details were re- b leased. The two men were given an immediate hearing befere U.S. Commissioner James I. Alder- man at Fort Pierce, Bond was set at $75,000 each. . Vetter and Davis were charged with wilfully placing an explosive on the railway bridge in a wilful attempt to damage > a train. The FBI saif' Vetter, a rail- way switchman for five years, is divorced and the father of five children. He is a native of! Duluth, Minn. Agents said Davis, a railway employee for seven years, is married and has four children. He is a native of St. Lucie County, Fla. The FBI said earlier that $300,000 in rewards would help agents track down the dynamit- » ers, Agents said the number of JOSEPH LEO VEDDER tips increased as the reward total grew. 'Curtain inte East 'Germany. |Brazil are the other countries Brazil at first turned down eral said Thursday he has made ican country, Finland, Ireland and Austria jhave not yet indicated whether jthey will contribute. | Martin's trip to the UN was jannounced here after the Cana- dian minister left by air from {London, Ont., where he had |spoken earlier in the day. | His department of transport jaircraft was forced to circle for jan hour over Kennedy Airport because of fog and snow. After the ext ended meeting with Thant he also conferred with Britain's Sir Patrick Dean for a half-hour. | Several dozen reporters wait- jing for Martin to show up at a scheduled 7 p.m. press confer- a new appeal to the Latin Amer-| UN ForceNearly Ready U Thant Tells Martin layed by an "important devel- opment." Martin arrived at 8:30 and de- clined to comment on the de- velopment, saying it was not re- lated to his visit. He said Canada had taken possible delay when the force is constituted. The. question would be put before Parliament immediately after Thant in- formed Ottawa' that the force was constituted. He said Thant had thanked| him for Canada's "rapid ac- tion" in the matter. The UN also issued a statement saying Thant had expressed thanks for Canada's "prompt compliance" with his request, Martin was asked, however, why Canada had "delayed" eight days before agreeingt o contribute, He replied that Thant had actually been in- formed of the Canadian deci- ence were told he had been de- a |Britain and Canada, agrees to including the stipulation that at Finland, Austria, Ireland, and | { | sion last week. | GREEK ' CYPRIOT | school students set fire to effigy of President Johnson and coffins bearing names .of Johnson and British Prime high } Minister Alec Douglas-Home in Morphou, Cyprus, Thurs- day, They also set fire to cof- fins bearing names of Turkish Foreign Minister -Feridum preliminary steps to avoid alll The Turkish "strong watn- ing" also was contained in a own 80vernment of Cyprus today,/note handed over to the Amer- ican, British and Greek ambase sadors in Ankara, Turkey, to- jday. The three ambassadors were summoned to the Turkish for- eign ministry where they had separate meetings with Turkish Foreign Minister Feridw. Erkin and 'were handed the notes. GIVES. WARNING Diplomatic sources in Ankara said the note addressed to Ma- karios warned that Turkey was not prepared to allow the pres- ent state of affairs to continue on the strife-torn island, (A. Cypris government spokesman in Athens, Greece, said his government would re- ject outright the Turkish note as "unacceptable" both for its content and wording.) As the note to Cyprus was delivered shots were heard in the Trakhonas suburb of Nico- sia but a government spokes- man said they were of no sige nificance and there were no sé- rious incidents anywhere on the island. Later it was disclosed that Turkish - Cypriots opened up with machine-guns and rifles for half an hour on four British soldiers in Trakhonas. A Brit- ish officer said the soldiers did not fire back and=no one was injured. Greek government and milit- ary leaders held urgent eonfer- ences at dawn today in Athens following thc' Turkish warning of intervention in Cyprus. It was reliably learned that Greek naval units were ordered \to begin "manoeuvres" between Crete and the Dodecanese Is- lands as they did when the Cyp- rus crists reached a flashpoint two weeks ago. RECEIVES AMBASSADORS Foreign Minister Stavros Kos- topoulos of Greece separately received the British and U.S, ambassadors, Sir Ralph Murray and Henry Labouisse. He told them the Turkish: wrning coupled with reported Turkish naval movements. had caused "serious anxiety" in Athens. The Greek foreign minister told reportess he summoned Turkish Envoy Nedim Veysel likin and told him "no Greek government would ever accept a unilateral Turkish interven- tion in Cyprus without adequate Greek reaction." Istanbul police broke up the first student demonstration in the Turkish metropolis over Cyprus since the start of the fighting in December. The stu+ dents urgel their government to intervene to halt the '"'massae cre" of the Turkish-Cypriot mie nority and accused the United Nations of dawdling. Cemat Erkin and Raouf Denk- tash, Turkish Cypriot leader. --AP Wirephoto via cable from Nicosia ,

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