Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Apr 1964, p. 1

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Lehoneletehetehenecrenereta meme neene ar erent Thought For Today Many folks have voices that are difficult to extinguish on the telephone. 4 VOL. 93 -- NO. 80 a OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, APRIL 4, 1964 Oshawa Sunes Second Class Ma! Authorized os Ottawa and for payment Weather Report Variable cloudiness Sunday and not quite so cold i! Post Office Department of Postage in Cash. . Clear tonight. EIGHTEEN: PAGES SMOKE BILLOWS FROM WINE STORE ENTRANCE Greek-Cypriots Fire maby On UN Rescue Patrol 44 NICOSIA (CP) -- The Unitedjand Greek - Cypriot wounded|riot government checkpoint MONTREAL (CP) -- Charles Nations reported widely - scat-jduring the incident. where armed police were stoP-| nurner ok, etred shooting in Cyprus today} A UN spokesman reported|ping and searching other Turk-| al © Basia on president of the but' the only casualty was ajfour overnight exchanges of fire|ish-Cypriot vehicles. | aaatateve® intentional "Union Greek Cypriot policeman,jin the Nicosia suburb of Omor-| Earlier today an advance : 'wounded by an accidenta] dis-|phita, where British UN troops|party of the Swedish contingent charge. lwere positioned between rh land A -- force vl sac The UN force was fired rd and Turkish - Cypriot)/The officers and "men will Friday i sts. |prepare for the arrival shortly area Gaia tomntets aver ce| A few shots were also re-jof the main Swedish force. ../0M the Great Lakes, nadian Dragoons will begin to|Ported from the southwest cor-| The Turkish contingent has Also involved patrol Monday. ner of the island. The British patrol was fired it thought was a wounded Turk- it in the village of near the north- single Union | meanwhile, escorted 10 buses/President Archbishop Makarios|maritime unions in carrying a relief force of 280\and the Greek press here and) 1 Ss Turkish troops from the port ofjin Athens Makarios, in identi-|ynion stability." | Mr. Turner was appointed to the top post by the federal-ap- pointed board of tees to restore what the board Famagusta, where they arrived|cal letters to Athens and An- Friday to Nicosia. kara, asked for the return of The new arrivals were re-jboth the Greek and Turkish ing a sim"ar number of army contingents. to their bar- troop uning hom» after their ri tour of duty., In reality, the request only af- PASSED 1 a ' lfects the Turks, because the The Turkish force, accom-|Greeks returned to their bar- panied by British troops injracks soon after the Christmas| armored cars, passed without fighting between the Turkish jhindrance through a Greek-Cyp-iand Greek communities. 2nd Major Tremor i a Tt was the third the UN peace forc they did not return fire but their threat to do was enough to stop the shoot- ing : The Royal Canadian Drag- oons, led by Maj. John Bea- ment of Ottawa, Monday will take over from British policing) of the 1,600-square-mile area in north -central and northwestern) Cyprus. The Canadian patrol) will consist of 20 armored scout time British ithe union. | His impending withdrawal jand the integration move were announced Friday night in a joint statement by Paul Hall, president of the SIU of North America, and Charles Millard, a member of the board. gration meant one union for all Great Lakes sailors, Mr., Mil- lard said' moves toward goal are "not too far away." It was understood that the Ca- nadian Maritime Union (CI), amited of Toronto, united: with the SIU. K Flees To RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -- In Ayios Theodoros, a Turk-- ANCHORAGE (AP)--Another|Cordova. The latter four com- jafter-shocks' since the major| State civil defence officials earth all over the world moved) Police réported no casualties|"eighboring commuiuties, the regional geophysics branch) The University of Washington|tred near Anchorage. There|said, while his successor tack- and down--it happens all 9d ag Friday which registered|floor March 27, not a thing was|law, Leonel Brizola, a pro-Com- Jobless Pay Blocked ishCypriot was later reported|major tremor in Wlaska, the munities, as well as Anchorage; killed and a Turkish - Cypriot|second in a week, lent a wary/suffered severe damage a weel jair Of activities in the quake- ago. Al k jstricken Anchorage 'area today. D earthquake of March 27, set|Clustered around their "'hot | |buildings asway Friday and/line," an emergency circuit a es or, sent: office 'workers and shop- linking the cities of south-cen- pers scurrying into the streets|tta! Alaska, when the shock hit, up and down 'after a devastat-\and had no reports of major} But, one by one the surround- ing earthquake hit Alaska a'damage to buildings or homes.|ing cities checked in to report week ago. Last week's tremor left 129)that- while the quake had been This happens after all earth-|known dead or missing and pre-|felt, it was. slight in of the U.S, Geological Survey,|seismograph office said the|were no reports »%f wunusualjled the formidable job of un- said in an interview today. jquake registered 7.5 on the|wave action. tangling Brazil's chaotic econ- _ In any earthquake, in addi-/Richter earthquake intensity, In the Anchorage daily Times|/omy. tion to seismic waves, you get/scale, ' substantially under the|building, where equipment and| Goulart crossed the border be- the world," he said. 5 |disturbed Friday. jmunist member of congress, "You have a motion which) The new shock was felt in| Power remained throughout|said a Uruguayan police office, you can't see with the naked) Fairbanks, Juneau, Yakutat,|the city and communications|ending a two-day mystery about eye." Kodiak, Seward, Valdez and!were not disrupted there whereabouts gg se: (CP) -- A 75-year-|steps, if any, .n be taken to,precedented Good Friday sitting/insurance money would be old Conservative senator|pump fresh cash into the com-|of s yen minutes and continued! much i yeni A Sa an : : uch inconvenienced an 'ob- blocked a government bill in|mission's-empty fund before the|through five days of ill-tem-| bl ae eee |pered and often confused debate|* Rattles Anchorag vil ates Ancnorage | The tremor, one of some 50, WATCHED 'HOT LINE' WASHINGTON (AP) -- Thelof downtown Anchorage apprehensive about the safety of quakes, Isidore Zietz, chief of| sumed dead. jareas and had apparently cen-|boring Uruguay today, police a surface wave which moves up force of the massive tremor of|supplies were strewn over the|/fore dawn with his brother-in- SENATOR REFUSES TO GRANT OK | the Senate Friday night--threat-|UIC offices open Monday. | "stur! 1 if payments ening payment of unemploy-| The minister ordered commis-\during what was supposed to|were not made," said Senator ment insurance to 46,000 jobless 's:on officials to report by 9:30/be an Easter week holiday. Connolly. workers on Monday. a.m, EST today to. exact) A growing rebellion in the} .The money bill included an Senator Grattan O'Leary said amount of cash on hand, if any./Senate erupted Friday after thejitem which authorizes the gov- he didn't want to be a '"'gram-/Chief Commissioner Laval For-|covernment rushed its arpropri-|ernment to advaz-e loans up to aphone" for the Commons. He|tier estimated Friday that $1,-|ations measure - through the| $55,000,000 to bail out the bank- firmly refused a government re-|500,000 to $2,000,000 will be/Commons. , rupt unemployment insurance quest to waive Senate rules tojneeded Monday to meet the ex-| The Commons holds the sole|fund. push through a $130,800,000 ap-|pected 46,000 claims for bene-/power to approve government s te propriations bill in time for last-' fits spending. which|FUN9 IN RED minute royal assent. Regan ie gee can alter most other measures! 4S Of Ic Tuesday--the end Labor Minister MacEachen LOAN UNAVAIL.' SLE approved by the Commons, can|f the 1963-64 fiscal year--the was to meet the three unem- The Senate stands adjourned debate, but not 'amend money] fund was $4,500,000 in the. red, ployment insurance commis-|¥ntil 8 .m. Monday and a gov-|pin. ' "jalthough it had some cash on sioners today to determine what ™ment emergency loan to the hand from advance contribu- - fund will not be available until|NO CONSENT tions for April. the appropriations bill passes} "I am going to resist," said| Sifting in the Senate's public ithe Senate and receives royal/Senator O'Leary. "I shall not|galleries when Senator O'Leary | assent, |give my consent to the passage|"resisted" was Stanley Knowles Senator O'Leary, president of|of this bill tonight on third read-|(NDP -- Winnipeg North Cen- the Ottawa Journal and noted|ing." tre) who then rushed to his of- for his thundering editorials,) He refused. to budge -- evenifice, dusted off a handwritten cap,ed one of the most unusual/ when the government leader, | bill calling fdr the abolition of w' ks in the history of Parlia-/Senator John J Connolly, ap-|the Senate and filed it with the ;ment. pealed to him to reconsider. | The week bean with an un-i "Recipients of unemployment! The Senate, CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 ing Monday. took. over from of Canada, will soon step down from the office and make way for a regular SIU member un- der a plan to ensure labor peace in the peace |come under criticism from the|package will be an all-out at- | United Nations armored cars,|government of Greek - Cypriot/tempt to "'achieve integration of Canada where it is in the interests of trus- jcalled "managerial stability" to When asked if plans for inte-| this representing sailors of the Up- per Lakes Shipping Company! whole or part, any police $25,000 FIRE GUT OSHAWA BUILDING SAULT STE. MARIE, Ort. (CP) -- Lake ships in the Sault Ste. Marie area are experienc- ing difficulties caused by ice conditions. Cold weather and winds have shifted the ice, which ranges 'from six to 20 inches thick, in the St. Mary's River and Lake} Superior. j Five ships were encountering }tough going in Whitefish Bay, a jperennial hazard to early ship- |ping, In the bay the new $4,000,000 Sir Denys Lowson, owned by Al- seme Central and Hudson Bay Railway company, aad the Le- moyne, owned by Canada Steamship Lines, began to move lafter being stuck in the ice Fri- Lake Ships Bash Way Through Ice |Portadoc and Ridgetown, owned jmoved into the lower river to In the lower river, 13 vessels were involved in a traffic tie- up. This was caused when the N. M. Paterson Steamship Lines by Upper Lakes, became stuck in ice and other vessels were unable to pass. The Portadoc was freed late Friday when the Mackinaw clear the jam. PORT ARTHUR (CP) -- Ice still called some of the shots at the Lakehead Friday, more than 24 hours after the grain- stocked port had its opening. The T. R. McLagan became stranded on heavy slip ice. El- evator officials said the ship took a run at the ice in an at- |day morning. ie | The two ships were joined lthe Gordon C. Leitch, owned bj Upper Lakes Shipping, Scott Misener Enterprises' Royalton and the Hamiltonian, owned by Papachristidis Company, All were reported moving cau- tiously after receiving aid from the United States Coast Guard icebreaker Mackinaw. Special Fund Covers Police TORONTO (CP) -- The exis- tence of a special fund provid- ing up to.$10,000 for any police- man sued for his actions dur- ing performance of his lduties was. confirpied here Fri- | day. | The special fund was cre lated by the Metropolitan Tor- jonto police department earlier this year when members of the ifund contains about $50.000. licly acknowledged by senior of- ficials of the force, but a seven- page circular, outlining the rules and regulations of the fund, was distributed to police stations Friday. The rules say the purpose of jthe fund is to indemnify in officer would be! who, in the course of his duties, man responsible. 'has incurred civil liability. Ousted President | | Uruguay Goulart's pretty wife, Maria} Deposed leftist -president Joao|Teresa, and their two children, |1943 as a political prisoner, said their|Goulart fled into exile in neigh-jarrived Friday in a small planejhe saw Kaduk and. defendant outside Montievideo, Uruguay.| She said she expected to be re-| united with her husband soon and added: i "We shall make our home jhere until the situation is clear in Brazil and then we shall re- turn," The police official said Gou- jlart and Brizola were at the | jtown, 19 miles from the Brazil- ian border, NEW PRESIDENT MOVES With Goulart in flight, Bra- zil's new president, Paschoal Ranieri Mazzilli, moved swiftly with U.S. blessings to return the country to normal in the wake of the anti-Communist upheaval. He met with reporters in Rio jde Janeiro shortly after his ar- rival from Brasilia and intro- jduced members of his provi- sional cabinet. He described his jgovernment ts a "bridge be- |tween the old situation and the |situation to come." In Washington, State Secre- jtary Dean Rusk said the United |States will work with the new |government on Brazil's urgent /problems. Canadian May Get Vacant NATO Post MANCHESTER (CP) -- The Guardian, in a Paris dispatch, |Says that "a Canadian" is jamong those mentioned as pos- sible successor of Dirk Stikker, who is to retire as secretary- lalmost single-handed a revolt of jranch of a friend in a small) tempt to get close enough to he dock to be loaded. She slid on top oft he cakes jand in churning up tie 'ce she |bent her propellor. "We'll have jto wait for an icebreaker to get in here now," the spokesman jsaid. | The Black Bay, which ar- jrived early Thursday and sig- nalled the opening of naviga- tion, continued to take on wheat Friday. She was expected to BOXING ENVOY Jack Hood Vaughn, a for- mer featherweight boxer, may be President Johnson's choice as the next U.S. Am- bassador to Panama. The 42- year-old Vaughn who posed last night in his nearby Alex- andria, Va., home, is now Cirecting the Peace Corps Latin American operation. Fighting under the name of Johnny Hood, Vaughn en- gaged in 165 bouts as an amateur and later turned professional in Mexico where he fought 26 times. clear early today. (AP Wirephoto) MADE GRENADES FRANKFURT (AP) -- A wit- jness testified Friday that a de- force contributed one day's pay /fendant in West Germany's big-|ionists --about $20--to establish it. The gest war crimes trial here {hanged five or six prisoners of The fund has never been pub-|the Auschwitz camp in front of|they too would be gassed. ja Christmas tree in 1944. | | The witness, Rudolf Steiner,| 45, a Viennese detective, told| the court the hangings took) |place in one of the camp kitch- jens on Christmas before a tree jput up by the SS (Nazi elite guard), He identified former SS Sgt. Oswald Kaduk as the | | "When some of his victims} yelled out 'Down with the~Na- zis' as Kaduk put the noose jaround their necks, he beat \them in the face with a riding} 'whip he carried in his right| hand, "Steiner said. 'In his 'left! hand he had a bottle of schnapps, and, as usual, was drunk," Steiner, sent to Auschwitz in Franz Hofmann, a former SS captain, select 150 to 300 pris- oners for gas chambers in the summer of 1943. Another witness, Maximilian Sternol, 70, testified that defen- dant Wilhelm Boger, 56, a for- mer SS sergeant, once put down Auschwitz prisoners. "The 100 or so Jewish in-} MacArthur Slips Into Coma WASHINGTON (AP) -- Gen. Douglas MacArthur slipped to- ward the deepést sleep of life-- perhaps a coma--Friday night to face the next challenges of his survival unaware. of the concerned faces around him. His slow retreat began Fri- day afternoon, Doctors found it progressively more difficult to get a response from the uncon- scious, 84-year-old army gen- eral. Through the night, a medical team -was in constant attend- ance in the room where the general is the sole occupant. Earlier in the evening his wife, Jean, was a frequent. visitor. Doctors reported there was no obvious change in the vital signs--the heart beat and blood pressure were still holding 'the line, The newspaper does not name the Canadian, but it is believed} in London that one suggested! specialist now in Geneva. Doctors also reported:that the feneral's body chemistry had improved, indicating the emer-| f candidate is Maj.-Gen. E |. M.|gency technique to draw poi-| wrecked hundreds of homes Commons clerk for' first rea?-|Burns, Canadian disarmament|sonous waste products from the| and claimed at least seven Iblood was working. Jews Turned On SS, Court Told | ies of their gassed fellow relig- in the crematoriums learned that after doing this Chateau-Gai Wine store on the Bond streets. mates who had to burn the bod-| 90 Firefi Tired, grimy firefighters and officials worked steadily through this morning sifting the ruins of a Simcoe street store and offices, gutted by fire during the night, The blaze is believed to have started in the centre of the south-west corner of Simcoe and The multi-alarm fire tied up 50 Oshawa firefighters from the outbreak at about 2.30 a.m. until it was brought under control at 5 a.m. The blaze swept through sec- ond-storey offices casting a dense pall of smoke across the heart of the city. An Oshawa Fire Department spokesman today unofficially estimated damage to the build- ing to be $25,000. The building was owned by city insurance adjuster, Vernon move his company offices into the suite of offices above the wine store this morning. Some materials and furniture had already been placed in the new office and these were de- stroyed by fire. But Walker stated that nothing of value had been lost, "Our firemen did an excellent job of getting the fire stopped," he said this morning. Looking 'worried and tired, Walker said he did not know if he would be able to carry on business at his old quarters, 13% Simcoe north. "The lease ghters Called To Blaze ed neatly in the centre of the store. City Police Chief Herbert Flintoff said that so far, to his knowledge, no request had been made for a police guard on the store to prevent looting. "I assume they're boarding the place up well, and I'd ex- pect they'll be trucking the wine away pretty soon," he con- cl Small Blaze Injures Oshawa Man Michael Dow, 20, of 426 Crom- well avenue, was admitted to Oshawa General last night with second degree burns to the -- body, oo . mid- night fire at Me : Machine Consens, har Walker, He had been due to and King street west. A second worker, William Babich, RR 3, Bowmanville, was uninjured, A fire department official said the fire was in an entranceway connecting the shop to Algoma Manufacturing Tool and Die Limited. (No damage was re- ported at Algoma). t lo damage .estimate is avail- abe and the cause of the fire is not known. my UN Favors | has already run out," he ex- plained. John Ebel, manager of the Chateau-Gai Wine store could not make any estimate of the damage to his store and stocks. type of work for six months, | DECIDED TO FIGHT "They decided against going} like lambs to the slaughter and! managed to get hold of some! guns. They even made hand gre- jance people to investigate be- "T have to wait for the insur- fore I can even talk about such things," he said, Meanwhile, workmen were busy boarding broken windows and doorways. Grimy wine bot- tles, their contents apparently undamaged, were being stack- Reds Rap U.S. Over Poor Nations Advice GENEVA (Reuters) -- Soviet Foreign Trade Minister Nikolail Patolichey Friday described] United States advice to. needy| countries to help themselves as) "a srather slippery formula." | He told reporters outside the United Nations world trade and development conference here that Russia was countering the U.S. formula with one of its own, It consisted of low - interest credits to the developing coun- tries to finance projects which would become their own prop- erty, the Russian reported. Patolichev was referring to U.S. State Undersecretary sa { George Ball's address March 25 suggesting that developing coun- tries could help bridge the gap between themselves and indus- trialized ones by doing more to help themselves. Patolichev said Ball's state- ment created a "rather hard impression' which had not been lost on delegates from under- developed countries. The American formula seemed to be "you are not will- ing to help yourself, so why should we help you?" Patoli- chey said, commenting '"a Standby Force Bunche Says WINNIPEG (CP)--The. United Nations does not favore stab- lishment of a standing UN army to carry out peace-keep- ing operations, Ralph Bunche, UN undersecretary for special political affairs, said Friday. Instead, he said, "we do fa- vor standby forces, with indi- vidual countries designating in- dividual units which would be available when the UN calls.' Dr. Bunche was addressing 3,000 people at a public meet- ing here, sponsored by the Win- nipeg branch of the United Na- tions Association in Canada. The meeting followed a spe- cial convocation of the Univer- sity of Manitoba at which Dr. Bunche was awarded the hon- orary degree of doctor of laws. Dr. Bunche warned against the "excessive tendency to see UN forces as a panacea."' They had, he said, limitations. One was cost, Another was that each "conflict situation" called for a different kind of UN force. In Cyprus, Dr. Bunche said, the situation was "probably po- litically the most delicate and difficult which has confronted the UN in its 18 years of life." War over Cyprus, he said, "seemed much too close for rather slippery formula, I would y." comfort," before the UN acted, TORNADO BEARS DOWN: ON TEXAS CITY The tornado funnel that lives is shown as it skirted the downtown section of - Wichita, Tex. This photo was made from the top of the Times Publishing Company new plant which was holding open house at the time for visitors from four states. --AP Wirephoto

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