Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Apr 1964, p. 1

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Bhe Oshawa Cimes Second Class Mall Post Office Department -- for payment of -Postoge. in Cash. Weather Report Mainly cloudy and _ cooler Wednesday. A few showers to- night, Thought For Today When you give someone a piece of your mind, you may be ad- ding to a vacuum. Authorized os TWENTY-SIX PAGES Price Not. Over 10 Cents per Copy VOL. 93 -- NO. 82 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, APRIL 7 , 1964 / CYPRIOT POLIC HUNT TERRORIST Lay Charge | Against 2 | - Belgian MDs ete ns BRUSSELS -- A warrant for the arrest of two doctors in north Belgium was issued to- day following the death of a 15- months - old baby during the doctors' strike which is a week old with no solution in sight. Thousands of workers marched through the streets to- day in protest against the walk- out and the Belgian Communist party called for a 24-hour, gen- eral strike with "'massive dem- onstrations' in principal towns, The two doctors, who provisionally detained Monday, were charged with "non-assist- ance to a person in danger of death." A court will decide Thursday whether the warrant should be maintained or dropped. Meanwhile, Belgium's hospi- tals were crowded to the burst- ing point. Weary nurses struggled to keep up with the flood, of pa- tients. Beds were set up in the corridors and some civilian pa- tients were sent to military hos- pitals that had empty beds. Only serious cases were ad- mitted to the hospitals, brought in under emergency arrange- ments set up by. the striking doctors. The physicians, who are pro- testing new provisions in Bel- gium's national health plan, have arranged to treat pressing cases, But -their opponents claim this is not meeting tne needs of the country's 9,000,000 people. ; Thousands of the striking doctors went to France, The Netherlands, West Germany and Luxembourg to avoid possi- ble 'requisitioning' by the gov- ernment while some doctors re- mained to provide emergency care for the very sick. Interior Minister Arthur Gil- son said the emergency setup cient hecaus were; e|were diverted to London, Then atment for sick| visibility le at home and because|zero, flights were rerouted to physicians refuse to func-'Windsor and Montreal. tion except in the main hospi- |tals."" | Angry demonstrators showed \their resentment in Liege Mon- lday by throwing firecrackers in the streets. A crowd of 14,000 |turned out to protest against the Strike. In the nearby town of Se- raing, women--some of whom carried babies in their arms-- paraded with signs reading "Belgian doctors value human life in terms of money" and! shouted "'assassin, assassin." Cypriot communities in the western part of the island. --AP Wirephoto by cable from Nicosia WOMEN AND CHILDREN from the Greek hamlet of Paby Ammos on Cyprus ar- rive at the Greek village of Pomos after fleeing Monday's fighting. Later United Nations truce officers arranged a cease-fire between the war- ring Greek and Turkish at London dropped 'to: Russian Claims: Chinese ' BUDAPEST (Reuters) -- So- viet Premier Khrushchev. was back in Budapest today after classifying American leaders as "reasonable" men and Commu- nist Chinese leaders as stupid. In a speech Monday to work- ers at the Hungarian industrial town of Kazinbarcika, Khrush- chev spoke of the "reasonable"' views on international affairs expressed by th. late president John F. Kennedy as well as Prsident Johnson, State Secre- tary Dean Rusk and Senator J. William Fulbright, chairman of the Senate foreign relations committee. At the same time, the Soviet leader bluntly accused Commu- nist China's top leaders of stu- pidity. - It was his first direct counter- thrust since last week's attack by the Peking People's Daily denouncing him as the "greatest revisionist" and "the greatest capitulationist in history.' The Kremlin chief stressed that Russia was against war and in favor of peace, believing that in any East-West competi- tion "the system which will give more material goods to man will win."' As Khrushchev spoke, the Sino-Soviet ideological dispute Expect Thousands To Honor General NEW YORK (AP) -- Thous- ands of persons were expected to pay their last respects today to Gen. Douglas MacArthur, whose body jay in the simple Surroundings of an' ancient ar- mory he once commanded. From 10 a.m., EST until as far into the night.as any mourn-| ers are in line, the 7th Regi- * ment armory will remain open. In Washington, leaders of Congress made . arrangements for the body to lie in'state in the Capitol rofunda Wednesddy end Thursday. The general is to be buried in the MacArthur Memorial Building at Norfolk Va., Saturday CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS PULICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 4 'Actor's C ondition Termed Critical -- HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- Brit-! ish actor 'Peter Sellers took abut turn for the worse today after|We suffering a heart attack Mon-|could get to replace him. Our day. A spokesman at Cedars of i Lebanon Hospital said his con-of thing, and I have a feeling we will suspend the picture un- dition is considered critical. The spokesman said complica-|t "It is such a part that no one Peter Sellers could play. don't know who else we nsurance covers us on this sort il we can get Peter Sellers Itons developed early today as/back." a result of shock and dis- turbance .of the rhythm of Sel-|tal for several weeks. lers' heartbeat. Early today he was trans-Swedish actress Britt Eklund,|information officer c He is expected to be in hospi- Sellers' bride of two months, | Greek Gang Executes Four Turk-Cypriots NICOSIA--United Nations of-| ficials today opened negotiations for a permanent truce between} \Greek- and Turkish-Cypriots inja jnorthwest Cyprus as police)Turkish Ambassador Nedim sought the killers of two Turk- down in ag field outside by armed men here Monday night A cease-fire was no sooner ar- ranged between the two com- munities Monday night in five |villages in the northwest of the were when a> Turkish-Cypriot harged that island, as "aggression key," The warning. was contained in formal note delivered by against Tur- Veysel Ilkin to Greek Foreign jish-Cypriots beaten and mowed) Minister Stavros Kostopoulos' in Athens at 3 a.m. _In a. verbal exchange at the time of delivery, Ilkin said the Turkish government had infor- mation that the Greek-Cypriots _ Planning to attack the Turkish military forces sta- tioned on the island under the ferred from his private room to|21, a beauteous blonde, said -her|Greek - Cypriots stopped four|treaty of alliance. an intensive care unit and an-|husband had no previous history|Turkish - Cypriots at the en- other consultant was called injof ill health. Sellres, a hard worker, has|Nicosia, beat them with iron| will arrive here Friday for con- on the case. The 38-year-old British actor lwas stricken at his home with parts in one} lwhat the hospital first called a/movie. During the last year he moderate heart attack -- half- made five movies. way between a light and heavy ~ |coronary. | | It occurred during his first Hollywood filming, Kiss Me, | Stupid. | A spokesman for Harold Mi-| risch, producer of the film,| said: Eruption Shakes Highest Volcano CATANIA, Sicily (AP)--A vi- olent eruption today shook Mt. |Etna, Europe's highest volcano. sending molten rocks and burn- ling ash into the air and spray- ling several communities with a jrain of hot sand. : There was no immediate re- |port of danger tothe population Yiving "along the slopes. of the} Sicilian volcano. Etna erupts) lfrequently. testim- BIG PHONEY Muffin, a live Himalayan kitten competing in the Cal- gary cat during ; weekend eyes with obvious contempt a "phoney" Siam- ese, given as atrophy in the Muffin: is Carol MacMil Traffic Death lfog which blanketed southern tricts. A highway fatality, dangerous | |\from the fog which stretched) Sault Ste. Marie, Sudbury,}| H e t D t ] Pp e Mrs, Harold Parker, 61, of| iT : u C Tinc CSS when a car driven by her hus- highway 12 miles west of Kit- AMSTERDAM (AP) -- The parents and sister surprisingly|verted to Roman Catholicism way 27 were blocked in the} will take place outside The) The communique said that) She won approval for her en- 4 the state visit to Mexico in or-|succession rights to the Dutch Toronto International Airport) he announcement was made ligations of the rayal family, no-|ish throne. the press by Dr. J. van det Hoe- "Ac Hh result: of this,"'° the nounced Fel: 9 that ¢rene, 24, |Prince Bernhard and Crown! | Mon The Netherlands." | Irene who officially was bon-Parma were received by| Disclosure s e veral months produced a verbal attack else- Hospital Patients MONTREAL (CP)--The num- ber of mentally-retarded chil- to a recent Afro-Asian solidarity|mittees Monday to consider births, Dr. W. J. McGanity to- propaganda 'very much like| hospitals will be able to vote in | | Dr. McGanity, professor of The delegate added: 'I do not|motion proposed by James Mc- Tale Of Bull jobstetrics and gynecology at the 4 e@ says si d i ded. acy of the yellow and black' bers' hour. says President Johnson|bies are mentally retarde : j--gunned his cr - j > remature babies of the white race over the black! 50,000 eligible voters are in gen- 'ineiiat Goloredicidenice of aan joncoming car veered off the! Line Call I | Hot Line Call Is when he gave newspaper men| Asked about newspaper re- ports that he drove up to 90\ambassador to the United }was unaware he had ever €x-\tween the Kremlin and White ceeded Texas' speed limit of 70./House rings it will be a wrong reporter in his Lincoln, while peace so each of us would be other reporters and photograph-|able to sleep well and not worry Johnson blew the cow - like told the Economic Club of De- horn on his car at the. cattle, troit. 5 \"'a very graphic description. of tions to the problems which di- the sex life of a bull." |vide us you will find us ready. MONTREAL (CP)--Mr. Jus-| justice, rendered false tice Adrien Meunier pleaded notjony .. . knowing it to be false. 5 \testimony given last month be-jof a telephone conversation in fore Judge Claude Wagner in a|Sept rior Court justice chose a sum-jin connection with the timing of mary trial which was fixed for a legal notice he had served on |Lefebvre, 38, and Armand La-| 3. When he denied having rose, 38, were also arraigned|withdrawn two cheques which ner Mr. Justice Meunier, a one Mr. Justice Meunier is ac- time Liberal 'member. of Parlia and central Ontario Monday) Visibility returned to normal) driving conditions and disrupted| from Toronto to London, | Nrth Bay and large sections) Kitchener was killed and al M I M e i band was in a head-on collision To arr V n a dri chener. wedding of Dutch Princess|stayed behind at the- last min-|created a sensation in her coun- western outskirts of Toronto 85] Netherlands; it was announced|Irene "will 'not participte in|gagement only after giving up der to separate fully her per-|throne in order to marry the was closed late Monday after- private secretary to not to create any political) 'There was speculation at the ven, private secretary to the statement concluded, ."'theirjand Carlos, 33, would be mar- Princess Beatrix had left for a/ Monday, Princess Irene and) scheduled to accompany her Pope Paul. in private audience |ago that the princess from Pro-| where. OTTAWA (OP) -- The Com-| ' Beers n Steers dren could be significantly re- jeonference at Algiers, accused/changes in the Election Act to |day told the College of General the racist theory that was once federal elections. | | University x said that see any difference between|Nulty (L--Lincoln) and passed) np University of Texas, said tha 4 --with his | i thers in jraces over the white and those) Harry Harley (L--Halton) es- Paper cup of beer) He said that for mothers |Lincoln Continental up a long; ---- . a and yellow." eral hospitals on any given day. ' ae road. | a similar account of Johnson's| and. newspaper women an 'in| Wrong Number miles an hour, Johnson told a|Staies sad Monday he hopes Time says Johnson took three number. ers followed in five other John- about the hot line ringing," Am- and Time said one newspaper} Dobrynin said "If the Ameri- | {guilty Monday to three charges} 1. When he denied it was his $64,000 bankruptcy case. Judge Wagner as evidence; |April 14. police officers during the 1962 Monday on charges arising|were exhibits in the dossier of cused of. having "'illegally ahd ment, was 'sworn in to, the Su- | TORONTO (CP) -- A heavy lifted early today in some dis- at Toronto and London. air travel resulted Monday ithrough Mount Forest and to} eee of the Georgian Bay area. persons were taken to hospital jwith another on a fog - bound! North and south lanes on High-| Irene and Don Carlos of Spainjute. itry. the result of five accidents. today. | by the sonal responsibility from the ob-|prince, pretender to the Span- noon and seven TOA flightS/piincess Irene. It was read to es for the queen" = {time their engagement was an- queen, after Queen Juliana, marriage will be performed|ried in Madrid this spring. 10-day state visit to Merico. her fiance Prince Carlos Bour-| AGE : at the Vati Nazis May Give Vote To can. testant Holland had been con-| In Moscow, the chief delegate} mons instructed one of its com- duced by preventing premature jthe Chinese Communists f/ensure that persons confined to As LBJ Tells Practice of Canada. carried out in Europe." The subject was raised in a Ww YO pe -lnearly 7 . those who advocate the suprem-|in the Commons private mem- gazin RK (AP)--Time ma-|nearly half of all premature ba "within easy sippin istance"' x roup, the in- who strive for the supremacy|timated that between 40,000 and : pping distance' |the under-20 age gtoup Pua as : biden acebic |Texas hill and the driver of an| S i i H Newsweek magazine carried| driving over Easter weekend,| promptu tour of his ranch. DETROIT (AP)--The Soviet press conference last week he} that any time the "hot line" be- newspaper women and a male| "We all hope for a state of son-owned vehicles. bassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin woman recalled he once gavejcan people want to find solu- | P ' C t jof perjury in. connection with|voice on a police tape-recording The 59-year-old Quebec Supe-, 2. When he gave a wrong date | Noel Paquette, 38: Alphonse hearing in the bankruptcy; from the inquiry by Judge Wag- Andre Poupart in Sept. 1962 |with the intention of misleading perior Court last October: show owned by show the an of Calgary --€P Wirephoto MD Urges Cut In Premature Births |was double the average for {mothers of all ages. One survey showed that 38 per cent of ha- bies born to mothers under 20 were premature. In most cases, child-birth for the girl under 20 is "just too much," he said. The under-20 mother was sub- ject to a three-fold stress, She was still struggling to complete jthe maturity of her own body.) \Her body had to try to nourish} la growing child during preg- jnaney. And often there was ter- lrible emotional distress due to ithe fact that in a high percent- jage of cases the baby was il- llegitimate: | It was important that the ex- pectant mother. take enough vi- tamin C. "The minimum safe consump- tion daily and_ consistently throughout pregnancy is the jequivalent of one-third of an orange,' Dr. McGanity said. "From there on down the inci-) dence of premies (premature babies) is three times the aver-| age." Untreated urinary tract infec- tion was also a significant fac- tor. Dr. McGanity, a Kitchener, Ont., native and a graduate of| the University of Toronto, said} jonly half of all such infections) show symptoms, Fear 20 Denk As Oil Ship Rams Bridge MARACAIBO--Radio reports today said at least 20 persons were feared dead or missing jafter an oil tanker struck and| destroyed an entire section of the new' $75,000,000 bridge! across Lake Maracaibo in Ven- jezuela Monday night. | The reports said the tanker} Esso Maracaibo collided with the bridge. 1962, reproduced beforg., Reports from the scene said fan unknown number of cars fel! jinto the water. Preliminary esitmates of dam- age to the. bridge exceeded $2,000,000. Soldiers, police and volunteers were searching the lake waters) for survivors. None of the 36,000-ton tanker's| all-Venezuelan crew was hurt,! although great chunks of con- crete from the overpass fell on the vessel's bow. causing it to |list heavily. de Paula Coelho, began. Delegates rose and headed There were. no incidents. dwindled to some 30 delega- t sented at the conference earlier jhad decided to boycott. Portu- jguese and South African speak- \ers, 80 Delegates Walk Out Of trance to the old walled city of shot them." Turkish feeling was reported! running high after the killings.) A Greek - Cypriot police ings as '"'an abominable crime"! and urged the public to volun-| help catch the culprits. The story was given promin- ent display in the Turkish press| and Turkish officials were bit-| _It was reliably reported UN Special Envoy Ralph Bunche \been known to play as many as|bars and "lined them up and/sultations on the Cyprus prob- lseven different lem. Dr. Fazil Kuchuk, Turkish- Cypriot vice-president of the is- land, said he believed the shoot. |spokesman denounced the slay-|ing was in reprisal for the slay- ing of a Greek-Cypriot auxtil- ary policeman in Nicosia Sun- |teer any information that might/day. A few hours before the UN force arranged a cease-fire to end three days of shooting at the Turkish village of Kokkina : |terly critical of the United Na-|and the Greek hamlet of Pahy T d ye lks |tions as well as of the Greeks.|Ammos in northwest Cyprus. Ta e a | Others saw it as a major ob- GENEVA (Reuters) -- Dele-| struction in getting immediate Turkish agreement. to a UN gates from 80 African, Asian,|Plan opening all major high-| Car Sales Latin American and Commu-|Ways to both Greek and Turk-| nist-bloc countries got up and walked out of the United Na- tions world trade and develop- ment conference here today rather than listen to.a speech by the chief delegate from Por- tugal. The chairman of the 12I-na- tion conference, Abdel Moneim el Kaissouny of Egypt, left the chair before Portugal's secre- ish vehicles. Entrenched Turkish army troops held their positions along the Kyrenia road north of Ni- cosia in territory held by the Turkish-Cypriots, 'Turkey today warned Greece that if Greek-Cypriots attacked men of the Turkish unit.- government would consider it tary of state for trade, Ar de Paula. Coelho, took the rost- rum. None of the Latin American vice chairmen would agree to replace him to call the Portu- guese speaker to-the rostrum. The call finally came from Canadian delegate L. Dana Wil- gress, As soon as Wilgress called on the walkout the exits. slowly for De Paula Coelho's audience ions, The African states repre- However, it was learned they decided not to continue e%) 2 Test Pilots Killed When Jet Hits Ice OTTAWA (CP)--Two test pi- lots--one of them an American --died Monday night when an RCAF jet trainer crashed through the ice of Primrose Lake 190 miles northeast of Ed- monton. The dead are Capt. Harley Johnson, 36, of Portland, Ore., a United States Air Force ex- change officer posted at RCAF Uplands, Ottawa, and Fit. Lt. Michel A. Grant, also 36, a na- \forts to have Soyth Africa ex-|tive of Oliver, B.C., who made |pelled from the conference. |his home in Ottawa. tioned 'on Cypras the Turkish) At New Peak GM Reports TORONTO (CP) -- Canada's car makers are turning out ve- -|hicles. at a record-breaking clip. |. General Motors of Canada, 'Chrysler of Canada and Ameri- jean Motors (Canada) Ltd. today reported sales running at rec- ord levels. Ford of Canada told the same story Monday, GM said its sales in the first three months of this year to- talled 84,997, compared with 73,- 117 in the similar period a year ago. Sales in March were & rec- jord 33,076, compared with 27,- 176 a year ago, Chrysler dealers delivered 9,305 vehicles in March, an in- crease of 28 per cent over Feb- ruary and 40 per cent higher than March, 1963. American Motors said March was the 29th consecutive month that its sales were higher than a year earlier, Its sales in March totalled 2,647 vehicles. Ford reported Monday its first-quarter sales were 42,498, 28.8 per cent higher than a year ago and 22 pet cent above the previous record set in 1961. ELEVEN WEEKS IN BODY CAST Caroline Jeffrey, 18, of De- troit, who was seriously in- jured in a car crash Jan. 19 in . which her husband-to-be was killed, was still in a body east over the weekend when she made her first trip out- side to visit her gtandpar- ' ents in Windsor. She is shown here on-her stretcher with grandparents Mr. and Mrs, Albert Jeffrey, 4 é

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