ili set 'hetbiataiabtey Thought For Today " To make a speech immortal, you don't have to make it ever- lasting. VOL. 93 -- NO. 95 Price Not Over 10 Certs per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 1964 ¢ Oshawa Time Authorized as Second Class Mai Ottawa ond for poyment Weather Report Sunny with a few cloudy inter- vals Thursday. Winds light. tment 1 Post Office Depa Cash. of Postage in THIRTY PAGES Britain Frees Top Soviet Spy For Own A P| LONDON (Reuters) -- British businessman Greville Wynne, convicted by the Russians as a Spy and freed today in an ex- change for a Russian master spy held by the British, came home today, pale, drawn, and with a shaved head. Wynne said his exchange for Russian spy Gordon Lonsdale in Berlin this morning had come as a great surprise. "T only had the news yester- day when I was sitting in my cell in Moscow. They did not} give me any direct indication that I was going to be ex- changed. They just said there was a possibility that I was leaving the prison,' Wynne said, "I did not know where I was going or anything about it. It was a complete surprise." Lonsdale, whose real name was Conor Molody, was a high- ranking officer in the Soviet in- telligence service. WAS IN CANADA He went from Russia to Can- ada in 1954 and during the year or so he spent there he took over the identity of the real Gordon Lonsdale, who had van- ished from Canada when a boy with his Finnish mother. In 1955, the new Lonsdale sailed to England via New York to set up his spy ring, and for more than five years GRAVILLE WYNNE gent was successful in passing to. the|to see his wife and family," Russians vital information on|the spokesman said. Britain's underwater defences. | Wynne's wife, Sheila, 42, who He was the most damaging of|saw him in prison in Russia ithe group of spies brought to/last'month, was waiting for her trial in March, 1961, and was|husband at their home in Chel- sentenced to 25 years--a rec-|sea, a fashionable section of ord at that time. London, where she said earlier The exchange was made at/today she was ordering cham-| the Heerstrasse crossing point pagne for a celebration. jbetween the British sector of) Heavy security forces were at West Berlin and East Germany the airport as Wynne arrived. at 5:35 a.m. Wynne, 45, arrived|Northolt was re ported used at London's Northolt Airport/Tyesday night to fly Lonsdale just outside London aboard an! oyt of Britain : RAF plane seven hours later. He wore a dark, pin-striped suit, Standing ramp to the plane, top. of the Wynne at the waved to reporters and photog- f raphers. A defence man said Wynne was tired." "He just wants to get home ministry spokes- "very C Military police and plain- clothesmen patrolled the airfield as Wynne walked to the airport lounge. He seemed unsteady on his eet. A foreign office official gave him support. "It's absolutely wonderful to be back,"" Wynne murmured as he walked from the plane. 'Home Rule Bids MONTREAL (CP) -- The Ca-| inadian Labor Congress Tuesday \turned down proposals aimed at lencouraging greater autonomy for Canadian locals of interna-) tional unions. The autonomy demands were jvoiced in eight resolutions placed before the 1,600 dele- |gates at the CLC convention jhere--all seeking home rule for {Canadian unionists in unions based in the United States. All were rejected by a vote of about three to one on the grounds that the CLC cannot force its affiliated international] unions to give greater power to| their Canadian branches. This could only be achieved by the individual unions through consti-| tutional amendments. | Ed Finn, Ottawa, public rela- tions director of the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Trans- port and General Workers, a na- tional union, said the most out- spoken supporters of greater in- dependence are Canadian locals of international unions. | \DISLIKE RESTRAINTS GORDON LONSDALE Laos R Seek Red Aid | VIENTIANE tian revolutionary (AP)--The Lao He said the nationalist feeling a resolution aimed at reducing working hours to a maximum of eight hours a day and 40 hours a week. Twelve men were lined up at |floor microphones waiting their jturn to speak when adjourn- 'ment put a stop to debate be- fore the resolution came to a vote. Don McNabb of Sudbury, a United Steelworkers of America |delegate, said the 40-hour week already is virtually established throughout the entire steel in- | dustry. 'GET OFF POT' "We're 20 years behind the times," he said. "Let's get off the pot and move ahead." The congress decidéd to seek a change in the Income Tax Act whereby all health care costs-- medical hospital, optical, dental and drug--would be deductible from income. for taxation pur- The CLC urged its unions to |press for a minimum of double |time payment for any work jdone on an overtime basis. Discussion indicated the in- Ea Turns Down | BLOOD POURS from wound suffered by man injured dur- ing struggle at the 74th St. station of the IRT subway line today. The train was PM Gets Go-Ahead On NEW YORK FAI STALL-IN FAIL Police-Demonstrators Feud In Subway Depots 'Austrian Police Patrol Nicosia NICOSIA (AP) -- A Greek -|Cypriot police escorting Cypriot was reported wounded |electricians returned to fire. lin the hand today during sev-| British troops and an Irish pa- eral hours of firing between|tro| removed British children Greek- and Turkish-Cypriots in from a nearby school | a suburb of Famagusta, on the * : | the east coast of Cyprus. BEGIN PATROLS | The firing occurred close to|, Austrian civilian police at-| tached to, the UN peace force ithe camp of the enmen Irish yegan patrolling aday in one of {contingent of the UN peace/Nicosia's worst trouble spots. jforce, The Irish are to take} UN Secretary General U over the area at midnight. Thant hopes to get countries} | A UN spokesman said the fir- which have sent troops to Cyp- ing started when a group of|rus to send civilian police also. iGreek - Cypriot electricians|He feels police are better |moved into a suburb just north the to deal. with riotous: si- lot the medieval wall of Fama-|\U@/0nS- gusta. we pa F "ges grate brought, Greek - Cypriot police said|/" te last of the 600-man Irish) [Turkish - Cypriots fasnatl fire contingent Tuesday night. | Flushing, Queens, when when the electricians arrived to| The Irish join the British, Ca- work on installations in a for-|Nadians and Swedes in the 7,000- struggle took place. mer British army camp taken|Man peace force. A Finnish con-| (AP Wirephoto) jover by the government. Greek- tingent is expected to begin ar-| Rate s --_--|riving over the weekend. | The UN force commander, In-| dian Lt.-Gen, Prem Singh Gy- ani, and his advisers continued} \talks with the Greek- and Turk-| jish-Cypriots seeking neutraliza- jtion of parts of Nicosia. to the bound from Manhattan evidently because of advance NEW YORK (AP)--A "'stall- in" by militant civil rights dem- onstrators which was intended to block highway traffic fizzled toda; and failed to disrupt the opening of 'the New "York World's Fair. Activity centred in subway stations where some demonstra- tors suffered bloody heads in clashes with police. Police arrested more than two dozen of the demonstrators, mostly Negroes. Leaders of the demonstration} had promised that hundreds of automobiles would be stalled on approaches to the fair but po- lice found only a small number to tow away. However, traffic was much lighter than' on a normal day, stall-in threats. "People apparently have avoided coming into the area," said Traffic Commissioner H, A. Barnes. : The multi-million dollar fair's international glitter was un- dimmed by the threats of rain and racial protest. Turchyn had waited in ling since Monday afternoon. ' Exotic exhibits from the world had Rested | 646-acre of Flushing Meadow marshland into wonderland 6f fun and fantasy, recreation and reality, past and present and fur ture, The promised '"'stall-in" by @ rebel faction of the Congress of Racial Equality did not mater: ialize on the complex maze of highways leading to the fait- ground in time to block the opening. ré HALT INTERFERENCE A huge force of police--2,008 city patrolmen and 3,000 private guards in and around the grounds, plus countless other's patrolling highways and subway lines--acted quickly and deci+ sively to thwart any interfer ence. However, a delegation of about 120 members, mostly Ne- gro, of the national C.O.R.E; organization entrained at Pentle sulvania Station to demonstrate outside. certain pavilions, chiefly those of southern states but also including some of ine DVA Hospitals Plans If passed in its present form, OTTAWA (CP)--By a vote of th:: bill will mean that the boun- to the hospitals issue. Most of the day was devoted|theirs. | President Makarios offered to| An' 18-year-old college fresh- dismantle all Greek - Cypriotjman, Bill Turchyn of Jersey fortifications and checkpoints|City, was named the No. 1 fair- on the island if the Turkish-|goer, leading a throng expected Cypriots would dismantlelto number 500,000 before the day is over and 70,000,000 by dustry. + 30 Negroes 1123 to 94, the minority Liberal government, in effect, won Com- mons approval Tuesday night for its bold policy to turn some or all of the 11 veterans hospi- jtals over to local authorities.' | The 106 Liberals presemt were ibacked by 10 Creditistes and iseven Social Credit MPs as they defeated a Conservative non- confidence motion deploring the government's plans and its re- jection of representations from veterars organizations. | The motion was supported by) \82 Conservatives and 12 New| \Democrats. Their spokesmen} daries of nearly every constitu- ency will be changed by 10 in- dependent commissions--one for each province. At the normal adjournment hour, of 10 .m. Tupsday, the; House wert into, a 30-minute} overtime period, It "was the) first such special debate since) rule changes were approved Moray for a six-week trial. FEW HARD SHOTS The overtime period brought} few hard shots on goal. Three opposition MPs argued separate grievances that had Veterans Minister Teillet de-|of the Turkish reaction. | There was no immediate vat time the fair ends its two 180-day runs. Attack Jewish. tal policy as a courageous break with tradition designed to en- sure that veterans will continue to receive excellent. medical) treatment--the best in the coun-| NONG Head Ordered "ie said a serious problem had| Payofts, Jury Told been building up for years in DVA. hospitals and standards there would decline in the fu-| ture unless changes were made. | TORONTO (CP) -- Ralph K. Farris directed "subtle" trans- a lactions to provide free stock ioe gy aT oars pe {shares in 1957 for current and derly veterans in. need. of former officials of municipali- chronic care as opposed to ac-| "CS that had given gas a ent of the resolution was to dis-|attacked the government for} arises from growing dissatisfac-|' i 3 1 " \courage employers from paying|spreading worry and confusion) been aired repeatedly before chises to his company, and government spokesmen|"¥° treatinem. 'This Proportion cown charged today at the tion with restraints imposed on|° ; , Phy : P » lovertime instead of hiring extra among disabled and chronically | jaye little or no new informa- \Canadian unionists by some in- |ternational unions through con- |stitutions and policies de. jalmost exclusively by leans. James Perna of Hamilton, representative of the Ameri- a United |workers. Delegates said this signed|Practice contributes to unem- | ployment. jwas increasing steadily. |Vancouver financier's trial on} scription" up with Continental Investment Corporation (Convesto) of Van- couver in early 1957. The second count alleges he perjured himself when he swore of e disposition of 14,000 NONG shares in a special "sub- account which, ac- cording to thé evidence, he set ill veterans. | Today the Commons resumes debate on the redistribution bill. UNREST AT GUELPH? | tion in their replies. | Louis:- Joseph Pigeon (PC-- Joliette - l'Assomption - Mont- calm) complained about coun- tries that refuse to contribute funds to the United Nations to finance the Cyprus peace force. derly veterans in need of chro| | aia at perjury charges. care as opposed to active tea Crown Attorney Harvey Mc- creasing steadit /Culloch, addressing an Ontario ta a. ane nominal __|Supreme Court jury, said the ltransactions were so arranged that the names of those receiv- ing. the stock of Northern On- |Glsss and Ceramic Workers of| {North America, said his union} He sald Canada should with- Medicare By draw from the UN unless other \tario Natural Gas Company did not appear on the firm's 'share committee|it clear that it wants Souvanna said today it is determined tojreinstated and it form a new government as dip-|return jhas full autonomy in Canada,| lyet still appreciates financial and moral assistance from the jUnited States in strike situa- itions. | In another debate, delegates} demonstrated strong interest in| ebels Guards Unhappy Over Pay Scale TORONTO (CP)--Reform In-|"simmering discontent" was |stitutions Minister Grossman fee among workers there. Inies there is any unusual dis-} Mr. Grossman replied that |content among the staff of|the matter of salary revisions |mentary countries pay up. External Affairs Minister |Guelph Reformatory. lwas 'one for the Civil Service Mr. Grossman said Tuesday|Commission to consider. He that suggestions of unrest at the)Said ' sca institution, as made in the leg-/for any one particular institu. islature earlier by Fred Young|tion. (NDP--Yorkview), could do a -| The United States had madejgreat deal of harm to the de- partment's recruitment of staff for the reformatory. "The superintendent of that insists on a SIU Man ts to the neutralist coali- salaries were not scaled| ASKS HIGHER PENSIONS l register. Earl 1965 | Farris is on trial on two Martin declined comment. » | jcharges of perjury arising out should be retained as the Cana- tigations into the distribution of dian flag. Jack Davis, parlia-) |NONG stock. The case is to go government's pledge to recom-iunlikely Ontario's proposed| Mr MeCulloch o d his fi 4 j : ; if Mr. Me pened his final mend by April 22, 1965, the|medical insurance plan will be/,qdress to the jury today. He 9; °C: | me rag page oewadt, by defence counsel Joseph higher pensions for retired civil/not be available for this session|_ The first charge against the servants, in line with increases|of the legislature Mr. Naylor 53-year-old Farris is that he Robert C. Coates (PC--Cum- jof his testimony before 1958 and berland) said the Red Ensign 'Unlikely' 1962 Ontario government inves- secretary to Prime 3 : to the jury Thursday. Minister Pearson, repeated the) LONDON, Ont. (CP)' -- It is} on the 11th day of 'the trial, adoption of a flag design. ready to start by the beginning|. 25 to be followed later in the Stanley Knowles (NDP--Win-|committee said Tuesday night.(SedeWick, and on Thursday by nipeg North Centre) called for]. The committee's report will Mr. Justice Dalton Wells. in the cost of living, E. J, Ben-|told a YMCA men's club meet-|!ied in saying he was unaware he did not give instructions for 600 of these shares to be dis- tributed by his assistant, G. Kelly McLean of Victoria, to of- ficials of three Ontario munici- 'palities. PM Gives Medals | To Labor Groups MONTREAL (CP) -- Prime Minister Pearson Tuesday pre- sented medals for participation in international affairs to two labor bodies--the Canadian La- bor Congress andthe Interna- tional Confederation of Free Trade. Unions, The medallions were minted to mark international co-opera- tion year in 1965, so designated \by resolution of the United Na- tions. Pont YORK" (AP)--About 50 egro IS, anti-se- mitic epithets: Berm | '@ group of Hebrew school. pupils in Brooklyn Tuesday, injuring at least 15 of them, police said. Two rabbis who. went to the aid of their pupils also were bea- ten. Within 1% hours after the melee broke out, and calm had been rsetored, 10 Negro youths beat up 10-year-old Samuel Lip- sker outside the school fled, police said. The first outbreak occurred during noon recess at the United Lubavitcher \ Yeshivoth, a Hebrew grammer-high school in the Bedford-Stuyvesant sec- tion, a predominantly Negre neighborhood. The Negro youths, boys and girls, some carrying sticks, bot- tles, chains and switch - blade knives, began to push and hit pupils on the school grounds. The pupils, ranging in age from 9 to 12, fought back with their fists, witnesses said. Rabbi Abraham Barnetsky, 46, took on a boy he supposed to be a leader of the Negro youths. "Two of my fingers were cut by this garbage can lid," the rabbi said. Another teacher, Rabbi Isl- dore Kolodny, was punched in the abdomen during the 10-min- ute fight. {son, parlamentary secretary tajing. Finance Minister Gordon, said) Mr. Naylor is on the 14-man| lomats worked feverishly tojtion government and grew out undo results of the right-wingiof the Geneva agreements on coup. Laos in 1962: a terse at ae, 2 sett reir te 1 r ' fi > : aia poy india flew to the the sided capital of Luang Pra- royal capital of Luang Prabang|>ang, 120 miles north of Vien- to meet with Eing Savang Vat-itiane, Tuesday for his second hana and neutralist Premierimeeting with the king since Prince Souvanna Phouma. right wing military leaders Meanwhile, Col. Ekam Sing- seized control of Vientiane Sun- yongsa, a spokesman for the'day and put Prince Souvanna institution informs me that mo- 6-Months Term rale amongst the staff is higher) MILWAUKEE (AP)--A_Sea-| than 'it has ever been to his\farers International Union} viewed. jgovernment to study the pro- the pension structure will be re-|committee set up by the ne pr jposed medical insurance plan.) . ey "ae Sotarlnicket casei wileaial .|The committee received 59) knowledge," e minister|picket charged with violaling. a jbriefs during its sittings in De-| added, jcourt order by picketing a Ca- Bomb Blast lcember ahd. Ienuaty, i | Mr. Young had asked Mr,Nadian ship was sentenced | Mr. Naylor said while prem-| iGrossman whether his depart:/Tuesday to six months in jail. ium rates have not been deter-| ment was considering raising) But Judge Robert M. Curley ac ouse 'jmined, the cost in Ontario} the salaries of the staff atjruled that picket Jack Pearl, 34, \"might be a little higher' than |Guelph. In a statement Jater is-|of Detroit serve the sentence 0 iceman <ieqeai in Alberta's medical sued outside of the house, the/after Dec. 7 when the shipping} Of P | jPlan, | i | The reasons would be - the} rebel junta, declared: "We are going to 'make an|------ appeal to all compatriots, in-| . | Pathet Lao, to join a workable ; j to cluding the (pro - Communist government." The La y three main political factions, a ready has charged that the Laotian civil war. Ekam indicated tionary group calls new government despite th possibility that U.S. aid to Lao might be cut off. Pathet Lao, one of Laos' Sun- day's coup was an imperialist plot that threatened renewal of the revolu- committee, as the coup itself, was prepared to continue its efforts to form a under house arrest. cial government official tors Tuesday that they {not get what they wanted with out the coming' of utopia e "I sympathize with your re- -- every- quest for more money CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS body wants more,"' Noble Drew acting director of.general wel- members the told known fare: assistance, of the group, as POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 White Tams peared at Queen's when they Park of Maurice Spanish Ont Brisson and four other members of the Union of Elec- could ap- have been NDP'member charged tha tiseason ends, Mr. Drew could not r than the are already getting them to report to the regiona told them ve more welf ef payments re for help in finding jobs The White Tams are predom inantly French-Canadians live mostly in Northern Onta rio, They wear white berets large medals of the Virgir Mary and armbands bearing a the government's welfare fund|swearing insignia 'by skull and crossbones words, in and the French Itravelling through Ontario in ai"Death to taxes." they arejing: they tion He advised 1/The members live on relief and|Castelneau Street East home of and pia's Your Answer Anti-Tax Group Told TORONTO (CP) -- A provin-|car with a flag stating "death| Brisson, father of 14 who has tol dito taxes." lived on welfare for three years, has been quoted as say- "We don't believe in elec- or political parties be- cause they divide the people.' relief office in Sault Ste. Marie|refuse to pay taxes. Stanley Farquhar, Liberal member for Algoma-Manitoulin, niinvoled in a movement to bleed telling potential recruits to "join our ranks and we'll get iyou welfare." MONTREAL (CP) -- A small bomb -- apparently planted by revengeful youths--exploded at the home of a Montreal police! sergeant Tuesday night. It was the second bomb inci- dent of the day in the city. A few hours earlier, a device \found under g downtown statue |was safely removed and ex- ploded in a field. Police said there was no con- nection between i dents, No one -was injured when the homemade bomb exploded against the front door of the de Set. Gerard Prevost in north- jeast Montreal, The blast shat- jtered the door's window. | Sgt. Prevost, a 17-year-vete- claimed in the legislature lastran of the police force, said he|P. S. Gyani, commander of the Tuesday that "agitators" were|had ordered some young thugs| United Nations foree in Cyprus, to move on after he heard them in the street last week the two inci- higher standard medical fees in| Ontario and the statistical in-| dication that the plan will be} used more fully than Alberta's.) Maximum monthly premium) rates in Alberta are $5.25 for a| single person, $10.50 for a fam- ily of two and $13.25 a month for a family of three or more. | PM Asks For Report On UN Shooting OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson said Tuesday the government has asked Lt.-Gen. |for a full report on the attack jon Lt.-Col. 'Andrew Woodcock, commander of the Ist Battation, | L'Auberge des Monts, a resort at Lac Beauport, 15 SKI RESORT DESTROYED was left in ashes after fire He said one of them had an-|Royal 22nd Regiment, in sa four-year-old Hotel at the ski miles north of Quebec City broke out Tuesday, noon. Loss. Iswered: "I'l) remember. that." |prus, estimated at $200,000,