Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Apr 1964, p. 1

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, Thought For Today © It's difficult to share the pleas- ure of a person who enjoys hearing himself VOL.93 -- NO. 99 talk, nee ee eee a ee eee a ee aie enim. cam idl ie 0 hile Ai a6 ae aU ane a is lcs Sen eal, sO Sata vas Parad we OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MGNDAY, APRIL 27 1964 Authorized 1 # 'Second Ottewa for poyment " ' seit aa AID «fae Ek, i aE ait Class Mall Post Office bee A Ts So aa eR ste I 9.2077 5 Weather Report Cloudy with scattered showers. Chance of a thunderstorm to- night... Clearing by. morning. Winds veering west 20'Tuesday, Department ef Postage in Cosh, 1 TWENTY PAGES Sukarno To Continue To 'Crush Malaysia \ JAKARTA (Reuters) -- Indo-|manipulated in the 'interest of nesian Foreign Minister Suban-|British neo-colonialism."' drio today accused Britain of; Malaysian Prime Minister using Malaysia to carry out a/Tunku Abdul Rahman who won "divide and rule" policy in| the elections, campaigned on a Southeast Asia. platform of defiance of Indo- But in a speech in parliament) nesia. he said 'pressure or threats DISCLOSES WARNING wherever they may come from| In Wellington, New Zealand, will not deter Indonesia's deter: Prime Minister Keith Holyoake, mination to solve the Malaysia|today revealed he warned Indo- issue through confrontation in nesia if a note last January he ali fields." "would not shrink" from send- Indonesia will "continue to|ing New Zealand forces to Bor- crush Malaysia," he said. neo if Indonesia's "'confronta- M yhile, the Ind tion"' policy makes it necessary. In a note to Subandrio fast January Holyoake said '"'up to the present we have not felt it necessary to commit forces to operations in the Borneo states alongside Malaysian and British units, ..-. | "It is nevertheless a step from |which- we would not shrink if a |further serious deterioration in) the situation in the Borneo states should follow from the continuation of the policy of confrontation.'* | Rahman won a sweeping vic-|_ 'tory in the elections. | | | House of Representatives has declared Saturday's Malayan) ie ofcal Anat ews x' Chinese Publish A statement issued bythe and reported to- elections were House Saturday day said the Aviation Man Chesen Envoy To Indonesia OTTAWA (CP) ment of, R. M. Macdonnell, 54, as Canadian ambassador to In- donesia was announced today by External' Affairs Martin. Mr. Macdonnell, a veteran of 30 years in the diplomatic serv- ice, has just finished a five-year! appointment as secretary-gen- eral of the International Civil Air Organization in Montreal. A native of Vernon, B.C., he has held a variety of posts in Ottawa and abroad, including a term as ambassador to Egypt in 1957-58. Mr. Macdonneli succeeds J. P. Sigvaldason, recently ap- pointed ambassador to Norway and Iceland. He will take up his new duties in Djakarta early in October. Appoint- Minister 'Feud' Documents PEKING (Reuters) -- Com-|eager munist China today published| three important Soviet ments involved in the ideolog-|munist party. ical feud between. Moscow and! 'The note accused Khrushchev |Peking. for a_ final the Chinese Communist leaders,|Leninists. . ; included the report by Soviet Xi puid they 'had: decided tb Commufist Party Secretary|« 7 Mikhail Susloy to the Soviet|«thoce w 2 : central committee Feb, 14, call-|_ mone eg sa the rev ing for a world Communist} ¢ se! meeting to discuss the argu- ment. The three documents . were preceded by an editorial note| Peking Silent On |which ne they read '"'like) abuse hurled by a harridan in |the streets." Red Peace Plea | It said the Chinese did not intend to reply in detail to the) VIENNA (AP) -- Communist latest. Soviet documents for the/Romania says Red China has moment. jnot replied to a Romanian pro- |posal for a Soviet-Chinese meet- ARE ANGRY F i i | a 1 .,|ing at which Romania would But diplomatic observers said|tpy to mediate their bitter dis- te. ple all over the world. .. ." |the note showed thp Chinese} leaders in an angry, utterly un-/ compromising mood «apparently! The Russians "agreed in gen- | Deena Quarrel ; Splits UK Jews LONDON (CP)--A_long-sim- mering and agonizing dispute that threatens to split British Jewry has broken into a public) quarrel with the formation dur- ing the weekend of a "'break- away" group to defy the chief rabbi. The dispute centres around the decision of Dr. Israel Bro- eral" with the Romanian pro- posals, the Romanian Commu- nist party newspaper Scinteia said Sunday. "The Teomanians "urged "the three-party meeting last month to obtain a truce in commun- ism's internal war and to set the stage for an international conference of Commuist party are separate entities and equal|leaders to give the world a dis- and elect their own rabbis--who|Play of unity. die, the Ohief Rabbi of the Brit- ish Commonwealth, to veto the appointment of Dr. Louis Ja- cobs, a so-called "modernist," to the fashionable New West End Synagogue. Although these two men are the chief players in the present drama the main split runs much deeper than a personal conflict and is caused by counter-revolution of the tradi- tionally orthodox against the new liberalism of modern Jew- ish thinkers. Traditionally all synagogues a/God and that. it is heresy to} criticize it. Jacobs, however, while advo-| jeating traditional Judaism, also} attempts to make it acceptable jto people with a modern aca- demic discipline. He even sug- are teachers, not priests, But in| Britain the Jews, back in the 1870s, formed the United Syna- GOURMET MOUSE gogue, thus méddelling _them- selves ox the local pattern of DIES IN LONDON religious life? It is this body, covering about 100,000 of Brit-| LONDON (AP)--Sir Mich- ain's estimated 450,000 adult) el, the mouse that nibbled at Jews, that now supports the! the cheeses in a London store chief rabbi. | that supplies groceries to the |\CENTRES ON DOGMA got es | "a a I inl ; » The controversy centres howe hig be gett ve around the dogma observed by! F Bt areses | Fortnum: and Masons, grocers 'the orthodox members--that the| by 'appointment to th \Lord revealed the truth to| ~ vd age ns = {Moses on Mount Sinai, that the| _ Mike's obituary appears in |truth is literally the word of| The Sunday Mirror: "Sir Michael, the mouse in the window at Fortnum and Masons is dead, "POISON ended his brief run of nightly" frolics at the queen's grocers in Picadiily. showdown} with Soviet Premier Nikita docu-|Khrushchev and § 0 viet Com- ee and his colleagues of having de- The documents, all critical Of | cided to "split with all Marxist- \"unite only with revisionists,"|with mischie? causing injury as imperial- "A spokesman for the Top | COLLISION AFTERMATH FOLEYET, Ont. (CP)--Two|ber W. T. Runaway Train Crash Hurts 3, 2 Charged Carny of Blezard| The collision occurred on the ipersons were charged Sunday|Valley, Ont., suffered minor in-|CNR's main line from Winnipeg |juries. the result of a freight train de-) anouyt 999 head of cattle jreal freight, No. 304, were |riously. }$1,000,000 and mail traffic WaS!ine jine \delayed 10 hours. | Police identified a = charged as Paul Bernatchez, 22, land Henry Linear, 18, both off (J ,), 1cer Foleyet. They will appear in court here bie seg cok ak m A diesel engine that of- K ll d I e ficials said was moved from the l e n yard '"'unattended or wig" ote ss unauthorized person aboar was in a collision with the four Viet Battle diesel, 60-car freight three miles west of here. The wayward en-| salGON (AP)--A U.S. Army gin, the freight diesels and 25 | officer was killed by Commu- cars were derailed, inist Viet Cong fire Sunday in a Polica:said the diesel inyolved|fiare-up..of. figpting. around pat- had been standing in the yarditle-scarred Kien Long town -in with its motor running. It was|the southern tip of South Viet believed to have been hijacked|Nam. because it moved out of the A U.S, spokesman Said the yard uphill "at a speed unusual) 4 merican was killed during a for an unmanned engine. jbattle with elements of t wo 2 z Communist Viet Cong guerrilla de erp er 42. ofibattalions, Two Vietnamese |Hornepayne, Ont., fireman on{died with him. Nine other gov- the freight, was in improved|ernment troops were woundd. condition in hospital Sunday. He| The spokesman said 20 Viet |had his right leg amputated be-|Cong were killed. low the knee, suffered a com-| Sunday's action was initiated {pound fracture of his lower leftipy the government, the U.S. leg, severe shoulder dislocation,|cnoxesman said. A large gov- a spinal fracture, facial burnsj/ernment forced moved out of and head injuries. Kien Long before dawn in payne, front-end brakeman onitallions that intelligence re- the freight, suffered burns to his hands. Crew mem-'town. Police Raid Nets 'Bank Gang, Loot WINDSOR (CP)--Police said;calibre. rifle, an automatic pis-| , jrailment Friday which injured| hoard the Winnipeg-to-Mont- ism, the common enemy of peo-jthree CNR employees, one se-| jto. Sudbury. Passenger traffic |Was re-routed over tracks of the CPR and Algoma Central and freight traffic over Ontario be ; ; Northland tracks. ., |killed. Workmen buried these) . | Damage in the 24-car derail-| Sunday near the site of the| CLOTHING CAUGHT ment was estimated. at about| cragh, as they worked to clear) Mr. Manthieu was injured when his clothing caught on the jside of the train's cab as he | jumped before the collision oc- jcurred. He was dragged a short \distance by the locomotive. |. Railway officials said they jused radio-telephone to notify Engineer Woods of the diesel |moving on a collision course with his train, which was trav- elling 45 to 60 miles an hour. Officials said just moments after Mr. Woods hung up, the light of the train picked up the oncoming diesel. Mr. Woods shouted at» Mr, Manthieu and Mr. Carney to jump, pulled the emergency brake: and jumped himself. The train's lead diesel burst into flames on impact and about |300 yards of track were ripped } up. UN NICOSIA (Reuters) -- Gun- fire provided accompaniment today to UN efforts to arrange the evacuation of the 800 Turk- ish-Cypriots of the village of Ayios Theddoros in southwest- ern Cyprus: A United Nations spokesman lsaid about 100 Greek - Cypriot "uncontrollable elements'? were jnow in the area of the village land that fighting which . has tbeen going on there flor the past three days was still in progress. However, the spokesman said, the evacuation effort might be scrapped should Turkish-Cypri- jots in the village agree to a ceasefire, He said the Greek- ROYALTY ROCKS A BEATLE BEAT ? LONDON (AP) -- A gossip columnist today reported that Prince Charles wants to form a musical beat group at his fashionable- Scottish school. Raising the question of Charles and a combo, he Daily Sketch writer said: "Prince Charles, who has | just acquired an electric gui- tar, will be allowed to go ahead wit hhis plan by his headmaster, Mr. Robert Chew." Over the telephone from Gordonstoun School in Scot- land, Chew said: "We've already got two groups -here. I gave them permission to play at the various houses." Asked if he'd heard about the report that Charles wants to organize a.beat band, the headmaster replied: "Just because a boy's been given a guitar, a trumpet, or hardly. in Cypriots had already accepted a ceasefire conditionally. He said about 100 Turkish- Cypriot women and children had already left the village for |the nearby village of Kophinou }and that the remaining Turkish- Cypriot civilians were: gathered jaround a school - house where UN troops set up a command |post. there was shooting near St, Hi- larion Castle in the: Kyrenia Mountains about 10 miles north of Nicosia, where Greek-Cypriot troops over-ran several. Turkish- Cypriot positions during the weekend, | Turkish-Cypriot hilltop gun- posts in the Kyrenia Mountains were trying to stand off attacks by Greek-Cypriots. The castle is the main Turk- ish-Cypriot stronghold in the area. SHOTS FIRED The UN spokesman said there was some shooting in the sub- urbs of Nicosia Sunday night, and Swedish UN troops ar- ranged a ceasefire in two vil- laxes north of Paphos in west- ern Cyprus. Talks initiated by UN peace force commander Lt. - Gen. Prem Gyani with leaders of both the Greek- and Turkish- Cypriot communities were ex- pected to continue today. Turkish-Cypriots tried during the weekend to strengthen their cael lears" Embattled - Community defences in a diminishing ¢t : around Nicosia and the mal north. 4 Turkish-Cypriot crowds ac-- cused Gyani and the UN forte Sunday of not doing enough | end bloodshed in the island. They staged two demonstra- tions. In one of them Gyani's jcar was stoned as he drove Turkish - Cypriots have strengthened defences around the Nicosia séctor they control, They have also moved more women and children inté the area from the outlying villages. Tries To Burn - Toronto Nun, ; Woman Held. © TORONTO (CP) -- A woman poured gasoline over. the sister superior of a Roman © orphanage Saturday night ai then tried to set the sister ablaze. When that failed she stabbed Sister Monica in the bavk. a . Police said a woman entered the Carmelite Sisters onphan- age about 8:30 p.m. and started - arguing with Sister Monica, Then she poured the gasolirip over her and started fumbling with a cigarette lighter. Hoffa In CHICAGA (AP) -- James R. a P that he's going to get up a band." A Buckingham Palce spokesman refused comment. Hoffa, president of the Teams- ters' Union, was called to trial on criminal charges today for the third time since taking over leadership of the largest union in the U.S. Already under conviction for Ruby Bangs Head Against Cell Wall | DALLAS (AP)--Jack Ruby, a;x-rays. These confirmed the in- | | | |from colliding with a cell wall, C,.H. Woods, also of Horne-|search of two Communist bat-jlump on his almost bald head|jury was minor. Decker said when Ruby was severe ported had been menacing the|/was to appear in court today a!returneq to his cell, he at- |defence lawyers seek his admit-| tempted to rip his clothing. The mental tests. | Sheriff Bill Decker said the| condemneq slayer of accused presiential assassin Lee Har- vey Oswald charged head-first against. his Dallas County jail cell wall early Sunday in a "'de- liberate act." | Ruby's lawyers asked a few gests, in some of his books, that Judaism has on some occasions jtaken comtemporary myths and! Headsman sanctified them. S lks | On Sunday night the break-} ta away group announced they in- People's store said: ""'We have | a contract with a firm to keep-~us pesticide free from } such things. "Sir Michael intrigued the- aure-goers and night clubbers who watched his caperings among window-display fruit." tended to install Jacobs in a} new place of worship. COPENHAGEN (AP)--Police investigating the theft of the Little Mermaid's head learned Saturday night that the head of another statue has been 'stolen in the provincial town of Od- ense, birthplace of Hans Chris- tian Andersen. ' Word of the new theft reached Copenhagen soon after the headless body of Copenhagen's Little Mermaid bronze statue-- a symbol of Denmark for mil- lions of tourists--had been re- moved under a shroud to the royal foundry where a new head will be made Its head had been sawn off Sir Michael's downfall ajp- parently was over-exposure. But he should rest easy. Who else rates four paragraphs in The Mirror? They predicted they would! carry with them half the con-| gregation and are preparing 700 letters appealing for the support of "all in sympathy with this aim." 48,000 CREW JOBS AT STAKE Rail Ruling Review 'Tossed Out By Court Sunday' a raid on an apartment|tol and a revolver, } |building has led to the solution} Police declined to release lof the biggest bank holdup in |names of those arrested pend- | Windsor in the last decade. jing charges, but said one man Two men were arrested in the|was from the Windsor area and jraid Saturday, bringing to four|the other from Montreal. ithe total of arrests since a| Earlier Saturday, two men branch of the Royal Bank of{arrested only minutes after the) \Canada was robbed of $35,000|robbery were | Friday. was recovered in the raid, po-|Bruce Fraser Jr., 25, both of lice said, along with a cache of| Montreal. fully-loaded -weapons--a_ .303-| Three cars, two bearing Que- --____--_+-___-+ |hec. licence plateg, and one re- ported stolen in Toronto, were seized at the time of the first acrests, The police raid followed the whittling down of a long list of automobiles suspected to have been involved in the holdup. Insp. C. L. Paget said tracing the ownership of a pickup truck led police to the apartment, which they kept under observa- tion 'for some time" after the first arrests were made. during the preceding night. The!) WASHINGTON (AP) -- Thejtration award will go into ef-|000 crew members. Rail man- loss horrified the Dansh peo-|U.S. Supreme Court refused to-|fect May 7-10 days after. theagement contends the firemen| ple ' Then peice in Odesen re- ported a similar act of vandal- issh. They said a monument called The Boxer had been erected in a park Friday night but that the head' was missing * Saturday morning A police spokesman said: "We suspect that someone is trying to start a cheap collec- tion of sculpture." CITY EMERGENCY | PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1138 'FIRE. DEPT. 725-6574 . | HOSPITAL 723-2211 | day to reviéw a federal govern-jfinal court decision: ment arbitration board ruling | ArRECTS FIREMEN snd Bye Pye Only firemen will be affected freight and yard firemen and| erin prs ae tea par other train crew members in| let page ah ol ving - ' other train crew members al- the United States. ready has been set in motion. _ Four railway Operating un-| President Johnson's an- fons attacked the ruling in twO/nouncement came shortly be- appeals to the Supreme Court Today's decision means that the board's ruling is allowed to stand. The issues the unions raised were separate from those in the prolonged rail labor dispute in which President Johnson an- nounced April 22 that an agree- mept had been worked out. Supreme | Court. The appeals concerned two prime work-rule questions, , On board said the railways could eliminate. up to 90 per cent of The railways declined com-;the 33,000 firemen's jobs on ment on the decision, except to|freight and yard diese} locomo- point out that finder the agree-|tives and could negotiate locally ment with the unions the arbi-'for the elimination of up to 18,-! & are no longer needed on mod-! ern diesefs, Mine Detector are erie in which somo] "TQ: Prope For ii ed ,Pay scale, jinter-divisional runs, combina- jtion of road and yard work, ex- Death Weapon |tra holidays, lay-over expenses! land the like '| GALT (CP) -- Provincial po- The appeals to the Supreme lice will use army mine detect- strike then threatened, charged with| ' theft. They were identified as | Pome potvinli Lda the two All but $200 of the cash loot|Robert Dillon, 24, and William|Played cards together. | Classes Small CHESTER, Pa. (AP) -- Ches- ldays ago that Judge Joe B. Brown order him placed in a hospital. The former night club operator pleaded insanity in his March trial, but was sentenced to death. The sheriff said Ruby bashed his head about 1 a.m. Sunday when a jailer turned to fetch | The jailer quickly restrained Ruby, who remained conscious. County health officer, Dr. J. M. |\Pickard, said Ruby suffered a lump and a scratch. Under heavy guard, Ruby was taken to hospital for skull Rights Rumpus Schools Open, jter High School re-opeed with- out incident today but attend- ance &ppeared jower than nor- ntal. All schools were closed last Wednesday because of vio- lence-marked civil rights dem- tance to a hospital for more|few jail furnishings were then removed from the cell as a pre- cautionary measure, with only a mattress left. Dr. Louis Jolyon West, pro- fessor and head 'of the depart- ment of psychiatry and neurol- ogy at the University of Okla- homa School of Medicine, ex- amined Ruby for about an hour, but would not comment on his findings. He did say, however, that portions of a report he planned to write from the cell examination would likely figure in today's hearing. attempting to rig a jury in an- other case, Hoffa and seven co-} defendants are charged with fraudulently obtaining $20,000,- 000 in loans from Teamsters' pension funds. A. special. venire of 100 pros- pective purors was on hand for the trial before Judge Richard B. Austin of U.S. District Court. Another 200 have been directed to appear later, if needed, Lawyers for the government and the defendants have said they expect the trial to last three to five months. It is the second trial this year for Hoffa. The Teamsters' president and three others were convicted March 4 in Chattanooga, Tenn., of tampering with a jury during Hoffa's 1962 conspiracy trial in Nashville, Tenn, The Nashville trial ended when the jury was unable to agree on a verdict. HAS APPEALED Hoffa has appealed the con- viction and is free on $75,000 Court On Pension Fraud. The present trial re' around'a 28-count indictment re: turned last year against the 51- year-old labor leader and seven others. Conviction on all counts could result in penalties totall- ing 140 years imprisonment and $37,000 in fines. for each of the accused men. Meanwhile Hoffa and the un- on's general counsel; Edward Bennett Williams, were re ported to be at loggerheads over use of union funds to pay Hof- fa's legal expenses. A union spokesman has deé- nied there is any dispute on the question, but Williams is reli- ably reported to have advised that use of Teamster funds to defend Hoffa in the trial begin- ning today would be illegal. - Margaret Expects Child This Week LONDON (Reuters)--A Royal court spokesman said. to- day that Princess Margaret, - Queen Elizabeth's sister, ex--- pected her 'second child "'by the end of the week." Margaret's child will be sev- enth in line of succession to the bond. Throne coming after her son Viscount Linley. y jonstrations over alleged de facto |segregation in this industrial city of 65,000 just, south of Phil- The high school\ re-opened as fore the deadline for a threat-|Court developed from action of Ors in an attempt to find a rifle|officials moved oh several ened U.S.-wide rail strike, but|the U.S. Congress in August,|used to "kill watchmaker Gordon|fronts to settle the no immediate strike threat was|1963, when it: created a special|Bryden, 53, in his home on the) controversy. involved in the appeals to thejarbitration board to head off a Outskirts of this city, April 18.| 0 month-long | Governor Eilliam |W. Scranton came here Sunday Skin-divers searched a muddy/to investigate personally: the si-| The board's ruling affecting/creek near, Bryden's homé last|tuation--in' which dozens have| the 48,000 bers left about 200 major. ri il-|der soft mud on the. creek's bot- ways free to begin on March 2,|/tom 1964, the reduction of firemen's| Beverly Dobson, 17, of Galt, jobs., However, the railways de-|charged with capital murder in layed such action pending out-|the slaying, has been remanded come of court appeals. On| tt freight, and yard|week. Police said they suspect/been injured and hundreds ar-| these questions, the arbitration/firemen and other crew mem-|the weapon may have stink un-|rested, | There were no pickets at the high school this morning. Plans call for the four junior} high schools and 11 elementary! schools to. re-open Tuesday i f juntil Thursday. 'today's sessions are péaceful. | adelphia, | HOFFA GOES TO James R. Hoffa, centre, pauses to talk with newsmen on way to trial today in Chi- 2g cago. The president of the teamsters union -- and seven co-defendants -- face charges --t TRIAL of fraudulently obfaining $20+ 000,000 in loans. from pensi funds of the teamsters union, : jfrom a meeting with Turkish- . © The spokesman also said Cypriot leaders. "a if |

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