Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 May 1964, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Thought For Today When two teenage daughters share a bedroom, you have wall to wall carping. he 10 Cents per Copy VOL. 93 -- NO, 126 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1964 Oshawa Times Authorized as Second. Closs Ottawa ye for ae Weather ten oye ee = " En eee Pepe Se -- Report Continuing cold. Mostly. clear overnight and sunny Saturday, Winds light. Post Office Department of Postege in Cash, ~ THIRTY PAGES esign Rapped As Innocuous PETERBOR 0 UGH (CP) --)for the project of a distinctive Twelve leading Canadians have}Canadian flag, but adds that the told Prime Minister Pearson|only advantage of the proposed they find the government's pro-| design is that it is innocuous. posed new flag "'inmocuous'"--| "We have a despairing feel-| } it produces "tepid approval,/ing that this insipid flag, in- mild disapproval or indiffer-| ence." } In a letter to the prime min-| ister made public here Thurs-/ day the 12, headed by historian} Donald G. Creighton of the Uni- : jversity of Toronto and Dr. Eu-} _ HITS THE SPOT | | Rookie fireman Jim McMil- jump. A total of 90 new men aa Mag ee Pood ge will be trained this summer rainees learning the tricks of ace ie the trade at a city fire hall, in a six-week basic ore. hits the spot in a_ practise (CP Wirephoto) | Peking Raps U.S. | On Laotian Issue jgene Forsey, research director of the Canadian Labor Con- gress, said the flag is not un- mistakeably Canadian and does not express unity. They ask the prime minister to abandon the maple leaf de-| sign "for the time being" and meet with leaders of all parties to agree upon a design "which asserts our history.' The letter expresses support! Racial Bar Ousts | | | Indian Politician JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -- Po-| lice escorted the leader of In- dia's socialist party from a seg- regated cafeteria Thursday; jwhen he refused a manager's|white robe, dark coat and slip- request to leave. Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia of! Delhi and a white woman com-| panion, Mrs. Ruth Steven of York City, were stopped at the| door of a Morrison's cafeteria in suburban Jackson. | Police said later the two were} not arrested, just "escorted away and released." They said jyou to leave." stead of promoting national uni- ty, will produce only an indif- ferent response, and in doing so will erode our national spirit," the letter says. It stresses that Canada is founded on '"'the long and often turbulent marriage of the} French and English heritages" and suggests that Canadians pride themselves on this union, and "on its parliamentary and non-revolutionary tradition." The writers say the maple} leaf has "never gained any-|# one's vigorous allegiance and|™ involves no commitment to the} human fact of Canada." } G. L, NANDA here, had been refused entrance to the restaurant Wednesday. The dark-skinned Indian poli- tician, in his native garb of a T. T. KRISHNAMCHARI pers, was stopped by manager Vernon Hill at the entrance to the cafeteria, DON'T WANT HIM "We don't want your busi- ness," he told Lohia. 'This is private property. I am asking! A I am not leaving," replied hia, 'I tell you with the =e Guizarilal Nanda. 3 members, meeting in executive) -» committee, © over Nehru's death of a » attack Wednesday, but did not| Places. | set a date for the plenary meet-| " succeed Nehru. The new party Indians Postpone Choosing Leader NEW DELHI (Reuters)--The| Sandalwood and flowers by the executive committee of the tul-| sacred river Jumna as the sing Congress Party today post-|grief-stricken cries of thousands poned until Saturday a decision) of Indians rent the air. on when the party will meet in} 4 great roaring noise and an full to name a successor to the|earth tremor centred 10 miles late prime minister Jawaharlal! away preceded the funeral and Nehru. increased the awe surrounding U.S. State Secretary Dean) th death of India's sole ruler Rusk met for 15 minutes today) since the nation won independ- with Nehru's interim successor,) ance from Britain in 1947. The Congress Party's senior were expectet to be colletted by his family today, Later they expressed sorrow North End MONTREAL PHO OOTHS BLASTE Ps Explosions Break Office Windows -- MONTREAL (OP)--Two tele- phone booths were blown up to- day in different areas in the north end of Montreal. The city's anti-terrorist squad said it- has a description of a man } seen near both booths prior to the explosions.., One of the booths was located 'in Jarry Park, near spectator's | stands, The park has a football hour apart, the first at 10:7 a.m, EDT, the second at 11:20 © a.m. ' Police said'a_ man described to them by eyewitnesses ap- peared to have been near telephone booths at about time of the explosions. The combined federal, . pro- vincial and municipal police anti-terrorist squad moved info | field and spacious grassy areas|the north-end area. Sgt. Leo | for recreation. either explosion. y | The first booth' exploded near| heart) Will be scattered in Indian holy| crowded Jean Talon Market.|panes of glass in nearby build- 'The explosions were about an | Plouffe, The ashes of-the dead nyler|. There were no casualties in| bomb expert, was also reported the Montreal police to have gone to the area. The first blast broke several ings. ing at which the party will) name a new party leader to} leader will become prime min- ister. | Informed sources said the ex-| ecutive would make the decision} at a special meeting Saturday.) Meanwhile, less than 24 hours} after Nehru was cremated, there were signs today of a behind-| TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario the-scenes struggle over the|doctors were advised Thursday choice of a new premier. to start creating a new image of themselves for the public, one ARE FAVORITES emphasizing the human element Though the two favorites up j in medicine, to now had been Nanda and Lal) Rabbi W, Gunther Plaut of Bahadur Shastri, intense lobby- Toronto suggested that because the cafeteria manager declined) -- Chi-jconference of foreign ministers; | ili if PEKING (Reuters)--The erence gn tention chases. |greatest humility I am not leav nese Communist party organjin Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 0 People's Daily today accused/Laos was '"'fair and reason- the United States of seeking to/ able." The 14 nations are those wreck the Geneva agreementss/which signed the 1962 Geneva on Laos and "drag the United|agreements on Laotian neutral- Nations" in. ity. i The newspaper, quoted by the| (Canadian External Aftairs| official New China news agency,| Minister Paul Martin indicated) said the situation in Laos was|last week that Canada, a signer Lohia and Dr. A. D. Beittel, white president of predomin- antly Negro Totigaloo College 'Santa Slayer' jing." Police Lieut. C. R, Wilson, who had been standing nearby, then stepped up and asked: "Did you understand the man- ager?" ; Lhio replied cheerfully that he Wilson told t |would not leave. him: "I'm sorry, I'll have to place "extremely serious" andijof the Geneva agreements, warned China would "never|would be willing to take part you under arrest." Wilson di- rected Lohia and Mrs. Steven to a police wagon. Lohia, here visiting integrated LAL RAHADUR SHASTRI ing was under way Thursday night for former finance miinis- ter Morarji Desai. Desai, leader of the far right- was fi Sadge th. Vo cab- inet by Neéhrqdast ember. 4 'Kelover in' prohibition, and not generally liked by Indian in- tellectuals, Desai is considered fin some .quarters as Shastri's 'main rival for the prime min- istership. Nehru, who was 74, was cre- mated Thursday on a pyre of Tougaloo College, heads a party of 25,000,000 members. He is a member of India's Parliament. Lohia said he wanted to Clerics Oppose Legal Gambling mid-week activities so families can spend more time at home." | Rev. Frederick Style of Col- | Hngwoodt said the church must move out to the cottage and re- \sort areas on summer weekends, |REJECT AD BAN IDEA of bitter medica] care disputes and widely - reported inquests in touch with matters outside their specialty and not "learn more and more about less and less." Meanwhile, at a committee session of coroners 'at the asso- ciation's meeting, a London, Ont., pathologist claimed the law 'was lenient with women who commit infanticide. into doctors' affairs the public has swung from an°® unrealistic "hero-worship" of doctors to an extreme of mistrust, 'Uinfortunately the public took Hospital mother. Dr, John Fisher of Victoria infanticide as thé killing of an infant un- der 12 months of age by its This could be done Rabbi Urges Doctors Build A New Image by suffocation, strangulation, drowning or bashing the in fant's head on the floor. In infanticide cases, he ex- plained, the law had to prove a baby was not stillborn, a dif- ficult task when it is killed by -- of the four mentioned meth- ods. MOST ARE UNWED 'ost of the cases involye un- mothers who give birth without the aid of doctors, he said. The law often decides the created 'a mental the doctor to be perfect and in- fallible, or nearly so," he told the annual meeting of the On- tario Medical Association. Even National Split some in the medical profession may have been captured by this new image, The swing now was to the op- posite extreme and should be stopped before it seriously de- stroyed the doctor - patient re- lationship and deterred young persons from making a career of medicine. Dr. Plaut said doctors should emphasize the human element in an age of mechanized medi- cine where a host of machines and gadgets are used in diag- nosis. They should re-educate the public to the fact that diag- nosis is, in the end, a matter of human not machine judgment and is subject to failure. SUGGESTS REALISM Said Danger In Flag Fuss TORONTO (CP) -- Robert Thompson, national Social Cre- dit leader, said Thursday that members of four parties would cross party lines to vote on a new national flag, but that there is a strong possibility the issue will not reach a vote. If the Progressive Conserva- tivés stage a filibuster, he said, an election could result. preg: condition which led the woman to the act. - Coroner Harold Brasch of Peel County told the group that the automobile has become a subtle means of taking one's life. Coroners find it almost im- possible to decide whether a fa- tal crash was accidental or planned by the driver, On another point, E. J. Hills of Toronto, executive assistant to Ontario's supervising core oner, defended those who op- pose mass burials following ma- jor disasters. He said failure to positively identify disaster victims could create chaos later when estates were settled or remarriage ar ranged. Doctors should also give the} public a realistic appraisal of} Judy Garland's is set tenta- later tres instead of mid-week church Held For Court: ' stand by - with folded arms andjin a new conference on Laos.) "i watch U.S. imperialists tearing) People's Daily said the 80-| Hanging Off will and setting fire to Laos and|ambassadors of the 14 Geneva) Indo-China." |conferen ce participants," as|_: ; ; |minute stay of execution Thurs- People's Daily said the Chi-| Sought by the United States and) 4, night postponed until July lems." It said they were "ac- 3 the hanging of Georges Mar-|«make it perfectly clear that I] tually designed to drag out|;injer who shot' down two po am not trying to uncover or mtters."" lie re ey : L Metro Needy ogee just' before Christmas! 4 merican-life. Such foul spots . A ist everywhere -also in In- | of only some of the Geneva con-| Marcotte, 32, was to have exist eal di pears r + ; " ference participants, in what-/ mounted the gallows at mid- ae riggscanee ee gee ever place, will be a contraven-!| nj t0V , -| , W ill Get + : night, Dut Gevernor Alert Tas-| nent apologised $0 the in-|Canaéa' coaference Thursday | re illege 7 +|dian embassy for: the treatment) passed a resolution against the |ments and therefore illegal. The|firmed at 7 p.m. that a post-| AS rae ' : 'oe. F Pi ® Chinese government cannot|ponement had come through|% Dr. Lohia in Jackson, legalizing of lotteries in Can froin Rene Hamel, Quebec at-| ¢ ait nar ' - ree ills | U.S. Ambassador '"'Adlai Stey-| torney-general. , |the department's office of spe-| Ene Tosa ainn iiucoend : | jcial representational services, |'erles. wou " | A motion urging a ban on to- TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto's|curity Council has let the cat|the postponement because the|S#id that in addition to an oral ing of Canadians |bacco, welfare committee voted Thurs-|out of the bag," People's Daily|Crown may want Marcotte to|@P0l0sy made Thursday a letter' PUT jtisements was rejected after day to make free birth control|said. (Stevenson said the U.S.|testify at the trial of Jean-Paul|°xPressing formal regrets-was) Other resolutions Ea fetance pills available to welfare recipi-| would be willing to contribute|Fournel, 40, an allegeq accom-| ' A nee ents. [to a UN force on the South'plice in the double slaying dur-|Nehtu by George Ball, actingjurged the federal government Previousiy, the city had not|Vietnamese - Cambodian bor-|ing a bank robbery in subur-|S¢¢Tetary of state. to form @ division of marriage for the pills received by pre-| Fournel's trial tice em h divi scription. Welfare commis-| |tively for June 8. Delegates said the new divi- sioner Robena Morris reveaied| SECOND TREMOR | Marcotte's lawyer, Yves May-| || sion could institute research tions had slipped throygh the after federal authorities refused| Hinted On Flag |breakdown. An 'extension of department's screening system Thursday to commute the ban-| LONDON (C both pre and post-marital coun- ; 7 mw . be ' 7 dete aged AO! IN (CP) -- Transport} A ' | NEW DELHI (AP)--Th caaterio 'net Reale port |. 5 sugges and ordered an immediate halt eas er sare Lah dit's sentence to life imprison-| Minister Pickersgill of Canada selling was suggested. The committee voted 7-to-1 to} i" two days jolted New e Witnesses at Marcotte's trial) port today from Toronto. Kingston suggested churches support a motion by Ald. May| ans tna bel th in March, 1963, identified him ire' ei st Many 1ans belleve 1€ . » he LASS a Ss ° jana, bef Birchard that suitable drugs be douaacs te Gao sin thet as the bandit dressed in a Santa|dience with the Queen <a prescription list and that} Mother Earth is disturbed policemeni with bullets from a) There was speculation that| "It's a pleasure to get your they 'be 'supplied only by pres-| iio Nehru Wednesday submachine-gun. The victims) his trip may be related to Can-|family by themselves for a cription to those "requiring : : were constables Denis Brabant, /ada's proposed new maple leaf|change," he said. 'The church up the Geneva agreements at/called Vientiane consultations | MONTREAL (CP) -- A lJast- nese proposal for a 14-nation|Britain "'can solve no prob- cotte. convicted "Santa Claus" : publicize something foul in "Any consultation or meeting| In Washington, the state de-| gates to a United. Church of jtion of the 1962 Geneva agree-|guay of Bordeaux Jail con- agree to this." Pedro San Juan, director of| #4a- j}enson's statement at the UN Se-| Mr. Hamel said he granted| iri I-be-| the moral and spiritual well liquor and beer adver- passed at |being sent to Ambassador B. K.\the Bay of Quinte officially approved of payment! der.) ban St. Laurent. jand family welfare in the jus- Palace Audience last week some such prescrip- JOL CAPITAL rand, sought the postponement| jinto the causes of marital to the purchase. ment arrived by air at London Air-| Rev. Dr. W. F. Bannister of Delhi today included on the welfare depart-) Claus suit who sprayed the two today. programs. at the death of Prime Min- them for medical reasons." 31, and Claude Marineau, 34. " flag. would do well to cut down on SOUTHEAST ASIA CRISIS DISCUSSED Pearson, LBJ Talk In New York NEW YORK (CP) -- Prime Minister Pearson's long exper- ience in foreign affairs was tapped by President Johnson Thursday in an informal chat between two leaders initiated by the president. The Canadian prime minister unreasonable economic national- ism. Measures aimed at en- couraging industries located in Canada to give some thought to the connection between their op- erations and the welfare of Ca- nadians should not be repre- jsesented as unwarranted 'inter- |ference Bundy, presidential adviser onjday night to the American Iron! "we must be prepared to ad- toreign affairs, shortly after/and Steel Institute. jus¥ to them." Pearson arrived here to ad- This speech was largely a re-, " There is no reason to think dress the American Iron and ply to apparent economic| that Canadian-United States re- Steel Institute at the Waldorf-| threats by George W. Ball. U.s,|!ations alone of all the relation- | Astoria. undersecretary of state, in an|Ships in a changing world Johnson hit town on an elec-| address last 'month in Harri-|Should remain stationary. It tion fund-raising' tour an hour}man, N.Y would be a mistke to make any are Pickersgill will have an au-|establish family counselling cen-| and the U.S. president chatted for 30 minutes in Mr. Johnson's hotel suite, a meeting which Ca- nadian informants described as later and Bundy brought Pear- son over for a chat. No indica tion was given of what sugges- tions Pearson 'had to: make but Ball spoke ef "immediate and j substan tial repercussions" if | Canada changes the "ground rules" where the economies and ;/be prepared to adjust to them." such assumption, Changés | bound to occur and we must As for etonomic interdepend- with |spirited debate at the confer- ence. | Opposition forces were spear- {headed by Hugh A. Rose of Smiths Falls, who said: "There is a grave danger of |making the church look utterly | ridiculous and it would be sheer folly to pass this resolution." Its proponent, Rey. Charles |Catto of the Oshawa présbytery, replied: "If this appears ridi- |culous, then it's time we started appearing ridiculous." The recommendation referred specifically to advertisements on sports telecasts and broad- casts viewed and heard by young persons. "We have the right to watch Davey Keon (a Toronto Maple {Leafs hockey player) without looking at him through a beer lable," Mr, Catto said. The conference also endorsed) birth control. Delegates voted to request the) Canadian govrnment to insti- tute a broader immigration pol- icy and' to recommend that the church hold an_ institute of church and industry to grapple) | with the problem of automation. Pe | Tighten Bonds 'With Exiles private business! judgments,*as though such) judgments must always be} made in the same static con-| Study Prompts the limitations of medical sci-| Illness Mystery ence, making patients aware that science has not beaten all |disease and probably will never conquer death. As a third measure in restor- ing some balance to the public's image of medicine, the rabbi said, doctors should avoid over- specialization, They should study the humanities and keep 4 Countries Will Attend Laos Meet VIENTIANE -- The United States, France, Thailand and South Viet Nam have agreed to attend consultations called by Britain in Vientiane to discuss the Laotian crisis, diplomatic sources said today. The sources said these four countries had already accepted the British invitation sent to representatives of the 14 coun- tries which signed the 1962 Ge- neva agreement making Laos neutral. : Cambodia declined to attend the consultations, the sources | said. HONG KONG--Judy Garland was taken off the critical list in hospital today, but the illness that put her in a coma for more teny. "She looks very much better now,' said American actor Mark Herron, her travelling companion .He added she now was 'able to talk or eat . The 41-year-old singer col- lapsed Thursday at her hotel and Herron hurried her to the hospital in a taxi while typhoon Viola was hitting the island with 90-mile-an-hour winds. She was given oxygen and other emer- igency treatment, | Herron said Miss Garland jwas suffering from "over ex- haustion." Earlier one nurse said she had a heart attack while another in the same ward described the illness as "poison- ling."" The attending doctor refused) ito say anything about the na- |ture of the illness, Herron dénied rumors that Miss Garland had taken an joverdose of sleeping pills acci- dentally. "She takes only a normal amount of sleeping pills as many performers do," he said. The actor said the singer's Replies were still being|bad reception in Australia could awaited from the other signa-/have some bearing on her ill- tories but the sources.-said it)"@SS. ence, Pearson said, "there is, of text." was virtually sure the Commu-| "No one can take a beating a move by Johnson to get some] one matter touched on was Can-| trade of the two countries are ideas from Pearson on handi-| ada's truce teams in Laos, Cam- deeply intertwined 4 . : between the rational develop-| ing the Southeast Asian crisis.) bodia and South Viet Nam ' ' . g He also suggested that the| ment of the joint resources of twined are Canada and the U.S. cours, an important distinction) Pearson said that so .inter. ' 80 + - WASHINGTON (AP)--A U.S. nist nations would not attend, congressional group urged today) that the ties that anti-Castro ex- ile organizations have in Cuba Britain called for consultations under Article 4 of the Geneva llike this without being hurt." | Herron said Miss Garland had jnot been feeling well since she arrived Saturday from Austra- 2 & than 12 hours remained a mys- JUDY GARLAND doctor advises us so," he said. Miss Garland's _ sister, Sue Gummer Cathcart, 48, died in La Vegas, Nev., Tuesday night, They had appeared with an- r sister as children in the mm Sisters Trio. y It, was not known whether Miss Garland had been in. fofmed of the death. Miss Garland's heart nearly failed, a friend of the singer said, Mrs, Frances da Silvakirk said: Miss Garland's pulse really stopped but. doctors pulled her through: She is out The meeting developed out of}- Canadian informants said F in s any ways tha ' 4 be Bese : a 'i {two countries focus attention,|this continent and the ec ic| 2 80 many ways that they are : ; 5 the Canadian|there mz : sone Me % r ntinent and the economic! BE ivy ok ; apreeme hic' rovides for oa casas' hy A soho co lg ee not on measures of "economic|integration of Canada and the|20U!d to have problems. These|be encouraged and streugthened| *8"e* men Boag aged mer : it wasn't immediately cléar|224Qnalism,'" but appropriate| United States," mustn't -be ignored or mini-|"to maintain and broaden the)" Sn action in the event 0 beta it fe iy i. ¢ bd steps toward increasing econo-| tre cited out rece |mized. fire of disaffection and eventual| Violation of or threat to Laotian whether it would involve a Ca-| nic interdependence e Sighed out recent at-| "But we must be careful not| revolt." jindependence, meutrality and | nadian contribution to proposed : tempts to expand production of] to distort or misrepresent them.| A report by the Senate judi-|Unity. pp age ; a 8 : ; |control teams along Cambodia's| Without referring directly tojauto parts in Canada and ar-|We w, Id be foolish t | -| A report by the § ju i hy a ob shave Tackais ae saw the doctor, adding, "it is)been feeling -well- on arrival | borders 'with South Viet Nam|Ball, Pearson dealt with 'poth|gued that figures already sug-'the aastual b elite t a tian A onan og Cs ios. jected ity selich cane tog 'personal for me to say eny-|Mere last Saturday after, ben | , with. Sout hag epee , we A cok ep ke ast ys { enetits of our close)and escapees said "Castro andjrejected the British proposal thing." fcontroversial Melb Aus? ga ar gas agar hed Zn ' \iaeviek sigenaaee st heb Pei Dae so oa interdepence. But neither of us}communism must be expelled) possibly in deference to the Po- Miss Garland's sister, Suejtralia, concert ype Bogen rb or reed : sa ' 1 st lé @ g " Se 5 € should for a momnt consider from Cuba." lish counter proposal for the;Gumm Cathcart, 48, died in Las| where she was booed ' - { tly two eas $s dealt) " He sa g in Canada-| auto industry that these benefits are sufficient' 'They will be buried the deep-|tiks . in. a neutral counteteeas, Nev. Tuesday night, but} Earlier a ho: vital kes mostly with Southeast Asia,|U.S. relations, political, econo-; 'Moderate and sensible pro-|to ovrride our respective na- est if buried by Cubans-- d g Britain, R d z erron sai y he j _ git ale sda 3 Pear é : I st if buried by Cubans--on the|among Britain, Russia, India,/Herron said Judy had not been| refused to say wh. 38 Ps a gave Johnson a) mic and cultural, are bound. to| posals such as these should not|tional interests: or to permit us| island and in exile," the report|Canada, Poland and representa-|told ' land was sc " . pipeline . 7 # : | ; x : : A : : a | as suffering fro i un-down of his address Thurs-| happen in a-changing world and'be regarde* as expressions of|to ignore our problems." added, Mives of three Laotia factions.| "We will tel{~ner when thei details of her condition'. -- J er of danger but doctors "think she would have to stay in hospital lia and had left the hotel only once, Wednesday, td consult a doctor. for at least five days."' He declined. to. say. why she} She said. the singer had not CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 ¢ HOSPITAL 723-2211 tet-a-tote said changes 'S

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy