Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Jun 1964, p. 1

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Thought For Today | Watch out for can get you into VOL. 93 -- NO. 128 ambition -- it a lot of work. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JUNE 1, 1964 Authorized as Second Ottawa and = for | Weather Report Clear overnight, cloudy Tuesday but mainly with showers late in the day. Continuing cool, Class-Mall Post Office Department payment of. Postage in Cash. EIGHTEEN PAGES a cad UP IN AIR Wearing a jet propelled rocket belt, Gordon Yaeger of Williamsville, N.Y., puts on a demonstration of the maneu- verability of the device in OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson said today the gov- ernment "took the honest way" in proposing its policy for a new maple leaf flag and a Union Jack flag in a single resolution before Parliament. He also told the opening ses- sion of the Liberal National Council meeting that MPs will make the flag decision because that is what they were elected to do. In both references to the flag issue, Mr. Pearson appeared to be striking at proposals that the flag resolution be split in two so as to deal with the two ban- Painers separately, and that the @ VER FAIR front of the New York World's Fair Amphitheater today. The rocket belt . originally was developed for the U.S. Anny. (AP Wirephoto) Typhoid Hits 197 In Scottis ABERDEEN--The number. of confirmed » id victims in Sool city of Aberdeen r 7--an increase : y night--heailth h City men, taken to a Glasgow hos- pital Sunday as suspected ty- phoid victims, were reported to- day to be only suffering from a stomach. ailment. @\flag issue be made the subject of a national referendum. He recalled that the party's election platform called for sub- Flag Move 'Honest PM Asserts mission to Parliament of a de- sign for a distinctively-Canadian flag within two years of taking office. At the same time, the 'Union Jack would be designated as the symbol of Canada's Com- monweailth connection. PUT IN RESOLUTION "We are putting that in a res- olution before the House as we were pledged to do." The resolution was not put forward in part but as a whole. "Surely that's the honest way for the government to proceed." Mr. Pearson urged that the 300-odd delegates take no action that would give the impression the flag now is a partisan issue. "Tt should be above that, . . and I hope it will be discussed on the broadest parliamentary basis possible." Accidents Kill At Least 400 In US. Holiday CHICAGO (AP) Traffic deaths in the United States dur- ing the Memorial Day weekend --more than 400--hit a record high for a three-day observance of the holiday. Boating deaths totalled 16 while 40 were drowned, The death toll on the high- ways from 6 p.m. Thursday to midnight Sunday was 409. Be- lated reports were expected to raise the final figure. The record toll for the first) holiday weekend of the spring topped the previous high mark of 371 set during the Memorial Day period in 1958. The Na- tional Safety Council had made a pre-holiday estimate that be- tween 410 and 490 persons Each MP would vote in ac- cordance with his convictions and "I hope it will be decided on a parliamentary basis." The responsibility was the MPs' arid "I don't see how you could find a better cross section than that--to. have the decision made by the men and women who were elected to make de- cisions."' Mr. Pearson said no matter how basic and important the questions put forward by the government, they were twisted and distorted by the Opposition and Opposition Leader Diefen- baker. He had hoped, despite a minority Parliament, for a max- imum of co-operation. Leaf Flag 'Charms' N.Y. Times CAPTIVE 21 DA SALESMAN CLAI Life preserving blood for the unborn child of an Osh- awa mother, Mrs. Evelyn Curtis, arrived at the Oshawa General Hospital today fol- jowing a journey from Halifax, OSHAWA BOUND N.S. The donors of the rare two women 200 miles to the :|folded onto the road. Prisoner PETERBOROUGH (CP), -- Police said today a 57-year-old Nobleton, Ont., man has told them two gunmen held him captive for 21 days in a' shack north of here. They said Lioyd Hannah, a boat salesman, was found stag- gering along a country road 20 He was shabby, unshaven and complained of hunger. } Police said his wife had re- ported him missing. They are seeking his car which he said was stolen by the two men be- fore they dumped him blind- Mr. Hannah told police he stopped his car at a red light in Nobleton, 24 miles 'north of Tor- onto, on May 8 and tow armed men jumped into it and forced him to drive them to Peterbor- ough, -- He said the men kept him in band had lost 20: pounds was "feeling very bad. rible, just terrible." tried to escape once, the men hit him with In Hut . Near Peterboro a shack for three weeks, blindfolded 'him and drove him to the countty road and dumped him on it, driving off in his ca) They took $340 Mr. Hannah he was carrying wi! z as him. cad miles north of here Thursday.| prow > Mrs, Hannah said her age She said he had -told»her but 25 blood; Helen Henshee, and her aunt, Mrs. Edward. Lums- den, of Half Island Cove, N.S., are shown above. Dew- ey Hensbee, left, drove the Halifax Red Cross clinic. He is seen with Miss Mensbee, Shirley Simpson, Red Cross technicians. and Mrs. Lums- den, (--CP Wirephoto) Brooklyn Gangs - Stalk Subways NEW YORK (AP) -- Bands of teen -. aged Negro marauders, beating him and-knifing : the shoulder. All five. bio . rr »|might be killed in traffic ac- _Aberdeen was. still a "ghost"! dents @uring the 78-hour per-; the city, with 30,000. students being! jod. } kept away from the closed Schools and dances, sporting and social events cancelled. Scotland's most popular holi- day resort faced its quietest summer ever with thousands of people cancelling holidays. The Aberdeen outbreak started through the sale of de- fective corned beef in a super- market. The meat slicer used for the beef also was used to cut other meats. This spread the disease. ferry boat, brought terror to . normally quiet sections of Booklyn and lower Manhattan the weekend. «05: <<< ty Sunday, Mat ae ae from in Brooklyn and terrorized and? candy, The youn many: of 'thom e , many reeking with alcohol, left the train at Kings Highway, a busi- ness area in Brooklyn, after smashing windows and light bulbs, They 'ran to: the street, smashed the window of a beauty' parlor and stole about $90 from the cash register. Residents of the district, which is predominantly white, reacted with anger and a street} e ays In Don Jail: i 7 Singer Freed On Bail TORONTO (CP) Harold Nurse, a calypso singer and limbo dancer from . Trinidad, has been released from the Don Jail here after being held for deportation. 87 days under $2,- 000 cash bail. Nurse. entered Canada cas- ually. at Windsor in 1956. Since then he has been entertaining in night, clubs here, has married a Canadian girl and has a five- year-old daughter. He was arrested March 4 and NEW YORK (CP)--The New) \York Times describes Can-) ight "toll was re-lada's ed new flag as corded "ES" Millions of' ie, and adds that ite motorists 74 mm¢a highways headed for home outings. Reports indicate nearly 150 per- sons were killed in traffic ac- cidents in the final 24 hours of the holiday. The record high traffic death toll for any Memorial Day holi- day period was 462 in a four- day observance in 1961. Last (Memorial Day was a one-day observance and there were 159 deaths on the highways. Police Investigate The The typhoid outbraek at this port and holiday resort is Brit- ain's biggest in 27 years. Typhoid is an infectious dis- ease, marked by high fever, eruption of red blotches on the chest and abdomen, nausea and severe intestinal irritation. Asked: about the possibility of a third wave of cases, Aber- deen's medical officer of health, Dr. Ian MacQueen, said it looked as though by Friday he would be able to say the big- gest danger was over, provided there was no fresh outbreak. . Meanwhile, two Royal Navy "The maple leaf, although al- ways a Canadian symbol, was first used by the French settl- ers," the paper says'in an ed- itorial comment on Prime Min- ister Pearson's proposal for a new flag showing three red ma- ple leaves on a white back- ground with a vertical blue bar at each side. | "An attempt to satisfy the British Canadians- by stating that the Union Jack can be flown as a symbol of Canada's membership in the Common- wealth has not pacified the _ migration department had _ re- fused to accept property bail in- Stead of cash bail until Friday, but on that day it reduced the amount of cash bail from $2,- 000 to $500 and let Nurse go free on his own recognizance until the bail should be de- posited today. The newspaper also: says: two: other men--not named -- who! were held on immigration war- rants were freed "at the same time and in the same haste." Lawyer Hugh Robertson, who in. an attempt to free Nurse by habeas corpus, said today he will appeal the case to the Su- preme Court of Canada. He -also said Immigration Minister Tremblay will be asked to exercise clemency. Nurse entered Canada from Detroit in July, 1956. He was turned back on a first attempt because he did not have enough money on him. The secon time, in an automobile with an American friend, he told a bor- der official he intended to stay U.S., Russia Agree On Jail Rights MOSCOW (Reuters) -- The) United States and Russia today| signed an agreement which gives American officials the the origins of a which was deactivated shortly Memorial Bomb QUEBEC (CP) -- Three police forces today investigated time bomb before it was set to go off at a Boer War monument on the 62nd anniversary of the ending of the war. The bomb was discovered Sunday--May 3l--and it was on May 31, 1902, that the war be- tween British forces and Dutch- right for the first time to talk to US, citizens arrested or; jailed by the Soviet govern- 'ment. | The agreement, a consular) convention which is the first bi-| lateral treaty reached by two nations since they estab- ate and the Supreme Soviet. | Informed sources said it was} the first time Russia had ac- cepted the right of foreign con- speaking Boers in what now is of Vereeniging. A spokesman for the provin- the|Cial police said the nature of} jthe monument made it seem|ticking of the watch as he ap- lished relations in 1933, still has|Possible that the bomb was/proached the bomb, which was to be ratified by the U.S. Sen-|planted by "a terrorist of some|wrapped in brown paper an ind. But he said that no note or inscription was found at the scene. ism--were to be sent to Mont- real for further examination. QPP Sgt. Raymond Dumas, trained at Montreal. in bomb dis posal techniques, discon- nected the watch and the dyna- mite after anonymous telephone calleds in French brought to jthe scene officers from the |RCMP and city police as well as from his own force. The monument, located within sight of the Quebec Parliament \independent South Africa was/Buildings, consists of a 15-foot| |brought to an end by the treaty) granite block topped by the sta-| tue of a soldier holding a rifle jand a flag. Sgt. Dumas said he heard the d placed upright on the steps of the monument. Two monuments in Quebec City. were damaged last year suls to access "without delay") The bomb parts -- two sticks|and terrorists were suspected of in the event of foreigners beingjof dynamite, a watch, a bat-| being involved in at least one of} arrested here. tery and a detonating mechan- TO ASK CHANGE IN°LAWS ithe incidents. English - speaking population and it has irritated the French- Canadians," the Times. says. "So Mr. Pearson is damned if he does and damned if he |doesn't, and ih any case, it will take more than a new flag to close Canada's deepening cleft between French Canada and the rest of the country. "The prime minister is stak- ing his government on the issue with, perhaps, the comforting thought that in an election the Liberals may even do better than last time." ordered deported the same. day by a board of inquiry here. An appeal was turned down at Ot- tawa March 20. He continued to be held while' legal efforts were made to free him, The Telegram says he was released Friday evening after it began asking questions about him following the recent depor- tation of Harry Hooper, a-Buf- falo, N.Y., man who had been held in Don Jail 99 days for refusing to answer immigration officials' questions, The Telegram says the im- Asia Talks Open As Rulers Falter HONOLULU (AP) -- Top U.S. strategists opened secret jtalks on Communist - plagued eet Asia today as the |shaky coalition government of Laos appeared to be falling lapart. : VOW Backs Birth Control BANFF, Alta. (CP)--A reso- lution asking for an amend- ment to the Criminal Code of Canada to make-legal the dis- persal of birth control informa- tion and devices, was passed Sunday by the national Voice of Women after a 45-minute de- bate. ; Eleven of the approximately 150 delegates, including those from Quebec, abstained from the yote. There were no votes against the measure. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 Dr. R. H. Wright of the Brit- ish Columbia Research Council told delegates medical science and modern technology has done a great deal to reduce the death rates in the world and "they could do equal wonders for the birth rates if they were allowed to, and given the same push." Advance in this field has been held back because of opposition from the Roman Catholic church and an old fashioned sense of propriety, Dr. Wright said. He urged the VoW to speak out loudly and often until the federal government gives at least as much.attention to the world population explosion as it is giving to choice of a flag. SUGGESTS CAMPAIGN Dr. Wright also suggested! the VoW press for channelling of one per cent of the money now "spent by world govern- ments for defence for the build- ing and maintenance of United Nations universities around the world. He said one per cent of next year's world defence expendi: ture would be $1,200,000,000 and with this 24-UN universities could be built, equipped and started in five years. Dr. Wright suggested conver- sion of the United States naval base at Guantanamo, Cuba, into a United Nations university campus. He said Canada could con- sider playing a "trump" card 'to force the issue. "For a long time both the |United States and the Latin JAmerican nations have hoping Canada would join the Organization of American States, COULD BACK OAS "T think it would be quite in order for the Voice of Women to take up the idea of our join- ing, if, and only if the Guan- tanamo base was turned over to the UN." The organization urged Cana- dian United Nations delegates to vote for all measures "aimed at securing of human rights for all in South Africa." Another resolution passed called on VoW's members to 'concern themselves with civil rights of minorities in their own provinces, particularly in The virtual pullout of the pro- Communist Pathet Lao move- ment from a patched-up coali- tion with Laotian neutralists and rightists deepened the cri- sis atmosphere surrounding the |talks, Just about every key U.S.. of- ficial concerned with Southeast Asia was present for the two- day conference behind . closed doors at Pacific command head- quarters. The. final decision maker -- President Johnson -- waited in Washington for recommenda- tions that could lead to mili- tary pressures against Commu- nist North Viet Nam, source of much of the trouble in Laos and South Viet Nam. Any decision involving mili- tary moves would mark .a sig- nificant. turn in U.S. policy, whch so far has avoided such action against North Viet Nam. It was understood that U.S. of- ficials have been seriously con- sidering a varigty of 'possible pressure, ranging from demon- strations of strength outside Communist - ruled North Viet Nam to more direct military moves such as a guerrilla coun- ter-offensive. The conference was expected to explore a wide selection of diplomatic and military ques- tions, including a possible big- i nieducation, em ploy ment sie been| housing. ger role for the' Unted Nations in Southeast Asia. Was unsuccessful last Tuesday in Canada two weeks, clash was narrowly averted. Officers in 11 cars sped to the Guiana's Leaders Confer On Riots GEORGETOWN (Reuters) -- Prime Minister Cheddi Jagan planned to meet with two oppo- sition leaders today following renewed outbreaks of racial violence in British Guiana. Forbes Burnham, leader of the People's National Congress, and. Peter d'Aguiar, United Force leader, planned to 'see Jagan at the legislative assem- off the Caribbean. at the 'top- of South 'America. In separate weekend racial clashes a man was hacked to death with 'cutlasses and an- other man and his daughter were. slashed. The incidents~took place in the Berbice River area, 60 miles east of here, : area and twelve of the youths were arrested. Less than two hours earlier, two men and two youths cowed way train near Prospect Park in Brooklyn. They threatened him with a meat cleaver: Police said the four boarded another train and threatened passengers with the cleaver. One passenger, pulled the emer-' gency cord as the train rolled into'a station, ran from the car and called police. Police got the motorman aboard a _sub-/Nations, Red Cross and bly: Burnham told reporters: "As far as I am concerned, Iam not discussing any matter ex- cept the ending of violence and disclosure, of illegal arms cashes," ' A official of the PNC made representations to the British garrison _ headquarters inj@ Georgetown Sunday about al- leged caches of arms smuggled|p into the country from Cuba. The PN© has long claimed' that "a significant quantity" of arms have arrived in the coun- try' aboard Cuban rice-carrying ships and were hidden by Com- munists. British Guiana lies just Garland Quits Hospital Bed To Convalesce HONG KONG (AP) -- Judy Garland walked out of hospital today but said: 'I am still very weak. I am going to take a long rest." The 41-year-old singer, who fell into a coma last Wednes-|' day, was accompanied by her personal physician, Dr. Lee Sie- gel of Hollywood, and her: tra- velling comm™=nion, actor Mark Herron. Siegel said Miss Garland was suffering from pleurisy. but added: "I think she is well enough to leave the hospital and teke- a -rest-in-ber-hotel." police after|}they were arrested on char; to robbery in connection with a riot on a subway. train early today. A' *) HELD IN NEW YORK RIOT Nine yquths: line up in station' in Brooklyn s ranging from rioting more, many reeking 'of 'alco- hol, smashed windows and lightbulbs on the Independ- ent subway "D" train in' the Sheepshead Bay Benson- hurst sections of Brooklyn of 20-or' shortly: after::2 a.m.' They also mercilessly beat and robbed white passengers,' Twelve of the youths were arrested and, police said, 8 to 15 of their cohorts got away. (AP Winephoto) &

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