Thought For Today One of these days. fishermen will be demanding a guaranteed annual catch. VOL. 93 -- NO. 194 She Oshawa Cines Price Not Over 10 Cents. per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1964 cool Thursday. Authorized es Second Closs- Moll Post Office Department Ottawa ond for payment of Postage in Cosh. Weather Report Continuing mainly sunny and TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES \the entry into the debate of t WORDS AND PICTURES Democrats will tell their story of campaign issues at next week's Democratic Na- tional Convention with huge pictures and word phrases around Atlantic City, N.J., Convention Hall. Decorator Angelo Cappuccio adjusts one of the pictures, with a section of an excerpt from. a speech by President Johnson, This photo represents, a spokes- man said, "a typical Ameri- can couple." --AP Wirephoto shombe Ousts Aliens For 'Aiding Red Rebels' LEOPOLDVILLE (AP)--Pre-|sources said Mulele is alive and mier Moise Tshombe's govern-|well in Brazzaville, where the ment announced today all citi-/Peking-oriented rebels have a zens of two neighboring coun-| western headquarters. tries who are in The Congo will) A dispatch from Bukavu, in be expelled on the ground that/Kivu province, announced two their governments are aiding a Congo Air Force T-28s, Communist - backed rebellion)made trainer planes , attacked among his people. lthe village of Mamba where The nations are the | two French United Nations of- Flag By BEN WARD packed public galleries, Commons flag debate |through its 10th day |with Conservative speaker jagain dominating the floor an Liberals continuing their "fili- buster" interjections. Only new development was he first cabirlet minister to spe on the issue since Prime Min- ister Pearson. introduced {maple leaf flag proposal June Sharp Tags 'Filibuster OTTAWA (CP) -- Playing to|Petual the | sions, rolled | Tuesday! is ; s|dian friends as a bone thrown qiout to a troublesome minority) the Fuss ion Jack. This would be "'a per- reminder of our divi- a clumsy piece of ap- f BOMBER TO NATE peasement that "must have ap- peared to my French - Cana-| to keep them quiet." | Michae] Starr (PC--Ontario) said Mr. Sharp had talked "a lot of drivel." Repeating the} Conservative call for a_plebis- cite, he said it is the only way) to avoid complete disunity,! "and we know from experience| over the years that the people Trade Minister Mitchell Sharp y aniesee Geatsat by accused the Conservatives of g ) AS10N. conducting an obvious filibuster|, Wallace Nesbitt (PC -- Ox- and branded their demand for ford) said a parliamentary fili- a national plebiscite on the flag buster is justified under certain as irresponsible " | circumstances, "It is most cer- "y ean imagine what Sir John tainly justified when a minority A. Macdonald would have done|Sovernment tries to force oy |with the idea of a plebiscite on|the throat of Parliament the \Confederation," he said. '"Sir|view of a minority in Canada, \John A. was a more sensible|he said. man; he knew that these great! decisions were settled in Par- liament -- and that is where this one is going to be settled." Ontario Riding PC member, Michael Starr, later mate a spirited reply to Sharp's speech. --(See Page 3). ot ea er Mr. Sharp called on Opposi- N W k tion Leader Diefenbaker to abandon his 'negative role'! toRONTO (CP) -- Laurence and let the issue go to a vote.|Coward, chairman of the On. * tario Pensions Commission, sai GALLERIES FILLED : today there has been no weak-| All afternoon and evening the, : a | 40 seats in the public gallerics| mie of the portability, fesbare| pte Bec 3 bing Roitman Plan which comes into ef.| ce ' S| fect next Jan. 1. there were lineups in the cor-| ,, e plan, if anything, has| jridors waiting for empty seats. been strengthened " he ani . Tuesday's speeches brought vse Bn eat i cen ithe total in the debate to 7¢--| Commenting on published re- 147. Conservative, 20 Liberal, 4)ports claiming portability had |NDP, three Creditiste and five| 'almost disappeared" from the Social Credit members. scheme, Mr. Coward said the Mr. Sharp said Conservative|onjy change made in this re- speakers have implied that the| snect was temo of the Wabi maple at Sine design is an ap- ity of 'employers with 1h, or Pension Plan Said Stronger, "MARRIED AIN'T HE was married. John Lennon, second from right, owned up and was pointed out by Paul McCartney, left. Second from left is George Harrison and, A press conference for the Beatles at the Hilton Hotel in San. Francisco last night brightened when they were asked which of the foursome Early In ANKARA (Reuters) -- Tur- key has returned to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization certain of its air force units which were used on bombing raids on northwest Cyprus ear- lier this month, it was an- nounce today. The announcement was made by a foreign ministry spokess man who said the Atlantic pact was informed that the planes now have been returned to NATO control. Turkish jet fighters made bombing raids on GreekCyp- riot positions in the northwest of the Mediterranean island on Aug. 8 and 9. The raids, which raised the Greek-Turkish communal con- flict on Cyprus to a new peak of crisis, were in retaliation for Greek-Cyriot attacks on the last Turkish stronghold in northwest Cyprus. After days of tension iast week, forces on the island agreed to a United Nations- sponsored cease-fire and Tur- key agreed to end its flights over Cyprus. Meantime, Greece announced Monday it was withdrawing part of its military commitment ¥ ? at right, is Ringo Starr. Their Cow Palace appearance to- night has been sold out for months. --AP Wirephoto Satellite Launched prec ies so le) on the north and the kingdom of Bu- rundi on the east. A commu-! nique said the Brazzaville gov- ernment is harboring Congolese, Patrol which reached the area) Canada. responsible for massacres, pil-|after the attack said they found) lage and destruction while Bu-|the village empty and no sign) rundi is giving material and} moral support to the rebels. | It was not known how many people would be affected. But several thousand residents of Brazzaville' work in Leopold- ville. Only the Congo River separates the two capitals. It's a 20-minute ferry run. Tshombe said personal be- longings of those expelled will be held until. Brazzaville author- ities hand back $300,000 worth of confiscated property. Esti- mating the rebels have done damage of $130,000,000, he said The Congo is determined to end foreign \interference The decision came amid con- flicting reports about one of the ficials were killed Monday on a mercy mission to a Watusi ref- ugee camp. A spotter plane and ground of the jeep used by the French- | men. Their Congolese driver, who witnessed the killings, reported to UN authorities that the two were hacked with machetes ahd hit with a burst of machine-gun fire by a mob of Watusi war- riors and Congolese rebels As the crowd hurled itself on |them, Jean Plicque, 33, head of the Bukavu branch of the In- jternational Labor Organization, | pleaded: "Gentlemen, we are here. to help you and not for anything C186. 5 A Congolese rebel then 'fired a dozen shots at Plicque and his companion, Francois Preziosi, was nothing in the maple !eaf/more workers to. bri French Canada. The maple leaf jwas the accepted symbol of all'agreement on a compulsory | Canada Pension Plan. Mr. Sharp said he was con-| The bill originally gave work- cerned by a recent suggestion|ers paying for a minimum pen- of Mr. Diefenbaker's that a Ca-|sion full ownership of employ- nadian flag should include thejers' contribution and pension fleur-de-lis along with the Un-| transferability at 30. Hundreds Escape Weedkiller Blast. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- Hun-jrose irritations, dreds of persons were routed) nausea. from their homes by noxious; The fumes, cramps and from a chemical fumes Tuesday night after a 55-\called acrolein, billowed from} Once in that orbit, Syncom $/to be televised live via Syncom|America and Asia, covering] gallon drum of underwater/open doors and windows into weed killer exploded at a chem-|the heavily populated, mostly ical plant. ta be sent from Japan to North America in 'the course of the 15-day Olympic period, U.S. viewers probably will see little of it However, Canadian and European broadcasters plan to make extensive use of the film | after speeding it by microwave jand by jet plane from the Cali- fornia reception point to Mont- mented Delta -- rocket burst |Teal and Hamburg, West Ger- away from its launching pad at) many 18:15 a.m. EDT to propel the) The National Broadcasting jcomplex payload toward a| Company purchased exclusive |planned elliptical orbit ranging|US territorial rights to Olym- \from 700 to 22,300 miles high, |Pic telecasts and plans to use The National Aeronautics and|mostly film flown from Tokyo Space Administration hoped to| Because most of the action will know within an hour whether|occur while North Americans this preliminary "transfer" or-|are asleep, only. the opening bit was achieved. jceremonies Oct 10 are planned |The Syncom 3 communications \satellite rocketed today toward an intended stationary orbit |high above the Pacific Ocean jwhere it would be in position \to relay swiftly to North Amer- jica and Europe television pic- tures of the October Olympic |Games in Japan. A powerful TAD--thrust-aug-| | |must execute a number of in-|3 To Relay Olympics reminiscent of Quebec Or|mifimum plan. This ability) Capp KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) of Olympic television film 4s to; Under the NBC contract, other |was made unnecessary by the to NATO. saying it was taking the step because of similar ac- tion by Turkey in withdrawing its air units Aug. 8. NICOSIA. (AP) -- -Turkish- Cypriots waited with scepticism today for President Makarios to fulfil his promise to allow food, fuel and medicine to enter blockaded Turkish - Cy prio areas. US broadcasting interests will be allotted nine minutes a day-- in three-minute segments--for showing Olympic film Some of this may be relayed by Syncom 3 Syncom 3's primary purpose is further to determine the feas- ibility of using high-altitude syn- chronous satellites as space couragin accused riot, of will have to wait and see." A Turkish-Cypriot spokesman welcomed the pledge as "'an en- finst step."' But he akarios, a Greek-Cyp- breaking agreements before and said, "therefore, we Makarios's pledge to the UN command Tuesday to allow movements into some beleag- Strafed Cyprus Month uered communities: could elim- inate a source of trouble, but -- other developments indicated the Cyprus crisis could come to a boil again. After another round of talks with Greek leaders, Cyprus For- eign Minister Spyros Kyprianou disclosed in Athens Tuesday night that he would fly to Mos- cow to negotiate an arms deal with the Soviet Union. Turkish Premier Ismet Inonu warned that his country would act again if the Greek-Cypriots renew attacks on Turkish-Cyp- riots. The new warning came in a message to heads of govern- ment released by Turkey's UN delegation in New York. HOLD MANOEUVRES Turkey underscored Inonu's words with a series of air and naval manoeuvres off eastern Turkey, 110 miles from Cyprus. Canada, meanwhile, has ree minded Turkey and Greece that their Canadian-built Sabre jet fighters must not be used in any Cyprus operation. In Nicosia, Lt.Gen. George Grivas told reporters that Greek-Cypriots have captured Turkish documents indicating that the Turks planned to land troops in northwest Cyprus Aug. 13. Grivas, former anti-British underground leader who now commands the Cyprus armed forces, said the Greek-Cypriot drive on the Turkish - Cypriot beachhead. around Kokkina a few days earlier prevented the Turkish invasion, Turkish Air Force jets came to the aid of the Turkish-Cyp- riots, strafing Greek - jot positions for four days and halt- ing the advance. A "spon- sored cease-fire ended the fight- ing, but both Turkey and Greece have 'announced the withdrawal of some units from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Informants in Nicosia said (Continued on Page 8) t communications stations Tele- | phone, television, radio, teletype jand picture transmission expe- jriments are planned | Only three such | equally spatedanound the Equa tor, would provide world-|. | wide communications coverage] 7 |From its high outpost, Syncom| / 3 could serve as a relay point) between wide areas of North| : satellites, f 'more than a third of the globe} : |tricate manoeuvres over a 12- Negro neighborhood. Mass traf-\day period to change orbit and most notorious of the rebel lead-|42,, Bukayu representative of More than 100 residents were|fic jams caused by curious on- Fs . _|UN. High Commission for Ref- ers, Peking-trained Pierre Mu- gees, lele CLOTHES FOUND 4 Radio Leopoldville said he had been killed in Kwilu prov- ince. Its announcement was based on the discovery there of clothes and ea passport belong- ing to Mulele, 33-year-old for- mer Congolese education minis- ter who turned to Red China) KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) during two years of exile Fresh fighting broke out today But there was no official con-|between Malaysian government firmation and diplomatic/forces and Indonesian guerrillas ae --------------= jin the Pontian swamps of south- jeast Malaysia, a defence minis- try spokesman reported here. One more Malaysian soldier was slightly wounded, he said, 'bringing the Malaysian casualty list to two wounded in action The spokesman said _ that more Indonesians, or local In- donesian supporters, were cap- Sukamo Guerrillas Again Fight Malaysian Forces Quiet Night, Less Tension In Dixmoor DIXMOOR, Il!. (AP) -- Ten-, many sion in this racially troubled) Malaysian Federation forces tured, but declined to say how|lands throughout Tuesday night|drum. Many were overcome treated at jammed hospital|lookers hampered firemen and emergency rooms for eye and|police trying to reach the area deere ocite ant in gas masks. Two men, Police Capt. L. J. Buchanan and fireman Lionel Hernandez, were taken to hos- pital for observation. Herbert Friedman, president of Southern Mill Creek Chem- ical Company, where the explo- sion occurred, said the chemi- jhave clashed over the jast three|©@! fumes were not poisonous. |days with a group of 30 or 40; Friedman said he heard an \Indonesian guerrillas who|@xPlosion about 8.p.m. He said landed Monday in the Pontian|the chemicai apparently built swamps, 50 miles north of Sin-|UP pressure inside the con- |gapore. |tainer, blowing the top off and | Malaysian forces claim to|SPewing snow-flake size powder |have shot dead two: guerrillas|all over the store room. jand captured more than 16 in| Within minutes, the fumes ithe clashes, in which small|blanketed the area around the arms, mortars and grenades/Plant. were used p | Troops and police continued|and rubber suits, entered the Firemen, wearing gas masks reach its goal as the world's} ifirst truly synchronous (station-| ary) satellite The payload's final target) jarea is a point 22,300 miles| labove the intersection of the} |Equator and the international) jdate line. It would appear to hover motionless there because| |it would be travelling at a speed | Nuyent we pe 2 | matching that of the earth's ro-| seed i rae | students today that they stand a ber below. ne |chance of being drafted into the | Although two or three hours army if they demonstrate | against the government. Vietnam SAIGON (AP) President Draft 'Marchers combing the Pontian marsh- and today for remnants of the ' . The students plan a protest NONG's Farris Ill, government. Police and a bat- talion of panatroopers reinforced |torney General William B. Com-|° other student meetings, pos- mon said today no warrant has) <ibly including street demon- Northern Ontario Natural Gas | Limited, because of his illness. |four-storey building to cap the |when fumes s jthe coming week. | Khanh told students they will |be permitted to go on studying, eeped through \landing force. [loose masks after an evening relatively. free! of violence "In contrast with the last two community eased this morning PROOF SEEN FOR meeting late today which is ex- pected to denounce the Khanh No Arrest Order |by armored cars have been put TORONTO (CP)--Deputy At-\oy SE for trouble. , peck ceo? ous of strations, have been planned for | Farris, 53, of Vancouver, was a |; , tsgat bee but if they wish "'to participate in New York Tuesday nigtt. lin the struggle of the whole VIRUS THEORY nights, this is like a lullaby," said Sheriff Richard Ogilvie of Cook County, who commanded 80 police at the scene The hope was that the rioting that began Sunday had run its course By FRANK CAREY It had resulted in some 50 WASHINGTON (AP)--A new injured, heavy property|cancer research development damage and 70 persons arrésted which a U.S. Senate group says A = bloek ' en ie bee foreshadows a likely major y Negro suburbs 2'X" breakthrough in pinpointing the and Harvey south of Chi- cance of the highly. fatal Pa emia of chil hood became known in detail today. The Senate appropriations committee referred to the de- velopment in general terms in a 'report released Tuesday. Commenting on it and other veTSONS moor cago PHONE NUMBERS CITY EMERGENCY POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 sci- en findings reported cent said Effective methods pre 'yention and cure (of leukemia) near the ommitter of Leukemia Cure Hope seem distinct possibilities in the|whether the particles are truly light of several observations,|viruses and whether, indeed, some old and some new." they are directly or indirectly Perhas the key finding made so recently that the sci-'emia entists involved have ot yet ne ee had their findings published in MAY FIND VACCINE medical literature is that), It could: also be a first step virus-like particles found in the|'wards trying to develop a blood of some human victims|V@°cine against leukemia. of leukemia can apparently be! Officials of the U.S. National made to "'grow"' in laboratory|Cancer Institute supplied the .in- test-tubes The development three climaxing| porter what the Senate commit- { dating'tee was f ng in its g when i ears of for referii to re- om the time were first found emia patients prelude when uch yal ort euk S a necessary citing research development re- to pinning downiported to the committee in this ; said icles n Vietnamese people, the armed forces will welcome them "with | open arms," | Authorities also braced for | possible anti-government dem- onstrations by Buddhists. As a precaution, they.. quietly dis- mantled a monument to the late president Kennedy in this tense : ae capital, jyear's (institute appropriations) 3 hearings is the likelihood of a}AWAIT ANNIVERSARY major breakthrough in the iden-| Authorities tensely awaited - involved in causing human leuk-| tification of the causal agent for|Thursday's observance of the/that. ousted France from Indo-\D¢Tby. Preakness Stakes and at least one form of cancer:|first. anniversary of the dloody The highly fatal leukemia. of| pagoda raids when hundreds of childhood (there is) most| Buddhist monks and nuns were |authoritative testimony 'that ajrounded up by security forces viral causation of leukemia is|of the late president Ngo Dinh ivery close to full, scientific| Diem. A forewarning of trouble |proof."' |jcame Monday when Buddhist The Senate committee gave|students staged an anti-govern- formation when asked by a re-|its views in a report to the Sen-|ment rally in Hue, 400 miles} WASHINGTON (AP) -- The ate recommending a $140,011,-/north of Saigon 000 appropriation for the Na tional Cancer Institute plus $10 the Keinedy officials apparently By removing monument The most profotnd and ex-|000,000. more for the institute's| also hoped to. forestall possible|year by shelving a measure to \special cancer - virus research) action by Saigon student groups, programs. i which had threatened to oull |carriers patrolled the streets on Threat down the slab. hey demolished a French war memorial last month. Government officials are re- ported to be anxious to coun- teract Communist claims that the South Vietnamese govern- ment is a U.S. puppet. Officials said the monument was removed with the concur- rence of the U.S. embassy. In Paris, the former U.S. am- bassador to South Viet Nam, Henry Cabot Lodge, declared the. United States will not aban- don South Viet Nam. Victory will be "slow and hard, but not impossible,"' said Lodge, who is on a tour of allied capitals to explain U.S. policy in Southeast Asia. In Saigon, paratroop reinforce-| ments and armored personnel] INJURED LEG TORONO (CP)--A_ decision on the racing future of North- ern Dancer, Canada's greatest three-year-old, will be made in about three weeks, owner E. P. aylor of Toronto said in a statement today. The colt rapped himself on the inside of his left fore-leg in a workout July 30 and the injury has not responded to treatment. Taylor said the Dancer, win- the lookout for a possible strike by the Communist Viet Cong, which is observing an anniver- sary of its own today. Nineteen years ago, Ho Chi Minh and his Red guerrillas Started a revolt and.seized Ha- noi, now the capital of North Viet Nam, from the French. It . was the beginning of the war|"er this year of the Kentucky | |ching. the Queen's Plate, was given | -----------___--_____--_________ | 'the usual treatment for an in- No TV Tangle jared hits sett nt Sletanar For LBJ, Barry New York. Taylor's statement said: 'For several days after the accident there was no indication of any injury to the tendon which re- mained completely straight. "However, inflammation and swelling in the area did not re- spond to treatment." The statement added that U.S. Senate Tuesday night killed the last hope for televised pres-| idential candidate debates this suspend equal time provisions NORTHERN DANCER Dancer's Fate In 3 Weeks ratio Luro, and a veterinary surgeon inspected the horse at Belmont two days ago and "a very slight bow in the tendon had appeared," The injury came about on an off-track at Belmont. "he leg has been put in a cast in order to reduce the swelling and inflammation and it will be removed in about three weeks," the statement added. "An announcement will then be made regarding the horse's future.' Taylor said it had been plan- ned to run Northern Dancer, winner of 14 of 18 starts in his brilliant two-year racing career, in the Arlington Classic Aug. 8 and the Travers Stakes Aug. 22. Northern Dancer, only Cana- dian-bred to win the Kentucky Derby, added the Preakness but could do no. better than a third in the Belmont Stakes, fina) jewel of the elusive: triple of.the Communications Act.. iTaylor, the horse's trainer. Ho- crown in North Americant hor- oughbred racing.