LORD MORAN, 82, Sir Winston Churchill's personal physician, and the family doctor was twice called to * visit, said there was "no fur- of the failing ex-prime min- ister last night. In the above picture he is shown leaving the residence. ext Struggle May Be His Last S LONDON (CP)--Sir Winston 'Churchill's deteriorated condi- tion has been arrested momen- tarily but a Britisn Medical As- sociation spokesman said today' the great warrior probably is unconscious and likely to re- main so until the next great! struggle that may be the final one. Churchill's condition worsened suddenly during the night .and Lord Moran, his great friend and physician, after spending five hours at Chur- chill's bedside, said the war time leader "had a very rest- less night and his condition has deteriorated." Shortly before noon today, Moran, after a further brief ther deterioration," Another bulletin would be issued at 9 p.m. (4 p.m. EST). wa The medical association spokesman said the deteriora- tion probably meant that the and that the next struggle might be the final one. pattern of the five-day struggle was one that was typ- ical "for the grave ailment, a blood clot and stroke that had felled the heroic statesman last Friday, the spokesman added. Several hundred persons, ii- cluding a number of elderly women, waited anxiously at the Churchill house for Moran's statement. Throughout the morning, members of Chur- chill's family entered the black- lacquered, silver-handled doors and later departed. There were more flowers and more messages. The vigil on the dead-end street went on. The orderliness of the crowd during Moran's pre-dawn and noon visits contrasted with the pushing and jostling Monday night. The day was bright, blue-- and cold. At the bidding of the Arch- bishop of Canterbury, Dr. Mich- 90°'- year - old Sir Winston had slipped into unconsciousness! ael Ramsey, a councill of high 'WINSTON churchmen of the Church of England offered special pray- ers this morning for Sir Win- ston "as he approaches death." The prayers were said at famous St. Margaret's Church, next to Westminster Abbey. It was at St. Margaret's that Sir Winston married Lady Chur- chill in 1008. 'The spokesman for the Brit- ish Medical Association said after the latest bulletin that Churchill "appears to be going through a crisis." "He is a very, tough man. He is putting up a terrific fight." But the spokesman added that the early morning visit to Churchill by Moran today "in dicates that a complication arose." pS "It may have been that he had. difficulty with his breath- ing, or that he was particularly restless. See -- Sir Winston (Continued on Page 2) FOUR GRANDCHILDREN of Sir Winston Churchill ar- rive at his home in London yesterday to pay their re- spects to the gravely ill statesman, Christopher Soames, husband of Church ill's daughter, Mary, accom panies children on the visit. the Hyde Park Gate home The Hometown Newspaper Of'Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, VOL, 94 -- NO. 15 Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1965 Authorized as Second Class Mail Ottawa ond for payment o' Weather Report Light Snow This Evening Ending Over- night. Milder Tomorrow. High-22, Low-15 Post Office f Postage in Cash. SIXTEEN 'PAGES COOLING OFF IN CALIFORNIA It may have been freezing in some parts of the coun- try, but Kathy Hage of Santa Monica, 'Calif., went to a local beach Monday to cool off and do some study- ing for school. The tempera- ture was 78, and in some areas of California it reach- ed the high 80's. (AP. Wireihoto) Grits Gird Loins For PC Onslaught TORONTO (CP) -- Liberaljals will support a government|pocritical. and hodge-podge"-- members of the Ontario legis-/medicare plan similar to Sas-|and an increase in the money lature are prepared to attack|katchewan's instead of the vol-|spent on the treatment of alco the government on_ pensions,|untary scheme the Robarts gov-|holics, medicare, liquor laws, automa-jernment is expected to offer, tion, pollution and constitutional) Mr. Thompson said his party|central body to consider com- problems, Liberal Leader An-|will urge the abolition of local|pany proposals to automate and drew Thompson said Monday, joption on liquor regulations--jto help re train and re-locate "the present laws are both hy- workers affected. In an interview at the end of The Liberals will suggest a the first day of a two-day caucus of the 23 Liberal members, Mr. Thompson said he hopes Pre- mier Robarts endorses the Can- ada Pension Plan. "If he doesn't, we will be very critical. The people of Ontario! think of themselves as Cana-| dians and have always recog-) nized national social measures should have priority over small immediate financial advantages! for a province." In the session of legislature Starting Wednesday, the Liber-| Operating Room Blast Kills Woman Patient, 46 TORONTO (CP) -- A woman who was seriously injured Fri day when an explosion blaste through her lungs during an operation|cause of the died early today. Doctors tried to save Agnes Rac7. 'S. of Clarkson, Ont., anesthetic tubes . LEGISLATURE REOPENS into} byiroom continues. performing an emergency tra- -| cheotomy -- a slashing of the d)windpipe to allow breathing. An investigation into the oxygen and cyclo- |propane blast at the start of |the surgery .in the operating U.S. Space Succeeds, By Gemini! Trial Run Murderer Stabs 3 raurderer who has spent 12 State Penitentiary ran amok at the institution Monday with a knife and stabbed three prison employees. Two died. Dead 'are Dr, James Clyde Vanneter, 65, a prison physic- ian; and Hugh L. Johnson, 43, an assistant superintendent of lindustry. Carl Vincent Bobro- sky, a clerk, was badly wounded. The prisoner, Allen Carroll Pruitt, of Spartenburg, S.C., is stand owner. Veterans Now Under U Of T TORONTO (CP) -- The .On- tario government and the fed- eral government have agreed to transfer Sunnybrook Veterans Hospital in Toronto from the department. of veterans affairs jto the University of Toronto. | The arrangement will make jat least 550 beds available to bed-short Metropolitan Toronto while up to 1,200 beds will be retained for the use of veterans. The announcement was made jointly today by Premier Rob- arts of Ontario and Veterans Affairs Minister Roger Teillet at a press conference Queen's Park. Details of the transfer have not yet been worked out, but agreement has been reached in principle to make Sunnybrook jOntario's first university hos- pital, they said. At present Sunnybrook has about 1,450 beds. Alterations and the addition of two new wings will increase this number to 1,750 Itll Be Long And Lively TORONTO (Special -- A solid body of legislation and a better-organized opposi- tion are expected to make this session of the Ontario Legislature the liveliest and most significant in many years. It will also be one of the longest, probably lasting until well into May, Pensions and medicare will be the hottest headline- catching issues. But there will also be amendments to the liquor and' child wel- fare laws, legislation affect- ing legal aid, reform insti- tutions, education, the muni- cipal and planning acts and possibly the securities and companies acts The provincial, budget, which is expected to come down fairly early -in the session, will hit a new high at around $1.5 billion. Premier John Robarts has indicated that his govern- ment will go ahead with its own medicare legislation and not wait for federal action. It will be non-com- pulsory, based on private plans -- a far cry from the proposals of the Hall royal commission on national medical services. The premier has also dropped broad hints that Ontario may proceed with its own pension plan, This go-it-alone tendency could spark a massive de- bate when the bill to ap- prove the formula for re- patriation of the British North America Act is introduced. That will- give the Lib- erals and New Democrats an opportunity to charge that the Robarts government is selfishly parochial and not interested in national unity despite the "national pos- ture" taken by the premier in speeches over the past year, The Liberals -and New Democrats have also made no secret of their intention to direct their heaviest attacks against Attorney- General Anthur Wishart, Welfare Minister Louis Cecille, Health Minister Matthew Dymond and Energy Resources Minister John Simonett. They will concentrate on such areas as child welfare, nursing homes, mental health, water resources and the powers of conservation authorities. The hassle between Upper Thames River servation Authority and farmers whose land has been appropriated for the Gordon Pittock Dam at . Woodstock provides . Mr. Simonett's opponents with a ready-made issue, The select committee on municipal law will produce its final -- and undoubtedly its most controversial ~ re- port during the next few weeks. The Goldenberg re- port on the government of Metropolitan Toronto and the Murray Jones report on Ottawa-Carleton county re- gional government are ex- pected to follow. These re- ports could lead to funda- mental changes in the prov- ince's municipal structure. jh the Con- his 30 years in the Virginia}? serving life for knifing to death) # a 70 - year « old Norfolk news-| RICHMOND. Va..(AP) =A) Eg Astronauts Ed White, left, -and James McDivitt. watch the flight of the Gemini Two spacecraft on its successful test flight from Cape Ken- nedy, Fla., today, White and Mechanical Astronauts Parachute Successtully : x east of 'Cape Kennedy. hi The flight, which subjected ASTRONAUTS WATCH GEMINI FLIGHT McDivitt will be the crew of a later Gemini flight. --(AP Wirephoto) MONTREAL (CP)--Marie Ri- vard testified before the Dorion inquiry today that she was 5% to seven months pregnant last November when her husband) japplied for reiease from Bor- deaux Jail on bail. The 32-year-old redhead burst into tears during a_ forceful cross-examination by Yves For- tier, counsel for Pierre Lamon- tagne, about her physical con- dition at the time bail was be- ing sought for her husband, Lu- cien Rivard. Rivard is wanted in the United States on narcotics smuggling charges. "I had a miscarriage . . when his request for bail was denied," Mrs, Rivard said. She vehemently denied Mr. Fortier's suggestion that the story of her pregnancy was concocted to get the court to agree to her husband's release. Mr, Fortier asked whether she had been attended by a doc- tor during her claimed miscar- riage. Mrs. Rivard said she was alone during. the miscarriage. Mr. Fortier asked whether Eddy Lechasseur, a previous witiess who has a criminal rec- ord, was present for the mis- carriage. Mrs. Rivard burst into tears and her counsel, Dollard Danse- reau, angrily protested that Mr. Fortier was being vulgar and going too far. Mr. Fortier said he was not being crude and asked again whether anyone had witnessed the miscarriage. ~ -|cussed. bail with her friends im- She was alone at home, Mrs. Rivard said, dabbing at her eyes with a handkerchief: Mr. Fortier then turned to other questioning. Earlier today, Mrs. Rivard said she loves her husband and was deeply distressed when. he was arrested through an "'er- ror.' CAN'T REMEMBER She said nothing was more important to her than to have her husband freed but that she could not remember when she first thought of raising bail money. She said she had not dis- mediately upon her husband's arrest because she thought the arrest had been a mistake and that he would be home soon. Mr. Fortier produced a copy of a Noy, 19, 1964, petition for bail for Rivard and his release on habeas corpus. She had given instructions to her husband's lawyer, Raymond Mrs. Rivard Cries On Dorion Stand Daoust, to submit the petition and she had told him she was 5% to seven months pregnant. Mr. Dansereau complained in his protest that Mr. Fortier was harassing the witness. Mrs. Ri- vard was telling the 'whole truth." Mr. Fortier said the credibil- ity of the witness is at stake. Mrs. Rivard had given testi- mony on important points last week but when questioned fur-| # ther the answer always was that she did not remember, Mr. For- : tier said. He said the point he was mak-| § ing about the alleged pregnancy and miscarriage would indicate whether Mrs. Rivard's testi- mony had been truthful. Mrs. Rivard said she would not say she had been pregnant if she had not been. Mrs. Rivard was on the stand Friday when Chief - Justice Frederic Dorion of Quebec Su- perior Court adjourned the hearing. the spacecraft to maximum re- entry heat, was a crucial fore- runner of an attempt to launch astronauts Virgil Grissom and John Young into orbit-in a sim-|¢h, ilar capsule in April. It was planned as the last un- manned flight of the series, A Titan If rocket propelled the 6,900-pound craft skyward at 9:03 a.m. Nineteen minutes later it landed in the intended impact area about 17 miles from the main recovery ship, the aircraft carrier Lake Cham- plain. Minutes later a recovery plane spotted the bell-shaped) vehicle floating in waves six to eight feet high. Helicopters flew' out from the Lake Champlain to retrieve the capsule. Within minutes the helicopter was in position to absorb the re-entry heat as the craft made a fiery dash back through the atmosphere, These electronic crew mem- bers then sent signals to sep- "send an a oor Ag Sere ase of the caps ger four braking rockets, Four Men Held In police in connection with the crack a safe Monday evening. serious condition in hospital. shot wound to the chest. room was' wrecked. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Shooting WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Four men are being held by shooting of a 66-year-old watchman who surprised several men apparently about to Reginald Coates, 66, is' in He is suffering from a gun- Police, Prisoners Battle In Court MOUNTMELLICK (Reuters) -- Police and prisoners battled in court in this Republic of Ireland community day when nine Irishmen were charged over incidents during Princess Margaret's recent visit to the district. The court- -- to-: THE TIMES today... 44 City Hall's Entertai Whitby Council To Examine t Policy Q d -- Page 9 Annexation -- Page 5 Annual Mixed Bonspiel At Golf Club -- Page 6 Ann Landers -- 11 City News -- 9 Classified -- 12, 13 Comics -- 15 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 14 Obits -- 2 Sports -- 6, 7 Teen Talk -- 8 Television -- 15 Theatre -- 11 Whitby News -- 5 Women's -- 10, 11 Weather -- 2 The Centennial Commis- sion has. chosen this symbol to mark the centennial of Confederation in 1967. It contains 11 equilateral tri- a CENTENNIAL SYMBOL angles arranged: together into a symbolic maple leaf representing the "10 prov- inces and: the. territories, --CP Wirephoto »