Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Jun 1964, p. 1

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

Thought For Today The lovely chrysathemum by any other name 'easier to spell, VOL. 93 -- NO. 136 would be a lot rar jour <2. felon ee INS Se Seb BEEF takes he Oshawa Time Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy Authorized Ottowa OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1964 onl Yor" pesment Weather Report Clearing this evening. Mainly sunny and warm Thursday, Winds becoming light overnight, % Syend Class Mall Post Office Department of Postage in Cash, "8 THIRTY-FOUR PAGES Cyprus Tensions Spark Mission To Greeks, Turks GENEVA (AP)--George Ball, U.S. undersecretary of state, set out today on an emergency mission to warn Greece and Turkey of the Johrison admin- istration's concern about the Cyprus crisis. Informed sources said Ball carried word that the United States» is ready to take sharp measures--their nature unspeci- fied--to prevent the conflict from degenerating into a Greek- Turkish war or otherwise dis- rupting the eastern flank of the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- tion. bai The undersecretary flew to Athens in a military jet. Before boarding the plane here Ball told reporters: "It is utterly impossible for war to break out between the two North Atlantic Treaty partners = whole free world." quences this would have for the Ball, who has spent two days at the closing phase of the UN trade and development confer- ence, cancelled a scheduled trip to London to undertake his mis- ERHARD TELLS PEARSON sion in Athens and Ankara. Ball changed his plans on di- rect orders from the president. | Canada Troop Loss U.S. SENATE BREAKS U RIGHTS BILL BLOCKA Passage --"e ) abet Seen Within Week WILL REPORT BACK He said he is meeting with Greek Premier George Papan- - dreou in Athens tonight and will) ee " rs j A | ' Jeaders. ¢ LYNDON JOHNSON because of the serious conse- 'Cypriots Return To Beef To UN leave for Ankara later in the! , - talks with Turkish a) Fe fl : s | He is due back in : » Tei | Washington late Thursday to) eee =e | report to the president. ; Wiik ' i He said his trip was not in-| tended as a mediation effort be- cause "this problem can only| E- e be solved by the parties di-| ' is 4 4 | rectly involved." Pe President Makarios of Cyp- rus, leader of the Greek-Cyp- riots, called Tuesday night for an urgent meeting of the UN| % Security Council meeting to) "denounce threats of the Turk-| ish government to invade our island.' night -- for NICOSIA (AP)--The Cypriot/alarms had been sounded in| IBEW government is going before the United Nations Security Council both Nicosia and Athens. There was no indication in Would Wor OTTAWA (CP) -- Chancellor Ludwig Erhard. of West many has indicated to Prime Minister Pearson that there j would be alarm in his country about any withdrawal of Cana- dian forces. from Germany. Informants said this was one of the points made by the chan- cellor in his 47-minute talk with |Mr. Pearson Tuesday after his | arrival here for a quick visit be- | fore going to Washington Thurs- 'day morning. | A 6,200-man Canadian infan- j try brigade and six of the eight squadrons of the RCAF air di- vision in Europe are stationed }in West Germany. | Sources said Germany would not regard their withdrawal as militarily significant, apart pos- sibly from the six bomber ry Bonn Ger- , WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Senate voted today, in a his- tory-making move, to choke off the 75-day southern filibuster jagainst the civil rights bill. The vote to pply the Sen- jate's debate + limiting closure rule was 71 to 29. This was four jmore votes than the required \two-thirds majority. | Each senator's time to de- jbate the bill and all amend- ments now will be limited to jone hour. This appears to 'as- |tempts to use it to cut off a-fill- |buster against g civil rights bill: jhad failed. "aP | Leaders of both parties be« 'came convinced in the face of jthe all-out opposition of the jsouthern forces to. the present bill that debate-limitation had- ta be obtained if the bill was to |pass, oF | Just before the vote, Republiz' jean Leader Everett M. Dirksen jof Illinois introduced the leads jers'. substitute bill- worked lsure Senate passage of the far-| with Attorney - General Rob t jreaching bill, possibly before} | the end of next week. de Kentiegy. i ri The House of Representatives|, Overnight, the substitute hag |passed the bill Feb. 10 by a/Peen revised further to include' |vote of 290 to 130. The Senate/? jury trial amendment adopted: |has been battling over it since|5! to 48 in the Senate Tuesday, March 9, with southern oppon-| wing yorEs My ents 'mounting a record-break-| . pt be c The adotpion of the amend> ing filibuster against it, ment; 'sponsored 5 7 |GALLERIES PACKED /Thurston B, Morton (Rep, Ky.) jsquadrons, but would be wor- again, charging that Turkey|Turkey that an invasion force} threatens to invade the Medit-|was poised to attack the island Hits Pool Project erranean Island. President Makarios of Cyp-|riot factions have been engaged) Tus, leader of the Greek-Cyp-| riots, called Tuesday night -for) an urgent meeting of the coun- cil to "denounce threats of the Turkish government to invade our island." In a note to heads of state and government he charged) that Turkéy "has now amassed! a great number of naval and air forces reddy for immediate invasion of Cyprus." that the sole aim of a Turkish landing on Cyprus. would be to' where Turkish- and Greek-Cyp- in a bitter struggle. The Ankara government has warned, how- ever, that it would invade if it considered it necessary to pro- tect the rights of Turkish-Cyp- riot minority, A high source in the Turkish capital said Monday the govern-| ment was sending a note to President Johnson declaring | He accused the Turks of re-|preserve the constitution. The} peatedly violating air space|Makarios governments wants to| over Cyprus and dropping arms|amend the charter to eliminate to Turkish Cypriots, | Foreign. Minister Spyros Ky-| .prianou, dispatched by Maka- trios to arrange for the council] meeting, told reporters he planned to see Council Presi- dent Arsene Assouan of the Iv- ory Coast today. Kyprianou said Cyprus was) relatively calm, but statements and information we have, we anticipate from Turkey." Makarios called for counciljbelieved the situation was too disaster area. action after repeated invasion the Turkish minority's veto over major legislation. Johnson, who has been try- ing to ease the crisis, was said to have warned Turkey that in- tervention in Cyprus would bring on war with Greece and imperil the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. i The Security Council is sched- "in view Of uled to meet June 17 to debate|mated damage from the flood, | continuance of the UN peace- trouble keeping force on Cyprus. The|and President Johnson declared)golf course. The shelter is in a Cyprus government apparently crucial to' wait until then. |picket line on the site. - the three-day flood, waters re-jheld fast despite a pounding by fe WELLAND (CP) -- Construc-} tion on a new swimming pool! at Chippawa Park was. halted| Tuesday when tradesmen walked off the job after mem- bers of Local 303 of the Inter-| ache ' owas mational Brotherhood of Electri-| CUSTOMERS were cal Workers (CLC) set up 8! booth: in: the Waterton "ares | Tuesday as flood waters cov- Flood Toll Mounting As 2,000 Flee Homes A natural gas pipeline under another bridge burst. Air force teams said they res- t least 200 persons from reas, The air force was Wil ered a wide area following a weekend of torrential rains, causing damage estimated at $1,000,000. (CP Wirephoto) GREAT FALLS, Mont. (AP) flooded areas to the west anid| Flood waters chased at least|north. 2,000 persons from their homes} Tom Sullivan, manager of a here Tuesday night after leav-|Red Cross shelter, said he hadjcued a ing 30 or. more dead and hun-/made records of about 1,300|rural a F : dreds homeless upstream. |persons evacuated from homes/using Malmstrom Air Force jwest of Great Falls and from|Base at Great Falls for a head- Governor Tim Babcock esti- ; d an exclusive residential. area/quarters for 11 helicopters an ther craft. At least 400 were homeless in seven northwestern counties alhigh school where more than the northwest counties desig- 1200 residents slept last night. nated for federal disaster re- One. bridge in Great Falls/lief. Hardest hit was the Black- " et Indian reservation. |ceded Tuesday night and rescue|/heavy water, trees, parts of, Drinking water, contaminated Montana's worst, at $10,000,000,'surrounding a country club and|° In the northwest, hit first by ried about reaction of the jUnited States, which maintains large forces in Germany. Dr, Erhard; Mr. Pearson and their extaetrnal affairs minis- |ters--Paul Martin and Gerhard | Schroeder -- settled down today |}to extensive talks, mainly on yerman reunification and all |factors bearing on it and the "Kennedy round' of tariff ne- gotiations at Geneva, Other subjects discussed in the first meeting were Cana- dian-German relations, includ- ing -the' possibilities of increased trade, the European Common Market, co-operation by the two countries in NATO and a Can- ada sponsored international | peacekeeping force, Dr. Erhard was reported by a Canadian spokesman to have shown much interest in and jsympathy for Mr. Pearson's |plan for a peacekeeping force which would be held in readi- ness for United Nations duty anywhere in the world. Dr. Erhard expressed grati- jtude for Mr. Martin's May 22 | CLOCK CHANGES | | 'WORST STRAIN' | OTTAWA (CP) -- A Wood- | LUDWIG ERHARD Commons statement that Can- ada supports West Germany in every peaceful effort to reunite the. country, Mr, Martin also said at that time that the German problem is at the centre of East-West re- lations and that its solution; |could open up real understand- ing with the Communist. ries. by ; | Dr. Erhard was. accorded | most cordial-weleome given any German by a Canadian govern- |ment since pre-Hitler days. | Mr. Pearson in an airport |} greeting referred to the "new" Germany as "democratic and peace-loving." : | The Senate's public galleries| was credited with winning some were packed as the crucial vote) crucial for on closure was taken. Tight se-|closure. jcurity was maintained around) off. the - floor manoeuvring \the Capitol building as more|continued right up to the hour people pressed for a chance tolot the vote. ; Jailed Sailor Fr : quit,| Sentence for iHeg: Canada, was released after his lawyer filed apeee and posted bail Republican votes In, | The vote followed an all-night ssion at which Senator Robert iC. Byrd, West Virginia Demo- jerat, made a marathon speech lattacking the civil rights bill and urging his colleagues, not off the < * my "an « Bi 9:52 a.m. When he finally lthe Senate took an eight-min- ute recess, then went back into session. It had agreed Tuesday! to meet at 10 a.m. today. f Since the adoption of the clos Thomadakis' release ca nt ure rule in 1917, all previous at-|four hours after he signed a ;document saying he would ap- y Florida Whites. Attack Marchers ST, AUGUSTINE, Fla. (AP) Gangs of screaming white men} and youths attacked white and) Negro marchers with fists and feet in this old city. The slugging, kicking attack- pear for trial if summoned. But instead of being released imme- -- he was taken back to cell. Four hours later he was freed, Rev, John Koulouras, ene of the men who posted bail for the |sailor, announced Thomadakis' | release from jail. He said Thome A big white man, weighing) a dakis reported a man had gone | about 230 pounds, pummeled to|to his cell. told him to get the pavement the Rev. William | dressed and escorted him to @ England, 33, Boston University|car in which he was driven to Chaplin, who is white, The as-|Father Koulouras' Greek Orth- sailant then methodically kicked| 0dox Church. teams started mopping up. farm buildings and other de-jin numerous smaller communi-| stock woman has sent a tele- |ers moved in on their victims-- Rotary Remains All-Male TORONTO (CP)--Rotary In- ternational, an all-male organi- zation It took deltgates only minutes to vote down motions that would have admitted women members. The Rotarians, attending the international convention here, upheld the committee on legis- lation, which rejected the mo tions earlier The delegates decided, how- ever, that membership of cler- Space Mates Have Infant MOSCOW (AP)--The world's only space woman Valentine Nikolayevna - Tereshkova, gave birth to a daughter Monday, an official announcement said to- day. Mother and daughter are well The child of the bionde, who orbited the earth 48 times last June, and her spaceman hus- since it was founded in 1905, voted Tuesday to continue to exclucda_women | Group jgymen in the _ organization |would be expanded Formerly, each club was permitted to have only one member from the Ro- man Catholic clergy, one from and one other m representative ajor faiths. Now clubs will be able to ad- mit members from several Pro- testant denominations. A -proposal that membership be extended to one representa- tive of each radio and television station within each club's area was set aside for two years. from At present club's are per- night with Randy Fergis of Tor- f 1,000 English - mitted one member from each newspaper in their area but {may admit only one represen- year but not allowed back be-| did about commercials beamed tative from all radio and all cause of the uncontrolled activi-|at their children. television stations A $4,000,000 educational pro- attending the folk-singing con-|is evident gram Was also approved. THOMSON A The Sun River crested 11 feet over its flood stage of 12 feet at midnight in this city of 70,- 000. A spokesman for the. air} force and national guard's res-| }cue operations estimated 2,000 to} 3,000 persons were from homes here and in the} Cold Shoulde r For. twO the Protestant faith, one rabbi Folk-Fest Plan | ORILLIA, Ont. (CP) -- Dalton Jermey, reeve of nearby Me-| donte Township, said Tuesday night the township does not want any part of the Mariposa Folk Festival. The reeve said there had becn no official request to hold the festival in the township but a meeting was scheduled for to- onto, festival promoter. The festival was held here last ties of a segment of the. crowd certs. i DDRESSES ROTARY MEET ~ evacuated; ° ence. bris ties, was safe in Great Falls. C pea A lien sl iscsi sia --_-- | jmarching two abreast on a | downtown sidewalk -- and then het | greatest strain on her family |fled when policemen armed hild-Slanted S life is changing to and from | with clubs moved in Tuesday " daylight time. |night. | Mrs, Esther E. Burman said | About a dozen demonstrators Tuesday in a wire to Confer- | were assaulted. The violence) ence President A. D. P. |ended wher marchers returned Heeney of Ottawa: to the. church where they be- "In twenty years of child- |gan their protest. raising I have found greatest | There were no reports of s2- stress on our family is that rious njuries and no arrests. imposed from outside by pei yearly change to daylight sav- | The march came within a few ing time, hours after a federal judge in "I beg you to consider. vio- | Jacksonville ordered police here lence done to peace of home {to lift their ban on night demon- and nerves of mother and |strations and to reduce bail for gram to the Canadian Confer- ence on the Family saying the Angering Parents Most Ca-/and some go to great lengths nt television|to counteract the influence of dat their,television advertising directed) go to great/at children. | "They take their children to the store, for instance, and This was one of a number of show that the toy or other. prod-| OTTAWA (CP) nadian parents res' advertising divett children and some lengths to counteract its influ- and stomped the chaplain who} slumped with his hands over his head, cycles of sleep and waking of }a group of marchers arrested all by (this) cruel practice, | earlier. | | 'If Governor - General and "Despite what happened, we good wife were to speak out | are going to continue protesting, against it they would earn : lifelong gratitude of thousands of parents and children in areas afflicted) by daylight saving across Canada." conclusions reached in a report ee | submitted to the Canadian Con- uct in question has been greatly| ference on the Family Tuesday exaggerated by the TV commer- by the Christian Communica- cial. tions Service of Canada. DRAWS MORE REPLIES As part of a two-year survey 'The question about advertis- speaking ing directed at children drew Roman Catholic homes, the|more replies than any of the service asked parents what they other 36 on the survey's ques- tionnaire. Seventy-four per cent, of par-| ents questioned said they! banned children from watching) mack eniaren vom wxenng, Magistrate | al al leader of the march, Rev. An-| drew Young, himself a victim of; the violence. | | IS KNOCKED DOWN "tf Young was struck in the) mouth, knocked down and | beaten. | He is an aide to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., head of the anti segregationist Southern Christian Leadership Con- ference, who was scheduled to The service's report says: "It that most parents consider this a real problem Urges Soviet Friendship arrive here today. The white marchers were sin- ed out. Auto Locks | OTTAWA (CP)--General Mo-\ gl \tors Corporation was: criticized | Tuesday by Magistrate Joachim unjust discrimination," said the) & Jail officials confirmed 'that | Thomadakis was released but would not elaborate, Sauve for making a key that band, Andriyan Nikolayev,| are to contemplate; "It is our responsibility to/will fit a number of automo-| weighed three kilos, 100 grams} Ex-Policeman (six pounds, 13% ounces), said usually reliable sources The sources said the baby was delivered by caesarian re- section at 2:10 a.m. Monday. There was no official confirma- tion The by first announcement Tass news agency said the baby) was born Sunday. Moscow ra- dio later correct this to Mon- day. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT, 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 alternative to ultimate war is the establishment of real inter jnational friendship by _ public figures of all nations, Lord Thomson told Rotarians today. | In an address to the third plenary session of Rotary Inter- national's 55th convention here, ithe Canadian - born publisher said that to be friendly, nations must understand each other's point of view. | Lord Thomson cited recent |talks he had with Nikita Khrush \chey in which the Russian fre- |mier complained that the West does not appreciate the efforts he is making to imporve his peoples' living standard There is much truth in this icharge," Lord Thomson sat great TORONTO (CP) -- The only|"The sooner we stop deriding| that if we the Soviet people and vilifying their leaders, the sooner they. will stop blackguarding us." He said the Russian govern- ment will probably continue to spread world communism and jas a result create trouble in many parts of the world, "but what the Russian government wants now above all is to im- prove the standard of living of its' own people. "From my discussion with Mr. Khrushchev, it became evi-} dent that: he has a great and) urgent desire to increase world trade between Russia and the) rest of the world and this is inderstandable Lord Thom son said | "I am completely. convinced!) jmedia of quality and integrity a peaceful, happy existence for|ptove all these facts to them-- bile models it produces. our children, and our children's' and do it quickly. "It's not the first time I've children, we must develop, "If we do not sermonize or|;been told that General Motors with; condescend, but concentrate in-/makes car keys that will fit a stead on dispassionately passing} few of their models," he said) on.technical and scientific know-| after hearing evidence in a car} lledge and the fruits of our po-|theft case, . litical and social experience, "Surely, such a large com- we will have gone far toward|/Pany could afford to spend a Dobson, 35, a. Niagara Falls po- getting them to accept the con-| feW chs hundred dollars to liceman who was _ suspended cepts or which are based: the Make different types of keys." /from, the force when charged liberties and achievements 'of Andre Talbot, 17, of Montreal with breaking and entering and Western civiiization."' j and i yes Arthur 3enard, 16.|theft, Tuesday was sentenced to tions are battlegrounds of the, He askeq the international Ro-| of rc 1 hav contesce athe five years in penitentiary, cold war and in the battle of|tary movement to assume part nisading nitlty to 'car there Dobson had pleaded guilty a ideologies, time is not on ourjof the responsibility in helping a deeied ; week ago to the theft of a safe side,' he said. "We must show] to provide the urgently needed) In Oshawa today, a GM | containing $372 and between 25 these new nations that our sys-/communications :facilities to the|spokesman said lock duplicationjand 30 cartons of cigarets. In tem. of best, that im the! yet uncommitted nations oecurred rarely, It was how-/the pre-sentence report Dobson long fun they will benefit most) Text of Lord Thomson's ad-jever, inevitable that in building)said he had consumed about 30 by being democratic and living dress was provided to the press|thousands of cars, some com- bottles of beer the day of the in: under a free enterprise system.|in advance of delivery. binations would be repeated. {cident | j *> Gets 5 Years For Break-ins the Soviet Union." Lord Thomson noted the ne- cessity of establishing a mass in the emergent nations if their people are to fulfil their wants and better their condition. "Remember, these new na- ife is WELLAND (CP) -- Douglas WHERE THERE Trainer Randy Orkisch holds out a mackerel snack for' Kaena, false killer whale, at Sea Life Park in Honolulu. Scientists at the park, unable to manufacture food, annual- ly spend $18,000 for fish for the ."'table" at which "sit" monk seals, turtles, gooney birds and albatrosses, and cf S FISH... hundreds of smaller fish specimens, In addition park officials must ,provide such: desserts as vitamins -- not available in frozen fish. -- and. salt pills. The false killer whale is so called becaus® species resembles killer var¢ iety. (AP. Wirephoto);

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy