Thought For Today Women not only drive as well as men, they do it on either side of the. road. VOL, 93 -- NO. 154 She Oshawa Zine Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1964 Authorized as Second: Class. Met Post Office Department Ottewe ond for payment Weather Report Cloudy, thundery-and continuing muggy. Winds light except 50 mph. gusts daring storms, TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES -- ef Postage in Cash, House Turns 'WE'LL HIT BACK' NEGROES' THREA To Debating Youth Aid government's youth allowances) 5. A bill to provide loans for bill and then returns to the flag| needy university students. debate for the rest of the holi-| 6. A supply bill giving the gov- day-abbreviated week. ernment enough money to pay The bill will provide payment |its August and September bills. of $10 monthly family allow-| 7. Two days of study of ap-! ances on behalf. of 16- and 17-|propriations. | OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com-|mile territorial limit and fish- OFFICER FACES | Massive Action a * year olds who remain in school. | Mr. Pearson said he hoped | Civil Rights Bill There is an all-party agreement/this business could be cleared LOADED RIFLE WATCH WATCHER Alex Oakley, of the Osh- awa Track Club, glances con- fidently at the stopwatch as . hits wire to win miles in blazing sun and occa- | siona! cloudbursts, His time was three minutes faster than second place finisher Felix | of Midland, Ontario. | , a member of Can- ada's Olympic team for the i 50-Kilometre walk, will travel | to Montreal on July 11, for the 20-Kilometre Olympic Trials. --Oshawa Times Photo by Bruce. Jones | ternational Juvenile Track Meet, held in conjunction with the Oshawa Folk Festival, on Wednesday. Oakley took only two hours, 52 minutes and 11.8 seconds to walk the 20 TECHNICAL, EDUCATION Home Has Hopes For Commonwealth Co-op LONDON (CP) -- A British, The London conference, bring- plan for joint Commonwealth|ing to Marlborough House prime financing in technical, educa-| ministers or leaders of 18 Com- tional and other fields will come|monwealth countries, starts a before the London meeting of week from today. prime ministers starting next' gir Alec's to week. ; "un, i y anc . & - The first public hint of the jointly financed pe cvamagiin new British initiative came) Wealth projects" is in line with Tuesday night in a radio discus- a Canadian Press London dis- sion when Prime Minister Sir patch last June 9 referring to Alec Douglas-Home spoke of the British hopes that the confer- need for what he called "Com | | | | references "ence of prime ministers would monwealth projects" to.increase ay the foundations for an in-.donesia is mobilizing funds and Canada, a Quebec to pass up an early-stage debate on it and get back to the flag. But next Monday the flag is- sue is expected to be inter- rupted again for a couple of weeks so the Commons can deal with urgent legislation Prime Minister Pearson Tues- day night gave the Commons this: order of priorities: 1. The bill creating a single ichief of the armed forces in |place of three service chiefs. | 2. The youth allowances bill. 3, Fiscal arrangements with the provinces. 4. The bill setting up a 12- Russia Pledges |More Arms -- For Sukamo JAKARTA (AP)----First. Dep- uty Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan promised today that more Rus- lsian military hardware will be |coming to Indonesia but refused to give details of new deliver- lies. Speaking at a press con- lference shortly before ending a 10-day visit to this key South-| east Asian country, Mikoyan also: 1. Said the Soviet Union SUD- |, ports Indonesia in its opposition | to the British-backed Federation | jdecision. on away by July 2? or 23 so that a the flag could be reached by the end of the month to permit a six-week recess to mid-September, Gordon Churchill, Conserva- tive floor leader, said the gov- erment was using the flag is- sue as "a club held over our heads." If the Opposition didn't approve the flag by the end of July, the Commons wouldn't get any recess. At the end the of Tuesday night sitting. Mr, Churchill also referred to. July 1 as the "one- day holiday we are getting this summer." The government's flag design is three red maple leaves on a white background with vertical blue bars at either side. The Progressive .Conserva- tives want a plebiscite on the lissue and Opposition Leader Diefenbaker, who from the Commons Tuesday with a heavy cold, has an amendment to this effect before the House. Mr. Pearson said the govern- ment doesn't intend to proceed with its resolutions on O Can- ada as the national anthem and God Save the Queen, as the Royal anthem until the fall. Stanley Knowles (NDP--Win- nipeg North Centre) protested against the absence of the Can- ada Pension Plan from the July schedule of business proposed Mr. Pearson. This was an "ominous"' delay. was away of Malaysia. | 2, Indicated he had at least gained 'sympathy' from the| Indonesian Communist party) for the Soviet position in the Moscow-Peking dispute. 3. Said part of the Soviet Un-) ion is in Asia and because of this geographical fact there is no need to dispute the question) of Soviet participation in a sec-| ond Afro Asian conference} planned next year. Red China| . opposes Soviet participation. 4. Said that 'bombardment by American planes" in Laos made it doubtful that a Laotian peace conference would be fruitful. Mikoyan and his delegation of members of the Soviet parlia- ment later stopped in Burma for a two-day visit en route to Moscow. During his visit here he held a series of talks with President Sukarno and other high Indone- sian officials Asked to-elaborate on the ref- erence to 'arms deliveries, Mi- koyan said: "I cannot clarify the details for you. We have long been sending arms to Indo- nesia and this will be con- tinued."' Meanwhile, Information Min- ister Ruslan Abdulgani said In- TOPLESS PULLS TOPS IN SERVICE NORWICH, Conn. (AP)-- Talk about service: Attendants at Main Street gas station just couldn't do enough for the driver of a sedan that pulled in around noon Wednesday. The oil was checked, the battery. serviced, the tires inflated, the windows--espe- cially the windshield--were polished with great care The driver was a young woman clad in a_ topless bathing suit. No Goal But Split Separatist Warns GENEVA PARK, Ont. (CP)-- French-speaking Canadians are determined to win their econo- mic and political independence from both the United States and separatist Park annual Geneva voting rights. Nearing Reality WASHINGTON (AP) -- long congressional fight civil rights legislation comes to an-end today as the House of Representatives votes on the far - reaching measure already passed by the Senate. Overwhelming approval is a foregone conclusion, the House having passed last February, 290 to 130, a bill that was re- vised in only the Senate during month debate Without w its three- ting until July 4-- U.S. Independence Day as some sources had_ indicated, President Johnson is expected to sign the bill into law speedily in hopes. it can start easing racial tensions. Many of its southern critics, however, pre- dict it will only inflame the situ- ation. For more than a year the bill was the subject of intensive ne- gotiating in both the House and Senate before it finally emerged as a compromise package sup- ported by Democratic and Re- publican leaders in Congress. The bill wraps into one big bundle a number of measures designed to help Negroes | achieve equality in nearly ail |phases of national life into federal government which the can reach. BARS DISCRIMINATION It bars discrimination in em- |ployment practices -- by both junions atid employers--and in jhotels, motels, restaurants, hmevies, and other places serv- jing the public. It arms the gov | ernment with powers to cut off} federal funds for programs in jwhich discrimination occurs, | It also grants new powers to jthe attorney-general to speed |desegregation of public schools and other public facilities, such as parks, playgrounds and li- braries It tightens provisions con- tained 'in the first civil rights law passed this century--in 1957 --aimed at protecting Negro the Rassemblement pour |'Inde- jpentance Nationale, said French speaking Canadians form 83 per cent 6f Quebec's population but control only 12 |per cent of its economy. He said the The} over relations It also creates a community service designed to provide machinery for voluntary settlement of racial disputes through mediation and concili- ation. And it extends for four years the life of the civil rights commissicn, with added pow- ers All but one of the provisions PICKERING -- Antoon Obdam, 32, of RR 2, Pick- ering was remanded today on a charge of assault and pointing a firearm Police said a man Wed- nesday night threatened to shoot a police officer with a -22 rifle, before another man slipped up behind him and pushed the muzzle of the weapon upward. Constable Thomas Holmes of Leaders Warn ATLANTA, Ga. (AP)--Negro) organizations will take '"'mass- ive direct action" in some He said the program would include voter registration drives in. Mississippi, Louisiana and southern cities which fail to) north Florida; and a: step-up of comply with terms of the civil) C.O.R.E. community centres in rights bill, says Dr. Martin Lu-) Mis. ippi, especially in central ther King Jr. ippi: where three civil King, who has been directing rghts workers disappeared 're- segregation demonstrations at) cently. St. Augustine, Fla., stopped) Malcom X, leader of a new evil rights group. he. calls. Affo- minor ways by --that dealing with discrimina- tion in employment--take effect as soon as the bill is signed by the president. But many others have built-in delays intended iM Pickering Township Police then grabbed the rifle. A struggle resulted, police said, before the man who had the rifle was subdued. MORE CARTRIDGE The single-shot rifle point- ed at the officer was loaded, police added, and five other cartridges were found on the seat of the truck. Seven more were on the driver. A woman previously told police she was having trou- ble with her husband and that she was afraid to go give state and local authorities a chance to settle complaints arising under the new law. Dirksen Backing | briefly at his home in Atlanta | before continuing to New York for conferences with other civil rights leaders. He said his Southern Christian Leadership Conference will urge businessmen to comply with the provisions of the bill voluntarily. \If they do not, he declared, court action would be taken. King said the Alabama cities |of Montgomery, Tuscaloosa, Cadsden, Birmingham and Selma are being considered at present for demonstrations sim-| ilar to.those at St, Augustine. In. other racial developments, civil rights leaders turned their American Unity, said his organ- ization has telegraphed. King that it is ready to send help to St. Augustine if the federal gov- ernment does not provide: aid. At -a press conference in Omaha, Neb., Malcolm X said his people "are ready to give the Ku Klux Klan" a 'taste of its own medicine in St. Augus- tine and Mississippi. "We can send enough help te get results," Malcolm X said. "The day of turning the other cheek to those brute beasts: is Over..a:. « "It's time to start swinging. home -- Constable Holmes | accompanied her to the home when she went for her Barry | The only thing that stops a man with a shotgun is another man with a shotgun... ." attention to the national politi- cal conventions. WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sena- tor Barry Goldwater's name will be placed in nomination at the Republican national conven- tion two weeks hence by Sena- tor Everett M. Dirksen of Illi- nois, Dirksen said Wednesday. "The request has been made | | j}and I have agreed to it," Dirk-| | sen told a reporter. delegation in'C | conference he s first ap- proached with the suggestion he place Goldwater in nomination by a member of Goldwater's staff whom he did not identify. The staffer, Dirksen related, made the approach "within the last few days," telling Dirksen "Barry is a little shy about ask- ing for himself." Later, Dirksen said, he told Goldwater he would '"'give it good consideration." Dirksen described as "one of those speculative things'? a re- porter's question as to whether he would accept a vice-presi- water ticket In reply to a question, Dirk- sen said he has no reason to Republican presidential candi date, "can't do as well or bet-| ter'? than anyone else to help} Republican of Representatives | win election. | | The Illinois Senator, Republi-| can Senate leader, came out! publicly for Goldwater at a cau-| cus of the Illinois convention) 4 hicago Tuesday.) Dirksen said la ata press | dential nomination on a Gold-| meant the Senate and House formants said former candidates| retary clothes. A truck was parked at the end of the driveway with a man in it. The officer was threatened by the man who pointed a rifle at him. Police said John Grimber- gen, the woman's uncle, came to the officer's res- cue from behind the truck. The head of the Congress of| | Racial Equality said at Kansas) City that his group would dem-| onstrate at both conventions and) jattempt to unseat the Missis-| | sippi delegation to the Democra- tic convention. James Farmer, national di- rector of C.O.R.E., outlined: the group's summer program as the organization's annual con- Union Guilty Of Race Bar In Houston | vention got under way. WASHINGTON (AP) -- The "NICOSIA (AP) -- President Makarios opposes the participa-| anticipating a settlement favor- /tion of an American adviser in| able to the Turkish-Cypriots. | the United Nations effort to me- diate the Cyprus dispute: Makarios said Wednesday the appointment of an American to help UN mediator Sakari 'Tuo- mioja of Finland would "include the danger of involvement of the issue in other circles outside the United Nations." He apparently North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The United States still fears a war between NATO members believe that Goldwater, as the| Greece and Turkey over Cyprus. .| It offered UN Secretary-General |U Thant the services of a dis-|. ° eM ; in-| ver, "certain movements and| for their finding. tinguished American--some in State Sec- Dean Acheson--to help the mediation effort. Tuomioja has been unable to | bring the two sides together. Greek - Cypriot newspapers Makarios Spurns U.S. Solution Aid National Labor Relations Board today found a union guilty of racial discrimination and stripped: it of its certification. In a broad opinion with sible national the ma- jority decision union.causes aatiaee serin wg based on race it has committed an unfair labor practice. The action--the first of its kind by the NLRB--was against the Independent Metal Workers Union which maintained separ- ate locals for white and Negro members at Hughes Tool Com- pany. in Houston, Tex, -- Atlantic Alliance peace force, The Greek-Cypriots- consider the 1960 Cyprus indpendence agreements dead. But Turkey) has warned repeatedly it may} land troops on the island to pro- ; tect the Turkish-Cypriot. minor-| Pie case involved the com- ity. Both Greece and Turkey) Plaint of a member of the Ne- | have limited garrisons on the is- oe ee eee comenae for land under the 1960 treaties. to i pes ome avRUSOS 4 The Greek government denied} py the Siibn" ie Wag Feecte | Wednesday that it had sent any) "The five-member board's de- officers or soldiers to Cyprus) cision to revoke certification on | other than replacements for the! srounds of illegal coerci /950-man Greek garrison "pine t se et nef unanimous, although two mem- A UN spokesman said, -how-|bers gave more limited reasons | Suspicious activities" by Greek The- minority sai |and Turkish nationals indicated never intended the Netlenal I | that weapons were being smug-|bor Relations Act to deal with gled to the island. The Turks) racial discrimination except jwere doing most of the arms when based on union member- t ing, he said. 'ship, as in this case. links among member countries. | tahc¢ co-operative effort aimed forces to crush the Federation told the Quebec living Russ Trawler | I : ; warned that an American ad- Up to now, Sir Alec said, eco- 4, increasing financial, techni- of Malaysia "within the near conference Wednesday standard is 28 per cent lower viser would involve NATO. After nomic contacts had been larg-| oa) and educational aid ely on a bilaterial basis between ' Britain and individual countries. L DCE URGES UN "] think we want, as far as we can, to make this a co-op- 0 future."" FORCE erative effort. It may be, there-| fore, that we should explore the field . . ..so that certain pro- jects, in particular in the field of technical assistance, should be jointly financed by a number of Commonwealth countries." Such co operative efforts would be on a special basis, wit rticipants limited to those who felt ready to contribute to a par- participants limited to those who = as well as joint financing, Cabot Lodge Says both the there could be joint contribu-| United Nations and the South- tions of technical experts. east Asia Treaty Organization Sir Alec agreed that most have shown signs of being ut- Commonwealth countries are terly powerless to act effectively not importers of capital. Never- to thwart the Communists in theless, he felt there were a| South Viet Nam number who. could produce, But in separate press vonfer- "something for a corporate ef- ences Wednesday, Lodge 'and fort." He hoped the new ap-| State Secretary Dean Rusk em- proach would meet with a fa-| phasized there is no reason to yorable response. idespair over the South Vietna- paring nist antl YAR PNY Both Viet Cong Strike Her tad Wheerity ot Souk Viet Destroys Convoy V Nam without eng whole of Southeast Asiz SAIGON (AP). -- Viet Cong portance of placing lar guerrillas ambushed _and ba Haned Natlont decd on stroyed an Ee ie cok: Cambodian border to prevent Se ehlaads wedaeater, kill the Communist Viet Cong from tral hi s sday, ' ing 29 government troops. WASHINGTON (CP) -- For- ler U.S. ambassador Henry mese . situation. agreed 3oth also emphasized the im- a ze the tacks on the South Vietnamese tends to send a three-man dip- lomatic mission, to' inspect the border. situation. But dip lomats do not const an. ef CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 three tute i fective contro About 1;200 needed | As for SEATO, this institution omm! roops ion said may be s ty using border points in their at- Lodge noted that the UN in-) he! a, also has become utterly power- less to act » of French opposition to ' policies in Saigon. Lodge suggested that while he could not. discuss se- cret strategy, there are a var- iety of effective measures the U.S. still has up its sleeve 'short of war." Lodge, who returned from Sai- gon.to assist Pennsylvania Gov- ernor, William Seranton in the stop-Goldwater movement, de- seribed as "very significant' re- porns 'he received that for the first time some rural residents lof South Viet Nam are refusing to feed the Viet Cong despite continuing threats of death and injury The slatement of Lodge-Rusk to indicate attempt to play. down the South Vietnamese situation which Senator Barry} |Goldwater has threatened 'to turn into a full presidential'cam- paign issue this fall tone the eemed administra an on administra- mphasized in t th S t attitude I the We Allies would miscaleulate U:8. intentions if they concluded that the U.S Recently ource a high had was and that / Pierre Bourgault, president of Allies Seem Weak Against Asian Reds would not risk a major Pacific war to preserve the independ- ence of South Viet Nam Lodge was asked at his Na- tional Press Club appearance whether the administration had "gagged"? him from being cri- tical about the South Vietnam- ese situation. He said he had never been gagged by anyone. AN'T DO IT As for making the South Viet- namese situation a campaign i sue, Lodge, who was Richard M. Nixon's running mate in 1960, said he had "fiddled around' with many issues in his time ng to turn them into campaign material but.he didn't believe Goldwater could do it this time with Viet Nam tusk said he shared Lodge's optimism. about the South Viet- namese situation, He believed the subject. was proper for po litical discussion since the U.S. had a ,major commitment in Southeast can and Democratic administra- tions «But he agreed with Lodge that the subject did not lend itself to tis since we all siockholders in this project all havea stake in the guicome."" ja an debat are Asia, under Republi-| than that of Ontario, and the Quebec annual average income is $1,500 compared to $7,000 in some western provinces. | "The reason for this is that i the federal government in Ot- jtawa does not serve our inter- jests. It sells wheat to Russia to |help. the western farmers, then buys Polish textiles in return, and in Montreal where we make 57 per cent of Canada's textiles our factories have to slow down. Mr. Bourgeault spoke to 77 high school students at the week-long conference sponsored by the United Nations Associa- tion of Canada in this Orillia- area community. CAN IT BE BILINGUAL He said his followers do not believe Canada can be bilingual. 'We are not going to ask for ights or privileges or respon- ibilities any more," he said. 'From now on we take what we need whether you like it or not. "We have fought and fought for nothing, nothing but a bilin- gual cheque. Now we will fight for ourselves. "You cannot feel what it means to be a French - Cana- jdian in Canada, an inferior be- ing with a valueless culture. Independence, he said, would only. be an instrument toward jinternationalism and would not jsolve all economic problems. But, Quebec mist have the right to make its own mistakes. ont is a complete | failure use Canadians have no identification with their coun- try. You. Canadians need a rev olution, too, and I wish you had 'the guts to do it." "Cor the fighting erupted between Greek- and Turkish - Cypriots last December, the United | States and Britain unsuccess- | Badly Dented, Shes US. Rid % tried to get the quarrel | settled through the alliance. | BOSTO! (AP) -- A Russian) yakarios rejected any kind of jtrawler ignored U.S. Coast) yao intervention, including an | Guand offers of help today after : Takeoff Crash colliding Wednesday with a} freighter and made repairs with the assistance of two other So-| viet vessels. The trawler and the 7,000-ton Hurts 13 At N.Y. Greek freighter Gannet col- ; | lided in heavy fog some 450} NEW YORK (AP) -- A jet miles east of Boston. aircraft with 13 persons aboard | About 2 a.m, today a second crashed on takeoff at Kennedy) Soviet trawler anda 150-foot International Airport Wednes-| sea-going Russian tug transfer-\4ay night, Police reported two red collision mats and towing Persons suffered minor injuries. hawsers to the damaged vessel.| Authorities said the craft, be- The coast guard said the Rus-| lieved owned by American Air- sian ships failed to heed calls|lines, ran off the end of a run- from the cutter McCulloch and| Way on takeoff. appeared to be successful in| The airport control tower said coping wtih whatever damage) the accident occurred during a the trawler sustained. heavy thunderstorm. Dupont, Ajax Announces $3-Million Expansion 'a AJAX (Staff) -- A $3,000,- 600 plant extension at Du Pont 'fhe expansion includes addi- | tions to manufacturing, ware- house, office and laboratory facilities. Process flow-will be stream- lined to utilize modern com- puter equipment and_ tech- niques: Resin-making facilities will be expanded, storage tank capacities increased and rail- of Canada Limited was an- nounced here today. Completion is scheduled for late 1965. The 75-man'staff will be in- creased "considerably", ac- cording to plant superinten- dent John. Halligan, The eight-year-old plant now manufactures automotive A cooling drink of water will refresh a baseball player, but sometimes it's a bit hard to come by. Rickie Bower, 8, of Sand Springs, a Tulsa sub- urb, demonstrates the _ac- cepted fashion for getting a and industrial paints, New produets will include acrylie house paints. road sidings lengthened for tank-car shipments of sol- venta, refresher from a water foun- tain at a Peewee baseball | park-in Tulsa. The fountain is fA RESOURCEFUL DRINKER atop a concrete ledge and per- sons trying to drink while Standing om the ground get drenched from the fountain, which sprays water to the front. So the youngsters use the head-stand stoop Rickie was caught in. (AP Wirephoto) ye 2%