Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Jul 1964, p. 1

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Thought For Today An extravagant girl not only makes a poor mother, but a poor father as VOL. 93 -- NO. 172 well. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JULY 23,-1964 he Oshawa Times Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Ottawa and for of payment Weather Report Lower, humidity, sunny and warm Friday. Winds light. one Postage TWENTY-FOUR PAGES , OSHAWA Bay street remained blase this 'gusher" which blew a downtown Oshawa street y. Stocks neither rose even a fraction, be- cause it seems Canadian spe- are just not interested in water. The 40-foot foun- was caused when work- GEYSER men broke a watermain dur- ing extensive road and rail- track rebuilding on Mary street. Water supplies in the Bond and Mary area were cut off for about half an hour until the geyser was staunch- ed. --Oshawa Times Photo OTTAWA (CP)<The govern- ment's proposed student loan legislation today goes into its seventh day of legal-laden argu- ment in the Commons. still caught up in constitutional ar- guments. When the Commons rose Wed- nesday, the issue of the mo- ment involved the democratic rights of Yukon residents. This was an offshoot of a debate about the. territory's constitu- tion, which grew from a sub- amendment proposed as the re- sult of another amendment that developed from the bill itself. The bill is intended to guaran- tee loans of up to $1,000 a year that students would get from banks to go through university or technical schools. Ar amend- ment introduced by the govern- ment Wednesday would allow Legal Haggling © Mires Debate. On Student Aid laires and credit societies to qualify as banks for th's pur- pose. Since the bill entered the Commons, most of the attacks have come from Quebec oppo- sition members, who have ar- gued that it represents a fed- eral intrusion into the exclu- sively provincial field of educa- tion. Quebec has already an- nounced it will not participate, but will take advantage of the cash equivalent. The jurisdictional discussion was overshadowed Wednesday by a stiff argument over the method of selecting students and universities qualifying for loans. VOTED DOWN After a long debate, the Com- mons voted 56 to 37 against an credit unions, caisses popu- amendment that would have the $100,000 DEBT OTTAWA (CP) Former Conservative transport minis- | ter George Hees has been asked to explain to Parliament the award of a Montreal Interna- tional Airport contract in 1960 that left the transport depart- ment with a debt of more than $100,000 The Commons public ac- |counts committee took this ac- |tion today in adopting a resolu- tion prop by its steering MD Beats "Bid To Jail Him ' AKRON, Ohio (AP)--Dr; Sa-jcourt order for his release} muel H. Sheppard has outlasted the prosecution in another legal battle to remain out of prison and it appears it could be; weeks or even months before! he learns his fate. | Sheppard won a new round) Wednesday when a three-judge federal panel of the Sixth U.S.) Circuit Court of Appeals held, y i his $10,000 bond--and his free-|Cleveland home to wait until |the legal smoke cleared. | His lawyer F. Lee Bailey of dom--were valid until the court could decide if the U.S. district Arson Squad Probes Blast Before Fire HAMILTON (CP)--A mysteri- ous explosion triggered a three- alarm fire in a downtown build-|would not void Judge Wein-| ing here early today, sending nearby apartment tenants scur- rying to the streets. No one was injured, Fire Chief Reg Swanborough said the 2 a.m. explosion had "a suspicious origin" in the retr of the premises. Arson squad officers. Bronte Malek and Detective John Ken- nelly, probing through the still- smouldering shell, said they were unable to immediately es tablish the cause of the blaze. would stand. The court is not scheduled to meet again until October and there was no indication that earlier action would be possi- le. | Sheppard, central figure in one of the country's most pub- licized murder cases, headed with his new wife to their |Boston, said: "I don't think this jcase will ever be retried." Sheppard, convicted of sec- jond-degree murder in the 1954 bludgeon sJaying of his preg- nant wife, Marilyn, was freed from Ohio Penitentiary a week 'ago after federal Judge Carl Weinman of Dayton ruled he had not received a fair trial. Presiding Judge Paul C. Weick of Akron said the court but }man's granting of bail |would modify it. Wednesday's ruling threw the! case into a new legal tangle \that could reach the U.S. Su- |preme Court. When he heard the ruling, |Sheppard turned to his bride of five days, the former Ariane /Tebbenjohanns, and embraced her. Honey,' hit."" she said, "we got SOME THOUGHT U.S. WAR BRIDES committee, representing all po- litical parties on the commit- lounge facilities was awarded }on Mr, Hees' recommendation despite departmental urging that an experienced catering firm undertake the task. Mr. Hees was Conservative transport minister from 1957 until October, 1960, when he be- came minister of trade. He left active politics before the 1963 federal election and now is president of the Montreal and Canadian Stock Exchanges. The resolution approved by the committee instructed the committee's Conservative chair- man, Gerald Baldwin (Peace River), to correspond with Mr. |Hees and ask for an explana- jtion of the awarding of the con- jtract. | OOKPIK BRINGS ESKIMOS CASH CHARLOTTETOWN (CP)-- Ookpik, the toy arctic owl with the big eyes, has already netted $10,000 in royalties for the Fort Chimo, Que.. Eskimo | co-operative, the Co-operative Union of Canada annual meet- | ing was told. Wednesday. Efforts are being made to | increase Ookpik's value "'as a whimsical little creation of the north that means some- thing in the Canadian culture as a symbol of Canada," adds the annual report of the CUC board of directors. Hees Asked To Explain Dining Contract Award The resolution also said that the steering committee "on the basis of any reply received' would determine 'whether or not there is any necessity to ask for a personal appearance before the committee of the for- mer minister of transport." The committee also estab- lished a subcommittee of five MPs to investigate the public sale of surplus military equip- ment at multi - million - dollar losses. The subcommittee in- cludes Paul Tardif. (L--Rus- sell), . }presume we are entitied to at ' ey conta. Bape jurice| ©2st reach Our own conclusions Cote (SC -- Chicoutimi) and Lloyd Francis (L--Carleton). The subcommittee will meet in camera to follow up a dis- closure by Auditor - General A. M. Henderson that some $29,000,000 worth of surplus mil- itary equipment and supplies were sold by Crown Assets Dis- posal Corporation for less than $800,000. federal government designate the provincial authorities to do the selecting. This meant the selection would remain in the hands of provincial govern ments. A government amendment then added that in the case of The Yukon and Northwest Ter- rest with the territorial com- missioners. Erik Nielsen (PC -- Yukon) proposed a sub-amendment that would have the federally-ap- pointed commissioner in The Yukon seek decisions. This, said Mr. Niel- sen, would bring elected repre- sentatives into the picture. John Turner (L--Montreal St. George), parlia- [Lawrence-St. jmentary secretary to Northern) g |Affairs Minister Laing, said the jsub-amendment would have the effect of turning the advisory committee on finance into an advisory committee on educa- tion. Under the constitution, he argued, the committee wouldn't have the power to assume this function. As the Commons neared the end of a hot and humid day, tempers frayed. slightly. | CHURCHILL ASTONISHED =| Gordon Churchill (PC--Winng- peg South Centre) said he was astonished at the lack of co-op- eration on the part of the gov- ernment, "I ask the minister of finance: What does he want done with this bill? Does he want it to go through, or does he want it to remain unen- acted?" Finance Minister Gordon said this sounded like a threat. "I and not be told that unless we accept an amendment of this kind, this bill will not go through." New Democratic Party Leader T. C. Douglas said if the government refuses to accept amendments regardless of the logic "'then we are just wasting our time in going over the leg- islation,"' WASHINGTON (AP) -- The jinter-American jters conference today headed for a final showdown with a majority reported to have al- lomatic and on Cuba. All six foreign ministers who trade quarantine jnesday unequivocally supported |Venezuela's demand for a stiff /penalty. against the Fidel Cas- tro regime for its export of sub- version to Venezuela. pected to oppose the. mandatory break in relations but they are given little chance to change other conferees. _ Brazil continued efforts to |find a compromise solution to Hearings Reveal Escapes Of Vicious Nazi Women FRANKFURT (AP) -- Testi-|parts. The current trial show;Dachau concentration camp for|gassings in order to get extra| 'with the exception of the use 4nony 20 years later shows that/the SS women frequently out-|instruction in murder and tor-|pay and tobacco and alcohol|®f armed force." ture techniques taught byjrations. Many enjoyed killing) The resolution excluded from the SS (Elite Guard) woman in Hitler's Germany often was more brutal than the male--and rarely was brought to justice. There are no women defend-| | did them. Who were the tens of thou- lsands of women in Henrich Himmler's SS? Trial testimony pictures them Himmler's collaborators. 'rom Dachau, they were as-|ceeded them in beauty and in-/@9d from Cuba necessary for signed to concentration camps-- 250 in Germany and German- ants. in the war crimes trials;as a cross-section of German| occupied Europe--to guard fe- now going on in West Germany. Womanhood -- girls in their|male prisoners. They were as-|ments" in artificial insemina-| A handful. were hanged under|teens, matrons in their 49s and|sisted by German women verdicts by .Allied war crimes 50s; 'highly educated women, | brought to the camps as civilian |and torturing prisoners who ex- telligence. | They chose females for crip- |pling and often dead'y "experi- |tion, performed without anrs- |thesia by SS physicians Cuba Quarantine Showdown Near foreign minis-| ready decide to vote for a dip-| jaddressed the conference ied version. if it persists in sub- Mexico and Chile are ex-! the indicated position of most ,avoid a split with Mexico and Chile. while satisfying most other member nations. State Secrétary Dean Rusk asked the conference to impose jSanctions on Cuba and urged a warning to the Castro regime that "'the full weight of the re- gional security system will be version, Rusk also called on the free | world countries to 'take appro- |Priate steps in the field of trade jwith Cuba." The United States jhas had only partial success in its own efforts to persuade its} jallies to cut off their trade with | Cuba. In his speech Rusk did not spell out the sanctions he pro- |posed. But the foreign minis- |ters have before them a reso- |lution calling for all members |of the Organization of American | States to break diplomatic and | trade relations with Cuba. | Venezuelan Foreign Minister Ignacio Iribarren Borges, in |presenting his country's case before the conference, said "the destiny of our organization de- pends upon the decision adopted here." He called for the application of all measures under the treaty of mutual assistance he embargo transportation to ritories, the responsibility would) / "the advice and) ~ consent of the advisory commit-| tee on finance" before making) - |sexual relationship with a pro- OTTAWA'S MAYOR WHITTON TAXES SAID SQUANDERED 4 MORE NEGROE SHOT IN RIOTING Victims Looting Police Charge NEW YORK (AP) -- Police shot and wounded four Negroes as racial rioting, looting and vandalism raged in Brooklyn through the night. Police saig the Negroes shot were accused of looting. Several policemen were in- jured during the city's fifth straight night of racial violence. Police counted 145 stores looted in the predominantly Ne- gro Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn. Marauders smashed store windows and ran off with anything they could carry. Crowds of Negroes, jeering and hurling missiles at police, surged through the streets Wed- nesday night. Steel-helmeted po- lice fired volley after volley over the heads of the roving bands to break up the disorder. In Manhattan, 500 white teén- agers pelted Negro demonstra- tors outside police headquar- ters. A police charge broke up the mob. Harlem, however; was quiet-- even quieter than on a normal OTTAWA (CP) -- Charlotte W..itton, Ottawa's controversial 68-year-old mayor, today faced a judicial inquiry into the city hall administration with only four months remaining in her present term of office. City council voted 12 to 6 Wednesday night in favor of holding the inquiry into charges by contractor Irving Greenberg of incompetence and inefficiency resulting in the waste of millions of tax dollars. The inquiry--details of which stil are to.be formulated--is bound to become a major issue for the December civic elec- tions. Mayor Whitton, who served for 24% terms between 1951 and 1956 and then was re-elected in 1960 and 1962, has not indicated whether she'!! run again. Britain Probes Deviate Rap Against Peer LONDON (CP)--The govern- ment Wednesday promised an investigation of a newspapers' charges that a peer had a homo- tection racketeer. Home Secretary Henry Brooke told the Commons the Sunday Mirror had agreed to hand Scotland Yard a copy of a picture which it says shows peer and mobster sharing a sofa. The Mirror reported posses- sion of the photograph Sunday. The disclosure was part of a campaign charging London's west end is terrorized by the biggest protection racket Brit- ain has ever known. The paper has charged that the peer and a member of the Commons and several promin- ent clergymen have attended parties run by the racketeers, who, it said, blackmail homo- Ottawa Faces Probe As Voting Day Nears The principal announced can- didate to date is Controller Don Reid, a merchant who acted as mayor when Miss Whitton was away for several weeks this spring. But Wednesday night, follow- ing a bitter shouting exchange with Mayor Whitton in the city hall press room, Mr. Greenberg threatened to,run for mayor "'in the name of justice" to remove Miss Whitton from office. He told reporters he would run "'if that is necessary to re- store the fundamental laws of democracy to the administra- tion of this city." . The blow-up occurred after council in a special two-hour session endorsed board of con- trol's recommendation for the inquiry. Mr. Greenberg, president of Minfo Construction Company Limited, went into the press room to read a statement to re- porters and was followed there by Miss Whitton. She ordered him to leave. | The contractor refused. "T'll stay here until I die,"| he shouted. "This is public property, I am a taxpayer and I have as much right in this room as you." Other controllers and alder- men were drawn to the scene as the mayor, shouting back, said the press room was for the convenience of reporters, Population Now Over 19-Million OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's population topped the 19,000,000 mark in June, with every prov- ince showing an increase except Prince Edward Island. Figures released Wednesday by the bureau of statistics show there were an estimated 331,000 more Canadians in June of this year than there were in June, The total population of the country is estimated now at 19,- 237,000, up from 18,896,000 last sexuals as a Sideline. June. |emergency humanitarian _ rea- sons, as well as sales of food and medicines. Under the treaty aggression against one of the American re- publics is to be regarded as ag- LATE NEWS FLASHES tribunals, just after the war,|often of noble blood, aid women|functionaries from prisons, Barracks-room orgies often|S'ession against all of them, but most of the SS women es- with so little schooling they|where they were serving terms|ended with drunken male and caped punishment. Allied authorities in general rarely could scratch out their names on pay chits for criminal offences. Perry Broad, a female SS guards forcing half- former SS|starved prisoners to put on sex! HAVANA (Reuters)--The Cu-| ban goverhment Wednesday in-| four-power conference for the conflict and the future status. insula, DeGaulle Urges Vietnam Parley PARIS (AP) -- President de Gaulle today proposed a settlement of the Vietnamese of the whole Indochinese pen- |Malays poured into the streets \of Singapore for more racial |break of racial rioting in Singa- eleeted representatives and civic officials. Miss Whitton, who over the years has had a running feud with Ottawa contractor Robert Campeau, said Mr. Greenberg should bring his charges to the fore by running against her. "T will run against you for mayor,"' retorted Mr. Green- berg. "You can't push me around; I'm not the slightest bit afraid of you." At one stage in the tiff, Mr. Greenberg: raised his hand to begin reading his statement and Miss Whitton seemed to brace herself, as though expect- summer Wednesday - night, po- lice. said. There were no riot arrests. No streets were sealed off in the Negro community where violence had flared for four nights in a row following the fatal shooting of a 15-year-old Negro boy by a white police lieutenant, Fifty-four Negroes were' ar- rested Wednesday night and early today in Brooklyn. The violence erupted less than three hours after Mayor Robert F, Wagner made a television and radio appeal for peace and said: "Law and order are the Negro's best friend. The oppo- site of law and order is mob rule, the way of the Ku Klux Klan and the lynch mob." The mayor, who interrupted a trip to Europe and flew home Tuesday, announced a program to end racial violence and prom- ised increased: efforts to end slum conditions, to recruit more Negroes for the police force and ligt charges of police bru- tality. Wagner later told reporters that there is "some evidence" of Communist instigation of the racial rioting. posed mostly of Negro teen- agers gathered around a truck with a loudspeaker and jeered officials of the National Associ- ation for the Advancement. of --- a hog they appealed groes Poles the dg fer Ayers 8 fag said in a resolu' at "the can no longer be Piri ae The leaders--clergymen, mer- chants and political figures-- told police they can no longer serve as restraining influences in their community of 500,000. In Harlem, police raided the headquarters of the black na- tionalist group headed by. Mal- colm X in a hotel room. They said they seized a loaded rifle and more than 100 rounds of ammniunition, Mayor Wagner announced a ing a blow, (Continued on Page 3) SINGAPORE -- Chinese and battles today, causing at least seven deaths and pushing the official death toll to 18 since the communal rioting began Tues- day night. Hospitals. reported 65 more injured were brought in after four hours of serious clashes, most of them during a morn- ing break in the curfew to al- low people to buy food. Three of the injured died today. Rahman said today the out- pore may cause him to shorten his visit to the United States and Canada, He was due to make a three-day visit to Ot- tawa Monday. Conflicting official reports of the total number of injured in the battling ranged from 192 to more than 300. Police, riot units and troops had hauled in 1,038 persons on curfew violation charges and another 195 were charged with unlawful assembly of rioting. A senior army officer said "if the police and army had not moved so quickly. it would have been a bloodbath." More than 6,000 troops and police are patrolling the island. Local police and military units were reinforced Wednesday from Malaya. ; The curfew in effect for 18 hours until 5:30 a.m., was re- laxed somewhat in an apparent attempt to prevent complete stagnation of the. island's bustl- Asian Race Feud Toll Reaches 18 persons with curfew passes. There were no reports of seri- ous incidents since the morning. Instead of people, the streets here and there showed the de- bris of violence--a burned out car leaning into a storm sewer, upturned crates, lumps of ma- sonry and sticks which had been used as weapons and thousands of broken bottles. Sa aay ei staan ing economy. Beginning tomor- formed the United Nations that! row, the new curfew-free hours shows on improvised stages set|the sit | * of ; igi 'l A , [up on the tables of SS mess United States provocations. in| ct@@k-Cypriots Want UK Out jare from 5:30 a.m. to: 10 a.m. attributed to their male counter- Poteet gg cy ag open| "were thrilled by the knowledge| halls, _The prisoner "'actors" Guantanamo naval base had NICOSIO "(Reuters) -- Greek-Cypriot members .of the |and from 3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. te -re Iaoeyir oh Ste a ae had inflicted pain" were invariably killed after created an "exceedingly grave} House of Representatives today unanimously adopted a mo- | During the 34-hour curfew *s _, iving matter un-jon their charges. Broad is one|their performances. |risk" which could Jead to a con-| tion! that the British contingent should withdraw from the |break prices rocketed by as -- . life." These were pri-| of 21 former SS guards and| Where are these SS women/flict endangering world peace. | United Nations peace-keeping force on Cyprus. /much as 25 per cent and some pean dis uel ok ee i aaa on "er vo ; '| In a note to Secretary-General : jcanned food was sold at ex- yone els illing ccept|in Frankfurt. egal authorities say most of Thant, Raul Roa, Cuba's Wh \tremely high pri oor-to- the dictates of Nazi ideology Survivors of women's camps them have settled into the| armed forces minister, teed Chrysler Earns $60-Million More door Sere au elk a put into practice what testify that SS women boasted| mainstream of German _life,| the U.S. government with re-| _ NEW YORK (AP) -- Chrysler Corp. reported today a ling to go into the streets. their convictions demanded,|of their ability to exceed each|working at careers or radsing/sponsibility for the fatal shoot-| jump in nt income to $60,600,000 in the three months ended | By mid-afternoon Singapore's ome women took basic training] other in cruelty. They competed|families. Some likely went to|ing of a Cuban border guard at| June 30. In the same period a year ago earnings were jstreets 'were nearly deserted at various Camps, then went iolfor ihe job of helping at mass|the United States as war brides. Guantanamo Sunday night. $41,700,000. 'except for security forces and were reluctant.to believe) Whatever their background,| trooper, wrote in his account of| women capable of the atrocities|all shared one thing in common} Auschwitz that the SS women| FRONTLESS This is a view of the "'Peeke a-boo" cut swim suit of elastic material, which was shown at the current fashion show in Florence, Italy, by the Galit- zine House of Rome. (AP Wire Photo via cable from Rome }- { CITY. EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211

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