Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Jul 1964, p. 1

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span mpepees Tere, = os GP et eet I Sle Thought For Today ' Men spoiled by misfortune probably would have been ruined permanently fortune. VOL. 93 -- NO. 176 by good he Oshawn Gi OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1964 Weather Report Another sweltering night with increasing chance of thunder- storms. Cooler Wednesday. - uthetiand of Second Clase Mall Pest. Otten Oromia Ottawa for payment of in Cash, Pestage TWENTY-FOUR PAGES: TEARFUL PRAYER Vietn SAIGON (AP) -- Communist US. Boosts am Forces Navy men and a somewhat SAY HOODS STILL RULING SEAMEN IL sy |} big boost in its military man-|eral thousang over a period of guerrillas killed four American|larger number of air force men military men today as the U.S.\are expected to be included in government made plans for ajthe over-all expansion of sev- power in South Viet Nam. some months. HOPE WANING One of the dead was a U.S.) Washington officials say about Army major, shot to death py a|16,250 American military advis-| age + on Cong pee bg and trainers already are in jin broad daylight in a Roman|South Viet Nam, deployed in | Catholic village 10 miles north-|the field with government} oe rage " ; forces or with headquarters) | Two U.S. Army officers and! staffs, jan air-force man were killed) Were's how the total breaks | |by a mine set off under their) qown: French Quarry Slide Traps 14 Dief, Fisher Demand Checks On Trustees new leaders of 'the Canadian SIU would be given a-free hand to continue Banks's. practices and in return the SIU would guarantee labor peace on -he Great Lakes this summer. ; OTTAWA (CP) -- An aroused opposition charged in the Com- mons Monday that gangsters still rule Canadian seamen, with the connivance of the govern- |jeep as they drove in a convoy) | Of five vehicles on a road 21) about 5,000; navy, about 750;| began to fade today for 14 men| miles south of Saigon. The toll of Americans killed in action in this Communist- |menaced country since Decem- |ber, 1961, rose to 163. | Up to 3,000 more American |military advisers and training personnel may be sent to swell ithe U.S, force of about 16,250) jalready in the country, No ex-| \tension of the Americans' lim- Army, about 10,000; air force, marines, about 500. There was speculation that the boost in aircraft strength may mean the assignment of more C-123 transport planes, The C-123, a propeller-driven plane designed for landings and takeoff on short fields, has proved particularly valuable in supply and other missions in: the CHAMPAGNOLE (AP)--Hope entombed for almost 24 hours in a limestone mine in the Jura Mountains of eastern France. A drill pipe sunk through 128 feet of mud and rock broke through into an intact part of the mine. Rescuers lowered a sensitive listening device down the six-inch tube but heard only the sound of dripping water and falling stones. | The men had been entombed ment and the federally ~ ap- with the 30-mile labyrinth more|P0inted maritime union trus- than 12 hours' when sensitive|"€®S- ' | special equipment, flowh to the . Opposition Leader Diefen- scene by helicopter, caught what} baker and Douglas Fisher, New seemed to be faint tapping. | Democratic Party House leader, | Two drills went to work above| Called for a searching parlia- ispots where the sounds were| mentary investigation into the heard, The drill reached 4 of them depth of 130 feet, past where it : : | should have broken through, but|_ Eldon Woolliams (PC -- Bow there was no breakthrough. The| River) charged that Hal Banks, |engineers concluded they had| deposed boss of the Seafarers i International Union of Canada} Mr. Diefenbaker said Red Mc- Laughlin, "this man whose ree- ord desecrated the decencies," now discharges the respons#bill- ties of SIU president. . All members of the Commons agreed that McLaughlin is un- three trustees' activities, or lack| arceptable as the SIU boss, but the trustees appointed by Par- iament kept him on. CALLED MOCKERY Mr. Woolliams said Banks's ited combat role was in pros-|War against the Viet Cong in scattered and remote Officials said the absence of drilled into one of the big pil-| reported escape to the U.S, was pect. widely The four American dead were) Places. reported by reliable sources who could not give the circum- WORK AT SEA . fe (CP Wirephoto) | stances In addition to work at milit- URC TR SESS by ? . iary assistance _ headquar- Four more dead would' bring} +,;. and. in schools. .@.:major the total Americans killed in|... " laction against the Communist| mission of the U.S. Navy con-| in : _\tingent is working with the) car pg aa |small craft patrols of the South lars i | (Ind.), paid off- prominent Lib- --o ae Har erals to escape detention on a The rescue squads were try- Quebec contempt-of-court con- ing to sink a ventilation shaft|Viction. ; poof if they were alive and'well.| about six inches in diameter| . Mr. Fisher said the SIU con- One official said it was pos-jand 65 to 100 feet deep. This| tinues to persecute seamen who sible that the area of the mine| would assure a supply of air to|0PP0Se Banks, depriving them under the drill pipe was cut off|the trapped men and would en-|f jobs. The te = from where ghee! hag shel-| able surface workers to get| DilKed and bamboozled Parlia- i ca i tering. But in that case the res-|messages and food to them. | . : The new commander of Amer- wane" cha ee yy cuers face new and formidable} Scores of tearful relatives} Mr. Diefenbaker said the trus- ican forces in the Pacific, Ad-|supplies for the guerrillas, -- difficulties when they break| and friends stood by as the work| tees have not interfered with miral U. §. Grant Sharp, told] . through into the mine. went on through the night under| Leonard (Red) McLaughlin and reporters today he doubts| Navy personnel go out on the' The drillers had worked) the glare of floodlights. lother Banks henchmen even events are leading to a general|Patrolling craft to advise on tactics and to check on the per- human sounds was "very dis-| turbing."" They said the men! would have come to the point where the pipe pierced the mine} a mockery of justice. He won- dered "how much money he poured into the Liberal coffers be help them win the (last) elec. ion." "He was a gangster when he was permitted to come here. He was a gangster after he came here and he is still at 'sd Jack Bigg (PC -- Al ). a former RCMP officer, volhn- teered to take two weeks off, hunt down Banks and bring him back to Canadian justice "by the ear." year-old brother who told police: "Truck break David." Mrs. John Moore sits be- side the body of her son, David, 24, praying for his life. But David was already dead, struck by a car on the outskirts of Prince George, B.C, The car didn't stop. The only witness was David's four- New Riot Possibility Worries Rochester through the night at one spect}. A mine official said: "Once| though Mr. Justice T. G. Norris without making a breakthrough.| we can communicate with them,| had recommended they be pros- war in Asia and that he is op-| sands of workers are released ROCHESTER, N.Y. (CP-AP) i: their normal days off. Violence - ridden Rochester semblance of normality from a|mented by thousands of Ne- national guard and state police. timistic about progress in South! He told reporters later that his|yjet Nam. Rochester's racial strife--fo-|tour of the battered areas con-| Sharp arrived in Saigon on gling work at schools ashore. vinced him that the situation|pis first visit to Viet Nam. He, was in hand but that the guard struggled today to regain a bloody weekend of race rioting after Governor Nelson Rockefel- ler during a surprise visit said the Lake Ontario city was a vic- groes anmq some whites--left a tragic toll of four dead, at least 350 injured and millions of dol- lars in property damage. Neue opps ee | Neb strong, stor preserve law and Sarr - folled into and the 400-man force of state troopers would be kept on duty "as long as necessary." The violence, touched off when. police attempted to arrest a Negro youth scuffling outside will confer with Lt.-Gen. Wil- liam C. Westermoreland, U.S. commander in Viet Nam, "to see what we can do better and) to see what more we can do." ; The South Vietnamese govern- ant sree UN Gun Check formance of Vietnamese who have been trained in anti-smug- ecuted for conspiracy and other Mr. Fisher criticized the trus- Then they moved the rig sev-|half the battle is won although eral yards up the hill and it may take two days or more | Started again. to get. them out." sscigi The mine burrows deep within the 2,575-foot mound known as | offences. | DENIES CHARGE Donald S. Macdonald, parlia- Greeks Refuse Mt. Rivel, a source of lime- stone for more than 100 years. The only entrance to the quarry-mine was blocked for more than 1,600 feet by the cave-in, a dance hall Friday night, sub- sided in the pre-dawn_ hours Monday. buildup Monday after a confer-| ence between Premier Nguyen Khanh and U.S. Ambassador) Authorities kept a state-of-|Maxwell D. Taylor. emergency night'. time curfew; A U.S. spokesman said the clamped on the city in only|arrival of personne] would be slightly modified form, Any cit-|gradual, and the number now izen found on the streets with-|planned. might be changed as ATHENS (AP) -- President Makarios has rejected a United|were guaranteed under the} | Nations request to let the peace| agreement which set up the UN force check arms imports by his Greek-Cypriots. The archbishop turned down Thant said such access rights force to seek peace between the warring Greek. and Turkish- Cypriots. as years of quarrying hollowed | Mine officials safa-tné tiside of the quarry-mine was some- | thing like a cathedral with. a high vaulted ceiling supported \by pillars every 24 feet or so. These pillars, each six to' nine feet in diameter, have been left mentary secretary to Justice Minister Favreau, denied Mr. Woolliams's claim that Banks tees for inaction. "T feel a little stupid about this," he said, "but I actually recommended privately to the minister of labor (last fall) that he choose Charles Millar' as one of the trustees. "purchased his freedom at the hands of the Liberal govern- ment." Labor Minister MacEachen's office said the minister may make a statement today when debate continues on a routine bill to give the government spending authority for August and September. Mr. Fisher said a deal has been made informally between 'Shot For Shot' At Navy Base Fidel Warns SANTIAGO (CP)--Fidel Cas- tro warned the United States Monday night that Cuba will "answer shot for shot" if "an- other man is murdered" by U.S. Marines at the Guanta- namo naval base. The Cuban prime minister held a 3%%-hour press confer- ence for 33 American newspa- per men visiting Cuba at his in- vitation and 40 other foreign newspaper men who came to Santiago for the celebration of his 26th of July revolutionary movement. | Castro again rejected the U.S: denial of his charge that U.S. Marines killed a Cuban sentry at the Guantanamo border two weeks ago. Castro made clear that he would not give up his ties with the Soviet Union to improve re- lations with the United Staes. "Cuba wants to have the same kind of relations with the United States that the United States wants to have with the Soviet Un'on," he said. ut the vault. The workers said)Mr. MacEachen or his repre- | the interior is large enough for} sentatives and Paul Hall, boss jtractors and dump trucks to/of the parent SIU in the United | operate. 'States, The deal was that the tim of extremism but there was Ee "ygenbalalier Sew. to Rochester , 'onday while an uneasy truce|Rochester Sunday *night.on" or- was being enforced by hun-\ders from Rockefeller, who state police. He said the racial/ficials. violence was clear evidence of| City, and state police, backed fied, but he felt that there was|hoses were unable to enforce a feace which tipped through Newlaignt and Sunday morning. But UN peorstaty ee cg ae : Makarios denied it, saying: | 9, York's Harlem and a Negro|a show of force by the troops|the hours of 8:30 p.m. and Thant's request Monday before «phe stationing of United Na-| area of Brooklyn. umbling through the darkened/6 a.m. was subject to arrest. hate ; : i fe : buildup of U.S. military man-| Greek -- George -- wouid 'be an understandable ter prompted hopes that some|sired sobering effect on the|from 8 p.m. to 7 a.m. power in South Viet Nam may|@reou. He told reporvers alter) neasure if United Nations ob- lution could be found to curb|/rampaging, pillaging mobs. | i : : ; , em eee ae | All liquor sales and bars re-'3999 army men to provide|leaders that the two countries tioned at Turkish ports where the week was out. section--lined with boarded-up|roe County, encompassing Roch-| 7°re on-the-spot advisers andhave reached an "'absolute|an armada for invading Cyprus} CW Vy rges i ficials said pri-jstore windows shattered by]; i as : ee tess. fh ester, and the sale of firearms)" Another 200 or 300 American Asked in what direction the) 'So! long as the Turkish) 2 bloody weekend might erupt/conferred for 90 minutes with) 7,3 while thtee. iudocs : : Dull ) i nd thou-! local officials and officers of the A eggs : eed the Greek-Cypriot president re-|military forces in the ports of O an ane ns cons. 8 ag A gies Hat K AND ERHARD \plied, "Toward Enosis," union|Turkey approximate to Cyprus n in "i a neg | 4 =| AGREE TO TALK LF ats toe Oe Greek-Cypriots|republic is bound to take all) TORONTO (CP) -- The Cana-| DEISORE ACE RECOR Fi Uae |have been arriving in the' Cyp-\military measures for the de-| dian Society for the Abolition of|prisonment with the possibility 250 prisoners charged with fel- BONN (Reuters) -- Both |riot port of Limassol, but the|fence of the island including th the Death Penalty was officially|of release on parole, Mr. Ma- 1 B th aaten-one gn sieting,, bueeaTy, and West German Chancei- |Ried access to the docks. Thant) High UN officials on Cyprus|!awyer Arthur Maloney as its) roled murderers have proved to gers 1g re eren for the grand jury--with bail| lor chard fave declared |in @ message to Makarios July\say freedom of movement first president. |be the most successful risks. ie .., set at $10,000, | | : ' i iety' i believes the death penalty is not VE AP)--Dr. Mar-|the leaders of 69 political, relizi- ES On c land demanded free. access for)tial for the UN operation. If the| ference the society's principal . ath pel Ney ORK NP) all} Soviet- West German sum- |tn forees to all parts of the/restrictions continue, a spokes-| aim is to abolish the death pen-|the only effective deterrent to ith M Robert F. Wagner/zations in Harlem agreed on a Negroes, were charged with) mit meeting, the chief West | win Mayor hover Fe eee € i yf lesser crimes, including intoxi- Lowi ith decid the Security| | the group is disturbed about the today about New York's racial list of issues, including two de- iaan Mietiiiced 1oday. ce pada et peace force wi lets ecided by urity! It will also aim: inequality of its application and ' : , ...|unlawful assembly. There are) Spokesman Guenther von te : : --To develop public support expressed anger that King did! 1, The suspension of white stout 25,000 Néproes: th the § aS ; t{ cae techie "wine oan not consult them first. Police Lieut. Thomas Gilligan, a tinea penalty. Hs circumstantial, meeting, which-ended at 2 a.m., that he would meet with "'sum- sections of New York City. Before leaving Atlanta, Ga., Negroes in New York to halt violence and lawlessness, warn- civil rights movement. He also said he might make peace tours N.Y., scene of weekend rioting and looting. tified Monday in a state Su- preme Court hearing that Wil- described Communist, told a se- cret Harlem meeting last week smashed," and "we're going to have to kill cops and judges." tinued a restraining or- der against demonstrations by fence Council. Marlem commurity _ leaders **unity council." L. Joseph Overton, a leader of no evidence of outside agitation. dreds of helmeted city and|acted at the request of local of- extremism that cannot oe justi-/py firemen with high-pressure lence which ripped through New|night and Sunday morning. But/out justifiable reason between/circumstances deveolped. WASHINGTON (AP) -- The|arriving in Athens for talks with|tions observers in Cyprus ports The relative quiet in Roches-|streets in trucks had the de-| The original restriction © was include the addition of up to|an hour meeting with Greek servers were also to be sta-| the simmering unrest before) After his tour of the Negro|mained closed throughout Mon- trainers in the battle zones. jidentity of views."' has been concentrated .. . y y d ther} bricks and bottles--Rockefeller i : rn Gecaais aigut aceat cas hbase rg \Cyprus dispute was heading,|buildup and concentration of ° : leased with suspended sentences continue, the government of the Ki Sol Conference The society favors life im- Ing $ 0 three nights of violence. About| Soviet Premier Khrushchev |UN. peace force has been de-|importation. of arms." » |formed Monday with Toronto|loney said, He added that pa- or larceny--were ordered held thelr readiness '.to hold' « |22 expressed growing concern|throughout the island is essen-| Mr. Maloney told a press: con- Mr. Maloney said the society . ; ee ; | Those released, virtually all) i ath King Jr. conferred|ous, business and civic organi- ' ' } : t ee Somer sd : island. Canada is a major con-|man said, the issue will have|alty in Canada. the crime of murder. He said German government spokes- ituati 4 Harlem. leaders| mands: cation, disorderly conduct and : situation an s S: Dp. the possibility of error, espe- for the abolition of the death P "f P Hase told a press confer- King said after the 3%4-hour mit leaders' in the riot-torn Monday night, King had urged ing that they could set back the this weekend in Rochester, New York City policemen tes- liam Epton, a Negro and self- that "the state must he Justice Gerald P. Culkin con- Epton's group, the Harlem De- me! Monday night to form a the Haren Labor Council, said CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 whose fatal shooting of a Negro boy touched off the bloody riot- jing. Gilligan said he fired in self-defence. 2. The "immediate "appoint-| ment by the mayor of a repre- sentative independeent civilian city's population of 315,000. New 401 Stretch : Opens On Friday TORONTO (CP) -- The north Adzhu bei, Khrushchev's son - in - law, told Erhard at a meeting here this morning Khrush- chev considered an ox- change of views be'ween the two heads of government | 'Renegade' Writer Sees 'Dief, PM At Impasse --To make representations to| alty. organizations favoring its ob- the federal government for aj will maintain a permanent of- law to abolish the death pen-| fice and secretary and solicit | funds from industry, service and --To maintain close ties with| welfare organizations and pri- jvate individuals. Mr. Maloney said the society "The United States tries to maintain a cold war with us and at the same time wants te mprove relations with the So- viet Union. jectives. And to co-ordinate complaint review board, with lanes of a 14-mile section of subpoena power," to deal pri-|Highway 401 extending from marily with charges of police| Cornwall to a mile east of Lan- brutality. caster will be opened to traffic The police department began Friday, it was announced to- assigning more Negroes to Har- The south lanes on. the sane lem. Five Negro sergeants re- stretch were opened in Septem- would be useful. "German readiness to taik with the Soviet prime mini- ster in Bonn over an unlim- ited range of subjects was confirmed," the spokesman added | GENEVA PARK, Ont. (CP)--|wkere the leaders of the two} Ottawa author and correspond-|major parties no longer: have} j}ent Peter C. Newman says self-| mutual respect for each other,"| discipline among members of/he told the Couchiching confer-) Parliament is necessary to im-jence of the Canadian Institute prove. the Canadian system of on Public Affairs Monday. government. Mr. Newman, author of the| ¢ 'However, there is little hope controversial best-seller Rene-| work of regional and loca |for self-discipline in a Commons! gade in Power, a book on the) b placd five white sergeants.|ber, 1962. | {years sf John Diefenbaker as} the activities of these other groups. --To conduct research into an alternative to the death pen- alty. To achieve its aims the so- iety plans to establish a net- ranches in the 10 provinces. The society, started by third- fairs editor of Maclean's Maga-|low of Kitchener, received its)?" BUTLER TELLS REDS ON LAOS Keep Trying For Peace MOSCOW (Reuters) -- British Foreign Secretary Richard A. Butler made a powerful appeal to the Russians today to con- tinue working with Britain to keep peace in Laos, informed sources said here. He began a five-day Moscow visit by calling on Premier Khrushchey at the Kremlin and on Andrei Gromyko, the foreign minister, for wide-ranging talks. The sources said Butler's strong appeal for continued. co- operation over Laos was one of the main factors in this morn- ing's .discussions. They said he warned Gro- myko that a chaotic situation in Laos would benefit "only those who are not necessarily our friends.¥ Butler urged the Soviet gov- plied threat made on the eve of last weekend for a new Laos his visit to give up the co-chair- conference to meet next month, manship of the 1962 Geneva and warned that rejection of conference on Laos this proposal might force it to Britain is the other co-chair- give up the co-chairmanship, man. Both countries share re- The sources said Gromyko sponsibility for safeguarding the made it clear at today's talk neutrality of the Southeas t that the Soviet Union has no in- Asian kingdom. tention of paying any part of Butler said he plans to sub--Unied Nations peacekeep- mit new ideas on Laos to Gro-\ing costs for The Congo and | pean minister, is national af-| year law student Paul T. Mat- izine. He will become an Ottawa|c harter June 5. correspondent 'for the Toronto 'Star this fall. In his address he referred to| the personal feelings between Mr. Diefenbakr, now opposi- ' : \tion leader, and Prime Minister which existed before February. pearson and their' influence on| Butler. stressed Anglo - Soviet | the discipline of members. | common interests" in a Laos "My: Pearson has fot' been| solution and said it was impor- 2 : : tant Britain and Russia continue ble to deal effectively with the opposition leader. because he to work together Gromyko said the 1962 Ge- neva agreements guaranteeing Laotian neutrality had been vio- lated and that the United Siates continued to interfere in the h p enbaker seriously." REGARDED AS IMPOSTOR On the other hand, 'Mr. Dief-| Gems Worth | $500-Thousand | Gunmen Take PARIS (AP) -- Four bandits otel today, exchanged fire with sems to be finding it increas-/Seized $500,000 worth of jewels} ingly difficult to take Mr, Dief-/in @ pre-dawn raid on a Paris olice and escaped in a black), | sedan. A stray bullet killed a taxi 3 myko. The Soviet minister said they will be studied by the Kremlin. Informed sources said these 'new ideas" probably would be handed to the Russians later to- day. The sources said Gromyko ex- pressed grave alarm at the sit: uation in Laos but said Moscow had not yet taken final deci- sions on how to deal with it Middle East. Butler told Gromyko Britain is not against a 14-nation Laos conference as proposed by the Kremlin but wants further dis- cussions on 'how it should be or- ganized. He said that first it was nee- essary to unite the Laot'an fac- tions 'under Prince Souvanna Phouma, the neutralist premier, to arrange a cease-fire, and for country's affairs. Russia, Gromyko said,' wants only a neutral, independent Laos. Gromyko said he could not ac- cept Butler's: view that the sit- uation is better than it was three months ago. He called the situation intolerable, said the Sduvanna Phouma government was paralysed, and that the prime minister was a prisoner ernment not to carry out an im-| The Soviet government called|troop positions to evert to those|of reactionaries. j 7 enbaker gives the impression of| driver, Henri-Eugene Andre, 37, regarding Mr, Pearson as an|who was parked across the impostor,.a man who only pre-| street. tends that he is a politician." The bandits pulled off the rob-| Mr. Newman said the prime/bery in the lobby of the Plaza} minister tends to dismiss Mr.| Athenee Hotel. They strode di-| Diefenbaker as an "unworthy| rectly to jewelry display cases opposition"' because he "knows| and, after failing to hack them that John Diefenbaker has been open with hatchets, blasted discredited by all the national'through the. reinforced glass and international establishment) wih pistol shots. One of the groups which he (Mr, Pearson)| group held hotel employees at 'regards as being significant." |bay with a machine-gun. HIGHEST APE Randy, a 4-year-old gibbon from Thailand, is percheg at the very top of 11,245-foot Mt. Hood which she went up yes- terday with help of five climb- ers. She rode just about all the way on pack of Ted Davis, ber owner, but dis- not. hurt. her, mounted at summit-and crouched in snow beside U.S. flag on ice axe, Reason for the climb: To publicize Ore- gon attractions, said Davis. . Zoo veterinarian said it would (AP Wirephoto)

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