Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Aug 1964, p. 1

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a ee ee ere eek ek bel nak Sui Thought For Today Some candidates stand for what they think people will fall for. VOL. 93.-- NO. 184 Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1964 The Osharon Cimes Weather erly 10-20, Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department of Postage in Cash, Ottowa ond for payment Report Sunny with cloudy periods and cooler on Saturday. Winds west- EIGHTEEN PAGES | | _ MP Greene Opposing Templeton TORONTO (CP)---J. J. (Joe) {only Mr. Templeton had '"'that) Greene, member of the House quality of dynamism withou of Commons for Renfrew South, which a party so long in the!| formally announced his candi-| wilderness cannot get the en-) = dacy for the Ontario Liberal/thusiasm and support to leadership today, coupling it/achieve office." with a challenge to Charles) Mr. Greene said he_ realizes Templeton to meet him in athat challenging Mr. Temple- television debate ton, a former television per- For Mr. Greene, 44, an Arn- sonality, to a TV debate is a prior lawyer, it will be his sec- 'calculated risk." ond attempt to win the Liberal "He is an experienced and,» leadership. He was also in the polished television performer, race when John Wintermeyer|while I'm a_ backwoods law- was chosen in 1958. Mr. Greene yer,"' he added finished third, behind Walter' Mr. Templeton, 48, is a one- Harris, former federa) finance time evangelist who resigned minister. as executive news editor of the! ; By tossing his hat in the Toronto Star to seek the lead- ring, Mr. Greene brings to six ership and the vacant Toronto} the number of men who have|Riverdale seat in the legisla-} declared their candidacy for}ture. the Liberal leadership, vacated Besides by the defeat of Mr. Winter- of the legislature for Brant, McNAMARA TALKS TO NEWSMEN Mr. Nixon, member FORGES ON ALE tion with the slaying of a Wash- ington, D.C., Negro education- ist who was killed. by a shot- gun blast as he drove through a rural Georgia area. The FBI the Ku Klux Klan. U.S. Commissioner '|Hawkins said one of the four-- James S. Lackey, 28--admitted /complicity in the death of Le- jmuel Penn, an army reserve meyer in the Ontario generaliand Mr. Thompson, member) Fat election last Sept. 25 for Toronto Dovercourt, 'two e e bd bed Mr. Greene, who first entered|other provincial members also the House of Commons in 1963,!are in the race--Eddie Sargent 1C e Ing ml e singled out Mr. Templeton as|(Grey North) and Joe Gould being the only one of the other|(Toronto Bracondale.) five contestants who has the)*Mr. Greene told the press "dynamism" that might unseat)conference he does not regard John Robarts and his Progres-jhis own lack of a_ provincial sive Conservative government At a press conference he cOMm-| referred lseat as a serious handicap. He to the late Mitchel pletely ignored those regarded|Hepburn, the Ontario Liberal! as the leaders in the Liberal|premier who left federal poli-/@'s Of Toronto's and tics to gain the Ontario leader- 36, 39--saying fight--Robert Nixon, Andrew Thompson, Polish President Dies In Warsaw WARSAW (Reuters) -- Polish President Aleksander Zawad- ski died here today, Radio War-| saw and the Polish news agency Pap said. ship, saying Mr. Hepburn had) ~ not been hampered by starting) from the federal arena. The grey - haired father of jfive, who presented his. wife,! {three daughters and two sons to. the press gathering, com- jpared the Conservative govern- ment of Premier Robarts with the former Union Nationale -re-| gime of Maurice Duplessis in| 'Quebec, j At Toronto Papers TORONTO (CP) -- Publish-| three daily| newspapers. obtained a- tem-| porary injunction Thursday lim-jers will seek to extend it. It/ers to withdraw their advertis- iting their striking printers to| was obtained without represea-| ments from the newspapers un- three pickets at each entrance to the newspapers The injunction, issued by the) Ontario Supreme Court, also) prohibits the International Typographical Union (CLC) from calling the dispute a lock- out. The printers, who have been off their jobs sirice July 9, are hibited from -distributing,| U Thant New Conference WASHINGTON (CP - UN Secretary-General U Thant has suggested to the U.S. gov- ernment several undisclosed possibilities to help solve the crisis in Southeast Asia and says he personally favors another 14- country Geneva conference to deal with the problem Thant also expressed the opin- Favors pi publishing or displaying an: placard, tabloid, sticker, hand- bill or any other document claiming they are locked out. The Globe and Mail, a morn- ing paper, and The Star and The Telegram, evening papers, AP)--/|that North Viet Nam, the key); {power involved, ber. Thant visited Washington Thursday for a day of talks with President Johnson and other high U.S. officials. The president} climaxed Thant's visit with a gala White House banquet On the question of a new 14- is not a mem- have continued to publish since} and non-union personnel to do) composing room work U.S. House Re Back Johnson WASHINGTON (AP) The ion that the Security Council is country Geneva conference, U-S. House of Representatives not the place to bring about a\Thant differed with the Ameri-|@PProved today a cong settlement in Southeast Asia atican position. Communist China, | Tesolution this time because of the coun- cil's limited powers and the fac Prospects Bright For BNA Change OTTAWA (CP) -- Informed observers here say the pros- pects now are brighter than ever for federal provincial agreement on a formula for making Canadian amendments to the British North America Act Prime Minister Pearson proposing to put the issue on the agenda for his . meeting with the premiers in Charlotte- town Sept. 1-2. Next step likely would 'be a conference of attor- neys-general to work on details. Success, which has so far eluded Canada's political lead- ers for 37. years, would mean that Westminster would be asked to make one last change in the original BNA Act of 1867, a change to make it a Ca- nadian statute. Only then would Canada lose its embarrassing status as the only member of the Commonwealth that must go to London each time it wants to change its own constitution. New hope for unanimity among the 11 governments based on two factors 1. A growing 'desire 'to patriate' the Canadian consti- tution before the 1967 centenary of Confederation 2. The change from a CCF to a Liberal government. in Sas katchewan, which. was the chief dissenter from a draft-amend- ing formula worked out in 1960 and 1961 is "Te- PHONE NUMBERS CITY EMERGENCY POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 99 9 "Ure North Viet Nam,and Russia jence without any pre-conditions. | 'The U.S. says that rather than} having another Geneva confer- ence now, it would be better for the. Communist nations to start} living up to the agreements) made at the last one, held in 1954 that resulted in the par- titioning of. French Indochina into four states -- North and South Viet Nam, Cambodia and Laos U.S. officials said today the United States asked for Secur- ,ity Council consideration of the North Viet Nam PT (patrol-tor- pedo) boat action because the UN charter calls for a report when a member acts in self-de- fence. The U.S. call for the council session amounts to reporting be- ressional backing Presi- dent Johnson's- actions in. the t have been urging such a confer-|50utheast Asia: crisis. The resolution had the sup-| port of Republican as well as Democratic party leaders. "This is one of those occa- sions when all of us, whatever our political persuasion, unite behind our commander in- chief," said Representative Frances P. Bolton (Rep. Ohio), ranking Republican on the House foreign affairs commit-/Cormack, president of Local 91|warning him it would be use- tee Senate action': -- with over-|cal Union (CLC), said Thursday|The letter also said that if Mr. whelming approval also certain) he will meet Monday in Ottawa|Freiman att --was expected this afternoon |with Claude Jodoin, president|to Europe "you and your fam- A. long speech of opposition) from Senator Wayne (Dem. Ore.) delayed action But few listened to him. At one point, only two other sen- ators were in the chamber Morse said Congress abandoning its constitutional) Thursday's injunction is fective until Monday at 2 p.m. when lawyers for. the publish- tations being heard from the union» About 200 pickets had gath- ered outside three back en- trances to The Telegram Thurs- day, slowing the: movement of trucks leaving. to deliver pa- pers. About 30 pickets were on hand as trucks began pulling in and out of the loading area at The Globe and Mail 'Thursday | nigat. Notiee*of the injunction was served on the pickets by representatives of The Globe and Mail but they continued their slow shuffle at the back of the plant. At 10 p.m. the pickets re- dis order, Talks strike have broken down and no resumption of negotiations is in sight. Meanwhile, Burnett M. Thall, vice-president of The Star, said several printers will return to work at The Star, as the result of letters sent out by the pa- pers Wednesday, inviting the printers to return to work in- dividually. There were reports that four printers, including an apprentice, returned to work at The Telegram Meanwhile, the Toronto and|Gardhouse here. today for. at-|karios Union May Seek National Support TORONTO (CP)--Robert Mc- of the International Typographi- of the Canadian Labor Con- Mors¢/gress, to discuss national sup-| port for the union in its dispute with the three Toronto daily newspapers. Mr, McCormack said at a Council ef- District Labor Council em-| |barked Thursday night on a} campaign to persuade advertis- til the publishers sign .agree- ment with the ITU. The action was taken at the request of the printers. Douglas Fisher, New Deme- cratic member of Parliament for Port Arthur, said Thursday} he will continue to write his) jcolumn of political comment) \for The Telegram until his ur-| lion tells him not to. | Mr: Fisher, a member ofthe +American Newspaper Guild} (CLC), has been criticized by! }the ITU for crossing the picket} jline at The Telegram. Sume} {ITU members called for his resignation as deputy NDP | House leader report for work. Fourteen mem- jgram are not reporting . for | work Man Jailed For 8 Years TORONTO (CP)--Ernest K. |Bryce, 36, of Toronto was sen- tenced to eight years in peni-) tentiary by Magistrate George tempting to extort $125,000 from} 'an Ottawa man by threatening} to kill the latter and his family.| Police had earlier testified jthat businessman Lawrence 'Freiman received a letter in June demanding the money and less to seek police protection. ttempted to escape jily will be killed." Bryce, who pleaded guilty to lextortion, was arrested July 24 when he walked into a police trap set-at a suburban shopping plaza where the money was to) | {full | lieutenant-colonel slain July 11 jas he drove along a rural north- jeast Georgia highway near | neighboring Colbert. Hawkins sakd Lackey implicated the | others, | They were held in jail under |} bonds of $25,000 each after ar- jtaignment before Hawkins on charges filed under the new Civil Rights Act. Meanwhile, state authorities looked into the possibility of |filing murder charges against Lackey, a gas station attend- ant; Herbert Guest, 37, a ga- rage operator; Cecil William Myers, a yarn-picker and Ja- borer, and Joseph Howard Sims, 41, a machinist, all of | Athens, said the men were members of| ver announced the arrests in _,__,| Washington climaxing an inten- Giriard| Arrest Klan Men In Negro ATHENS, Ga. (AP) -- Four| white men were arrested by the FBI Thursday night in connec-} s Death The federal charge against the men carries a maximum penalty of $5,000 fine and 10 years' imprisonment while a first - degree murder charge filed under state laws can carry the death penalty. | FBI Director J. Edgar Hoo- jsive three-week hunt for the Slayers. CEMETERY RAPS STONE REMOVAL CHICAGO. (AP)--A_ Chi- cago cemetery filed a suit asking an injunction to pre- vent a tombstone firm from removing headstones when the buyers fall behind in payments. The suit filed by the Acacia Park Cemetery charges the tombstone firm, Acacia Memorial Markers, has, been causing confusion and disturbing cemetery employees by repossessing the headstones. South Viet SAIGON (CP) -- Premier Maj.-Gen. Nguyen Khanh today proclaimed all of South Viet Nam in a state of emergency. His proclamation in effect placed the country under mar- tial law. The proclamation gave mili- tary courts jurisdiction over all violations of public security with a mandatory death sen- tence without appeal for terror- ists, provocateurs and profit- eers. . Khanh told a press confer- ence the 'coming week will de- cide the destiny of our entire people." The state of emergency pro- vided for press censorship but it was expected this would af- fect the local press only. "According to the needs of national defence, a partial mo- bilization of manpower will be applied," the decree said. After reading the decree and broadcasting to the country, Khanh said: "I am _ leaving right now to deal with my _sol- diers at the front." He told re- porters he would leave for the 17th parallel--the border with Communist Viet Nam. At the Viet Nam border it- self, South Vietnamese forces remained on full alert but U.S. Makarios Relaxes Stand On Barred C UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- |Relaxing his stand slightly, |President Makarios has made a carefully hedged offer to ar- the walkout, using supervisory! moved their signs and began! The Guild contract with Thejrange access for United Na- persing in line with the court) Telegram allows its members to|tions to to peace-keeping forces jareas on Cyprus barred aimed at settling the|bers of The Guild at The Tele-|them. The Greek - Cypriot presi- dent's cable Thursday to Secre- \tary-General U Thant appeared to retreat from the adamant |position Makarios took July 28, when he wrote Thant that it was not possible to let UN pa- trols to enter sensitive areas "where requirements of abso- lute secrecy on matters of state defence and security are in- volved." Thant had protested to Ma-| that Greek-Cypriot au- were barring UN troops from Limassol and other port areas where. the Greek- Cypriots were landing arms. He asked the Cypriot govern- ment to honor its agree- ment granting the UN force freedom of movement" throughout the island. SOME EXCEPTIONS? thorities In his note Thursday, how-| ever, Makarios told Thant: "Irrespective of the legal views: expressed in that com- communication, it is my desire to assure your excellency that the United Nations force in Cy- was| Toronto and District Labor/be picked up from a parked|prus will enjoy full freedom of meeting that if the/car. Police rehearsed the cap-/ movement throughout the terri- fore the Security Counci!, not) duty to decide upon declarations|newspapers are able to break|ture plot three times after Mr.|tory of the republic. asking it to take any action|of war threugh this and similar the ITU despite its resources, now, the officials said _ MPs DUST OFF RULE BOOKS recent resolutions. other unions would be next. Freiman advised them' of the | threat. , "The only exception will be certain localities ... access to Preparing For Flag Fight OTTAWA (CP) -- Prospects} are for the Commons to resume} the flag debate early next week. All parties are preparing for a, tough battle in' which mastery of Commons rules will be at a premium. The Liberals and the three smaller opposition parties--New Democrats, Social Credit and Creditistes -- anticipate .a loag and gruelling debate kept alive by Progressiv.e Conserva- live speakers The Conservatives have al- ready made it plain in the Com- mons and privately that a greai many more of their members| want to participate than the 20) who spoke previously.. Some Conservatives predict the flag resolution will never come to a voie Opposition Leader Diefen- baker has already given a hint of one feature of the Conserva- 'tive attack. He has twice sug- gested. that the government! ostpone the flag debate to in- troduce the Canada Plan Pens.on Servatives will build up a drum-|House that the Conservatives|debate to deal with some press-)be used while the Commons is} fire of similar suggestions as will propose a series of amend-'ing. matter debating an amendment to the 1 the flag debate progresses. The ments to the flag resolution, ex-} Each week that passes ineans| flag resolution, | aim is said to be to portray the|perts have been closely exam- that much less time for getting] This method forces a vote on government as so bent on hav- ing a decision on the flag that no other matter of public im), portance can shake them. ining the rule book parliamentary approval of de- the main resolution, or ques- Each new amendment per- partmental spending. programs|tion, by eliminating the neces: its a new round of debate hy jand that much less time for the) government's legislative pro- Prime Minister Pearson rec- SPeakers who have exhausted) gram, ognized this in his national teie- vision speech Wednesday night. He said the government is "to!d that it (the flag) is a relatively trivial' matter and that. w should go on with other legisia- tion." "The time has come for a de- cision: There is no use saying now, as'I see it, let's postpone it until spring or next summer o a year from now. We will. al- ways have legislation facing us that some people will say i; more important that a flag res- olution." He said he believes a flag will bring Canadians together.; deepen a sense of unity and a! feeling of pride and confidence in Canada their turn to speak. With enough amendments, the debate could be kept going indefinite.y, in theory Many MPs are cgnvinced this the Conservative intention, anticipating that the point wi'l be reached at which the gov- ernment must suspend the flag Is Pearson Now Hopes Table White Pape OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson said today in the Commons he now hopes Informants say that the Con- pectations on both sides of theithe Commons Monday. The rule book provides only two sure-fire ways of ending 'such a debate and getting a vote on the flag One is closure -- giving 24 hours notice of a motion to end debate at a particular time. But |since the 1956 pipeline debate. this is' considered by most of the cabinet as out of the ques- tion, Their reasoning is that closure would raise iso serious a public outcry if used to cut off debate} strong bodies of public opinion} on both sides of the issue. The second way of getting a) ment if the government gave a) that}vote on the flag is a parliamen-| commitment. not to-use the pre-| of the Ku Klux Klan and I don't the white paper on the Canada/tary device called "moving the) vious question device. Mr. Pear-|think we're going to get it," the In the face of widespread ex-| Pension Plan gyill be tabled in|previous question." It also has 'some limitations since it cannot| sity of first allowing possible amendments to the main ques- tion and their debate. Such an amendment, calling for a national plebiscite, now is before the Commons, Conserva- tives sources indicate the party has no intention of getting it- self into the position where there is no amendment before the House. If successful, this could effectively prevent use of the device of '"'moving the pre- vious question." Liberal sources say they have no dbout that this is the Con- servative plan. They say Oppo- ['|on a question where there arejsition Leader Diefenbaker of- fered to agree to an immediate vote on the plebiscite amend- son was said to have refused such a committment, yprus Areas which may be arranged after consultation between the . gov- qernment and - Gen, Thi- mayya." Gen. K. S, Thimaya of India is the UN commander, Fighting continues between |Greek- and Turkish-Cypriots in the mountains 40 miles west of Nicosia. UN officials reported at least four Greek- and one Turkish-Cypriot. Russians Protest 'Buzzing MOSCOW (Reuters)--The So- viet Union has protested to the U.S. against alleged "buzzing" of Russian ships by American aircraft, it was announced here today. An American spokesman said jthe note has been transmitted to the state department, It said the U.S. Air Force buzzed Soviet passenger and cargo vessels in. various' parts of the world. The U.S. spokesman declined to release the text of the note but said the places referred to were "all over the map." It had "absolutely nothing to do with the Tonkin Gulf." He said about 10 incidents were mentioned. Similar pro- tests had been made in the past and this was a "fairly custom- ary sort of note." LONDON (Reuters) -- Five prominent Britons today criti- cized "the unqualified endorse- ment" given to American air action in North Viet Nam by Prime Minister Sir Alec Doug- las - Home, Foreign Secretary Robert A. Butler, and the Brit- ish representative in the United Nations Security Council. They included Canon L. John Collins of St. Paul's Cathedral, a prominent nuclear-disarma- ment campaigner, Kingsley Martin, editor of the left-wing periodical New Statesman, .and Professor Victor Purcell of Cambridge 'University, a well- known authority on Chinese af- fairs. | Barry Refuses | KKK Backing | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sen- ator Barry Goldwater, the Re- publican presidential nominee, has turned down the support of the KKK in the November pres- idential election campaign, "We don't want the backing izonan said Thursday in re- advisers said they doubt that the Communists would launch an attack at least for the pres- ent. One senior U.S. adviser said if the North Vietnamese had moved in anger over the US. retaliatory bo m'bin'g of their naval and supply. instal- Jations, they would have done it by now. The American air strikes took place Wednesday. The response of China partic- ularly was the unknown quan- tity when President Johnson or- dered late Tuesday night the air strikes against the North Viet Nam mainland in retalia- tion for what the U.S. says were unlawful attacks in inter- national waters by North Viet- namese patrol boats against U.S. warships. US. Defence Secretary Robert McNamara Wednesday held a-press conference at the Pentagon, U.S. defence head- quarters, and said that while he assumes Peking may send in some combat aircraft to help North Viet Nam, there have been no indication of any sub- stantial Chinese military move- ments in the last few days. What's more, McNamara said there is no evidence the Chi- nese helped the North Vietna- mese in the Tonkin Gulf action against the destroyers Maddox and Turner Joy. Nam Now Under Martial Law sources in Hong Kong today backed up McNamara and § id they had nothing to substaiti- ate reports from Nationa ist Chinese military sources t,\at Red China sent about 100 Jo- viet-built MiG fighters to Henoi Thursday to reinforce the North Vietnamese Air Force. Earlier U.S. intelligence sources in Hong Kong had de- scribed as "highly inflated" Chinese Nationalist reports that large Chinese Communist army units had been shifted from Central China to the southern border provinces. One source said much of the activity in- volved work on roads and com- munications and some strength- ening of units had beéit noted. - But he added that most of the activity appeared to "'fall in the class of normal precautionary measures in the light of recent developments. On the Viet Nam border it- self along the Ben Hai River a regiment of North Viet Nam's infantry faced Saigon's '1¢in- forced Ast Division. Will Debate Asian Crisis UNITED NATIONS (AP) ~ The United Nations Security Counci! was called into session' for 3 p.m, EDT t to prove an invitation ot North and South Viet Nam to take part in debate on the new crisis in Southeast Asia. Word that the counci] was summoned indicated that an ate gument about wording of the in- vitation to the rival regimes had been settled. Diplomatic sources said Coune cil President Sivert A, Nielsen of Norway proposed calling them North Viet Nam and South Viet Nam. Russia insisted that the Come munist government be ad- dressed as it calls itself--the Democratic Republic of Viet Nam. The United States said in that case the pro-Western southern state should be called the Republic of Viet Nam. Preoccupation with such de- tails indicated tensions were easing in the crisis resulting from the action of North Viet- namese patrols torpedo boats against U.S. warships in the Gulf of Tonkin and retaliatory air strikes by the United States on North Viet Nam PT boats U.S. military intelligence Nicole Drolet, a 23-year-old. Montrealer, has fpeen chosen nse to reporters' questions. Miss Canadian Cricket, Here, and supply installations. EYES ON THE BALL, PLEASE! she tries out her hand at the wicket keeper's post.. % --CP Wirephote

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