Some Insurers Won't Pay L.A. Insurrection Damages By RICHARD GRAVES NEW YORK (AP)--A number of major United States property insurers Monday ruled out in- surrection as a reason for non- payment of damage claims arising from the Los Angeles riots. Aithoug' most property insu- rance policies provide financial] protection against riot, 'virtually all stipulate that damages re- jsulting from war or insurrec- Watts district of Los Angeles before setting a claims policy. FIRMS AGREE Spokesmen for a number of insurance firms said they agreed with a statement by Roger Arnebergh, Los Angeles city attorney, that the courts would not consider the riots armed insurrection. American dictionaries gener ally define insurrection as an organized rebellion or revolt against government. The insu- tion are not covered. } Several California officials, including Governor Edmund G. Brown, eve referred to the riot as "insurrection." But a number of insurers--in- cluding at least two giant firms --gaid they will settle property damage claims on an individ- ual-case basis. thers said they want more information from the ruined Laughter CBC's Medicine In Fall TV Progra: By DONALD PHILLIPSON TORONTO (CP) --The em- phasis is on laughter this fall as CBC-TV replaces seven of last year's programs with five new comedies and three adventure series, The comedies follow styles) that have proved successful in) st years, Okay Crackerby fol- lows the problems of Burl Ives as an Oklahoma multi-million- aire who wants to become a gentleman, and I Dream of} Jeanie is about a beautiful girl-| genie who lives in a_ bottle} owned by a Cape Kennedy as- tronaut. Get Smart stars Don Adams as the world's worst secret agent in a fairyland of gadgets, and Hogan's Heroes is a war comedy about the lighter side of American airmen's attempts to escape from a German pris- oner-of-war camp. There is a message for today in Hank, in which Dick Kallman plays a 5 school drop-out who drops into college--study- _ ing without registering and try- ing to support a young sister at the same time. | The programs that have been} withdrawn are The Rogues, The Saint, The Defenders, Candid) Camera, Country Hoedown and Red River Jamboree. Old favor- ites that will be back again in- clude Perry Mason, The Fugi- tive, Bonanza, The Ed Sullivan Show, The Dick Van Dyke Show and The Beverly Hillbillies." BASED ON SEAWAY . The adventure drama most eagerly awaited by television) executives is Seaway, an hour- long Canadian-produced weekly | drama based on the St. Law- rence Seaway. Director Maxine Samuels, creator of. The Forest Rangers for children's televi- sion, has recruited an impres- |back before the Sunday late rance information institute, a spokesman for the industry, said there is no common defini- tion for the word used by the industry, In the less destructive riots of the summer of 1964 in Ro- chester, Harlem and Brooklyn, ogramming | ,,__|N-¥., insurance companies ° did sive staff 'which now is filfning|not invoke the insurrection on location in Eastern Canada. | clause, Most insurance policies pro- vide financial protection against riot damages through an @x- tended coverage endorsement to a standard fire policy, A spokesman for the insurance in- formation institute said it is a rare businessman or home owner who fails to have the ex- tended coverage protection. WILL SETTLE Two of the largest U.S. in- surers, The 'Travelers Insu- rance Companies and Aetna Life and Casualty Co., said they will settle claims without re- gard to the insurrection clause in their policies, The Hartford Insurance Infor- mation Office, representing most Connecticut, insurance companies, said payment of claims would be determined on interpretations by company of- ficials, not by California au- thorities. 'Falls Opposes N.Y. Water Grab NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) City council voted unanimously Monday to fight any proposal aimed at taking water from the Niagara River to. alleviate drought conditions in New York City. Alderman George Martin, |who tabled the motion adopted Children's television will by the council, said: 'It is carry on last year's series, as'wrong for any place as far will the news and public affairsjaway as New York even to departments. think, or consider, coming here This Hour has Seven Days is|and taking away our national heritage." A New York engineering firm recently proposed that Niagara water be used to assist in that city's water shortage. The two new American dra- mas are The Trials of O'Brien, an hour-long courtroom series starring Peter Falk, and A Man Called Shenandoah. In the lat- ter, Robert Horton, former star of Wagon Train, plays a man who wanders the west trying to rebuild his lost memory. Canadian comedians Johnny Wayne and Frank Shuster will star in four shows and Juliette will be back in her usual time- slot, following Hockey Night in Canada Saturdays. Tommy Hunter, popular coun- try and Western singer on ra- dio, will have his own television show and Don Messer's Jubilee will continue. Red Skelton will be back on Mondays and Bob Hope's drama hour moves into Perry Mason's former time on Tuesday.' For what may be his last season, Raymond Burr will dominate the courtroom Sundays as the star of Perry Mason. PANEL SHOWS CONTINUE Front Page Challenge and} Flashback, the two Canadian| panel games, will continue, as) will Take 30. In a stronger bid for afternoon viewers, the CBC's own stations will carry two new 15-minute series, Guiding Light and Search for Tomorrow. As the World Turns and Moment of Truth will still be available at times depending on ocal op- tions. news and a new program, Back- ground, will carry editorial opinions each Tuesday on con- troversial topics of. the day. To Win CO's By JAMES BACON HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- Gypsy Rose Lee, busting all out in movies and television, recently had some new glamour pin-ups made of her famous figure. The first shipment went to her son serving in Europe with the U,S, Army, She. got this let- ter back; 'Dear mom: "1 pasted your new photos in my locker but by commanding) officer made me take them all army these days, "T kept telling him; 'Bat, sir these are pictures of my mother.' It did no good, "T keep the pictures in my trunk, Love Eric." Gypsy says; "Tt could kiss that officer. I've never had such a compli- ment. And I'm old enough now. to really appreciate it," The famed former queen of burlesque now is making the movie Mother Superior, First question asked by & shocked reporter, Is she playing a nun? 'Heavens, no,' says Gypsy. "Do you want to ruin my im- age?" She plays a dance instruct- ress in the movie that stars Rosalind Russell in the title role, Gypsy, besides collectin alties on her books an stage and movie versions of her roy nality. HAS TV SHOW She started a daylime telev ion chatter show in San Fr: cisco and it now is being syn cated across the U.S, "It's known as the bleepers lesque reputation somehow erything that's Birth Control Clinic On Way TORONTO (CP) -- A small group of open four birth control clinics this fal! to protest lack of ac- |tion by the City of Toronto. "The city should have a sort of cafeicria of birth control in- formation," Mrs. G. W. Cad- bury, executive director of the Planned Parenthood League, isaid Monday. The association opened its first clinic here last spring. CNR Defies Wage Laws, Union Says OTTAWA (CP)--A spokesman for employees at the Chateau Laurier said Monday the CNR- owned hotel is 'defying and evading the law' by refusing to pay the $1.25 hourly federal minimum wage to its staff. Laurent St. Pierre, chairman of Local 270 of the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway Em- ployees (CLC), said a formal complaint has been filed with the labor department charging that the Chateau Laurier is re- fusing to follow the new federa! Labor Code. Earlier this month Labor Minister MacKachen rejected an application from the CNR that its hotels be exempted from the minimum wage sec- tion of the Labor Code. Mr, St, Pierre said in a pre- pered --o issued by the national headquarters of the CBRE that 239 of the hotel's 450 employees are being paid less than $1.25 an hour. (In Montreal, W. T. Wilson, CNR vice-president for labor relations, said the company's position was based on the ad- vice of its law officers that the Labor Code does not apply to CN hotels.) Pope Paul's Health Fine VATICAN CITY (AP)--Pope Paul, rounding out a full month of semi-vacation at the Castel Gandolfo summer residence in the Alban Hills, was reliably re- ported Monday in fine health and no longer over-tired. Sources here said the coun- tryside air and easier pace, plus an initial period of reduced audiences right after the Ro- man Catholic pontiff arrived July 18 at Castel Gandolfo, ac- count for the rested look he has had in recent public appear- ances. The Italian weekly magazine Il Tempo has prepared an arti- cle for its next edition saying that a newly-detected stomach ulcer was "expected to impede a hoped-for rapid recovery" of the Pope's energy after a heavy workload in the spring. On the eve of the magazine's publication, however, a Vatican press office official said Mon- day night that the Pope has no history of a stomach ulcer, either fram the past or at pres- ent ' "The health of His Holiness is excellent," the spokesman said in answer to an inquiry, With An... Oshawa Sines Holiday Subse The OSHAWA TIMES Will ee ee ee ee a Start Mailing Stop Mailing ----e oe ee ee oe ee eee eee ee | Circulation Dept. Oshawa Times | | anes, Eee Re ED aN cee pra eG as a | 1 as es Bees lisis cases cae sbenunsaesbopacees ) l Vacation Addrest ....+ eRe UEECeer SC eee eee errr er rc reer errr yr ry er re l Stop Home Delivery ....csesseseeess Restart Home Delivery ........ alas fe | | i L. a ription Be Mailed To Your Vacation Address At The Regular ; Carrier Rate of 50c Per Week Just Mail this coupon or call The Office at 723-3474 and you will be billed for your holiday subscription. ee ee Gypsy Still Has A Figure show. on the show one day and she custom of wrapping your hairdo in toilet tissue and then sleep- jdown. I guess there is @ neWipaing the|fs life, also is a television perso- sleeper," says Gypsy. "My bur-|f gives a double meaning to ev-|f said on thely volunteers plan to | Disapproval I'm always getting bleeped out." But Gypsy thinks that the tel- evision censors go too far, "IT had an ordinary housewife was telling me of the Japanese ing on a board, It's quite a com- mon practice even in this country among women who hea want to spoil a new 0, fs | eg asked the house- wife what her husband "thought about the practice. She an- swered: 'He said he didn't know whether to kiss me or flush me,' Bleep, Bleep." Gypsy is a natural for televi- sion chatter. She's glib with an amazing command of the. Eng: lish language. She has written many books and articles and is} considered quite "'in" by the in- tellectual crowd, : "And I only went to school five days in my whole life," says Gypsy. "My sister June (Havoc) didn't go at all. "And she keeps throwing it at me all the time, If we have trouble spelling a word, she al- ways aske me: 'Cone on brain, you went to school.'" Manry and his 1344-foot sailboat Tinkerbelle were sighted off England's Lizard Point today, marking completion of the Cleveland journalist's solo crassi of Cornwall--is the spot where the Atlantic joins the English Smallest Sailing Ship Ever Crosses Atlantic Non-Stop By THOMAS A, REEDY FALMOUTH (AP) -- Robert of the Atlantic, The Lizard--southernmost tip Channel, It is 15 miles south- southwest'of Falmouth, the 48- year-old amateur sailor's des- tination. i "From now on it should be alt downhill sailing for him," said one old Cornish sailor after checking the wind and weather. The Tinkerbelle is the small- est boat to cross the. Atlantic non-stop. Manry left Falmouth, Mass., June 1 on the 3,200-mile voyage, The people of Falmouth pre- pared a big welcome. Manry's wife, Virginia, 46, his son, Douglas, 11, and his 13- year-ol ddaughter, Robin, are to et him, A trawler took Mrs. lanry out to the Tinkerbelle 55 miles off Cornwall Monday for a 10-minute reunion with her husband, WILL KISS EARTH "Well, I just hugged and kissed him," said Mrs. Manry. to kiss Mother Earth when I land, On second thought, I'll oar during its long voyage. "He said to me: 'I'm just going kiss you first and Mother Earth second',"' "Robert was very fit and well," his wife said, Manry told her the tiny boat had lost one rudder and one "Robert said, 'she is a pretty good boat, but she has a few flaws',"" Mrs, Manry added, Her husband's supplies seemed to be in good shape, she said, "although the cabin was mouldy," Mrs, Manry said she consid- ered staying aboard for the fi- nal leg of the trip, "but then '5.00 PER DAY 725-6553 RENT-A-CAR DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH RUTHERFORD'S CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS that wouldn't have been finish- ing the trip singlehanded, so I got back aboard the trawler." Manry, @ copy editor for the Cleveland Plain Dealer, spent|A™ six years rebuilding his 30-year- old boat, He developed sailing THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuosdoy, August 17, 1965 2] and Bermuda on the way across. _ HONOLULU US. Coast Guard ; a. report Monday of the of the 24-foot sailboat Graham, 16, who. sailed alone skill on Lake Erie and also be- came an accomplished car- penter, As Manry neared his goal, an- other solo voyager arrived Newport, R.I., Monday aver crossing the Atlantic in a 12- foot sloop. But 25-year-old John Riding, an Englishman, was towed 70 miles out from the Spanish coast before taking off PLUS LOW MILEAGE CHARGE 14 ALBERT ST. Oshawa Conadian Head Office, Scarboro, Ont. ZEN : WARERYCIA 203 Oshewe Sivd, N. Oshewa 725-904) eed @ Bring more than a little vivacity to Fall ! Bright new Autumn swash . . . supple wools intuitively aware of the up-coming season! Versatile costumes... easy by day... enchanting at night. Si A. Collarless style with big decors ative buttons. Navy, brown or jade. style In black, B. Carved jacket with Chelsea BD. Double - collar... notched colla navy or grey. 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