LER asy spin recoil 4 with Timken trol with for- avy duty 10 x ter Bolo type del 6801 (384) PHONE 725-7373 al construction; ' of plastic hose , (385) 7.95 Duty hose, good any sort. Colour -- 9.95 -- 13.95 -- 17.95 Pedestal any garden or 2 or green finish. fits into round and 24" tall stion with rubber of 3 cu. ft. Colour indles and black ccasional light PHONE 725-7373 of your car; . until 9 p.m.) Home Newspaper" Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowmans ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 26--NO. 163 10e Single C S5¢ Per Week ome She Oshawa Cimes livered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1967 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department , Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash Weather Report Afternoon temperatures will reach the low 70's. Warming trend will continue Sunday, Low tonight; 50; high Sune day 72 EIGHTEEN PAGES NEGRO IN Newark, N.J., gives National Guardsman the thumbs down sign yes: terday as he watches a anne A NATIONAL Guardsman crouches behind jeep while sniper sprays Springfield Avenue in Newark last night. Eleven have died as a result of rioting in the New Jersey city over the past three days. The city now is under martial law. group of Negroes, New Jer- sey National Guard was mit NEWARK FIREMEN bat- tle two blazes late today in the section of this city marked by racial distur- bances. Looting, gunfire and called into Newark yester- day in an attempt to put down racial violence. several deaths marked the day long violence in the New Jersey city. (AP Wirephoto) New Clashes On Suez |Guenillas Stimulate UN Efforts UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) | turn charged Egypt with "grave Security Council members to-|violations' of the Security day stood by for a_possible|Council's ceasefire resolution. weekend meeting following new} Rafael said five Israeli sol- Jordan in last month's fighting and now has absorbed through special legislation enacted by parliament. Alarm 'South Korea SEOUL, Korea (AP) -- U.S. jand South Korean military offi- RIOTS W! FORCES Negroes Accuse Whites 'Masters Of NEWARK, N.J. (AP)--'White men are masters of _ trick- nology," said one young: mili- tant Negro in explaining why he and his friends were rioting. "We're tired of always getting nothing." Doug Jones, 22, the father of four, lounged against a weath- ered picket fence Friday night on the edge of the riot - torn Negro neighborhood, near the towering housing project where his family lives. Near here, on the street be- fore dusk Friday evening, a Negro man was shot to death. And sniper's bullets, whining and snapping from windows and roofs, killed a policeman. Tricknology' |powder was the arrest of a cab driver Wednesday night for a traffic violation, and resisting policemen | "They beat that guy up," said) |Calvin Tindall, 17, "I saw it.) They stomped on him, they| jclubbed him. They killed him.) fala is that right?" | Assured the cabbie was alive) jand free on bail, the angry jyoung men wouldn't believe it,| jand Jones said: "It's just an- j other white man's trick, but this| teen... wat |time we won't be fooled. We GOLF CHAMPION | |rose up. We made this city take! | Oshawa's 19-year-old golf | \notice."" | rau |CALL ON GUARDSMAN | star, Pam Miller, success- | The havoc that his all wrought) yy defended the Ontario rare A early 1,000 Arrested; I] Killed And 500 Injured NEWARK, N.J. (AP)--A third) Democratic Governor Richard night of Negro rioting sputtered|J. Hughes summoned additional to an end today, with police and| guardsmen to: quell what he national guard patrols prowling called a "criminal insurrec- littered streets under sporadic tion." sniper fire from roof tops. The medical examiner's office) RIOTS FLARE UP put the death toll at 11, eight, It reached a violent crescendo of them killed Friday night|on a humid Friday night, as the when bullets replaced rocks as|darkness was pierced by the main weapons of mounting|gun flashes, searchlights and violence that began Wednesday. |the flickering flames of build- One white policeman was killed.|ings put to the torch by rioters. The other victims, not all iden-| About 4,000 helmeted police tified, were Negroes. with riot guns and guardsmen Hospital officials put the toll! with bayonets cordoned off the of injured at more than 500\Negro riot centre, west of while the number of persons ar-| Newark's downtown business rested neared 1,000. centre, A night-long curfew was bro- The quarantined area was "There's no leader in this|--the deaths, the injuries, the} thing," he said, and his four|damage in the millions -- also} friends agreed. "One guy picks} brought in two battalions of New| up a brick, and the others just|Jersey's 50th Armored Division, join. jroughly 2,600 national guards- "They think it is necessary.|men. You know, it's got to stop, this} Sgt. Fred Schlueter of Little} picking on us, particularly by) Falls was one of those called to the cops. Why if we all hadjhelp quell the rebellion in the} guns, guns. . ."' and his voice city. | faded in his thoughts. "T had just found out that my} Jones, slender but tough, may) wife's pregnant--and here I am. be bitter. But his pal Yonkii--| would you believe it? | "no first name, -- "knd. @han diy: bieak ue with every breath. |down into groups of three to| NO JOB--BLACK jstand at an intersection my "I'm not Negro, I'm a West|group is No. 13. And on Friday, Indian born in Jamaica who is|too. Then we're assigned to one Women's. Golf ship she won last year, when she defeated Jocelyn Bourassa of Shawinigan, Quebec, yesterday at Chat- ham. Miss Miller won the 36-hole final match, "eight and seven," losing only the first and 27th holes, winning 10 and splitting the others. Next week she will compete against North America's top amateurs and pros in the "Supertest" Ladies Open at London, Next month, Pam | will be a member of a Can- | adian four-player team to tour Scotland and England, Champion- | ken by frequent gunfire, from! yidened when snipers and loot- jsnipers, harassing patrols and o,< appeared outside the armed \from police and guardsmen |blasting with rifles and shot-! | guns. | | One skirmish was halted by |the arrival of armored satiinal| |guard vehicles after 15 minutes| Ship Damage a ae A fon Risk Noted EXCHANGE SHOTS | | In one 30-minute period just) MOSCOW (AP)--The United |before the curfew expired at) jdawn, state police exchanged Union it will take "extraordin- States has promised the Soviet ~ fire with rooftop snipers in three separate incidents As daylight came, police still ary measures to minimize dam- age" to Soviet ships in the Viet- nam war zone. now a Muslim in Newark, all/Of the worst streets in the city| the way," said Yonkii, "I can't where two people are killed) *" get a job because my complex-jand sniper fire flashes all) ion is black. jaround us." | "I'm a high school graduate| Nearly 50 South Korean sol-| and I can't get a job, But ifjdiers have been killed since you're whit, you get a jhb." january jn gunfights with intru- The fuse that set off the'ders. competing in tournaments there. fection |} chased looters. | The U.S. embassy said today | But with the end of fhe cur-|it delivered a note to the Soviet \few at 6 a.m. traffic began|foreign ministry Thursday ac- | flowing again. All cars had been|knowledging the possibility that jrouted around the Springfield|some U.S. fire aimed at Haip- Avenue section because of spo-|hong installations had acciden- radic sniping. | tally hit the Soviet ship Mikhail Negro police and guardsmen|Frunze June 29. Causes £ Queen Mother Attending | Two Deaths Negro rioters, and a guard of- an excellent job -- a helluva job found themselves pitted against! The note added, however, that "the risk of unintentional dam- ficer reported: "They're doing|age to vessels in the area of hostilities cannot be completely eliminated." HALIFAX (CP) -- Queen Mother Elizabeth, accompanied by Prime Minister Pearson and this wife, is to attend the high- land games at Antigonish, N.S., | today. | The Queen Mother, who had ja hectic round of engagements |here Friday, wound up the day 'by waving goodbye to a crowd of about 2,000 gathered at the | Halifax Dockyard to watch the ithe Strait of Canso. Highland Games In N.S. MONTREAL (CP) -- Dr. Al- bert Grenier, 39, told a cor- foner's inquest Friday he in- jected two women with a "'re- |she visited Campobello Island in juvenation" serum which he New Brunswick in thick fog and|said was prepared from unborn mist. |lambs. In Halifax, she rode through; pr. Ilona Kerner of the med- jthe city in an open car on her|ico-jegal institute in Montreal way to engagements, and thous- testified that both women: died ands of Haligonians lined streets| eyeral days later--the cause of, to watch her pass.. death being "infection with the Besides the special convoca-|formation of gas gangrene." | tion at Dalhousie University, the : ' i Queen Mother officially opened| The inquest is being held into the new 16-storey Sir Charles|the deaths of Marie Louise de jroyal yacht Britannia sail for)Tupper medical building on the|Grandpre, 74, and Pierrette Ri- Dalhousie campus. The $18,000,-!yerin, 31, a schoolteacher. Miss As a marine band played/000 building is Nova Scotia's! ae Grandpre died June 6, Miss | Hello Dolly and then Auld Lang Syne, the Britannia sailed| centennial project. pie fo eh me ____.|Riverin two days later. Dr. Grenier, of suburban La- tslowly out of the harbor. | | | The Queen Mother, Prime! C d A kg <2" testified before Coroner| |Minister Pearson and Mrs.| ana a S |Laurin Lapointe that on 12 pre-| Pearson stood on the deck wav-! jing to the crowds as the yacht] pulled away from the dock. | |vious occasions the serum had been used on patients with no} ill effects. Withdrawal clashes in the Suez Canal zone. The fighting Friday, along with new action reported today, diers were killed and 20 wounded in Friday's fighting while el Kony reported 20 Egyp- Ninety - nine member states|cials are alarmed at sharply in- including Canada voted Friday |creasing guerrilla-type harass- Nations might be given an in-|ment*by North Korean Commu- resolution sponsored by Pakis-| nists. Earlier, the Queen Mother be-| came the first member of any} UNITED NATIONS (CP) --| royal family to receive an hon-/C anadian Ambassador Paul orary degree from Dalhousie) Reaulieu told the General As- acted as a spur to United Na-|tians deaths and 36 wounded. tions efforts to force Israel to| Today, the Israeli Army withdraw its troops from Arab|boosted the toll to seven dead, jtan deploring the Israeli action and calling for its annulment. It affects areas far south of jthe military demarcation line University here. About 1,000) guests applauded as the Queen) sembly Friday that withdrawal of forces is "'one of the vital territory. Egyptian delegate Mohamed two missing and 22 wounded. Meanwhile, Israel was on no- Awad el Kony accused Israel of\tice, for a second time, to give further "aggressive acts." Is-|up control of the Old City of raeli delegate Gideon Rafael in| Jerusalem which it seized from Three MiG Jets Downed ; In New Battles Along Suez TEL AVIV (Reuters)--Three|up the body of a soldier killed | protection of the holy places is Egyptian MiG fighters were shot down by Israeli jets today as air and artillery battles flared along the Suez Canal, an Israeli military spokesman said. The spokesman said one Is- raeli plane was brought down by Egyptian anti-aircraft fire, but its pilot parachuted safely into Sinai. Fighting erupted at 7 a.m. to- day at the southern end of the canal and by late morning had spread north. The Israeli | lin Friday's clash. An army announcement today | said seven soldiers were killed /and 22 wounded Friday, and two | seamen are missing. The sea- men were aboard a small naval craft hit by Egyptian gunfire in the Port Toufik area. A huge fireball rose over the base and the whole sky turned fiery red as rockets hit ammu- nition and gasoline dumps and aircraft. These in turn caused chain losi to spread along the p an said the first of the three MiGs was shot down in a dogfight over Sinai soon after Israeli jets had silenced Egyptian artillery. BATTLE CASUALTIES About an hour later, another two MiGs crashed after an ae- rial battle east of the canal in the Ismailia region. A spokesman said the battle began when Egyptian forces aimed machine-gun fire from the area of Port Ibrahim to- ward an Israeli jeep, He said the jeep was picking airfield as flaming metal was flung into other aircraft and concussion set off bomb stores. One rocket went through the roof of an air force barracks be- fore exploding among the sleep- ing troops and two more of the wooden - frame barracks on either side caught fire and burned to the ground. The air base, 380 miles north- east of Saigon, is a major cen- tre for U.S. air strikes in sup- port of marines fighting in the |northern provinces and for air raids over North Vietnam. Ambassador Paul Beaulieu of | Canada told the assembly: "We have from the first op-| posed any precipitate action which might prejudice the pres- interests in Jerusalem and we jhave suggested that the United {Nations migt be given an in- jternational supervisory respon-| sibility for the protection of |those interests... . | "We cannot fail to affirm that Hee Park was sworn in for his|speech that during Confedera-/must be respect forthe terri- the future of Jerusalem and the ja matter of special concern to) all member states of the United Nations and that this organiza- tion has a legitimate interest in) separating South Korea from the North. Disguised in dark-green South {Korean combat unifefms, North ervation of special and religious |Korean Army regdlars launched a series of ambushes and raids south of the' truce zone during recent weeks. One took place about 60 miles northeast of Seoul July 1 a few hours after President Chung second four-year term. Seven South Koreans, includ- ing two officers, were killed when a group of more than 10 North Koreans threw hand gren- ades and fired sub - machine- any arrangement made there. |guns. bce oe Pp me Minister/ elements in any enduring settle- earson, who also received a)ment in the Middle East." | degree, "entered the university) Beaulieu spoke in the assem- ee for ee gym | shortly before Canada voted a henge abe degrees of| With 98 other countries in favor aaah ine Brees ©") of a Pakistani resolution calling jon Israel to rescind all mea- WEARS ACADEMIC GOWN _$#Sures taken to change the status The Queen Mother, wearing a/0f Jerusalem. red - and - black trimmed aca-| He recalled External Affairs demic gown and black hat with) Minister Paul Martin told in the! gold tassle, said in a brief |assen.bly June. 23 that there| jfion year Canada is celebrating torial integrity of Middle East "the birth of a great nation." /nations hut that withdrawal of For the second day in a 'row,|forces would have to be related temperatures were humid with/to other basic issues involved. overcast skies and intermittent; Beaulieu said Canada had ex- showers, during the Queen amined the pending resolution in Mother's visit. On Thursday,' this framework. | He said the practice of taking the foetus of a lamb for the re- juvenation of humans was de- veloped in Switzerland during the 1930s and used since by many European doctors. He testified his serum was not in accordance with the Ca- nadian Food and Drug Act, but added that these statutes con- cerned large commercial labor- atories and that his lab was es- tablished for "the advancement of science," not for commercial motives. | HEART CONDITION Under questioning by Michel Cote, city police attorney, Dr. Grenier said that in a death certificate he attributed Miss de Grandpre's death to a heart at- | AIRLIFTED BY RCAF By MARILYN ARGUE kimo children from Baffin be part of a suburban fam planned for two years. The kids from 10 to 17 years old are finding suburbia, w: OTTAWA (CP)--For 99 Es- to Ottawa Wednesday to begin a two-week visit in the suburb of Alta Vista. Each. child will with children of its own dur- hen ing the trip, which has been Eskimo Children its unfamiliar trees and flow- ers and miles-of paved roads, a pretty exciting place. Is- here." Eskimo children are known convertible which has a power community. raised $1,600 for J to be quiet and shy with stran- top that goes up and down the trip by holding a carnival ily gers but Mr. Evans says his at the touch of a button. raffle and door-to-door drive. visitors, John, 15, and The visit of the 99 children The Northwest Territories Nanau, 11, have no inhibitions is a joint centennial project of and federal .governments about discussing their impres- sions of the South. ith zhey were surprised by the tack. ON CENTENNIAL VISIT size of a shopping centre the Evans took them to, and both bought sunglasses and badges flew into 7 . 1. ata nt x John Evans, the local Scout- for their Boy Scout camping partment is picking up the | - ayes gli eet le master, says the two boys blankets. tab for all air transportation | e a 3 ' staying with his family are in- and the health department ory. oh terested in everything--"even LIKED CONVERTIBLE has provided special medical The children were airlifted the birds we have down Both boys were favorably facilities, impressed with the family's the Northwest Territories Council and the Hillcrest Com- munity Council. = for Arrive In Ottawa An RCAF Yukon airplane The Frobisher Bay Eskimo added $1,400. The money pro- vides $30 to spend in Ottawa the Eskimo: youngsters Ottawa. The defence de- each visiting child, / U.S. Air Base At Da Nang Reels From Cong Attack DA NANG,. South Vietnam{nam's northern sea coa i ; s st, (CP)--The huge U.S. air base at) launching pad for many of the Da Nang was reeling today|bombing raids on North Viet- from a Viet Cong rocket attack|nam; was shut down immedi- so left a gr er dead, |ately after the attack. woun' and 42 airplanes; cr g | ews went out to repair one wrecked or crippled. jbadly cratered 10,000-foot run- It was the worst punishment inflicted on the U.S. base which -- -- re et re a ee EO tae One Cake Nee fe st five months. Earlier, 13 Americans haa| minutes early today from two been reported killed, but five | Positions 4.3 miles southwest of marines at first presumed deaa| the huge base. were accounted for. | The attack also wrecked four The base on the South Viet-|air force barracks. em NEWS HIGHLIGHTS President de Gaulle Leaves For Canada PARIS (Reuters) -- President de Gaulle lef air today for Brest where he will sail for an foidies official visit to Canada and the French Islands of St Pierre-Miquelon. In Brest, the president will board the 8,270-ton ciuiser Colbert, flagship of France's Mediter- ranean fleet, for the five-day transatlantic crossing. Pope Paul Flies To Turkey VATICAN CITY (Reuters) -- Pope Paul will fly to Istanbul, Turkey, July 25 for talks with Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras, it was announced today. The Pope also will meet Turkish President Cevdet Sunay during his two-day stay in Turkey, his fifth foreign journey of his four-year reign. The Roman Catholic pontiff previously met the pairiarch, head of the Eastern Orthodox Church, during the Pope's pilgrimage to Jerusalem in 1964, Argentine Leads British Open HOYLAKE, England (AP) -- Roberto de Vicenzo, the 44-year-old Argentine, held a two-stroke lead over Gary Player of South Africa and a_rallying Jack Nicklaus to- day with nine holes to play in the British. Open golf championship. The Argentine had a 63-hole total of 244, Player and Nicklaus were 246 with nine holes left. aM TAN .. In THE TIMES Today .. Eorly Settlers Buried In Cemetery -- P, 9 Ajox Municipal Building Praised -- P. 5 Pam Miller Wins Her Second Crown -- P. 6 Semana santa Ann Landers--10 Obituories--17 Ajox News--5 Sports--6, 7 City News--9? Television--12, 13 Classified--15, 16, 17 Theotres--12 Comics--13 Weather--2 Editorial--4 Whitby News--5 Churches--8 Women's--10 Aauaataauaiai MMMM ra ith OMT NS > a