Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Jul 1967, p. 1

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ail [TO PARK ARAVAN iction on Sim- h persons at- itennial Cara io use the fol- reach Alexan- ing from the use Rossland Street or Car- and then via yulevard and to Alexandra 'ing from the ither Adelaide olf Street or xandra Street lay also enter gate located de of Simcoe rdeen_ Street g is limited in cece renner menor AL PROJECT . Que. (CP)-- wte has a cen- hat is annoying e collects flags. the theft of a flags decorat- al Park, right "e station and Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. 'men and a woman are dead. fol- VOL. 26--NO. 176 10c Single Copy 55 Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JULY 31, 1967 She Oshawa Cimnes Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Deportment Ottawa ond for payment of Postage in Cash Weather Report Unsettled weather to continue today and Tuesday. Low to- night 60, high tomorrow 78, EIGHTEEN PAGES FIREFIGHTERS POUR water on burning dwellings in city's predominantly Negro inner core where TORONTO (CP) --_ Premier Robarts announced today that the first 1,140 lots under On- tario's HOME program will be offered for sale tomorrow in eight communities. Mr. Robarts told a press con- ference fully - serviced lots pur- chased by the Ontario Housing Corp. will be offered at Brama- lea, Windsor, Arnprier, Brock- Brunetville and Trenton decision by federal aut not to participate in pr of serviced lots. Minister Stanley Randa % seh * mee began last night, and con- firebombs were hurled and policemen were shot lead- F Ho cinday ing to a call-up of National tinued early today. (AP Wirephoto) | Owner Of Krupp's Firm Dies Unexpectedly At 59 ESSEN (AP)--Alfried Krupp ppadagelen. 208 Be vast. concern, died Sunday night at the age of 59, a company spokesman announced today. The cause of death was not immediately disclosed. Krupp had not been reported ill and the company spokesman said his death was "'sudden and un- expected." Krupp, one of the richest men in Europe, was a reserved and somewhat shy man. He lived a quiet life, avoiding publicity and limelight. He would have. been 60 Aug. 13. Twice married and twice di- vorced, Krupp is survived by a son, Arndt. But the father was the fifth and last hereditary ruler of the vast empire that made Germany's munitions for the Franco - Prussian war and two world wars. RECOVERS FROM WAR Although the House of Krupp recovered from the destruction of the Second World War and was the bellwether of the coun- try's. postwar boom, Halbach, owner Krupp: Alfried|vert the firm, into a_publicly- Krupp was forced by losses and| owned corporation by the end of debts last spring to agree to con-|next year. Guard troops. The violence The Second World War left the } Krupp works .in ruins, and Krupp was given a 12-year war crimes sentence for exploitation of slave labor. After six years Two Killed In Milwaukee MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP)-- The bodies of a Milwaukee po- liceman and an_ unidentified woman were found today near;mayor for anything he wants.' a burned sniper's nest.in Mil-} Tensions in the core area, waukee's inner core after a riol-| where more than 90per cent of ous night in the area where!the Negroes who make up 12 most of the city's 86,000 Negroes | per cent of Milwaukee's popula- are concentrated. |tion live, have been simmering Calm returned to streets onjsince last summer when the the near north side with day-| governor called out the guard to light, but a partial count of casu-|protect civil rights demonstra- alties showed 53 persons, includ-|tors in the virtually all - white ing 12 other police officers, in|suburb of Wauwatosa. hospital. Six of the policemen} Acting Deputy Fire Chief Al- were wounded in exchanges of| ven Hainke said full crews were gunfire with snipers and six) sent to. 70 fire calls. At least others were hurt by debris. |two fires burned out of con- About 180 persons were taken | trol because policemen couldn't into custody. \clear out snipers in time to en- Normal. activities in the cen-| able firemen to work, tral city, and in most of its 20} Negroes smashed winddws, ing by at outstate armories, told a news conference that the state would "stand behind the he was released in February, 1951, at the intervention of John J. McCloy, then the U.S. high commissioner for Germany. Krupp immediately set about rebuilding his industrial empire. An Allied order that he sell off his basic iron and steel proper-| ties went years on grounds that he could find no buyer. By 1965 his company, Fried- Krupp, Essen, had built up rec- ord postwar sales of $1,350,000,-| 00. But sales in 1966 were $10,- | 000,000 below that figure, and| the company could not raise necessary credit as a privately owned concern. Krupp's son also has shown no aptitude for suc- ceeding his father. | China Protests | Italian Ruling | HONG KONG (Reuters) --! | China has protested to Italy| AR ALFRIED KRUPi «+. Dies Sunday Four Die At In Two-Car Collision BRANTFORD (CP) -- Three lowing a two-car crash here early Sunday morning. The victims, four of five oc- cupants of a 1957-- model car, are: Charles Henry: Doxtator, 39, of Innerkip, Ont.,: his 36-year- old. wife Ariel, Charles Wesley Doxtator, 76, of Simcoe and Cameron Henry, 19, of Hangers- ville, Ont: ' Iris Doxtator, 15 - year - old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Henry Doxtator, and Floyd Hill, 22, of Wilsonville, jabout an incident involving two {Chinese freighters ordered. out jof Italian territorial waters t,he New China news agency re- ported today. It said a responsible member) of the China Council for the Pro-| Ont,, the sole occupant of the|motion of International Trade| second car involved in the col-jlodged the protest two days ago| lision, are in fair condition with| with Francesco Manzella, a rep-| multiple injuries in Brantford|resentative of the Italian For-| hospital. eign Trade Institute in Peking. | All victims and survivors} The two ships, the 4,959-ton| were Indians from the nearby|Song Jiang and .the 8,405-ton| Six Nations Indian reserve. You Hao, left Porto Marghera Mr. Hill was driving a 1965-|near Venice Sunday. | model car when the accident oc-} They had docked there to un-| curred on the junction of Cock-|load manganese. But when the shut and Newport roads here.|crews displayed Mao Tse-tung | Firemen had to pry the|/banners and slogans, port au-! wreckage to free two trapped|thorities cordoned off the ships in the car. A two truck had to|banned their crews from com lift one of the demolished ve-|ing ashore, and ordered the ves- hicles off a victim pinned be-|sels out of Italian territorial wa- neath it. ters. Brantford unheeded over the | STANDING BY surrounding suburbs as_ well,| looted, stoned passing vehicles, came to a halt after Milwaukee|and hurled fire bombs on the Mayor Henry Maier declared a| pavement. state of emergency and ordered| After it started to rain, many everyone off the streets "untiljof the groups of youths broke such time as the police depart-/up. ment tells us the situation has} By dawn, streets were bare. returned to normal." Buses weren't running and state patrol. cars blocked freeways leading into the city. A police statement said any- one on the street "without a very good reason"' would be ar- rested At Madison, Governor Warren) P. Knowles. who had ordered 900 national guardsmen into Milwaukee with 500 more stand- Police Stress : Crime Increase TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto's police department is in danger|last year and one of the sharp- of being overwhelmed by thejest increases is in crimes | of soaring crime rate, the presi-| violence, he said, but of Crime is up drastically from|&! fe ville, Peterborough, St. Thomas, The premier said the program was being launched despite a Economics and Development Central Mortgage and Housing Corp., the federal housing worst in recent U.S. history. OHC in purchas Partially service horities urchase may make borr projects more doubted there w crease in costs ll said w BLOOD - policeman, disturbances that broke out late yesterday in Negro neighborhood, is helped to SPATTERED injured during Ban On Liquor DETROIT (AP) -- An emer- gency ban against sale of liquor b |preached love and npawiolence Lord Francis ia Williams Says as lifted partially overnor George today by Romney as flames licked at the wreckage at Gage Park. Detroit's: racial explosion, The governor restored to resi- dents of the fifth largest U.S. ty limited rights to buy beer, jwine and liquor during non-cur-) ------------_________ w hours. He cut the hours of police curfew to a span from midnight dent of the Metropolitan Tor-|commission officials last week to 5:30 a.m. as quiet returned onto Police Association said to-| refused a reporter's request for|'® Detroit day. jcrime-rate figures for the first!' Constable Sydney Brown said | SiX months of 1967. an at least 200 more policemen are} Figures released last March} ready to join the 450 who have! showed an increase in beatings, resigned in the last 18 months|muggings and attacks on wom- unless an arbitration board!en, and the 30 bank holdups so comes through with subsiantial|far this year are almost twice benefits and increased pay. fas many as the 18 committed Resignations of 200 experi-/during all of 1956. enced officers might cause sus-| Constable Brown said it cos' a la. ment's regular operations, he! 000 to equip and train a police- said. "We j "2 ord to los Oy Ege al i ros | the 450 men who have resigned and hope to stay. ahead:of the|in the last 18. months is six| criminal element," he said. He|Years."" he said. ne) hoped an arbitration board un-| A Metro constable gets $6,500 der Judge W. S. Lane-of Picton|a year, $600 less than Ontario} would come up. with a. settie-| provincial policemen, Some re-| ment. It is scheduled to meet|tired policemen get $800-a-year some titie"-in the next two] pensions after 25 years' service. weeks. The commission has offered a straight eight-per-cent wage in- MORALE LOW . jcrease. The association is ask- Constable Brown said the mo-| ing 8!4 per cent in wages and| rale of Toronto's 3,000 - man/three per cent in fringe bene-| force. is at an all-time low. fits. STOKELY CARMICHAEL TO SPEAK AT PARLEY IN HAVANA | _ Castro Revolutionaries Hold Meet taverns which began to open for the first her shrubs -- a time since last Monday Romney closed them State law prohibits sale of any alcoholic |beverage between 2 a.n.. and 7) ; ~~. jeach day man during a three-year period. \be: g "The average experience ot = after more than a eek of looting, burning and kill- Detroiters began flocking to and package when m, so Romney's relaxed liq- ; 'cole aes : pension of some of the depart-|Metropolitan Toronto about $25,-1bo controls meant only two urs less time to buy liquor than befdre the riot gan a week ago Sunday. agency, informed him only July 18 that CMHC wouldn't join with WON'T INCREASE COST . He said the CMHC decision under the HOME plan. ...+ From AP-Reuters. HAVANA (CP)--Lalin-Ameri- can revolutionaries assembled in Havana today to echo Fidel Castro's call for guerrilla wars fare from Detroit to Cape Horn. Stokely Carmichael, the U.S. Black Power advocate, is to be mong the speakers at the nine- ay meeting of the Organization of Latin American Solidarity. Cuban President Osvaldo Dor- ticos is expected to deliver the keynote address at the opening session tonight, and Pren.ier Castro is expected wo wind up the meeting Aug. 8. One mayor issue on the meet- ing's agenda calls for 'support of the Negro people of the United States in their struggie against racial discrimination." Since arriving in Cuba last Tuesday, Carmichael has been calling for American Negroes tu take up guerrilla - type opera- tions. He has endorsed missinz guerrilla leader Ernesto Che Guevara's call for creation of more Vietnams for the United States. He said racial upheav- als in Detroit, Newark and other U.S. cities should be considered Vietrams. VIET VISITORS Big delegations from the Viet Cong and North Vietnam are among the observers. The Puerto Rican Independence Movement is represented by its executive secretary, Juan Mari Bras. An estimated 125 of the ex- pected 200 or so delegates had checked in early today. Yugoslavia was excluded be- cause it does not accept the North Vietnamese conditions for ending the Vietnam war. Castro's whipping up of guer- rilla warfare fever in Latin America has led to coolness with Moscow, which is trying to promote trade with several Latin + American countries harassed or threatened. with guerrilla tactics. But the Soviets, who have a heavy economic aid stake in Cuba, will be' repre- sentec at the meeting. Hard wrangling and possible compromises in the final confer- ence resolutions were foreseen on imperialism and Russian re- lations with present Latin Amer ican governments. Observers found it difficult to predict how much success the moderates would have in forc- ing compromises The moderates themselves appeared confident they could shelve any violent trena. But the radicals seemed equally confident that their guerrilla - warfare line would win the day, Hysterical woman is as- sisted from her home in Caracas, Venezuela, Satur- day night after the city was rocked by an earthquake, QUAKE TERRIFIES WOMAN ing serviced or miles d lots. . owing for the expensive but 'ould be any in- Mr to purchasers an ambulance by com- rades. All off-duty police- men had been ordered into trouble areas. (AP Wirephoto) The biggest ment will be at Bramalea, 20 northwest of where Bramalea developers of the land, will build 310 single and semi + de- tached houses for sale under the HOME plan. Randall said provide another 60 houses at Bramalea under the HOME plan © and an 1,140 HOME LOTS DUE FOR SALE TOMORROW initial develop. and 251 vacant lots will be of- fered to individual applicants and merchant builders. "As servicing progresses a further 1,045 lots will be made available at Bramalea to indi- vidual applicants and builders," he said. "This will give us a total of 1,666 housing units un- der HOMES land development program in this area alone." Toronto, Consolidated, OHC will ' Milwaukee In Turmoil Race Riots Calm Ends 12 Policemen Wounded 1,000 Guardsmen Called By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS|troops sent to quell the violence Two persons -- a policeman there last week. Paratroopers unidentified woman--|also began leaving Detroit. were reported dead in Milwau-| Despite Johnson's call for @ kee, Wis., today as violence|day of prayer for civil and ra- flared anew in widely scattered|cial peace, there were outbreaks Negro areas across the United in Portland, Ore., San Bernar- States, and then was quelled |dino, Calif., Riviera Beach, Fla., Three battalions of regular|Wichita, Kan., and Cleveland, U.S. Army troops were pulled|Ohio, Sunday night, out of Detroit as the situation) yp Portland, Oregon, National eased there. Guard troops, especially trained Bodies of the two victims injin riot control, and a large force Milwaukee were found near ajof state police were nreld in burned-out house. Police said it\readiness after a night of loot- had been a sniper's nest. jing and vandalism in which 12 Police counted 53 persons in|fires were reported in the city's hospital, including 12 policemen.| Negro area. There were 70 fires and 180 per-| portland Ma yor ferry D. sons arrested in the sniper-torn,|\Schrunk said the leadership of fire-ripped area where 90 per|the disturbance appeared to be cent of Milwaukee's 86,000 Ne-\*hard-core agitators who have groes live. stimulated the youth." He Milwaukee ,.Mayor Henry/added: 'Only 200 or 300 people Maier declared a state of emer-|had taken part in the violence." gency and ordered everyone off}, Two persons were arrested in the streets, Drenching rain from|San Bernardino, after violence a summer storm helped break/flared in the city's Negro and up the crowds. Mexican + American section on west side. Gasoline-filled bottles ORDERED OUT were thrown on the roof of a Cyrus R. Vance, President supermarket, but the resu!ting | Romney Eases | Hippies Preach | For Non-Violence HAMILTON (CP)--Local and jto about 1,000 curious spec |tors at Hamilton's first lov e-in| Johnson's representative in De-|fire quickly was extinguished. troit, ordered withdrawn three|There also was sporadic sniper battalions of regular army 'fire, Journalists' Treatment Soft |Yorkville hippies Saturday | GENEVA PARK, Ont. (CP)--{treated almost as members of Wearing flowers in their hair;Lord Francis-Williams, a Brit-[the cabinet, given secrets that sticks, they urged rejection of the establishment for individual love. Housewife Balks | At Expropriation i ___,an independent and critical , and carrying burning incense ish journalist and author, said|'utn Out to be not so secret until the j list thi Saturday that governments re- hiineet? Piggies gg 4 quire the constant correction oflruling caste. "The business of newspaper- men is to be outsiders, not |press. | Lord Francis - Williams told|insiders, and they must remain | the Couchiching Conference' of| pers the Canadian Institute of Public) Frank Mankiewicz, press sec- Affairs that he sees a greatiretary to U.S. senator Robert danger in London and Washing-; Kennedy, told a session Sunday ntly so,"' he said. TORONTO (CP)--A Toronto ton of what he called the official|that U.S. and Canadian news- 12-foot blue spruce, 50 feet of hedge and |two forsythia bushes--and the laxe. The plants stand on land ex- propriated by the city for road widening in front of her home Mrs. Eric Harris was visited jtwo months ago by a crew bent 'on removing her plants. The residential eastern sev- tion of the city appeared the worst hit. (AP Wirephoto by radio from Caracas) | | | stores|housewife is standing between' embrace. .| } papers continue to operate on He said journalists are'the basis of 50 years ago. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 5,000 Sailors Set To Strike OTTAWA (CP) -- A federal conciliation board report clear- ing the way for possible strike action next Monday at the ear- liest by 5,000 sailors on the Great Lakes and East Coast was issued today by Labor Minister Nicho!son's office. As expected, the majority report of the board fell short of meeting demands by the Seafarers' International Union of Canada for adoption of the 40-hour work week in the shipping industry. we Quake Again Shakes West Turkey ISTANBUL (Reuters) -- Another earthquake shook western Turkey today. No details were immediately available of the damage caused by the tremor--latest in a series to strike the country in the last 10 days. About 200 persons were killed in the two biggest of the recent earthquakes--one in the moun- tains of eastern Turkey and the other in the area around the city of Adapazari, about 100 miles east of Istanbul. Forrestal Reaches Philippines SAIGON (AP) -- The U.S. aircraft carrier Forrestal, -ra- vaged by flames and bomb blasts Saturday, limped into Subie Bay in the Philippines today. Another fire broke out as she prepared to dock. It was only a flash fire, nothing like the holocaust that left 76 of the crew dead, 69 missing and presum- ed dead, and 64 injured on the 76,000-ton carrier. .. In THE TIMES Today .. UAW, GM C Negotiati ee | Jones Wins et Mosport--P. 6 \4 Ann Landers--10 Pickering News--5 |Z Ajax News--5S Sports--6, 7, 8 City News--9 Television--17 Classified---14, 15, 16 Theatres--12 | Comics--17 Weather--2 | Editorial--4 Whitby News--5 3 Financiol--13 Women's--10, 11 : Obituaries--16 : MM ti ld By ONE lil duis 1%

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