Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Aug 1967, p. 1

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noothly. They s and weights. to s your sleeping to your com- attern of the . consists of Ila are green, 88.7 .. 449 eoch 8,66 up anyone's 47.66 Ja Floral pat- 47.66 nyl webbing. 10.99 10.99 ries »m the ham- > Barbecues, Folding "79.99 ries e available "4.79 ING Reg. 14.25 21.40 n Mowers. 119.99 model. Ad- "9.59 finish, Re- 9.99 P.M. | ote eer een VoL. 26--NO. 181 10¢ Single Copy Home Newspaper ' Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durhdm Counties, S5e Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, AUGUST 5, 1967 She Oshawa Zimes Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Deportmen Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash Weather Report Sunny and warmer with some afternoon cloudiness on Sun- day. Low tonight 60. High to- morrow 80, TWENTY-TWO PAGES BITTER FIGH IN CHINA P ROCKS, BOTTLES HURLED WICHITA, Kan, (AP) -- Po- lice and sheriff's officers were pelted with rocks, bottles and debris from about 150 Negroes early today after Mayor Clar- ence Vollmer ordered a curfew in a futile attempt to stop' such a clash. Three police officers were in- jured by blows or flying debris. Two hospitals estimated that 10 other persons sought treat- ment for injuries inflicted dur- ing the disturbance period. Several persons were arrested as the mobile group of Negroes hit and ran from between 80 to GOVERNOR-GENERAL DONS INDIAN HEADGEAR Governor - General Ro- 67 restaurant on Friday Colorful dances ahd cele- i i _ res ) ' 100 officers armed with night land Michener dons Indian which ended ceremonies brations were held to mark | sticks, "! head dress during his visit of the Indians of Canada the event while thousands | Police broke up and scattered to the recepti at an Expo Da at the world's fair looked on. (CP Wirephoto) the large group but smaller ; comma prensa sar . "| groups formed in several spots e of the predominantly Negro northeast residential area and I ] O] 1eslia O | several clashes--in diminishing size--ensued with police. Police moved to break up the gathering, and when they @ e reached the centre of the artery V the missiles rained down on them. : ; ; After throwing the first bar- JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP)--| mains of one smoked and crack-|donesian troops began arriving.|rage of rocks and bottles, the Chinese inside a well barricaded | !ed. The aly surged a the | group scattered, re-formed, and ssy drove back a mol Helmeted Indonesian troops|™ain building, smashing win-|let loose with a second, then a po igesetheoned sit ep An took up positions behind trees | dows BRO EA ABIAE G00r8. card parhaer, Wines ae oon, small arms fire today as the|2"d_ trained their automatic) be cg Fey eater i Paths smashed into' the em.|tifles on the building. Tanks broken and barred window) The curfew was imposed at tides compound and set two lumbered up. pales wwe ' wounded were|the request of the police after free Th the were se.| The youths, believed to be the |""@88ed to safety. peaponts:.:ofe, Wana' -of.s Meare res. ree youths were Ss same group that attacked the The Indonesian government| youths roving the streets. ONE OF SEVERAL Ne- gro men arrested after a rock: - and - bottle battle with police in Wichita early Saturday is assisted into a police van. Three officers APTER MAYOR oRDERS currew | Chungking . *8teneeennst' "S&@eeeee 150 Wichita Negroes Attack Police 'ew "entre Of Revolt By LEE CASEY sprea Wuhan The key industrial city of Wu of serious fighting between anti Maoists hours say the wartime National HONG KONG (Reuters)--Bitter fing in the Chinese power le today appears to have ac along the Yangtze River, although supporters of Commu- nist Chairman Mao Tse - tung were reported back in contro! of han on the lower Yangtze in central China was reported to have been the scene last month Mao elements in the arn.y and Reports reaching here from various sources in the last 24 ist capital of Chungking, up the ' **eesvee Yangize from Wuhan, and ee ecen Shanghai at the mouth of the and about 100 other persons reported being injured as about 150 Negroes and 80 centres Paratroops were dropped an gunboats stationed in th during the fighting in Wuhan. Radio Canton said today Ma istrative offices in Wuhan fro ber ot Wuhan's "reactionary to 100 city and county po- ganizations" were dissolved. river were the new storm d Cy Yangtze in support of Maoists o- ists won back control of admin- m _ the "agents of the Khrushchev : of China (head of state Liu | Shao-chi) " \ The radio said Friday a num- or- lice clashed after a curfew The infl was ordered for the city. revolutionaries was mounting (CP Wirephoto)|While that of the reactionaries was disintegrating, it said. verely wounded. Chinese Embassy twice before|had warned the Chinese it | One of 00 Indonesian soldiers A would tear down the embassy | who arrived to control the out- oeee et 1 mee aeak walls if they were not lowered | DITION j weit Pp. Bie break was also wounded se- to five feet from 10 feet. 'cr Black Ower the huge outer gate. Others : pire cad by the volley from the) ated the 10-foot cance wall} The embassy was stoned in oe topped with broken glass and|April last year and again this ON MONDAY After the initial outburst, the|parbed wire. April by youths . The Chinese) Chinese, believed to number are alleged to have been in-| 'There will be no edition of about 20, kept their positions in-| FIRE BUILDING volved in the abortive Commu-| The Oshawa Times on Mon- side. building and an uneasy lull] The youths, members of a|nist coup attempt of 1965. | day, which is a civic holiday. came. Two buildings in the|small nationalistic political] The reaction to the coup at-| pyhlication will resume the compound had been set afire/party immediately set fire to a/tempt to the overthrow of the) folowing day. by the student mob, and the re-'small house near the gate as In-/ Communist party and President nf Sukarno's government, and the} According to the Czechoslovak hein agency Ceteka, pata or i i wet " dee eee " 3 Chu C . fine . " ; shipped 750 jmiles upriver from Wuhan. ° ° ° ets Permit | The Chungking fighting has Would Kill Police Captain | ors sco -- sm innate in be means nesian engineer who claims he} In Shanghai, hooligans were He should be killed -- he nojman, told Senate investigators|was barred froom Canada be. roaming the streets beating up NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)-- A Btack Power advocate who says he is director of a. "Ltb- eration School" the white Mine Men Favor Merger |:vii.cr"""""" am shouldbe. Fred H. Brooks, leader of the black community. should bejof employees, charged with somewhere. He's insane." Asked to amplify, Brooks| curate Se . . teaching hatred of | SS cousins eas ine! F ve Killed race said Friday a police cap- said: "I think any man who re-| Federal funds for the school! Friday, 1 tain should be '"'killed" for re-'sorts to lying to this country) have been delayed until offi-! H: G. Wene "now Two months ago Indonesia expelled the Chinese charge T k : Ante With Steelworkers 3-] d'affaires, Yao Teng-shan, and| n ruc local chapter of the Student killed. He's a traitor | a : Consul - General Hu Yen. They) Non-violent Co-ordinating Com- were accused of subversive ac- FREMONT, Calif. (AP) regi. mittee, also said th | flatbed truck carrying a YMCA! continue to operate even if fed- j ! 6,000 mine - Mill members at)---------- . ------| youngsters' club home from &@leral government funds are cut/classes for Negro children in St.|day Their work--observed for) (Anglican)|the first time by white reporters Unofficial totals show the) tiviti TORONTO (CP) -- Unofficial returns indicate Thursday's referendum among Canadian|Trail, and Kimberley, B.C., members of the International | voted 75 per cent in favor of Union of Mine, Mill and Smel-| amalgamation with the Steel-| ter Workers (Ind.) approved ras to The margin there was merger with the United Steel- workers of America by a mar-| Figures were not available gin of about three to one. for Wedge, NB., but Mr. Long-| ede in William Longridge, national|ridge said totals there are year-old man was reported re- up to the cab of the truck and Mill said Friday results tele-| amalgamation." placing his damaged aoertic! pogies." |day at a beach somersaulted out! off. Friday night. phoned to him "are running) The only aberrant area WaS|valve with the valve of a calf.| Fink radioed for "all the am-|.HOULD BE KILLED' about three to one nationally in]Sudbury where 3,100 men in| 'The open-heart surgery, dis-/pylances you've got" and then| favor of the merger. four mines voted 63 per centiclosed Thursday by the New|with others broke out. first-aid| He said he had heard from|against the merger. Unofficial) york Medical College, was per-| kits and started loading young- locals representing about 11,-|totals there were 1,135 to 646 formed July 7 at Flower-Fifth| sters into passing cars that took 000 of Mine-Mill's 13,000 Cana-|against. : | Avenue Hospital. The man, not! them to hospitals. | dian members. | The merger was first ap-|identified, was reported. recov-| 'The patrolman said the north-| "It looks like there is no|Proved the executives of the ering at his home. | bound truck veered to the right | doubt about it--the merger has|two unions, which already have' The four-hour operation was| and then to the left onto a 40-| rw! i g J.S. ; y Dr. Idon Bur-| ri ri divides th 1 acce ted| amalgamated in the U.S performed by Dr She B foot wide strip that divides the| ag oe a eepres|_ It was. then agreed to at ajman and Dr. Ciro Armellini. | four-lane freeway. As the truck he : June Mine-Mill convention in| They said calves' valves have! pit the centre strip it somer- STILL UNOFFICIAL Winnipeg. advantages over artificial|saulted, finally landing on its! However, Mr. Longridge said! The referendum is to be the|yalves because they are plenti-| side, | the cutcome of the referendum|las$ step in the ratification) ful, nearly identical in composi- ; will remain unofficial until Aug.| process. tion and structure to the human SPILLED OUT 17. On that day he will offi-- Kenneth Smith, national pres-,valve and 'appear to be well-| As the truck rolled, young- cially tabulate sealed results ident of Mine-Mill, said Friday | tolerated by human recipients) sters spilled onto the divider mailed to him from locals|he was "delighted" with the re-| without inciting a foreign body/|strip and onto the road. None} were all over and heaped on top of things." 145 missions after a record 197)4 'mortar attack on the base| centration points in South heed strikes the previous day. A main| camp of the U.S. Ist Infantry;nam on the Ho Chi yon ae ON DEODORANTS 7 y uns which were | Division's 3 i vail intelligence sources repor a j target was the g' vision's 3rd Brigade at Lai| inte TOMI (ibs cae Kep, 38 miles northeast of/gon, came under Communist at-! based in Thailand attacked a} Commercials for girdles, | Hanoi. tack early today. lrail yard 30 miles north of| brassieres, health clubs, hair South Vietnamese headquarters} The command confirmed|Clark Clifford and Gen. Max-| now are considered accept- said infantry sweeps in the Viet) American artillery accidentally| well D. Taylor on their special) able," said Charles Spraggett, across the country. sults. reaction. was hit by passing cars. Thirty children were in hospi-| i t them. Khe, 30 mil Saigon.|flat-bed semi-trailers capable of | L I ROE a i a has lifted its ban on deodorant Other pilots flew through; A navy spokesman said the|Hanoi Friday and pilots re-| removers, and bathroom tis- Cong - infested Mekong Delta shot down an ammunition-carry-| mission to the capitals of the) supervisor of press publicity Bente --_______----------|_ A passing motorist, Le Albers, North Viet G Blasted tal today, one in critical condi-| U.S. Air Force F-105 Thunder-| The attack Friday night killed| hauling tons of weapons have) heavy anti-aircraft fire and sur-|Communists fired just eight re-|ported damaging 20 railroad} sues now may be seen on accounted for a total of 469 en-|ing C-7 Caribou transport Thurs-| U.S. Vietnam allies. The presi-| for the CBC. 29, said: "They were just lay- e e © In 145 US. Air Missions tion. The other injured were re-' chief pilots reported they de-jone American and wounded/been spotted in the valley re-| commercials and other ad- face-to-air missiles to hit other|coilless rifle shells today. No|cars and destroying 300 feet of} CBC-TV. emy dead in nine days. day as it approached a U.S.|dential advisers were to arrive} A ban remains on panties. ing down, some on the road's SAIGON (AP) -- U.S. planes|at two U.S. military installa-;Quant Ngai City. The plane's jeased after treatment. stroyed at least 17 anti-aircraft] eight. cently. vertisements formerly con- targets and fuel storage areas. casualties were reported. track. "Subjects that were not con- The Viet Cong struck again|Special Forces camp west of|in Washington today. shoulder, some on the divider. Some were bandaged. They just tions near Saigon. crew of three was killed. Kept i peal gan wid For the aacned time in 10| SPOT CARRIERS North Vietnam Y, TY!8) days, the Communists unleashed| At A Shau, first of many con-| CBC ENDS BAN y ee TES gun emplacements around the; The U.S. naval base at Nhe| In air raids against North] sidered too intimate to appear air field and railroad yard at|Be, eight miles southeast of Sai-| Vietnam, F - 105 Thunderchiefs| on television. Ground fighting continued in| Ground action remained light] Meanwhile, President Johnson} sidered polite in mixed com- one of its periodic lulls. But) Friday. is due for a report shortly from} panies a number of years ago | . Anselm's Episcopal ' Heart Sur er of control Friday on a freeway,| Police Captain John A. So-|Churck chapel -- is a summer --included a dramatic interpre- g 7 killing five and injuring 65 oth-| race of Nashville told the Sen-|projiect of the Metropolitan Ac- jers. ate judiciary committee injtion Commission, local organi-| underground railroad which lzation of the U.S. Office of|aided escaping slaves, working |with paints, studying mathema- Although Brooks says he is'tics and swimming. director of the school, officials: y - treasur ine-|"about 95 per cent in favor of abe ; ciumth ' Brooks, a husky 20-year-old of the commission and OEO say|with OEO in Washington, was oa eae [Ceti igo nd Recaro covering after an operation f6"jall I. saw was) a mound of Detroit Negro, answered Sorace|he has not received pay from ordered here by OEO officiats jas a result of Sorace's testi-| He declined comment on 2,087 to 677. R S | Larry Fink, a California|Washington 'Thursday the anti | ecovery een | Highway Patrol officer who saw| poverty school teaches "pure,|Economic Opportunity |the accident, said: "I didn't re-|naduiterated hatred of the alize how bad it was until I got! whit, race." the federal government. In Washington, Rev. J. Pas-|mory |tation of the pre - Sorace could not be reached WHITES ATTEND e school will/ for comment. "T think Sorace is a racist.|chall Davis, commission chair-'his investigation. Ea MILWAUKEE POLICE PATROLS CALL of Milwaukee's near north side last night. They watch- ed television through the window of a furniture store and listened on transistor Milwaukee patrol men were able to see the Pack- ers vs All-Stars football game as they walked the streets radios. The city's core area has been heavily patrolled siace civil disturbances erupted early last week. Civil War longe: serves a function in so-jno federal funds for the school ciety. He ought to be put away/will be approved if Sorace's statement is found to be ac- about what's going on in the/cials complete a security check Bill Davis, com- imission director said Friday. leven of racial bias has been | a granted a minister's permit to) eer Cetekn: aan: enter the country, an immigra-| ' ; i tion department official said] usnting in Hwatian, * ove : south of Shangtung province. : G. e living in Australia will be allowed to re-/News Agency quoted Forei main in Canada one year to de- | Minister Chen Yi as telling Red Guards and looting state The agency also reported in Anwhei province, immediately In Peking, the New China gn a jtermine whether he meets the' visiting Mali delegation that the Thirty-four Negroes, six to 12 ter qualifi ) . au cations, The school -- which holds,years old attended classes Fri- Harry Carpenter, an inspector department's health and charac- cultural revolution situation w lexcellent. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Congo Rescinds Expulsion Order KINSHASA, The Congo (Reuters) -- The Congolese government toaay rescinded an expulsion order on Reuters correspondent Francois _Duriaud. Duriaud was called Friday to the office of the Congolese high com- missioner for information, Jean-Jacques Kande, and told to leave the country within 48 hours. But today the high cominissioner told Duriaud he need not leave after. all. Three Associated Press correspondents -- two journalists and a photographer -- were also ordered to leave Kin- shasa Friday. Soviet Skipper Remains In Jail ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -- Soviet trawler skipper Daniel Baronik remained in the Alaska state jail today in lieu of $10,000 bail after he was charged Friday with viola- tion of the exclusive 12-mile U.S. fisheries zone. Baronik appeared before U.S. Commissioner James Hanson who set bail ana ordered the Russian held. Arraignment was postponed until Monday to permit the arrival of Soviet em- bassy officials from Washington. Baronik's vessel was seized by the U.S. Coast Guard Thursday after a three- mile chase. Capri Bush Fire Out Of Control CAPRI, Italy (AP) -- A raging brush fire whipped by sea breezcs raced out of control over miles of this ro- mantic isiand today, causing panic among tourists and threatenirg hotels and villas. Capri authorities appealed to the North Atlantic: Treaty Organization installation at Naples, on the mainland 18 n.iles away, to send men and equipment to help fight the flames. Frightened tourists abandoned. the beaches to be ready to leave the island if the fire got worse. Hundreds of tourists helped firemen and local residents fight the flames, which leaped control ditches. int : | In THE TIMES Today .. Library's Bookmobile Opens Summer Tour--P. 11 Reading Popular With Whitby Teen-Agers--P. 5 Brooklin Redmen Win Second Place--P. 8 z Ann Landers--12 Pickering News--S : Ajax News--5 Sports--8, 9 u 2] Z Churches--10 Television--20, 21 A TIME OUT \3 City News--11 Theatres--20 Classified --16, 17, 18 Weather---2 Comics--21 Whitby News--5 Editorial---4 Women's--12, 13 | Obituaries --18 Fa ino A Cn Nai --AP Wirephoto as Ermer ty % "~7;,

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