Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Jun 1963, p. 2

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~ THOUGHT FOR TODAY Maybe money can't buy friends but it certainly can cut down on your enemies. Oshawa Zines WEATHER REPORT Scattered showers this evening. Sunny with a few cloudy inter- vals Tuesday. Little change in temperature. VOL. 92--NO. 142 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JUNE 17, 1963 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department, payment Ottawa and for of Postage in Cash. SIXTEEN PAGES RUSS IA'S VALENTINA TERESHKOVA, 26, and Lt. Col. Valery Bykovsky, 28, who are orbiting the earth today in ture was released today by Tass, the Soviet news agency. - (AP Wirephoto via cable from Moscow) separate spaceships, are shown. shortly before Bykov- sky was launched in_ his spaceship, Vostok 5. This pic- JFK Launches Appeal For Help To Negroes WASHINGTON (CP .- AP)-- Congressional and religious leaders gather at the White House today to hear appeals from President Kennedy that they act to improve the lot of American Negroes. A long-time split in the ranks of the Negro civil rights groups came out in the open Sunday night when a major organiza- tion -- the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People--claimed it was paying the bills while other groups were furnishing the noise in such racial hotspots as Jackson, Miss. Kennedy's separate meetings with congressional and religious leaders are part of his two- attack on inequality: day. |civil rights commission. gressional leaders votes to kill the filibuster that/to govern themselves. southern senators are almost} As an example, he cited certain to mount in opposition] wo chinot, h 1 aiay to Kennedy's legislation. skh cpl Attained Acie SENATE MAY OPPOSE Passage in the House of Rep- resentatives of some form o civil rights legislation is re- garded as likely. The story is apt to be different in the Senate, for an Associated Press canvass indicates leaders cannot count on marshalling the necessary the majority, and Liberia, Ethi- opia and Haiti, three countries headed by Negroes. |IS 'CESSPOOL' Washington "is a cesspool as |far as crime is concerned," El- lender said in a program taped for radio and television. "Haiti, persuasion to try to speed desegregation; sounding out key members of Congress prior to sending his civil rights legisla- tion to Congress later this week. two-thirds margin of those vot- ing to shut off debate. The southern senators' key target probably will be an ex- to my way of thinking, is a cess- pool of central America," he added, and Ethiopia and Liberia are also incapably governed. pected administration proposal calling for legal steps to pre- vent discrimination in public places and private businesses. | The Kennedy program probably | will include, too, proposals to strengthen voting rights, author-| ize the attorney-general to act On the voluntary front, Ken- nedy already has met with bus- iness and labor groups, with several governors and a week ago in Hawaii with U.S. may- ors. Another session with gover- nors is planned for Tuesday and In the civil rights camp, ling- ering differences among Negro groups broke out into. the open when Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the NAACP, told a rally at Alexandria, Va., Sun- day that "other organizations furnish the noise amd get the publicity while the NAACP fur- Evers Brother nishes the manpower and pays the bills." He spetifically named Congress of Racial the Takes Over Job JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -- The)population was such that many) brother of slain Medgar Evers|knowing onlookers had a sense took over as Negro civil rights) of foreboding. champion im Mississippi today; Sunday was comparatively and pledged to work for "the | quiet. Four young Negro women (CORE), the Student Non-Vio- lence that is headed by Dr, Martin Luther King, Jr. Officers Visit equality of ali men." Jackson, the state capital, looked forward to the possibility of more demonstrations, such as the one Saturday when hun- dreds of bottle - throwing Ne- groes, "crying we want the killer,' charged police barri- cades. The demonstration was brought under control after 50 minutes, with the help of John Doar, attorney in the civil rights division of the U.S. department of justice. With arms upraised, he walked toward the surging Negroes, saying: "This is not the way to do it. You are doing yourselves more harm than good." New Zealand jwalked quietly into St. An-| drew's Episcopal (Anglican) Church, across the street from} the governor's mansion, and were allowed to remain |throughout the service. However, at three other) churches -- Central Presbyter-} lian, First Baptist and First Christian--Negroes were turned jaway. At St. Anmdrew's the four Ne-| tendent of brokers. |8to girls, clad neatly in sum-| Supt, Macdonnell said the ac- mer frocks and carrying Bibles, tion is part of a renewe listened from a rear tow as the| vectication into Northern $ rector, the Rev. C. Keller Jr.,|,i, Natural Gas read a passage from the First) 4.4), : |Epistle of John: : pai | "If a man say I love God and jhateth his brother, he is a liar; |for he that loveth not his brother tioning J. | }land about two weeks ago. He Although Charles Evers, 40-| year-old brother of the assassi-| whom he hath seen, how can nated field secretary of the Na-|he love God whom he hath not! tional Association for the Ad-|seen?" vancement of Colored People,| Noting man's achievements in) did not disclose his policies in|space, the minister said: detail, the ferment in the Negro| "In the field of human rela- tions, what have we accom- | plished--fear, tension, suspicion! jand a tragic death in the com- |munity." | He-referred to the so far un- AUDITORIUM PROGRESS iby a rifle bullet last Wednes- day. He was shot in the back by a sniper as he stepped out of an automobile near his home. The body of Evers, a war vet- eran, sped today to Washington for burial in Arlington National Cemetery Wednesday. GOES TO ARLINGTON A white hearse took it to Mer- idian, about 100 miles from here Sunday and there it was trans- ferred to a Southern Railway $1,000,000 $900,000 $800,000 $700,000 | | solved killing of Medgar Evers| | was the ranking official in the}a whizzing sound and felt a| all of Montreal. branch when Northern Ontario/sharp pain in his left leg below, T stock was sold through a nom-|the knee. He rode home and his| which the report says has pro- there have been reports he willjlegally to speed school integra-| mentary debate on the Profumo} meet with educationists Wednes-|tion and to extend the life of the! affair before a packed House of| The president called in con-| A staunch opponent of civiljlan's comp'acent at'itude last week.|rights legislation, Senator Allen|ward the scandal was "gam- This morning's repeat session|J. Ellender, Louisiana Demo-/bling on national security." comes amid signs that civiljcrat, expounded Sunday his} Wilson said Ward, arrested on rights supporters still lack the|thesis that Negroes are not fit}a charge of living off immoral | Equality} In NONG Probe VANCOUVER (CP) -- RCMP)? fiend. Chief Superintendent C. B. Mac-|CAN'T CATCH YOUTH donnell of Victoria said Sunday an RCMP officer and two civil-\fair condition in hospital. He}! ians are in New Zealand, ques-|had chased but was unable to! Stewart Smith, for-/catch a youth who leaped from mer British Columbia superin-|g patch of bushes and plunged RENDEZVOUS IN SPA oe MAY BE RUSSIAN PLAN Wilson said that the day after Minister Macmillan said today|ex-war minister Profumo lied to the Profumo affair had "in-|Parliament in denying he had flicted a deep, bitter and last-/had an affair with Christine, ing wound" on him. |Ward told a Labor member of Macmillan, making the first) Parliament what he knew about government speech in the de-|Christine, Profumo and Russian bate on the affair, said "a great|diplomat Capt. Yevgeny Ivanov, shock has been. given to Par-|another of her lovers, liament and the whole country"| He said a report on what by the scandal. | Ward re ome ont Sa ; te position La-)Nauseating document' -- was her eaier a i de-| given to Macmillan, but his re- scribed society osteopath Dr.|Plies to Wilson on it were symp- sho in.|tomatic of the 'indolent, non- i ae re pe chalant attitude' he had shown --as "a tool" of ever since. Sigg iE agli ll |_ As Macmillan headed into the Opening the crucial parila-| OP Rituine aaa not in Macmillan revealed that on Aug. 9, 1961, Profumo was warned by Sir Norman Brooke, then secretary to the cabinet, }of a possibility of danger by |virtue of his associating with a man thought to be rather friendly with Ivanov. a " ly|. Wilson referred to Macmil- icy Fac Pi scone PO decision to ask Lord Chan- his unique access to people in/Céllor Lord Dilhorne to make a LONDON (Reuters) -- Prime Commons, Wilson said Macmil- to- earnings, was too unstable to| |U.S. city where Negroes are in|high places made him useful to|Personal investigation of the lease--at Wilson's prompting-- jand said: "He gambled desper- Jately on the hope that nothing Three Attacks ("3n! ai Miemian dno Peace: a new spy scanda an Unexplained In Toronto Profur o's resignation so soon TORONTO (CP)--A rifle, them." jafte r homosexual admiralty clerk John Vassal was con- vieted of spying for Russia. Wilson said:~"There was a standing condition of security \risk as long as the secretary of state for war was part of this a shotgun and a knife were used in three unexplamed attacks here during the weekend, one of which may cost a young man his eyesight. Gordon Mitchell, 21, was re- ported in fair condition and in shotgun blast tore deap pits into his face as he stood talking to a friend. Police said Mitchell jis in damger of losing his éye- |sight. Charles Munroe, 21, has been charged with attempted mur- d er. Mitchell was talking to a friend, James Hall, 20, outside the Hall home when a man proached and fired the shotgun from about 15 feet. Only moments after this at- quadrilateral with Ward, a self- jeonfessed Soviet intermediary, and the Soviet attache." | At this stage in his speech Wilson declared: "We shall want a straight an- | swer to every one of these ques- deep shock after a .410-gauge ion "Why did Mr. Macmillan not Cabinet Debate Opens On Profumo Scandal prime minister was expected to win a vote of confidence in the House of Commons tonight after a long debate. Failure to win the vote would topple the gov- ernment and bring on a gen- eral election. Many thought that after the scandal died down Macmillan probably would hand over the prime ministership -- perhaps to his deputy, R, A. Butler, 60, or Science Minister Lord Hail- sham, 55. HAROLD: MACMILLAN | | | KITCHENER (CP)--The On- tario Young Progressive Con- servative Association executive nance Minister Walter Gordon should resign over the budget "ghost writers" incident. A resolution charging that Mr. Gordon's use of three privately- employed Toronto financial con- sultants in preparation of the federal budget was a breach of confidence and principle passed by a 15-13 executive vote. The 200 delegates to the three day YPC conference. which the 'yes' margin needed in a cent. Conspicuous by aker. A special meeting of 20 Que- YPCs Say Gordon Must Quit Post Saturday declared Federal Fi-| ended here' Sunday also urged the Ontario: government to lower tive prime minister said in an interview that YPC officials had told him it was too contentious. Philip Mitches, vice-chairman of the YPC policy and research committee first declined to give a reason for withdrawal of the motion later said it had not been received the required 30 days in advance. The mo'ion would have de- ciared that. by remaining as party leader Mr. Diefenbaker saved the party at least 25 seats in the April 8 general election. The conference, held in the home town of Ontario Liberal Woman MOSCOW -- The world's first woman cosmonaut, escorted by| a male Soviet space comrade in| a separate craft, logged her) first 24 hours of space flight to-| day. } The boy and girl space team| was reported to have manoeu-! vred their Vostock spaceships} to within five kilometres (3.1| miles) of one another during their first orbit Sunday. | By 3 p.m. Moscow time (3) a,m, EDT) spacewoman. Valen-| tina Tereshkova had completed} 18 orbits of the earth. Cosmo-| naut Valery Bykovsky had com-) pleted 49 orbits. The Russian news agency Tass reported that on their first dual - orbit Sunday, the two spaceships came within five kilometres of each other, com- pared with the 6% kilometres (less than four miles) that sep- arated space twins Andrian Nik- olayev and Pavel Popovich last August. MIGHT MEET But an actual rendezvous in space--with the two capsules coming together--was still the |subject of speculation. It would |be a vital preliminary to build- ing a launching platform for a moon flight. During the afternoon, both cosmonauts appeared on Rus- sian television as they soared above Russia. Bykovsky, 28, gave a "thumbs up" sign and grinned. Valentina, 26, first looked serious when she ap- peared on the screen studying In Orbit Nears Comrade -- Both are fulfilling the program as required, the bulletin said. All parts of the machinery and the systems are functioning well. Soon after breakfast the pair re-established radio communi- cation with one another, Tass said, Valentina, an unmarried fore mer textile factory worker, completed 14 earth orbits by. 8 a.m. Moscow time. Bykovsky's orbit total at the Same time was 45, " Valentina's pulse of 52 to 34 beats a minute during the night showed that she slept y. Bykovsky's pulse rate during the night was 46 to 50 beats'a minute. Soviet officials remained si- lent on whether Bykovsky and Miss Tereshkova would attempt a rendezvous in space. Such 'a manoeuvre would be a rehear- sal for building a space plat- form to the moon, Observers noted, however, that Miss Tereshkova is not's trained pilot and might not be able to carry out her role inva complicated linkup manoeuvte. Tass said the purpose of send- ing a man and woman into space was to compare the ef- fects of space flight on the two sexes, The Soviet Union rocketed Miss Tereshkova aloft Sunday, two days after Bykov blasted into space, a logbook, but then beamed at Leader John Wintermeyer, ts absence} among praises for the Ontario! Conservative government of Premier John Robarts was a vote of confidence in Federal Opposition Leader John Diefen- bi accept Mr. Profumo's resigna-|bec YPC officials in Montreal ltion? Was it offered by Mr, Pro-|Sunday said the party needs a fumo and refused by the prime/new national leader. minister? If it was not, why did) A Chatham delegate who Sun- neard heavy criticism levelled liquor vote from 60 to 50 per at the Liberals by Health Min- istr Matthew Dymond. Death Probed For Cause Five- month-old Jacqueline Oshawa Baby's not the prime minister demand |that resignation?" The 69-year-old Conservative jday withdrew a motion at the Ontario meeting expressing con- fidence in the former Conserva- " Surgery Method | tack and within five blocks, Jack McSporran 61, suffered a} knife wound in his abdomen as| he walked along a* street with! Aids Cor ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (CP) Development of a surgical pro- | McSporran was reported in |the knife into his abdomen. | Police did not know if the two! in-|incidents were connected, nta-| Saturday, doctors extracted a Company stock| piece of lead, fired by a .22-cal- libre rifle, from the leg of Ger-! Mr. Smith, who resigned last|hard Frei, 12, A sniper hit him! jyear, was located in New Zea-|in the leg as he rode his bicycle. The boy told police he heard inee \here to several prominent| parents took him to hospital. persons in Ontario. The sniper was not found. cedure to encourage growth of new arteries in patients suffer- ing from coronary artery di- sease was reported today to the American College of Chest Phy- | sicians and the American Med- |ical Association. The report' was presented by Dr. Arthur Vineberg of Mont- real, who developed the tech. nique, It was prepared by him and co-surgeons Drs. R. Pi- farre, R. Criollos and Y. Kato, | The newly-developed method, | duced satisfactory results | among 12 patients in combina- | | EDMONTON (CP) -- Social Credit's 28 continuous years of administration were on the line today as Albertans decided in a general election their govern- mer' for the next five years. A total of 224 candidates con- tested 62 seats in the new legis- lature. One seat was filled by acclamation when nominations $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 train bound for Washington.| closed two weeks ago. "Oh Lord, Lord. Oh, Lord," a! Good weather was forecast Negro woman screamed as the/for the polling hours.of 9 a.m. hearse entered the railway|MST to 8 p.m. Temperatures yard. A crowd of 100 Negroes| were expected to hit the 80s singing mournfully, held a spe-| with possible evening showers. cial goodbye service. | Most rural roads were.in good Meantime at Clarksdale,| condition. Miss., police arrested eight Ne- groes who paraded before two) were eligible to vote compared white churches carrying signs) with 649,678 in the last provin. such as "Grant unto us our ion in 1959 when Social} cial election in 1959 when |seats, including Leduc which freedom." Integration leaders|Credit won in a walk. said there would be demonstra-} : : tions every day until a commit-/ PREDICT LIGHT VOTE tee to study racial problems is} Observers, looking back on set up. j An estimated 715,630 persons| | six weeks of quiet and mostly|the party in sta on policy. The Light Turnout Seen In Alberta Election dull campaigning, predicted a light turnout. In 1959, 63.65 per cent voted, Social Credit held 60 of 65 seats when the legislature was dissolved last month. The oppc- sition was made up of one Lib. eral, one Progressive Conserv- ative, one coalition and one In- dependent Social Credit. One seat, Little Bow, was vacant through the death of Rev. Pe- ter Dawson, long-time Speaker of the House. Social Credit won all four by- elections since the last general election. Redistribution reduced the} number of seats to 63 in the| new legislature. Social Credit contested all was represented by Earl An. sley, an Independent Social Credit member who broke from part 1959 RE-ELECT HALMRAST Agriculture Minister bh. C. Halmrast was. re-elected by ac- clamation in Taber - Warner June 3 when a new Democratic Party candidate failed to file his papers. The NDP had 56 candidates, Liberals 55 and Progressive Conservatives 33. There were 18 independents, including four Communists and three mem- bers pf the Alberta Unity Move. ment, a group which wants more compensation for farmers by oil companies. Social Credit, led by Hon. E. C. Manning who this mont marked 20 years a premier of Alberta, campaigned on its rec- ord and continuation of a multi- million dollar development pro- y did not oppose him in onaries tion with another operation, utilizes a free omental graft. The procedure is used pri- marily when all three major coronary arteries are diseased. It utilizes the geater omen. tum, an apron-like tissue within the abdominal cavity. A section is removed, attached to the aorta body artery -- and wrapped about the heart mus. cle. It was found, through early experments with animals, that the free omental graft seeks and obtains a blood supply and forms a connection between the | heart muscle. SURVIVAL RATE HIGH The experiments showed also that when all three arteries were artificially constricted, there nevertheless was 90-per- cent survival when the omental graft was used and 100-per-cent survival when it was used in mary artery implantation. "It would seem that we have |new coronary arteries to grow from the ascending aorta - out into the free omental graft," the report said. "These arteries have been shown to communicate with the vast' vascular network in the omental graft. The omental graft, in turn, has excellent communications with the arter. iolar network. of the heart' and the pericardium." Ex-Chief Of Staff Dies In U.K. Today LONDON (Reuters) -- Vis- count Alanbrooke, former chief of the Imperial General Staff and one of the chief organizers gram it launched before the 1959 general election. of Britain's Second World War three coronary arteries and the!; Denault, of 529 Crerar avenue, died Saturday' night after she failed 'to respond to mouth-to- mouth resuscitation attempts by Oshawa firefighters. Cause of death is unknown. | An autopsy has been performed but the report has not been re- leased by hospital officials. The parents, Gervain and Mary Denault, were out and had left the baby in the care of Mr. Denault's brother, Pres- ton. Police were told the baby was lying on .a_ chesterfield and when it was picked up some time after 9 p.m., showed no! signs of life. Besides her parents, the little girl is survived by a brother, Albert, and two sisters, Patricia! and Mary Ellen. The memorial service will be held in thé Armstrong Funeral Chapel, Tuesday, June 18, at 11 the camera, EXERCISE FIRST "Both cosmonauts began their working day with physical ex- ercises," Tass said Tass said all systems on the two spaceship--Vostok V and Vostok VI--were working nor- mally, On instructions from earth, the cosmonauts lowered the air temperature in their space cap- sules slightly. Tass said the tem- perature was 59 degrees in the cabin of Bykovsky's space craft and 64.4 degrees in Miss Teresh- kova's cabin. A noon communique broad- cast at 1:30 p.m. (6:30 a.m. EDT) said the pilots received new technical instructions to pursue what the command on the ground considered "'the most useful regimes." 3rd Russian Orbit Predicted In U.K. MANCHESTER, England (Reuters)--Sir Bernard Lovell, director of Jodrell Bank radio astronomy research station, said today Russia might launch a third spacecraft to join the two already orbiting the earth. He described the latest Rus- sian space achievement as a "wonderful effort' and said it was clear the Russians were a.m. Interment will be in Osh- phasing their space program for Ben-Gurion © Quits Post 'In Israel JERUSALEM (AP) -- David Ben-Gurion, prime minister al- most continuously since Israel was founded in 1948, has re signed for personal reasons. A government spokesman. said he also will relinquish his seat in Parliament but will remain a head of a caretaker government until a new one is formed. Speculation spread that the 76-year-old leader resigned Sun- day because of criticism in Par- liament over his handling of a security case. But a communi: gue issued after a cabinet meet. ing said Ben-Gurion's reasons for quitting were "not connected with any state problem op event." ay One source said that when the cabinet pressed Ben-Gurion for the reasons he replied: "I am keeping them to myself." The security case involved German scientists developii euclear rockets for the Uni Arab Republic. An Israeli se- curity chief, who never was. - identified, resigned last Mareh because of differences with Bet Gurion. Opposition parties de- manded an open debate on the resignation, but Ben - Gurion's a moon landing. Mapai party averted it. - awa Union Cemetery. combination with internal mam-| } been successful in encouraging] Cole Palen of Rhinebeck, NY, coaxes an ancient Avro 504K into the air during Sat- urday's air show at Oshawa Airport. Keeping this rickety strategy, died today. graft upstairs looked like a ANCIENT AIRCRAFT real chore as_ spectators watched it stutter along a few hundred feet from the ground. First World War pilots who watched cited the noise and the smell of gastor oil as ca catalysts in releasing memore* ies of bygone days in the air over foreign territory. (See Story Page Nine). Oshawa Times, photo

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