Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Jun 1964, p. 1

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Thought For Today The trouble is t stop to think -- started again. VOL. 93 -- NO. 134 hat some. folks and never get OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JUNE 8, 1964 Authorized os Second Ottawa and for payment Class Moll Post of Weather oceasional Report y with only an" period. Show- Office Department Postage in 'Cash. 19 MORE 'FO IN TORONT Korea Purges Lack Legal Aid Lawyer Claims | 576 Officials SEOUL (AP) -- President;censorship imposed along with TORONTO (CP)--A Toronto, cases he has not been able to lawyer who visited a Greekifind out how lone they spent sailor awaiting deportation in| in custody before appearing fn |Chung Hee Park suspended 576/martial law in Seoul last week. lgovernment officials--including| ARREST CITIZENS TOO a cabinet vice-minister -- for| The Park government ad- \corruption today in an effort to|mitted for te first time that demonstrators.) citizens other than students had 'BAD LUCK strikes post position holder Dan Gurney at. Mosport; Mechanics had to push his car from the Mosport Race Gate aa after the starter failed. n the background, eventual victor, New, Zealander Bruce McLaren, car 47, looks on. quiet siudent |The action was announced by Premier Chung Il-wkon but he did not identify the officials or |give other details. Corruption within Park's gov- jernment was one cause of the jviolent student demonstrations |against Park in Seoul and other South Korea cities last week. The president also ordered an linvestigation of scandals |charged to his government by Gurney. later. started from the back of the field after a Fey euilla stinks' Piojo Man On Ledge Wouldn't Leap: Crowd Hoots |the demonstrators. They a % cluded a government-finance Breaks All Records NEW YORK (AP)--Specatltpariment onstruction, Project ars gelled." jump: at $ man) and price rigging of flour, ce- ORONO (Stafi):---The larg- est -crowd ever to attend a Canadian sports event 52,224 fans -- Saturday witnessed New Zealander Bruce win the Play- er's Sports car race at nearby Mosport. McLaren, ,6 completed the 80 lap race at a record 92,51 miles-an-hour but failed to clip the track lap record of 1:35.5 seconds established by Dan Gurney in 1962. Fastest lap of the day was turned in by John Morton of Santa : Calif, in a_ Ford- Lotus. AB, He was 6.1 second 'short of the record, \ Dah Gurney, whose Friday time gave him' the post. position on the starting grid, lost'his advantage when a balky starter forced mech- anics to push him from the lineup, He left the start line last in the field-after a push start: CASH AND TROPHY The. winner, McLaren, took home over $3,000 in . prize money for his. over-all and heat victories. He was also presented with the Player's Cup by Paul Pare, vice-presi- dent of Imperial tobacco. His overall time clipped | nearly two minutes off the previous Player's, 200 record set by 1963 winner Chuck of Long Beach Calif. -- two hours, nine minutes, 38.6 seconds in a Lotus 19. FASTEST CANADIAN Fastest Canadian in the event was Ludwig Heimrath of Toronto. The German-born! garage foreman took fourth place in a Ford-powered Coop- Church Considers Alliance TORONTO (CP) -- The 90th General Assembly of the Pres-| byterian Church in Canada meets today to decide whether) consultations begun this year) with the United Church to clear} away areas of misunderstand- ing and difficulty can promote co-operation should be contin- ued, In a. survey conducted re- cently by the Committee on Inter-Church Relations, it was discovered that a majority of presbyteries across Canada wanted further study of the Presbyterian position before the church talks with anyone. Only} a few favored immediate talks) with the United Church. The survey, part of a report submitted last Thursday by Rev. G. D. Johnston of Brant- ford, noted that 37 of 49 pres- byteries questioned felt "the church. should try to explain it- self to itself at this period of its history." i Mr. Johnston reported that! three conversations had taken place with representatives of the United Church during the} last-year but, by common agree-| ment, the talks did not touch on} church union. | t In Saturday's business, Rev./came a majority controlling in-|, | race-goers up. E. S. Mackay, convener of a} committee on the place of} women in the church, suggested) to the 250-member assembly! that the presbyteries study the possibility of admitting women) to the pulpit. His recommendation, de- signed to promote action at next year's assembly, will be! debated sometime this week. A similar motion was tabled four years ago. Mr. Mackay said that while there are physical, psychologi- cal and sociological differences between men and women, there) are no spiritual differences. AREN'T OPPOSED "It. is unbiblical to think of man and woman as being in| any sense opposed to each other in the so-called war of the sexes," he shia. "In the purpose CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 | HOSPITAL 723-2211 | } Meeting» of God the two form a unity, not only in marriage ... . but in all male - female. relation- ships." He said that in marriage, there. would be no fundamental) difficulty for the woman, but} only a possible change in the| sphere of service. Britain Brews Chrysler-Rootes Buy-In Ruckus | LONDON (Reuters), -- A_ma-| jor row is: brewing -here in the! wake of Friday's announcement that the Chrysler Corp. has bid for a 3-per-cent interest in Britain's Rootes Motor Co. Harold Wilson, leader of the opposition Labor party, accused the Conservative government| Saturday of "willingness to sell) out vital concerns" to foreign interests. Wilson warned a meeting of miners that a minority interest by an American company in a French car firm recently be-| terest before long. |SHEDS WHEEL on a 10thefloor ledge, and booed| r -- police pulled him to A apes, for Park's gov- Ee , ljernment could come from the a ae eta ant ae death Sunday of Lee Yoon sik, 20, a university freshman) in- per Broadway for nearly A@Mlitiog jast Wednesday in the hour early Sunday. A crowd of rioting about 500 gathered below, some| Eee ; ae shouting' taunts. Lee was in a group of students Figueroa, who said he was go who clashed with police guard- ling to jump because his wife|itg-the Capitol and the ons | and two children left him a year dential mansion in Seoul, It was lago, spurned the pleas of two|not known how Lee was injured. priests. His was. the first death reported Finally, Patrolman Carmello|$ 4 result of the rioting. |Zumatto, speaking in Spanish,| A student's death during stu- told Figueroa: "'All. right, You}den demontration four years will not listen to us, Let us atjago touched off the widespread ileast shake hands." ~ "= violence that ultimately forced Figueroa hesitantly extended/Préesident Synman Rhee into a hand, Zumatto grabbed it andjexile. No. new demonstrations pulled him to» safety, He was|had developed up to 1 p.m to. taken to hospital for observa-|day, but Lee's death was not tion. widely known because of press | GOVERNORS RAP BARRY | Change Attitude | | Goldwater Told CLEVELAND (AP) -- Sen-|water to accept a strong civil ator Barry Goldwater of Ari-jrights declaration -in the party from| platform and to repudiate some er, He completed 77 of the 80 laps in. 2:01:05.3: Second overall was Augie Pabst whose Lola-Chev clock- ed 2:08:45.2 over 79 laps. Pabst is a member of the Milwaukee brewing fam- ily. Another Milwaukee resi- dent, Bill Wuesthoff drove an Elva-Porsche over 78 laps in 2:09:50.7. FOYT IN TROUBLE Indianpolis 500 star, A. J. Foyt was one of the favorites dogged by bad luck. Suspen- sion troubles held him down to 22nd place. He completed only 60 "laps: i Bad luck also plagued Roger Péenske of Gladwyne, Pa front-runner during both heats, and holding the lead for 10 laps of the second, he ran out of gas and pushed his car into the pits for a refill. This set- back dropped him to 9th place at the finish. PUDDLE OF OIL Jim: Hall, the Chaparral driving Texas millionaire, ran a brilliant race only to grind to'a halt in a puddle of oil near the end of the event. One of the supporting events, the sedan race drew almost as much excitement from spectators as the main|zona had notice today race. Crowds cheered wildly as the tiny Mini-Cooper driven by Toronto artist Al Pease, slip- streamed and finally passed Dave Hunt's potent Pontiac GTO, if he becomes the Republican|the U.S, social security system | presidential nominee he will)voluntary instead of compul- have to alter his conservative! sory; : image or lose their big states in| After a day in which moder- the November election. jates flailed away at Goldwater, Governors Nelson A. Rocke-/Governor Mark 0. Hatfield of feller of New York, William W.| Oregon summed it up as "an Scranton. of Pennsylvania, and/exercise in sheer futility." He |George Romney of Michigan said he thinks Goldwater's nom- spoke out Sunday at press con-|ination is certain. -- ferences held in connection with| Goldwater said in Chester, today's. opening of the annual|Pa., that his time at the con- veered into a dirt embank- | governors' conference. ference here would be limited ment. Hunt, however, kept | Scranton said he is available| because of Tuesday votes in the the big car going on three |for the présidential nomination. |Senate, but he would be glad to wheels and scraped over the |He. moved a little further into|talk to Scranton and other lead- finish line to take third place. The. GTO was pushed so hard that as it followed the Mini towards the checkered flag, it shed a wheel and three Republican governors that|of his ideas, such as making} been arrested since imposition of martial law, Unofficial reports said 20 |Mewspaper men, university pro- fessors and other citizens were arrested on unspeciiicu charges. A bried presidential announce- ment said only that the arrests were made to "maintain secur- ity" against anti-state activi- ties. It was not disclosed how many persons were under ar- rest. Viet Reds Gun Down U.S. Plane | VIENTIANE (AP)--Commu- nist groundfire knocked down the second. U.S. Navy jet in two days over Laos Sunday, but the pilot was safely lifted out of the jungle. U.S, 'officials hoped to. con: tinue an air. seareh today for the pilot of the. first plane, but a heavy clotd cover hung over Vientiane, The 'mongoon'season has set in. Both planes were shot down east of the Plaine des Jarres area, recently overrun by the Pathet Lao. Both 'were Cru- sader jets capable of 1,000 miles an hour. They were operating from the carrier Kitty Hawk in the South China Sea, The second jet was armed and accompanying an unarmed reconnaissance plane over cen- tral Laos, The United States has been conducting photographic flights over. Communist posi- tions since May 17 at the re- quest of the neutralist Premier Souvanna Phouma. In Washington, the state de- partment said the reconnais- sance flights would be continued with U.S. fighter escorts, The armed escorts were ordered Saturday after the loss of the second plane near Ban Ban, 25 miles northeast of the plain. The downing of the two planes created a new sense of urgency among U.S. officials in Wash- ington, President Johnson met at the White House with his advisers Sunday. Defence 'Sec- retary Robert S. McNamara cancelled an appearance at Ohio University's commence- ment exercises | jthe race at the urging of former |ers about the issues, The mammoth crowd kept | president Eisenhower. both officials and police busy Scranton said Republican can- Spectators wandered onto the | didates are worried 'about winn- track after climbing high wire ing in their states if Goldwater fences, and one race had to | is the nominée. be held back some 15 min- | Rockefeller said that he is in utes so officials could clear |the race until a better repre- the - circuit. sentative of the moderate Re-| On the roads, 50 extra On- | publicans comes along, and he tario Provincia! Police offic- | made it clear he doesn't think! SAIGON. (AP)--Thousands of ers tried to keep traffic mov- | one will. ' South Vietnamese Roman Ca- ing. Desspite hi-jinks and re-| What had taken on the -as-|tholics demonstrated for three velry at the track, neither | pects Sunday of a stop-Gold-|hours in downtown Saigon Sun- they nor Bowmanville police |water movement rapidly was|day, threatening the embattled were required to lock any | changing into an effort by Re-jcountry with new religious-po- | publican moderates to get Gold-|litical turmoil, Vietnam DOCK STRIKE CUTS LUXURIES Newfie Supplies Shrink ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) "I "I'm sorry, we don't have that in stock." St. John's residents are. get- ting this answer in almost every. store and restaurant in this city of, 90,000 as a longshoremen's strike continues well into its second month. The strike so far has caused he serious shortage of necessi- ties, but every day businesses run out of more items that may be lacking long after the strike is settled. Ice cream stores can no longer get fruit sauces for sun- daies, there are no new lawn chairs for the summer cottage, babies' can't ride in new car- riages, bakeries can't cook ap- ple pies because their supplies) ~ > tures filet mignon, you can't tell p's is gone, here and.at nearby harbors'the 'ustomers you are all out." At least one large store is|have reduced.the flow of goods! No mew houses will be started wondéring what it will do with|from the mainland to a trickle.| a. long as the strike continues. a consignment of Mother's'Day) Women are resigned to the|Sewer pipe, electrical wiring gifts that is still lying in a dock-|ract they will have to wear last|components and all types of side freight shed. j summer's shoes. structural steel are lacking. The strike began April 24 af-| Fiectrical appliance. stores). Schools and students can no ter the Longshoremen's Union | say their whole stock now is on\longer buy from a. choice of (ind.) refused to meet demands) ij,oi- showroom floors. school. supplies. Supermarket of the St. John's Employers As- Book and magazine racks|Shoppers go without green pep- aeaeian or een would make one forget what the|/pers, good grade potatées, rights in handling gangs in/'*: . | ellihe their thine: azines are up to two weeks old) yogetables and'. certain: dairy The companies want in-|and retailers have been told by| products, creased authority. over lqng-|distributors they won't be sure} "We don't even have to tell 'Te -gangs but. the union|of getting new books. until the|them anymore," one salesgirl in claims this would butt into un-| Strike is ended ja supermarket said, "They just ion ranks and take away estab-| A leading restaurenteur said|take the negative approach and lished union rights. it was costing more to fly steaks|say 'don't suppose you'll have The jobs of more than 1,000\in than was covered in thejany of this or that-until the men are affected |price but "when our menu fea-istrike is over,.'" 4 of both fresh and canned ap-| Picket: lines at the wharfs day--or week--was. Some mag-/mushrooms, fresh fruit, . green! Catholics Protest . Polici Many demonstrators carried banners denouncing U.S. Am- bassador Henry Cabot Lodge. Other banners called Budd- hism an ally of communism. A few placards tha ked the United States for its' aid in the fight against Communist guer- rillas, the anti-Lodge demonstrators d the amb dor of sup- porting the Buddhists in their campaign against President Ngo Dinh Diem's regime, which was overthrown last . November. Diem, his family and many of {his leading officials were Ro- jman Catholics, and the church had a favored' position under his regime. The demonstration brought ou jan estimated 40,000 persons on the morning after the .sentenc- ing of a Catholic army officer' whose troops. fired on Buddhist demonstrators in Hue last year. Eight persons died in the clash, which set off the Buddhist cam- paign against Diem. | Maj. Dang Sy, 37, was sen- jtenceqd to life . iniprisonment. Some Catholics think he is, be- ing offered as a scapegoat to South Viet Nam's Buddhist ma- jority. A small group broke away jand tried to pull down a mem- orial plaque to president Ken- nedy, | CHRISTINE FREE Christine Keeler, the red- haired prostitute who was the center of Britain's sex-and- security scadal last year, was released from London's Holloway. prison early this morning. Christine, who was sentenced to nine months for perjury and conspiring to ob- strvck justice, received three months. off for good behavior. The prison staff slipped her through the 'gates well in advance of the usual 8 a.m. release hour, Don Jail .at the 'weekend said he has learned the names of 10 more men. who are. being held on immigration department warrants. ; Legal aid lawyer Allan Mintz said he has also received infor+ mation about another nine men whose names he does not know, Mr. Mintz, who recently ob- tained freedom for Eric Claude Hooper, 27, of Buffalo, N.Y., after Hooper had spent 100 days in jail. awaiting deportation visited John Thomadakis, 21, who claims he was held in cts- tody for 38 days without a court appearance after he illegally entered Canada. "It seems that most of these people are in the same position as Thomadakis," he said. "No- body informed them of their tight to counsel." In another recent case, Har- old Nurse, a calypso singer and limbo dancer from Trinidad, was released from Don Jail after being held for deportation 87 days under $2,000 cash bail. Nurse, who. illegally entered Canada in 10956, was released on reduced bail. MONTHS IN JAIL a court, arene 1 through court appears, wen the day after Hooper was de- ported," he said. : Mr. Mintz said six: of the nine men 'whose. names he does not know are Greek and three are Portuguese, i '"T am going to visit every one of them," he said. "So far there are grounds for appeal, for habeas corpus in the case ot pe the men I have talked 0." Mr. Mintz said he will appeal immediately against Thomad- aki's conviction ona: charge' of entering Canada by stealth a ere sentence | on him, ssp A letter he wrote from: Don Jail seeking an Ontario Su- rreme Court hearing on whether im ent is valid was delivered to the court Friday. ; He said he was arrested here March 3. tion: officials locked him in jail: and did not advise him of gm al lo pI to call ° Le was told about @ charge Apri 3, seven days before 'Mis eourt Mr. Mintz said the 10 men whose names he learned ---(AP Wirephoto) 24 days to five appearance, |. bits :. The jail official said: he 1n- cereale § ees : ¢ for Thomadakis scheduled. ALLAHABAD (AP) -- Thou- jsands of grieving Indians plunged into the Ganges River: in a frenzied stampede today as the ashes of the late prime min- ister Nehru were strewn on In- dia's holy rivers. At. least one woman was drowned before police, wielding clubs from boats, forced swim- mers and waders to the shore. Four persons were killed in a stampede Sunday as Nehkru's ashes were brought from New il 'and. in. some Nehru Ash Stampede Trample, Drown Five The mourning thousands, dressed in the white homespun: cotton of India's poor, mobbed a floating platform and it sank under their weight. Scores tried to climb in boats filled with re- porters and government offi- cials, but police beat them back. . About 500,000 persons crowded to the river banks or waded in. The temperature hit 107 de- grees and scores collapsed. Others were injured by police Delhi. beating them back. TORONTO (CP) -- William Milne, a Montreal free ~- lance commercial pilot who flew into Toronto Sunday with an aircraft held by the Cuban government Since October, said he had no fear of returning to the coun- try..where, he once faced im- prisonment on a charge of smuggling arms. But. Milne, 32, who returned Cuba Gives Plane Back To Canadian to Cuba this week after the Cu- ban. government released the twin -. engine aircraft, said he does not plan to pilot flights into. Cuba again. Milne and Patrick Lippert 'of Kitchener were arrested in Ha- vana and charged with smug- gling arms Oct. 24 shortly after flying there in the small plane leased by Lippert from William Garfat, an Aurora, Ont., busi- nessman., Lippert was found guilty by a five-man military tribunal in Havana and: given a 30-year sentence. His appeal was dis- allowed by the Cuban court which convicted him. Milne said he wanted to fly out the aircraft when he was 401 Injuries Take Toll After Month TORONTO Harrop, 37, of Markham, Ont., became the second man to die 10 miles west of Oshawa. Richard Victor Freeman, 35, of Toronto, was killed when the car he and Harrop were riding in ctruck the side of an over- (CP) -- Robert|§ as the result of a May 9 car } accident near Liverpool, Ont.,| pass on Highway 401. Harrop died in hospital in| |Toronto after being transferred from Pickering hospital. * ~ Cuban foreign minister had not decided what to do' with it. "I was acquitted, I thought the aircraft should have, been acquitted too. After all, the ex- plosives were. brough in on Lip- pert's personal belongings." The aircraft's owner was told Tuesday by 'the department. of external, affairs that' the Cuban government had decided to re- lease . the plane. acquitted in November but the ? MONTREAL PILOT William Milne, acquitted by a Cuban court last November on a charge of smuggling arms into Cuba, is shown in Tor- onto Sunday night after 'he arrived with the plane' the Cuban government seized in " {> "the case," Milne, "who, was. spams bet em ta 00), edes beards Dike 4G F Adding to the confusion, a large group of huge tu: sud- denly appeared in the' midst of swimming. crowds. Nehra'e family, ord the heat and almost dea by the 'uproar, went out into the river in 'an amphibious army vehicle to strew the ashes. "Babuji (father) is gone," sobbed Nehru's daughter, Mrs. Indira Gandhi, as she boarded the. vehicle. ' Her sons, Rajiv and Sanjas, emptied the urn. of . Nehru's ashes at a point where the Gan- ges and the Jumna Rivers meet. ' : At the.s.ame moment, other small portions of Nehru's ashes were strewn on rivers and over fields and mountain in other parts of India. Nehru had directed in his will that his ashes be immersed in the rivers of. Allahabad, his birth place. Hindu priests se- lected for thi cei the ashes of Nehru's head and chest to signify his heart and mind. The ashes of Nehru's wife, Kamala, who died 28 years ago, were, brought to for immersion with his. He kept. the small coffin of ashes in his bed- room, ( arrested in. Havana, Oct, 24, with Ronald' Patrick Lippert of Kitchener, said thé 'Cuban government caused no trouble in releasing the plane. ¥ --(CP Wirephoto) x %

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