Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Jun 1964, p. 1

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Thought For Today Reformed smoker: Person who insists on letting his conscience be your guide, VOL. 93 -- NO. 138 he Oshawa Times Price Not Over 0 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1964 Authorized Ottawa a hy Second Class Mail: Pos! for payment of Weather Report Cloudy with scattered showers, thundershowers. Cooler Satur- day. t Office Department Postage _ in Cash, Scranton To Oppose Goldwater BALTIMORE (AP) -- Penn-| Goldwater, with 543 delegates Ivania's Governor William W.jpublicly committed. to vote for cranton will tell the Maryland/him at the convention opening Republican state convention|a month from Saturday, is driv- here today he will seek the Re-jing for the nomination on the publican presidential nomina-|first ballot. tion at Sam Francisco next) The Pennsylvania governor month, sources close to the gov-|has only 85 delegates, and 655 ernor reported. lare needed for nomination. Those close to Scranton de-| A key factor in Scranton's de- scribed him as deeply disturbed' cision, sources said, was Gold- over the leadership trend within| water's vote Wednesday against the Republican party. The ending the filibuster in the Sen- sources said he would tell thejate on civil rights legislation. Maryland organization he will|/Scranton long has been an out- continue to fight for the nom-|spoken advocate of civil rights. ination until the issue is settled.| Goldwater has indicated he Secranton's announcement would vote against the civil would put him in direct oppos-jrights bill itself unless it is ton to Senator Barry Gold-|changed to meet his specifica- water. The Arizona Republican tions. holds a commanding lead in the) In a ing his c y, battle for national convention Scranton would join a field o delegates. contenders that includes Gold- ------" water, New York Governor Nel- . son A, Rockefeller, Maine Sen- Flights Over ator Margaret Chase Smith, and Central Laos . Will Resume _ VIENTIANE (AP)--Premier}| Souvanna Phouma said today that U.S. reconnaissance flights over central Laos will resume in the next day or two because "important movements" of pro- Communist forces are under way there. The flights were suspended! Wednesday at Souvanna's re- quest. | "Unfortunately," the premier | told a press conference, "recent information reaching us shows that important movements of Pathet Lao and Vietminh (North Viet Nam) troops are aki lace in these (Commu- Stassen. Goldwater was not available immediately for comment. The Scranton action capped a a week of confusion in the Re- that saw major developments lin Harrisburg, and Gettysburg, |Pa., Cleveland and Baltimore. Activity began last Saturday when Scranton met with former president Eisenhower in Gettys- burg. The general urged Scran- ton to make himself "'more available" for the nomination. SLEEP-WALKER DOESN'T BLINK RHODES (AP) -- Traffic stopped. Drivers and pas- sersby blinked their eyes in amazement. On a_first- Fosert 'hotel om this Greek " Greek isle stood a beautiful, golden haired girl--in the nude, staring calmly into space. Police, called to the scene, reported the foreign tourist was sleep - walking. They refused to reveal her identity. h efore be n Pathet Lao 'want them to it is up to them to create the necessary conditions." Souvanna said he has no ob-| jection to armed American) fighter escorts for the recon-| naissance planes. He said Laos) itself has no means to protect| the flights. publican party over candidates _- persons jraged Beaverbrook Sunday Will LONDON (CP)--The crema-|son, Sir Max Aitken, announced|an official report the blasts|tracted by the fire which pre- Cremation Minnesota governor Harold | SCRANTON, DAUGHTER CHECK SPEECH DURING STRAWBERRY BREAKFAST | DOMINICAN REPUBLIC Explosions Rocked Ammunition Dumps SATNO DOMINGO -- Explo- sions rocked military ammuni- tion dumps across the Ozama River from Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic through piege a Me fore the first explosions: It was} The Dominican ibelieved these were fired byjalso urged all donors to go to sentries giving the alarm for|blood banks and all doctors to the fire. |report at once to the city's hos- The government put all hos-/pitals. ifals and private clinics in the} Santo Domingo, with a popu- ital onan é ion. of 480,000-was known by wounded. ing. "the = nate of~ id 'Trujillo Reuters news agency quoted| Immediately aftet the first|from 1930 to 1961, but reverted unofficial sources as saying\explosions guards were placed|to its former name when dic- they feared at least 10 personsjaround the camp, which canjtator Rafael Trujillo was assas- were killed and 300 injured. 'hold up to 1,300 men. sinated. Flames set by the blasts still] In the downtown section, a today, preventing fire-|mije from the camp, streets men, troops and police from|were littered with broken plate getting close to the dumps. glass from windows. | The explosions caused some) : damage in the city. INJURED IN HUNDREDS Donald Reid Cabral of the| Officials would not estimate} jcasualties but the injured were} |Dominican Republic which {shares the Island of Hispaniola |with Haiti. MP Requests government junta said three Be Private | and possibly five dumps at the| reported arriving at hospitals jarmy's 27th of February Bar-\'in hundreds." They came not racks. were destroyed. He saidjonly from the camp but from} investigators were trying to de-|Adjacent civilian homes. termine the caus.e There was) Hundreds of residents were at-| Emergency Red. Cross) The city is the capital of the}, Chart Course | Improve Lot Of Indians KENORA, Ont. (CP)--Indians and whites met Thursday in an attempt to chart a course to im- prove the lot of the Indians in Ontario, A total of 64 people, mostly |whites from government and jindustry, began a formal dis- jcussion in a three-day confer- ence on Indian problems. The Indians are delegates from reserves in northwestern Ontario, home of 7,000 of the 50,000 registered Indians in On- tario. ' | | Sponsored by the Ontario di-| | vision of the Indian-Eskimo As- | sociation of Canada, the confer- ence is designed to assess the| needs and problems of Indians| in the area. | E. R. McEwen of Toronto, the 'association's executive director, said that he 'hopes the current) and succeeding workshops will lay the groundwork for the ex- tension of provincial govern- ment municipal-help services to Indian reserves to raise their economic level. In an interview, he said the Indian problem "will not be} solved until all these services| that are available from provin- cial governments to municipal-| ities become available to re- serves," Mr. McEwen said attemp' |to institute this procedure are} |being made but the process| should be speeded up. Indians on reserves are under the ju- risdiction of the Indian affairs department of the federal gov- ernment. and, as a result, are outside 'the orbit of provincial services. It is h oped, Mr. McEwen! said, that the urgency of get-| ting these provincial services, | as eligibility to participate! jin the community programs| ection of the Ontario depart-) | | ts | re! 1s | te t K SAYS PEKING WANTS WAR III MOSCOW (AP) -- Premier Khrushchev accused Peking day of wanting world war 0 spread communism but depending upon the Soviet Un- ion to. win the war for it. "When we have a chance, we will use all our influence so there will be no war," Khrushchev declared. A man would have to be in- sane to call for war in the time of nuclear weapons, Khrushchev said. The bomb that destroyed Hiroshima is now considered a toy and who knows what a 100-megaton bomb would do? Khrushchev said the United States claims it has enough nuclear weapons to kill each Russian three times. It also says, Khrushchev added, that the Soviet Union has enough nuclear weapons to kill each American once. "We don't need any more than that." The audience of 6,000 laughed and applauded the Soviet premier. He was speak- ing extemporaneously after wandering from .a text on Germany at a Soviet-German friendship meeting honoring East German Communist Leader Walter Ulbricht. SABOTAGE TRIA MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet Union and East Germany signed a friendship treaty to- day but avoided stirring up a major crisis with the West by stopping short of a Second World War peace treaty. Premier Khrushchey said the |treaty would be an important contribution to "the peaceful regulation of the German ques- tion." His announcement of the pact appeared couched in cautious terms, | But East German Communist \Chief Walter Ulbricht, following the Soviet leader on the dais at a Kremlin meeting, said the treaty provides that East Ger- many and the Soviet Union will regard isolated West Berlin as "an independent political entity which in no way is part of the |West German Federal Republic land to which the competence of the West German Federal |Republic does not extend." STILL WANTS TREATY Ulbricht had argued for a peace treaty. Speaking before the signing, he said: "There is no other way of en- suring peace now than by nor- malizing relations between the) two German states, disarma- Eight Escape Death Penalty PRETORIA -- The eight de- fendants in the South African sabotage trial escaped the death were sen- penalty today. All tenced to life imprisonment, across the road, forcing the co' umn to turn back }- CAUTIOUS TREA SIGNED BY RED Pact Does Not Stir Up Crisis ;ment and the signing ofa |treaty by the victor powers the Second World War) and i governments of the two Ger jman states." i . The West German govern ment refuses to talk with US bricht's regime and the major Western allies decline to recog nize it. xi | In Washington, London and |Paris statements were iss before the treaty was saying the Western gov ments would continue to Moscow responsible for Ei Germany. WARNS IN ADVANCE The statements were in sponse to Soviet advance w: ings of the treaty, which ently were given to avoid . ing off a crisis through mis understanding on what it» com> tains: ro The three allied governmi consulted urgently on the opment, agreed the new patt was not to be considered a peace treaty and therefore cr#- ated no new critical situations. The Soviet premier, in a yoiee hoarse from much speaking and conferring, said the treaty |would be signed "in a few hours." * He said it reflected the desire of socialist states to work t0- gether, and provided for non-in- terference in the affairs. of-one another. Speaking at a. Soviet German friendship meeting in the Kremlin, Khrushchev said: "The unsettled German ques tien can absolutely un' pectedly provoke a catastrop. If we want to avoid. it, 'or later statesmen )muster enough courage to # |praise soberly the really. 4 + * i. re & Only people with business in|ing situation. the buildings were allowed up| the steps. Even relatives of the) j}ment of education, will be) ' a as " Death sentences given three made evident by the associa-} en tion's ject. ssociation| Opponents of South Africa's ra- BR ge ga gyre cant ial laws had caused a storm of represents some 70 welfare! © ohh allied organizations. | protest abroad, The United Na- At the conference Indians|tions Security Council Monday will discuss their problem s|adopted a resolution appealing among themselves and then on|to the South African govern- Saturday meet with white offi- pine ig easy what can be done}, the eight w si Sea ste ne | THUY: | and not to give death sentence ho were convict convicted men had difficulty en- tering the small courtroom. Mrs. Mandela arrived early and was allowed to take in a party of six, including her hus- band's mother and sister. }ment not to execute the three) S ed atel | Lionel Bernstein, a Johannes- burg white lawyer, was ac- quitted but rearrested immedi- y on new charges. Before Judge de Wet imposed} Erhard Arrives In Washington; 'Says Nothing © WASHINGTON (AP) -- Chan- cellor Ludwig Erhard of West tion of Lord Beaverbrook will|that he.is renouncing the barony|were started by fire in a powder] ceded the first explosion. take place Sunday at Leather-|his father had borne since 1917, |magazine. In central Santo Domingo,} head, Surrey, it was learned] "The title was earned and| Persons in the area heard) anarated by a river from the today. won by my father," the 54-year-|several carbine shots just be The ceremony will be a pr-i|old Sir Max said in a statement.| ------ PET Bea ss vate one at the wish of the|"He brought on it a unique dis- family. tinction that belongs to him| Leatherhead, itself a modest, alone." not particularly attractive town,| Although renouncing his peer- sentence, author Alan Paton ap-|Germany flew into Washington pealed to the court for clem-|today to review the German ency. Pton, author of Cry the/and Berlin problems with Pres- s Australians | The eight men sentenced to- Beloved Country, is pr t of ident Joh in-the light of the b B l |day included Negro nationalist) South Africa's Liberal party|Soviet-East German Friendship lleaders Nelson Mandela and|@nd an opponent of apartheid,|pact announced in Moscow ADELAIDE, Australia -- A Flag Debate OTTAWA (CP) -- An opposi- camp, dozens of persons were)|tion MP attempted in the Com- jcut by flying glass. mons today to have an emer- : | Thunderous explosions of} cy debate on the govern- Abduction Results |heavy shells and the crue atl ment's alas te test-fly Se one. 3 Months In Jail | A ninth defendant in the trial} | was acquitted. the government's policy of ra-|earlier in the day. | cial segregation. Erhard declined immediate GUILTY OF SABOTAGE comment on the pact, saying: | Walter Sisulu;Dennis Goldberg, jsmall arms ammunition could|posed maple leaf flag from a} a white civil engineer; four be heard. Occasionally the sky|flagpole on Parliament Hill. lies in some of Britain's richest|age, Sir Max is unable to divest and most beautiful countryside, himself of his baronetcy. Most above the column of flame was jilluminated as scores of flares|ington South) moved that the TORONTO (CP) Angus Alfred D. Hales (PC--Well-| | hysterical crowd of 25,000 broke| other Negroes, and an Indian,) The eight men were convicted "Tt must see the text first. I ¢an- |through barriers and formed aj/Ahmed Kathrada. labelled the 'stockbrokers' play-| British papers refer to him sim-|Joseph Forsythe, 63, of Torento, | w ground." ply as 'Max Aitken," but it is)was sentenced Thilrsday to) Near Leatherhead is Cherkley understood that he is correctly|three months in jail for abduc-) 4; Court, the big grey house with known as Sir Max. tion after he hitch-hiked to Sault! rp its acres of green parkland and CAN BE REVIVED Ste. Marie last month with two the two yew trees named John Thc ek ce ies jsisters, aged 12 and 14. fr e rd chancellor's fice} 3 > i Knox and Winston Churchill, be- : ye ts Roe ponibigenigied dein neath whose shade Lord Beaver- said the instrument of dis-|month when they told him they|P! : cliamer has been received andjwere running away from home. brook often meditated that the title now remains dor-|He put them up at his apart- The announcement of the date for the cremation mant. It can be revived after ment for a few days before they ceremony} |the death of Sir Max, unless his'all set out to hitch-hike to Van came: atfer Lord Beaverbrook's son also renounces it "'couver. : Oe : 'bl PRELIMINARY FLAG DEBATE ere ignited. It appeared to be the worst saster in the history of Santo omingo. Many persons were thrown om their beds by the first ex- osion, The Santo Domingo radio asked the rest of the country's radio stations to join it in a dis- aster network and appealed for ood donors |Commons set aside its regular| screaming, waving mob around! jbusiness to debate whee) Prime Minister Pearson should |"'without legal authority display|here today from Sydney. jan unauthorized flag' on Crown) An estimated 100,000 persons |property. jlined the 10-mile route taken by) | As Liberal MPs thundered) the mop-haired group from Ade- applause, Mr. Hales noted that) laide airport to the city. ja special flagpole already has! As yelling teen-agers surged been erected on the lawn in| around the car, two girls were} front of the Parliament Build-|trampled underfoot. | ings for the test flying, sched-| Police horses kicked out uled for 5 to 8 p.m. EDT to-|wildly and police had to use \day. |their elbows and shoulders to Mr. Hales said this debate|clear a circle round one of the would be "quite apart" from|ttampled girls as she lay of high treason," |waited for hours outside the Judge Quartus de Wet said in| of assisting in acts of sabotage in 1962 to prepare for guerrilla! not make a political comment knowing only what the head- the car carrying Britain's pop-|imposing the sentence that|action and an invasion to over-|lines say." singing Beatles on their arrival! where people plotted revolution! throw the government. Responding to the welcome they usually meant to take over} Mandela admitted he had|extended at Andrews Air Force the government as well. "Per- sonal ambition cannot be ex- cluded. In essence this is a case BEGIN TO SING Hundreds of Negroes who had Palace of Justice began singing on hearing the sentences. They then marched 10 abreast round the' side of the building in an relieve our oppression." | The trial lasted eight months.) planned violence, saying it was|base by U.S. State Undersecre- the only "means open to us to|tary W. Averell Harriman, Ere hard said of his coming talks with Johnson: Conservatives Won't Salute Bunting' Flying OTTAWA (CP) -- The gov- ernment's proposed maple leaf/the Thursday edition of the pre- Chapdelaine (SC -- She flag will fly on Parliament Hill liminary flag debate--all grad-|Mr. Diefenbaker wou today but Conservatives pokes- ually leading up to Monday's of-' design once he saw it flying. Opposi- ficial opening of the 'issue in the i tion Leader Diefenbaker--have Commons--had as its theme the too served clear notice they won't)government's right, or lack of!said the Opposition it, to fly the proposed flag on . It looks too much like official property. men--and particularly salute it. a trademark."' said Mr. Deifen- baker Thursday the mons went through a4 tions, sit . an unauthorized Com- there for flying another Mr. Diefenbaker after Prime}sign change in the proposed fiag| w 'arehy session on flag ques- Minister Pearson had said that would constitute a confidence is- t Lasting only 10 minutes or so,, "What possible justification is) this?" asked would be flown -- as re- piece|quested by some members of national su of bunting over the parliamen-| Parliament--this evening. tary grounds,"' declared Gordon Churchill (PC--Winnipeg South council passed? If not, it can-pbe a later reply, but meantime Centre), CITY EMERGENCY "Has there been an order in not be justified; that is all," Mr.|the request of certain members| ®2de" T- C: Diefenbaker said. "There is the same justifica-| tion as in making available to|Hill would be fulfilled this eve- "egard," said Mr, Pearson. members a pictorial represen-|ning. the debate -- scheduled next }Monday--on the government's| \proposal to adopt a Canadian \flag composed of three red |maple leaves on a white ground with vertical blue bars at the | sides, | He said the debate would be) centred on the right of the} prime minister "to circumvent George Muir (PC -- Lisgar)|20¢_ ignore" a. 1045 order-in. rbrooke) | arose on a question of privileseline Wed Base? eo Coa Id like the'to "yoice an objection person- flag aati ally right now that-no unauthor-}_ = . . + May I say no; it looks|ized flag should be flown on much like a trademark,"| Parliament Hill." | leader. Mr. Pearson again said that} British Golfers The flag issue was hoistedino one objected when the mat- : : Thursday 'whe n Reid Scott|ter was raised last week. | Still Competing GANTON,, England (CP-AP) (NDP--Toronto Danforth) again) Mr, Muir went on to suggest asked whether a vote on a de-\that 'the 3,000-odd flag designs The British amateur golf cham- hich have been presented to/pionship turned into an. all-Eng- he government should each be|janq affair today.as defending lown for 15 minutes a day. | champion Michael Lunt led four Could other politica] parties|Englishmen into the semi-finals which have favored designs dis-| this afternoon, play these, too,? asked NDP} Lunt ousted three-time cham- %. Douglas pion Joe Carr of Ireland at the} fs huss he purecanint's 'ork. "The government h a'$ ~~ tic 19th hole in the quarter-finals} posed flag hoisted on Parliament|Claim to any monopoly in ang art? John Hall who de-| | Eng On The Hill Perhaps, suggested Gerard) sue. He said there is growing|f pport for a design with one maple leaf. | Mr. Pearson said there would Alan Thirwell, former lish champion, 1 up: Mr. Diefenbaker again asked,| In the other semi-final Mar- ichev's visit, screaming on the ground. apparent attempt to see the A 60 - year - old woman col-| sentenced men, |lapsed from fatigue while wait-| Scores of policemen linked |ing for the Beatles to arrive. 'arms-and formed a barrier Sweden Sentences Spy To Life Term STOCKHOLM (AP)--Col. Stig Wennerstrom of the Swedish Air Force was sentenced to life} Wennerstrom received notice in prison today for spying|of the sentence from the cen- against Sweden for. the Soviet|tral criminal court in a special Union. |steel and concrete prison "bun- The sentence, Sweden's most|ker" in which he has been kept severe in peacetime, was|since a suicide attempt. handed down 10 days before So-| He will be eligible for parole jviet Premier Khrushchey is due/after 10 years. in Stockholm on a goadwill vi-| The court stripped Wenner-| sit. strom of his air force rank and When Wennerstrom was .ar- ordered him to pay 490,350 tic Treaty Organization, he said. rested a year ago, Premier] crowns --nearly $100,000 -- in Tage Erlander said relations damages. between Sweden and Russia Wenterstromn's d . strove aha ted ,| enners mostly secret had been seriously disturbed by trial opened April 9. About 900) nF OBER: Ri) PECEMNY AC CCl cages: of "ponte investigation| clined to comment when asked! ang interrogation have been re-| how this might affect Khrush-jjeaceq put 2,800 pages have tation when the resolution was introduced," replied the prime minister. When the flag-flying was requested by New Demo- cratic Party members last week jthere were no objections, he amis PHONE NUMBERS POLICE. 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 ,HOSPITAL 723-2211 is the boss and determines these Lamas mths 9? " With that announcement came . What possible justification|tin Christmas, British Walker a chorus of protest. is there, in view of the order- Cupper, meets Gordon Clark. Mr. Diefenbaker askedjin-council of 1945 respecting the Christmas eliminated t he last whether the prime minister had/flying of the Red Ensign, to fly!American in the field, "arrived at a point where he|what is at the present moment Sweeny, 6 and 5. Clark knocked the prime minister's Derevens aut Derek Harrison of Scotland " 43 Lalniem 1 wn | v Wennerstrom, rested after 1 57, was ar-| ington and Stockholm. His activity was mainly rected against the North Atlan-| | ibeen stamped secret, According to the prosecution, | years of espion-| Wennerstrom started his Bob. age.activities in Moscow, Wash- career during the war for the Germans and switched to the| tient in the Alberta children's di-| Russians Stalingrad after the Battle of CHIMP-SIZE. KISS ? Twelve-year-old Joyce, a pa- during a hospital visit'by-the Shrine. Circus. --(AP Wirephotel SS hospital in Calgary gets buses from. Tommy the chimo

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