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

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Thought For Today The greatest labor-saving de- vice known to man is centuries old; it's money, ~-- Ghe Os Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy VOL. 93 -- NO. 159 OSHAWA, hawa Times Authorized Class Mol Ottawa ond for poyment ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1964 Weather Report Skies clearing overnight. Mainly sunny Thursday remaining warm. Winds light. d Ht Post Office Postage I, Deportment rHIRTY-FOUR PAGES Compliance With New Rights Law Pleases Kennedy | RAIL to collect the , COLORFUL VISITORS = in Oshawa today were three | aA | | \fered them a new formula fo1 Si eas AR ss this week. Angel Meneses is flanked by Margarita Bar- quin (right) and Luz Marina Lopez, Queen of the Viila de Guadalupe Lions' Club. --(Times Photo) Mexican delegates to the Lions' international conven- tion taking place in Toronto | | MD Did Fined At 'Clamp Inquiry | Nov, to call an inquest. nt Report Death: clamp was left in her body dur-| The coroner's office was noti-|fences will be the contention ing an abdominal operation, (fied of the death Jan. 30 and/that, at the time of the au- Dr. Alan Noble became the|the charges were laid after a|topsy, Dr. Brown was in a sate first doctor in Ontario ever con-| February. inquest, |of doubt as to what had caused victed of the charge and was | FACES OTHER CHARGES |the death. fined $100 and costs, with an} Dr, Brown,went on trial on| Under defence questioning, alternative of 15 days in jail./the single charge of failing to| Nurse Anne. Styrett, who was Five other charges against him|notify the coroner of a death|in attendance when Miss Mor- were dropped and he was given) requiring investigation. But like gan died, agreed that Dr. Smoking" signs in hospital rooms where oxygen is in use." The men were rushed to Osh- LATE NEWS FLASHES - LEOPOLDVILLE (AP) posts before. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 While U.S, Attorney - General|four companions were beaten|ber. pliance with the Civil Rights|seats at a white lunch counter.| publican platform committee at) been major trouble spots in the! were not hurt seriously. ASKS ENDORSEMENT tion shaped up at St. Augustine Ala., city council in next the committee to endorse the Three groups of Negroes in- Negroes ate in four white eat- ator Lester Maddox was or-| were no incidents jejected from one of the restau-|County court in the fall on a were arrested at Selma, Ala.,|tional Association for the Ad-| The Georgia Court of Appeals Goldwater should see how Ne-|SiPPi, cracking racial barriers|the rights of any individual. law should be enforced by the|._ A federal judge at Jackson,| guard withdrawn from Cam- U.S. attorneys that genera || County, Jackson and Biloxi be-|the community, law came about because of federal officials who will be in- law explained to Governor Al- Prep are For W all ace ginia just. what they expect to Hodges and Leroy Collins, the regationist groups continued to} money. munity Relations Service under|P!anned picketing of Alabamajexplained the fund's stand on) | | merely act a conciliation ' ; 4 gh cep nual Lions International con-|tribute to the fund with ne A Negro teen - ager said at , am jof the Canedian Anti-Apartheid| ence. gether last week to protest the/Givens of showing favortism t Ld . Rights Office for at least 1,000 to turn out." |post of third vice-president of . , Wallace signs were being hand-| years. He charged that Mayor MCCOMB, Miss. (AP)--Three|onto residence. Another 60 signs|South Dakota dairyman Al dropped, another doctor was| tion's "freedom house," whereltee on Human Rights. Puerto Rico. Each man is|went on trial. Tuesday on A police officer said therejernor's administrative assistant, | president post. Staff Inspector Harold Adam-|Coroner's Act. Pickets are scheduled to meet|Police said Tuesday at .east 20| General Hospital and the hos-! violent Co-ordinating §Commit- opening meeting at 8 p.m. and gold Lions regalia in an a-|the death of 32-year-old Patricia A spokesman for SNCC's na and confidence men, ia few weeks after a surgical 21, a McComb Negro SNCC staffiday visit, representatives of explosions. The spokesman, Ed| Lions delegates. Boxes and bas- R T bl N Parl appear to be moving into a"'important and positive step" and financing of United Na- problem, and all should share sues clamored for priority as|(Organization for African Russia and the U.S. differ on|Fedorenko of Russia invited opened at Marlborough House tors displayed placards calling cil, where the veto exists, ra-| Patrick Dean to the Soviet mis- the African faction urging Brit-| Africa. case of Southern Rhodesia,| House was daubed with "Stand|°" Some other issues, The dangers of British Guiana,|League of Empire Loyalists|ton that they are encouraged by| Williams after new violence|Home called the 13th post-war Ment may be ready to begin se- UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- But prime ministers and pres-|PTOtam of economic co-opera- United Nations to a degree un- that he has extended the year- own particular region. Malay-|, Australia, Canada and New an international army under two months, to Sept. 4, among Far Eastern and Asian pose Rive less emphasis to the}overcoming objections in the'air group: to help in its work ritsinis: Sir 'Alec ~jmembers can agree. Prime Minister Pearson of a greatly expanded program of ' ' member-states made it clear|this fall involving countries 'hat he will put forward ideas in ete Grae Doulas Hote' rity ove x 5 eco- cee ne oe °° RELEASE NOTE Nigerians demonstrated outside! want a Com ~ . " " for freedom of the Commonwealth Jeaders be-| as Prime|Japan calling for formation of Kenya expressed it With thejjurisdiction of the Security and Trinidad-Tobago, they have|members, including Communist The African members | the council with the veto rangement are under way to sia's white minori'y to relic. the United States Britain ST. AUGUSTINE, Fila. (AP)\Bessemer, Ala., that he and|gin desegregating this L 0 0 Robert F. Kennedy praised|by white men with baseball} The racial issue gained pri-| what he called widespread com-|bats when the Negroes took| mary consideration by the Re-| Act, Negroes sought to test|One youth was treated for head| San Francisco. compliance in cities which have|cuts. The others apparently soe Roy Wilkins, executive secre- past, : Negroes qualified to run for lled on A massive effort at integra-|alj five places gn the Tuskegee, '2"Y Of the NAACP, called 0 j ; nat ; civil rights law. prcryyd Fg ageless month's municipal election. In' Atlanta, restaurant' oper: " ' ing places in Tuscaloosa, Ala., dered to stand trial in the puatine Tuceden sight. "Thewe|but one group of Negroes was| criminal division of Fulton There was violence at Besse-|72"'S by several white men. --_| charge of pointing a pistol at a mer, Ala., nine more persons) Eleven leaders of the Na-| Negro. and a group of national Negro|Vancement of Colored Peoplejruled that systematic exclusion inadendl "oss Senator Barry continued their tour of Missis-|of Negroes from juries violates Toes live i iguissinni en route including two plush re-| Governor J. Millard Tawes of Eck thnme saga ated sort hotels at Biloxi. Maryland ordered the national states. Miss., made permanent an or-| bridge, Md., after more than a Kennedy told a conference of| er that public schools in Leake} year of keeping racial peace in compliance with the civil rights * President Johnson's leadership. A t R B CG At Richmond, Va., two of the nti Mnace-Dar Uroups "volved in the workings of the bertis S. Harrison Jr. of Vir- bare Secretary Luther TORONTO (CP) -- Anti-seg-| Leaf Gardens man named to head the Com.|muster forces today for their) A newspaper advertisement ' il ri | Hodges, said the servi ould) Governor George Wallace's ad-|civil rights and asked that Tor-| " " seed IG) cress Thursday to the 47th an-jontonians and delegates con-| force in any civil rights dis- | putes. 4 wes vention here. ceeds going to the Southern Mrs, Jean Daniels, chairman|Christian Leadership Confer-| |Committee, the group which) Meanwhile, Controller Allen Blast Shakes called about 20 other groups plows accused Mayor Philip 0 visit, said: "We are porta candidate in the race for tne In preparation for the pro-| Lions, a job which usually leads > -Hurting-None eaigns were being hand yearr' Re chersed 'ine Maver painted at a University of Tor-\Givens should have invited TORONTO | (CP), Five| r ainst one doctor were) ~-- ~~ are sceved were being printed for the use/Shock to a reception held for charges-ag s a civil rights organiza-iof the Toronto Labor Commit-| Jorge Bird, mayor of San Juan,| convicted and a third doctor| 10 persons were sleeping Hunter Williams, the gov-| keenly contesting the third vice-| charges of failing to fepert er the was no fire, although fire de-\said Mr, Wallace will arrive| ee ou trucks were standing|some time tonight by. air. son of 4he Metropolitan Toronto| Five doctors at Toronto Fast, ' The sires og oo, _ outside Maple Leaf Gardens|men and women officers have|pital's administrator have been pre Sy e siucent Non-lwhen the Lions begin their|been outfitted with purple and charged with failure to report! bd pour i southwestern will regroup again Thursday|tempt to clamp down on pick-| Morgan last November. Ississipp! town. : night when Mr. Wallace speaks. |pockets, prostitues, prowlers| Miss Morgan died in hospital tional headquarters at Green-/SEEK FUNDS | wood, Miss., said Curtis Hays,| During the governor's two-) PEACE FORCE PLAN worker, was cut abou: the face/the Martin Luther King Fund and body by debris from thejwill try to raise $15,000 from > e Rudd, said Hays was not seri- kets will be passed around the | lit it Russia US. ously hurt. ; Royal York Hotel and Maple ' | UNITED NATIONS (CP-AP))Paul Martin 'said in Ottawa Russia and the United States|that it could turn out to be an ed genda major new negotiation on the|but he noted that peace-keeping future makeup, organization/in the world is everybody's| LONDON (CP) -- Racial is-|"Nigeria -- puppet. But OAU/|tions military forces used to in it. the 18 - country conference of|Unity) first." mare. the: pence, Chief UN delegate Nikolai T. Commonwealth prime ministers Anti . P mol apartheid demonstra the extent of control that should| U.S. Ambassador Adlai Steven- today. for support tor any United Na.|D€ vested in the Security Coun-|son and British Ambassador Sir} * ' k tions sanctions Cr i j Ghana's Kwame Nkrumah led) rere, OBAIATS BOUIN ak the General Assem-|sion to receive a copy of the ain to stronger action in the Early today Marlborough|bly where there is no veto, and|proposal Tuesday night. where 225,000 whites rule 3,000, by white Rrodesians" .slogans,, But U.S. state department au- 000 blacks, Members of the rightis t|thorities said today in Washing-| Thant Prolongs were expected to be empha. were believed to be responsible. Russia's latest move and be- UN Yemen Stint sized by Trinidad's Dr. Eric| Prime Minister Douglas. lieve that the Soviet govern- killed 24 persons in the sugar parley in hopes of uniting the rious negotiations on these ques- Secretary-General U Thant told colony torn by racial strife. Commonwealth in a sweeping|tions and to co-operate with the|the Security Council" Tuesday idents tended to be concerned|tion pegged to increased aid for known in the past. old United Nations observation) chiefly with problems in their the poorer members Canada long has plumped for mission in Yemen for another sia's struggle against Indonesia |Zealand are supoerting Brit-/UN auspices to deal with world-- Canada is a member of the! caused mounting concern|#in's stand that the conference) wide peace-keeping tasks, thus|mission and has contributed an} visive questions and concen-|UN to a manent standb mL trate on those on which the! un force. ssi dazcines! FAVORS MORE AID Douslas-| ; vie WANT PRIORITY Canada has called a_peace- t in f " f Hae oe Cer col Je fever © But the leaders of six African|keeping conference in Ottawa "0+ iv id d Canada's ee een slug indicated they would insist that the issue|/took part in the UN . of Southern. Rhodesia get pri-| keeping operations. this rection ing| nomic plan A group' of placard-carrying} "i I hiciihe Disclosure of the Soviet move i M ta ,|monwealth declaration calling)came Monday with the release Marlborough House just before) "or ihe hp in Tokyo of a Sovie: note to poe scheen 'still in bondage," a . Ta arate were inscribed Minister Jomo Kenyatta of the UN military force under the support of India and the two|Council. The troups would be Caribbean members, Jamaica|supplied by the smalier UN the votes to put througn such alcountries declaration The five permanen' members| insist|of that Britain has a constitutiona'|power would provide funds but duty to fo.ce Southern lhode-/no troops. The five are Ruesia quish political power to the France and Nationalist China lblacks. 'External Affairs Minister| care program, veace-'Missing 3 Days, Youths Found NEWCASTLE, N.B. (CP) -- Five. United States youths, missing from a camp in Northumberland County since Mon- day, were found this afternoon.. \Tshombe Lines Up Neophytes Tshombe says he has lined up a new government for The Congo made up of 12 men who have never' held 'cabinet It was not known whether President' Joseph! Kasavubu would accept Tshombe's lineup. Robarts Sets Up Medicare Parley TORONTO (CP) -- Premier Robarts ference soon to-discuss the recommendations of the federal royal commission on health se Premier-designate law, successfully argued that/Tuesday that one of his fe-iring haridles of the clamp. _ of a death on the technicality beitte Weldoo'e ha Ct 81 e ann yesterday. cort to the burn ward at the cribing Miss Morgan's death to) Aloe, 45, 238 Ritson south, Osh- "That's not true," said Dr.|hurned Hicks, he received burns clamp, was made on the day of er in the narrow tunnel used jack - hammer to the oxygen tunnel with his 'clothing and Moise hooked onto the oxygen line. a_month to pay his fine. the others, he faces five other|Brown' seemed mystified. Earlier in the day, five re-|charges worded in different} Doctor Kennedy repeated pre- maining charges against Dr./ways but dealing with the same|yious autopsy' testimony that Burns Plewes, the hospital's! subject, Maximum penalty is a'death had resulted from a chief surgeon, were dropped) $500 fine or six months in jail.|jength of the small intestine be- after his lawyer, D. K. Laid- Pepper told the court|/coming entwined in one of the the charges so closely resem- bled a charge on which Dr. % Plewes was acquitted Monday E ] I T l that he would be placed in dou- xp osion h unne ble jeopardy. Dr, Plewes was acquitted Monday on a charge -- te of failing to notify the coroner l ure 4 I Whitb that the Crown had failed to} Hy S n y introduce evidence that files of the coroner's office had been| WHITBY (Staff) -- A freak| searched for any sign of notifi-|flash fire in a service tunnel cation. hoary new Lake Ontario ang ee Bree 4 Sicel Plant sent four workmen awa General Hospital and Hicks ia are|{0 hospital with serious injuries/was dispatched, with police' es- things began warming uj when ate md * sid eg a General Hospiial. Dr. Kenneth A. Brown went on} 2° °°. ; . "| _No serious damage was caus- {rial after Dr. Noble's 'convie-(iition in Toronto General Hos-|eq by the blast in the tunnel, but Hon pital with burns to more than! the charred, crisp remains of Barry Pepper, counsel for Dr,|75 Per cent of his body: |the boots and hard hat worn by Brown, attacked the integrity of} Pat Celestine, 25, 75 Hall) Hicks, testify to the intense heat an undated hospital report as-|street, Oshawa, and Innocenzo generated by the blast. Pp the surgical clamp. He sug-|awa, were admitted to Oshawa -- final report of pa ogi Hospital with burns to autopsy was prepared|their arms and chests. only after the hospital learned). Robert Larmour, a Toronto | that the coroner's office had)jesident was on the surface | heard of the death and planned'when the blast occurred and during his rescue of the badly A. J. Kennedy, senior intern int 'is hands and face, Lamour cate the a ge kg was released after treatment. prepared the report for "8 Ontario County Saget . hi A " ys y Inspec- oe ee Pathologist Dr. tor, Robert Carter said that Dr. Kennedy testified a hand -- and spol np pie written report, mentioning the|!"& With a pneumatic jack-ham. the autopsy and had 'been avail-|'0 house electric wiring and oth- able, The final report was writ-/'7 Services. : ten in December after comple-, He explained that two lines, tion of laboratory tests. one containing compressed air and the other oxygen, serviced the tunnel. The two workmen hooked the pressure line and had worked, filling the tunnel with the gas for more than an hour, The super-heated, flash ex- plosion was set off when one of j the workers lit a cigarette. Hicks was hauled from the shoes charred from his body. "Even the soles of his feet were bummed" commented one of the rescue workers, Gordon Boles, Personnel Man- ager at. LASCO, said he. could not understand how the men had "The couplings are different and they would have to adapt them somehow," "People, do not réally appre- ciale how dangerous pure oxy- gen can be and I often hear them comment on the 'No said today"ar- hold a federal-provincial con rvices for a. national medical OTTAWA CASH AVER MING ST RIK Pact Not Final But Heat's Off OTTAWA (CP)--The govern-:cial help in return for labor ment appears to have averted' peace, a possible transcontinental) rail-| On their side, the railways way strike by promising a new : temporary subsidy to the rail- agreed to resume talks with the ways to help meet the extra 5 non-op unions in Montreal | cost of a $57,000,000 wage settle. July 16 "for the eat of - ; bow Al i . | gotiating an agreement on -- on en ee basis of the conciliation board's recommendations." Neither the settlement nor the : subsidy are in the bag yet, but| This was regarded by Ottawa government sources say the S0Urces-as a virtual acceptance heat is off in what was shaping|PY the railways of a 19.1-cent- up as another bienn'al railway|ourly pay increase for the 100, sec apo . ; 000 non-operating railway work. crisis with a threatened tie-up r ; Lint thaliie 'morons Canada: jers in freight sheds, shops and | Prime Minister Pearson paved offices across. the country. \the way for a settlement atliOFFER REVIEW meetings here last week with} The government offered to |the railway presidents by agree-|review the railway wage situae ing that the railways are caught/tion in six months--by Decems jin a special situation, He of-|ber--and decide what subsidy would be justified on the basig jof an impartial study of the ac- tual costs of the 19.1-cent wage settlement, : The new subsidy is appar ently in addition to some $70,» }000,000 already paid or prom- lised to the railways annually pending parliamentary action Send Envoy ToGeneva --=2.2te talvay law. 1t would NICOSIA -- President Maka-|Proposed new railway legisiae rios will not send a representa-| tion, based on the report of the - tive to the Cyprus talks in Ge | Macknaneos royal commission neva'later this week. jon transportation, comes inte A statement pain by the hh dia' siiaieaa Greek - Cypriot president here i * Tuesday night said the Cyprus prong | that the railways government did not, think, any are caught est cial u urpose' eeze--b ' served Vy seading a represen-|edict from raising freight rates jtative to the talks, which are|and from scrapping uneconomic jbeing held under United Na-|branch, lines. jtions auspices. The commission put forward "On the contrary, we are/@ blueprint that would ulti- afraid the procedure in Ge.|mately revolutionize the rail neva, with the persistently ma-|Way business--allowing them to nifested offer of help from|scrap uneconomic branch lines many quarters, may divert the and passenger trains while lift. Cyprus question outside the|ing regulatory burdens on calculating government finan Cyprus Won't framework of the United Na-|freight rates. Part of the Mac- tions," Makarios said, | Pherson plan is a series of spe- In Geneva, it was reliably|Cial subsidies -- $23,000,000 a jlearned that Greece has named|Yyear'to offset railway losses on |Dimitri Nikolareiziz, Greek am-| werere export grain shipments, bassador to Yugoslavia as its/$62,000,000 to cover railway special envoy at the talks. losses on passenger trains, $13,- He and the Turkish represen-| 900,000 for losses on branch tative, Professor Nihat Erim,| lines, ? were expected to arrive in Ge- neva today. The British repre- M4 sentative, Viscouat Hood, was Matric Results -expected Thursday. The special American enyoy| Later Than Ever to the talks, Dean Acheson, -is/ already in Geneva. | TORONTO (CP)--Grade 18 | /examination results will not be (TALKS START TODAY lreleased until after Aug. 10, 9 | Negotiations were scheduled|department of education spokes- today on the withdrawal of/man said Tuesday. It is the Greek and Turkish forces from|latest announcement date' in |the "green line" that divides! their history. : |Nicosia to create a UN - pa-| C, A. Brown, department reg- jtrolled neutral zone in the cen-|istrar, said an estimated 230,000 |tre. of the capital, |papers were written this year Sources said it would likely | by 42,000 students.. Last year take more than a week to ar-|there were 207,000 examinations range final details of the free|written by about 37,000 stue zone. \dents. SRR ARMS BANDAGED, WORKER LEAVES FOR HOSPITAL

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