Thought For Today The best time to put your chil- dren to bed is while you still have the strength. Price Not 10 Cents per Copy ' VOL. 93 -- NO. 161 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1964 She Oshawa Simes Authorized es Second awa «6and = for th atl all coll aa onl lees Weather ati tit tat os Report Cloudy intervals continuing "warm with chance of thunder- showers late Saturday, in. Cash, Class Mall Post Office Department poyment of =P ostage EIGHTEEN: PAGES 3 Metro Papers still Publishing Despite Strike damage to typesetting machines|Toronto local of the American at the newspapers, all three re-/Newspaper Guiid (CLC) went TORONTO (CP). -- All three Toronto daily newspapers pub- lished today despite a walkout) of 680 printers. |ported. to work at The Globe and Mail The two afternoon papers, Some linotype machines,,and at The Star under terms of The Star and. The Telegram,|which cast lead into type, hadjtheir contracts. Telegram) brought their first editions out|been altered to a degree that Guildsmen haye a contract Ree on time during the morning and|left them unusable without con-|lowing them to respect rr planned their normal number of|siderable work Sticky sub-|union's lines without jeopardiz-| three for the day. The morning|stances had been poured into ns their jobs, but the paper) Globe and Mail- printed two of/some working parts, clogging said all men due on duty ap- its customary six editions. them. Others had wires pulled peared to have reported. | Members of the International\0ut or pins reversed to alter' The Newspaper Guild repre- Typographical Union (CLC) the timing. sents about 1,800 of the three walked off the papers--which Union officia's were not avail-| papers 4,300 employees, in the have a combined circulation of|able for comment on the pub-jeditorial, circulation, advertis- 900,000--Thursday in what theyllishers' reports of machinejing and business offices. The described as a lockout but/damage. Engravers' Union--which only} which the newspapers called a} Members of most other un-jlast week asked its interna-| strike. jlons engaged in newSpaper pro-jtional office for permission to} duction and distribution crossed|{ake a strike vote in a dispute! the ITU's picket lines, though/of its own with the papers --| members of the Mailers' Union|announced it would -work under --allied with the ITU--did not|jts contract. So did the press- report for work and the Team-/men and the stereotypers, who sters' Union announced it would/mold the lead forms that print not deliver newsprint to the pa-'the papers on the presses. While picketing printers pa- raded before the three build- ings, executives helped man the composing rooms to get out slimmed-down 'versions of the big dailies in the face of the city's first major printers' work stoppage. 'pers During the night, The Globe and Mail came out with edi-| tions of 26 pages compared with 44 last Friday. The first edition was about 2% hours late, and the final edition con- tained no night sport results.| The paper had less than one- Rhodesia Placed On Race Carpet fyi we qi kets, and was wel] laced with LONDON (CP) -- More plain|tralia were obstructive and). a ohical errors, talk on racial matters was|seemed to serve as a delaying scheduled for today when the/factor in view. of the heavy in-- FEWER PAGES 13th Commonwealth prime min-|vestment of certain powers in| The Star and Telegram pub- isters conference bore down on|South Africa," jlished 32 pages apiece, com- the question of Southern Rho-| Australia's Sir Robert Men-|pared with 46 for The Star and desia. jzies, who was not in the con-/38 for The Telegram a week Concerted action against}ference chamber at the time,/ago. Many executives of both South Africa over its apartheid/ later issued a statement that it papers Wor ked through the policies also was urged by sev- was easier to decide on sanc-|night, some of them handling} eral speakers Thursday, the tions than to implement them.|type in the composing rooms. older Commonwealth countries|They would not help South Af- The afternoon papers' front being accused of hesitancy. rican liberal forces. |pages looked about normal typo-| But one newspaper, The} Australia had repeatedly ex-|graphically. Both used red ma- Daily Mail, credits Canada's|pressed horror of apartheid but jor headlines out front, and the Lester Pearson with giving the/90 per cent of all South African/Tely had multi-color ads inside | 'most impressive advice" when|goods imported by Australia/The Star reproduced Thursdays) he .advised against seeking to|was produced by non - white form chart from Woodbine} have South Africa kicked out of|labor who would not be helped|racetrack by photo - engraving} United Nations bodies. if sanctions caused unemploy-jrather than type. Z | It was better to have South ment. On the front page, The br Africa within the UN agencies 4: wee gram ran four pictures of picket so that its representatives could) FAMILY BREAKING UP? lines while The Star ran two. hear the volume of criticism) The conference acuta at United States Senator Wayne building' up against apartheid, |Wednesday in an uncertain at-inyoice rated the only other| |mosphere, amid reports the/page One picture, on the basis| STRESSES EQUALITY Commonwealth may be coming) .- 3 speech warning of war in Pearson's words carried ai end. : Southeast Asia: i that ut some observers now are : weight because he stressed tha a the basis for the new Common-jtaking a more optimistic out- BARD RECEIVES | wealth must be full racial equal-|look, nothing that. Ghana's | ity without any discrimination Kwame Nkrumah and many KOSHER TOUCH | of any kind. other leaders of the younger A black-white clash of a kind) countries are calling for new in- came when Prime Minister Al- stitutions such as a Common- day, a fatal crash since Nov. 21, 1962. Viscount turbo Plane Atire Hits Hill Killing 39 NEWPORT, Tenn.- (AP) -- A smoking, low-flying United Air Lines plane crashed and burned in the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains late Thurs- killing the 39 persons Thursday Canada isn't anxious 4 '| He said in the Commons ex-| 4 ' | Ottawa Shuns Time Waste | In Indochina | OTTAWA (CP) |Affairs Minister External Martin said |to continue its participation in TURKISH, GREEK FORCES SMUGGLED TO CYPRUS Martin Reveals Turk Landings OTTAWA (CP)--External 'Af-| has information} be gained by a public' discus- fairs Minister Martin indicated sion of the number of troops jtoday 'in the Commons that the} landed. government that Turkish as well as Greek|and Turkey to exercise every He said he had asked Greece troops have been landed in Cy-|moderating influence they can jthe Indochina truce commis- | |sions if they are thought use- \less or to have served their pur-| |pose, | ternal affairs committee that if |the 14 nations which established [the commissions at Geneva in prus. cording to the air evacuation of the 1,122 Outside the Commons, in formed sources said the defence are 1,100 Canadian department has worked out a|Cyprus and that the incursions plan,- which it revises daily ac-| circumstances, for! Canadian troops serving in the RESCUERS REMOVE BODIES |1954 judge the truce teams in |Laos, Viet Nam and Cambodia jto be inefficient, "we certainly don't want to keep going." lack of collaboration from time to time by the other two na- uo | ions represented on the three / #8 commissions, India and Poland. # The minister stoutly defended ithe United Nations peacekeep- jing effort in Cyprus and Can- lada's share in this operation. The UN was an imperfect in- strument but "a small fire en- gine is infinitely better than no engine at all," he said. "| Mr. Martin said the buildup of the military potential of the \Greek and Turkish communi- ities in Cyprus has continued with aid from neighboring coun- tries. If this continued, the risk of widespread violence would be increased. board, It was United's 962 | Witnesses Said they 'saw: the! -prop explode | and objects fall from it before it crashed eight miles northeast! of here near the North Carolina ne. reau of Investigation to make) an inquiry. TORONTO (CP) -- Alabama} The flight originated in Phila-|Governor George Wallace told delphia and was bound _for|an estimated 12,000 Lions Inter-| Huntsville, Ala. The plane had/national members Thursday 'the| stopped in Washington and was|newly - enacted United States due in Knoxville, 40 miles to/ciyil rights legislation would the south, six minutes after it collapse in a few years because crashed in a heavily - wooded of the federal government's in- hollow at 7:16 p.m. ability to enforce it. Rights Law Io Fall ~ "nus sia eran WA AlLace Tells Lions tors from various Toronto|dians also declined to applaud. groups carried placards de-| The governor said: "There is nouncing the governor and seg-|no state that has come to the |tion Leader Diefenbaker He also saiq there has been|' concern . presence of troops from other countries that have an involve- United Nations Cyprus force. Mr. Martin said in reply to a series of questions by Opposi-| 'we have expressed our deep . - with regard to the ment." He added that he had called in Ambassador Taha Carim of Turkey as well as Greek Am- bassador John D. Kalergis and made unmistakably clear to them Canadian concern. over foreign incursions. : A week ago, Mr. Martin re- ferred only to the landing of Greek troops and arms on Cy- prus and.earlier this week he said he had called in the Greek ambassador. His statement today was be- lieved the first indication that Turkish troops might have been put ashore on the island. . Mr. Diefenbaker again. asked 4,000 infiltrated) planes. still use Pisa for a stop for confirmation... th at Greek troops have into Cyprus. that in the situation. Mr. Diefenbaker said there troops in are very serious. Mr. Martin said he wanted to reassure Mr. Diefenbaker. that Canada's position has been made perfectly clear to Greece and Turkey. Mr. Martin Thursday said Canada suspended indefinitely all arms shipments to Greece atid Turkey when the Cyprus crisis arose, Planes Ready For Instant Evacuation Authorities declined 'to say. how long it would take to air- lift Canadian soldiers out of \Cyprus, But with every available plane diverted to the scene it was estimated that this could be done in a day or two, Rng es, ee sevanee se sa, » is still open though the UN Congo operation has" come to an end. RCAF lon flights to El Arish, Egypt, Mr. Martin repeated that hel/near the base camp of the UN has no confirmation of that fig- ure. { SEES SECRECY Why the secrecy, demanded Mr, Diefenbaker. Mr. Martin should remove the mystery, The minister said the govern- ment has its own sources of force in Egypt. North Stars make the run to |El Arish from the RCAF base jat Marville, France, while the |Canadian contingent in the UN \Cyprus force is supplied direct from Trenton, Ont., by Yukons |making one stop at Marville, bert Margai of Sierra Leone|wealth secretariat and concilia- said sanctions alone can change tion machinery to settle family South Africa and added: disputes, such as the one be- "I am beginning to think the tween India and Pakistan over arguments brought out by Aus-'Kashmir. INQUIRY NEARS END Might Have Recovered But For Clamp -- Surgeon TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Burns/body a feeding tube could prob-} Plewes, chief of surgery at Tor-/ably have been cemovec from) onto East General Hospital.|Miss Morgan's digestive tract) said Thursday that Patr.ciajand she coud have been oper-) Morgan might have resumed ajated on again in about six comparatively normal life if it) weeks. | had not been for a surgical) Dr. Brown had intended to clamp left in her abdominaljremove part of the patient's cavity, © stomack to eliminate a block Dr. Plewes was testifying at 28¢ of the lower exit which had the trial of Dr Kenneth Brown developed after an earlier oper- on six charges of failing to re- ation to remove a cancer} port the death of the 32-year. Srowth. The operat on was old woman to the corone: stopped before this was done An- | The pilot, Capt. Oliver E. Sa-/ Jn a 15-minute address which |batke of Washington, radioed 13)he prefaced with a statement |minutes before the crash that} that he did not intend to dis-| he was changing from an in-|eyss politics, Governor Wallace }strument to a visual flight plan. | accused the federal government [There was a 4,000-foot ceiling, of being undemocratic. He said \20-mile visibility and scattered it rode roughshod over the \clouds. SAW PLANE SMOKING | |. "I heard a screeching noise,) manner. |looked up and saw the plane) |smoking and coming in toward|fiance of any law," NEW YORK (A) -- other highly unorthodox re- write of Shakespeare has been worked up by ortho- dox Jews at the Menorah Home and Hospital for the Aged, Their play -this year -is Macbeth, and the script calls for the ambitious and unscrupulous Lady Mac- beth to ask: "Did I do bad? I wanted my husband to be a some- body." Midway in the play, Mac- beth, played by Zousse Mas- sinca 82, turns to Lady Macbeth, played by Bessie Estrich, 76, and laments: "A king T had to be?. A 15-room castle wasn't good enough for you?" Last year, in Romeo and Juliet, a 75-year-old Romeo asked an 82-year-old Juliet, "you Jewish?" said she saw the four-engine|I have enough to do without) |plane explode and fall into the|trying to enforce the most un- |hollow near her home. |popular piece of legislation in | The plane smashed into the|the United States." jside of a hill known as Trent-| During his visit here, which jham Hollow, Bodies, personal/lasted less than 24 hours, the leffects and wreckage were|segregationist governor was strewn over a half-square-mile/closely guarded by police, while} area. One engine rolled 150 feet/picketers demonstrated against to the bottom of the hill. A wing/his policies and newspaper men section was the largest piece of/hesieged him. He left early wreckage, Thursday evening by Six floodlights' were used plane. the -hodies to an emergency|where he made his speech, be- The trial may end today when Dr. Plewes, a Crown witness is expected to be cross-examined morgue set up in Newport. itween 300 and 500 demonstra- 'WIN VIETNAM' IF ELECTED by defence counse! Barry C Pepper. Dr. Plewes earlier this week was acquitted of the same six charges. Dr. Allan Noble was convicted of one of the charges and fined $100 and costs or 15 days in jail. Two other doctors and the hospita! administrator also face the charges, 'the first --, -- ne oe unde he becomes president he would e Coroner's Ac order 6 Dr. Plewes told aS Vise Naw and insteaet he Gaile Shue mains er oer hour|{2tY chiefs of staff to get the r . » operation on Miss Morgan Oct rie taciestiee 18 Miss Morgan died Nov 4. inatks, Heit made Ge ad inte: STOPS OPERATION vjew for the German news He said that after being,magazine Der Spiegel. and re- called by an intern he stopped peated at a press conference the operation on Miss Morgan here Thursday is that Gold-| because the patient had been water would allow his military weakened chiefs to decide whether nu- He said that if the clamp had clear weapons would be needed not SAN FRANCISCO (CP) Barry Goldwater has ac- knowledged saying that if ever of his re wat Goldwater, whose -arrival at} this convention city Thursday was cheered. lustily by more than 1,000 placard-bearing sup-| porters, breezily told an esti- mated 500 reporters. jammed into. a hotel hall that he would capture the * Republican dential nomination next nesday on the first allot But he is still hunting for| CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | presi Wed- Barry Would A-Bomb nominating delegates, he added,|bring a full transcript of and hopes to pick up another\interview when the senator 20 or 30 vote pledges within the pears before the next. few days the} alliance, real convention} Goldwater hesitated manders or the supreme com- of the 1,331 delegate votes. Un- didn't have official estimates place Gold-|though his office previously had water pledges at more than 700./issued transcribed excerpts. said Lemnitzer should have "a RAPS SENATOR whe a Neamt as Hyland Pe more leeway" on the nu-| Desperately se arching for tial andi mate sevhte the ae some way ty stop the Gold- 8 ee: aaa When caveat a me D sutaa governor had accused him of | nag water bandwagon, Pennsylvania Al ark. |e Be ae cae ' ~* anin, Deing ignorant, cowardly, back- Governor William Scranton ward and inbulatve plunged into 'wo press confer- gid ences Thursday to seize. re-- CLARIFIES STAND ported new excerpts from Der Goldwater said he NATO supreme commander. He reporters. pointed Scranton had demanded! that the party openly reject the| John Birch Society, a - right- wing extremist group that sup- never ad-|ports. Goldwater, the senator Goldwater of toying with the | hoped he never would -have to|Whatever the platform-drafting lives of almost 290,000,000 Am-|make such a decision. But he|Committee decides. ericans. believed military men had a} As for chances of winning "This is.another example of|place' "in our scheme of things"|against President Lyndon B his failure to comprehend be-jand that decisions affecting the|Johnson. next November, Gold- ing president of the United|use of small nuclear tactical|water said that if the election States is not the same as being)weapons should be left to men/was held today, he couldn't win! 1 benevolent chairman. of thelin the field against the Democratic leader | board, etting o-hars decide) When asked to clarify his po-|But thete were clouds hanging! when nuclear destruction shalljsition by saying whether hejover the White House By next be unleashed," Scranton said. | would leave use of such tactical/fall the situation would be dif- He demanded Goldwater'weapons with alion. com-'ferent. throughout the night to remove| Outside Maple Leaf Gardens,| sons thought movie star A successful platform committee to give his|\™@nder of the North Atlantic "win" policy in South|candidate must get at least 655|views today. Goldwater said he|and said he was referring to|ing he was there only to see the a transcript, al-/U.S. Gen. Lyman Lemnitzer,| Picture and not to take part in regationist views, defence of the free world more ireadily than the state of Ala-| bama. "'We are interested in the. wel-| fare of all mankind. We are not! racists. We have no ill feeling toward any man because of) race, creed, color or rligion. | "Anyone who despises an-! other man on these groundes| despises God's handiwork." | RAPS PRESS FORM COMMITTEE The Canadian protest groups formed The Emergency Com- mittee of Five which included the anti-apartheid committee home service association, the peace institute and representa- tives from the Toronto and District Labor Council. When Governor Wallace took the stand to speak, he was applauded for 30 seconds, while jrights of individuals in an un-\a group of Alabama delegates) jconstitutional and tyrannical/near the platform stood to|when the state of Alabama tried| tween Lima, Peru, and Vancou-|the Royal Air Force jcheer. But some delegates, in-|to prevent the overriding of in-lyver, A CPA spokesman said| I "I've never advocated. de-|cluding Lions on the platform/dividual rights, but remaining) Wednesday night investigations he said,jand delegates from England|silent on questions just as vital/are under way to determine a hill," said Constable Frank|". . . but it is not my respon-|and several northern states, sat| which called for objective ex- |Turner, 52. Mrs. Charles Hawk|sibility to enforce federal law.|with folded arms. Many Cana-| amination. Mob Storms Theater; Police Use Gas, Hoses TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) -- Police used tear gas and fire hoses Thursday night to quell a private disturbance in Tuscaloosa when (Dem. Calif.) a former FBI n angry crowd of white per- Jack Palance was joining in an inte- gration attempt. Officers, who estimatde the crowd at between 600 and 1,000, arrested one man as bricks and other missiles \were thrown at a theatre where Palance, his wife and four children had ent- ered. The theatre was inte- grated this last week for the first time in compliance with the new Civil Rights Act. Richard E. Young, manager of the thaetre, said there were no Negroes present at the time. He also quoted Palance as say- any civil rights movement. Young said the theatre's mar- quee, cashier's booth and other facilities were heavily damaged by the crowd before off'cers out used tear gas and the fire hose 5999 university professors to bring it under control. HOOVER MAY VISIT It' was reported in Washing- fon, meanwhile, that J. Edyar been left in the woman's to win the South Vieinamese Spiegel interview and to accuse) vocated use of nuclear war and Said he would go along with| Hoover, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, is se- ritusly consideting a trip to Mississippi where more than 100 FBI agents are taking part in the search for three missing civil rights workers. The report that Hoover is|jcan and Vietnamese lives, thinking about the trip to Phil- adelphia,~ Miss, came in the wake of a congressman's stale- ment that there is a 'very information but not- much would) External Affairs Minister |Martin said Thursday that its Water In Fuel junlikely that the UN force would be attacked even if the Cripples CP Jet VANCOUVER (CP)--A |worst came to the worst and |Greek and Turkish troops "large amount of water' was found in the fuel tanks of a Ca- nadian Pacific Airlines DC-8- jet |that was forced fo land at Salt He accused the liberal press|Lake City, Utah, last week. of 'crying bloody murder" The plane was on a flight be- where the water came aboard. jlanded in the island. RAF CONTROLS | This. would mean that the Ca- nadian troops likely wouldn't have to fight any rearguard ac- tion " while trying to board |planes at Nicosia airport, which jin any event, is controlled by Mr. Martin said the govern- jment has given careful thought to the security of Canadian sol- diers. jamong students in the Missis- | sippi project. Representative Don Edwards agent, had just returned from a Mississippi tour where his son, Leonard, 23, is spending the summer trying to get Ne- groes registered to vote. | .At Jackson; Miss., Mayor Al- jlen Thompson' urged residents |to comply with the new civil jrights law. The stand put Thompson in direct contrast to Governor Paul Johnson, who has called on Mississippians not to comply until the law can be tested in court. oct | US. Scholars Petition For Viet Peace WASHINGTON (AP) -- Some called on President Johnson to- day--and on both the Republi- can and Democratic parties--to work for a neutralized North} and South Viet Nam. : | In a statement circulated by | the National Committee for a |Sane Nuclear Policy, they said that neutralizing both parts of the divided country would end its terror and suffering as well as the continuing loss of Amer- The proposal differed from other calls for neutralization, particularly that by Cambodia, in that it specifically a| eep distrust" of the FBI|Communist North Viet Nam, SEEING Louie .Quall, who teaches Canadian history at a Spring- field, Oregon school, poses with his son, Michael, 14, in = CANADA. Winnipeg on a bicycle trip to Quebec City. They say it's a wonderful way to. learn about Canada, : a)