Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Jul 1964, p. 1

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Weather Report Sunny and very warm. on Thurday. Winds' will be light. Thought For Today' Trouble-makers never want to get ahead -- all they want is a chance to get even. Shy 4 Os Hawa On NES OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JULY: 22, 1964 age fg Clave Mel Pott, Office. Onpertenat CUBANS TOUGHE Day-Time Curfew MAY FA R ACTIO OAS Session Stunned THIRTY 'PAGES. Race Fight Breaks Out In Brooklyn f / : NEW YORK (AP)( --Racial| On orders from President violence and widespread looting| Johnson, FBI agents began an broke out in Brooklyt\s Negrojinvestigation of the disturb- section throughout the night.|/ances. Mayor Robert F. Wagner Police bullets critic N-y{was back from a European va- wounded two Negroes. }cation trip he cut short. oe Harlem, meanwhile, had its} Acting Mayor Paul R. Scre- : first relatively quiet night in| vane Said the Harlem disorders four days. jhad been incited in part by In Brooklyn's Bedford-Stuyve-| 'fringe groups, including the sant section police fired at loot-/Communist party." Wagrer ers. Dozens of store windows said he would look into the re- were broken. About two dozen|port of Communist influence. ' persons were arrested. 'He also said he did not believe Policeman Calms Singapore SINGAPORE (AP) -- A day-|ing rioters, mainly Chinese, at-, | time curfew enforced by more|tacked a-U.S. consulate car in| % than 6,000 troops and police re-| which Charles J. Rogers, a dip- stored quiet today to Singapore|!omatic courier, was riding with jisland after race riots petween|a Malay driver. Rogers was un- |Malaya and Chinese killed eight| hurt, but the Malay. driver was |persons and injured 341. jeut by flying glass, | Acting Prime Minister Tun me oF | |Abdul Razak, who flew here|*QMCE FLY IN Nearly 100 riot police armed ~ By March Of Exiles WASHINGTON (CP - AP) --|and Bolivia are the only Latin The foreign ministers of the Or- American countries still main- ganization of American States/taining relations with Cuba. jeonsidered today strong eco-| 2. Suspend all economic trade jnomic and diplomatic actions|with Cuba with the exception of jagainst Cuba after a march of! foodstuff, medicines and medi- |5,000 Cuban exiles stunned thecal equipment, jopening session Tuesday when| 3. Suspend all sea and aif |rioting blamed on pro-Castrojjinks with Cuba. Transport nec- supporters broke out. lessary for emergency reasons State Secretary Dean Rusk,/of a humanitarian charactér voicing the United States re-| would be excluded. ifrom Kuala Lumpur, the Ma- laysian capital) announced the official toll from the' violence Tuesday night at a press con- ference. He said 167 persons had been arrested on various charges. ? "azak said the curfew will be lifted for 3% hours Thursday morning io give residents a chance to buy necessities. quest for strong action against) Venezuela supports the pro Cuba, was among the day's)nosa) and U.S. officials said the scheduled speakers. _ United States "wants to go Venezuela is pressing the along with Venezuela." 7 OAS, a grouping of all the West- Outside the Pan American ern. Remteomerc "netions | with Union Building where the OAS the exception of Canada, for ministers opened their -mesting complete sanctions agains tin ocday a clash of several hufl- Cuba under the 1947 inter-Amer- dean Cubans with police marred ican treaty. An OAS investigat- what tae "stated dat ae ol we cone nas supported peaceful demonstration by 5,000 Venezuela's charge that Castro Cuban' exiles who Chime Heee agents planted a three-ton ca- from several cities to urge che of arms in Venezuela to sup- OAS action against the Castro |ply pro-Castro guerrillas. regime. ; |\CALL FOR BREAK Aided by leaders of the march with clubs 'ang tear gas guns) were flown from Kuala Lum- jpur today to join 5,000 police and -two battalions of troops in from spreading up the Malay, DISMISSED | peninsuls | David Cass-Beggs, head of guard would be needed to pre- Explai jerings. But there were no large crowds, demonstrations or any- with 16% years on the force. [in the crowd and many people He says the boy, James Pow-/|scattered in panic. | work, including four times when) The crowd broke up after an| 900,000 letters--at least one for|possibility that teiephon® oper-| he disarmed men with guns. He/hour or two and police began|every adult in the land--have ators will be catled on for sup- which hit the boy in the hand,|Racial Equality, who were pick- 'adiatl ; ni A Set ok ».-.| workers continued their over-)}by postmen on industrial action) but 'he kept coming. Then heleting Tuesday night against tiene bath. in the next few weeks: Newspapers Deny Use capital fund of about £200,000 | Police reported a number of police to disperse unruly gath- Lieut. Thomas R. Gilligan,}more than 100 injured. is a 200-pound white six-footer| Negroes. Firecrackers exploded servant in Saskatchewan has grand jury ts weighing his story|fired more than 150 shots in the curity forces with fixed bayo-| Mier Lee Kuan Yew of Singa-| times for. outstanding police|time. LONDON (CP)--Nearly 30,-| Smith says there is a strong . During Tuesday night's fight-|prior to talks. with President ttac Ss we to: cause trouble, police quickly suicide by mouth-to-mouth re-| At police headquarters in/P0Stal dispute. fice. from Communist or Indonesian! bigger day by day as. postaljestimates £500,000 will be spent |crush the Malaysian federation,|lance and stay on full alert," Is Announced jlabelling it a ruse to perpetu-| Soviet Premier Khrushchey told me " Gilligan says his hand was|the headquarters, shouted "Go 8 | etd - 2 K ' Economic I ront ews he has been on, sick) a the Exchequer Reginald -Mau-/sispended. ihe firat-class..maill |i. 4, individual metiti gimi-|Malays celebrating the birth of publican platform. - |Of. a survey on pay conditions| peals to the public to keep mai! the Commonwealth Prizes Insti:|the 'Malays 40 per cent. 'The|after the United States and Brit-/non - Communist countries this|this week, the Castro regime is 190-per-cent rise, boosting their/ready over - taxed telephone|Proval but not the financial/Chinese resent the Malays' pre-|policy by Polish Communist) cong. the- punkive "Seenbaben | damage through the denial of |year, general of the Trades Union| the 19,000,000 letters passing|Canadian-born newspaper pub- s ' . ; i anler s oin men |state of disrepair. Trucks and now is upward, after declining The prospect now is for a|time because of the shortage of board of trustees hopes to raise; |slow-moving lines to buy food) Washington's policy of economi¢e The number of prizes will de- |from Canada's first French-| Leaders of the Opposition|sources, is up to 60 cents a gal-/lead. | ($3,000) each. This will need a ($600,000) Gen. Vanier, 76, whose five-|tributes to both Gen. Vanier and|more than 25 per cent. jnot mean any change in U.S. serve order, |REPORT BURGLARIES burglaries in Harlem, the big Negro neighborhood in Manhat- ten. A few shots were fired by Shootin g thing like the weekend rioting NEW TORK (AP) -- i which one man was killed and whose fatai shooting of a 15-| In Brooklyn, the _ trouble BEARDED NEGRO FORCIBLY RESTRAINED year-old Negro boy triggered started after a black nationalist the Harlem and Brovklyn riots;|street rally that drew about 500/ see ane Rates BE PENMAN FOES Singapore's general hospital) ag Sar esd Tes : nd said 41 persons injured in Tues-| he Saskatchewan Power a RRS 2 a ;.| Corporation and at $35,000 a e ers 1 e p jday night's violence bb in| year, the highest paid civil ell, came at him with a knife' More than 200 police moved Singapore's streets 'were de-| Critical condition, | patent ti 4 and he shot in self-defence. A/in to quell the disturbance, They ' ' serted except for patrols of sol- Razak flew to Singapore and! been dismissed by the new : : A diers i lice. Earlier se-|Went into conference with Pre-| 7 iperal vernment of Ross against otter accounts whichlair. Bottles were thrown. Sub- During Dispute nate Ai or Oem eae Theater (CP Wirephoto) say the boy was not armed. Ways were ordereq to skip nets pushed everyone off the| Pore. fs z Gilligan has been cited 19|street stops in the area for a streets who tried to ignore the| Prime Minister Tunku. Abdul] daytime curfew. |Rahman, in Williamsburg, Va.,) Colombia, Panama and Costa|who charged that supporters. of {Rica introduced a proposal call- Premier Fidel Castro of Cuba A fe Tihs ye --|Johnson, expressed shock over ling upon all members of the/had infiltrated the parade t@ has rescued women and chil-|getting reports of looting Piled up in London Sorting of-| port. Britain's telephone system the riots. He said he believed : aS : dren from fire and prevented a/throughout the section. fices alone because of Britain's|is run by the Genera} Post Of- Commonwealth the racial outbreak resulted Goldwater a er ae - with peaneee aene and the crowds S oe ; . | iCuba. Mexico, le, Uruguay!me away. suscitation. MmMaCne aivedt 2A webitn top|. TP APNENS Degen to sive) Tee union is alee on inl é . {attempts to stir up trouble while| In the Powell case Gilligan|agers hurled rotten eggs at 16/With last Thursday's one-day \ A hag ae " aromigad. Mainth Merit Prize jhe was away. Indonesian Pres-/- WARSAW (AP)--'Clean our| said, he fired a warning shot|members of the Congress of| St". by postmen and it gotjalready been promised. Smith jident Sukarno has vowed to/ weapons, always keep. our vigi- re | er e As, firs i it kill-| ice brutality. | ; F P - ate British colonial rule. the Communist bloc Tuesday po ghinlend more, one sho pk! ee rama tet oh aps Tentative peace moves failed) Meanwhile, with sgpond-elass| LONDON (CP)--Plans for an| 'The rioting began Tuesday| night after attacking Senator 1 [Tuesday when: Chancellor . ofj mail and pateel post services|, - 14 1 Commonwealth cash!during 2 procession of 25,000\Barry Goldwater and the Re- * Harlem" and '"Com- i | | re aed 'at the pickets. ding: stick ¢ the government's Ap being 'delayed 'by wei days lar in prestige to the Nobel|the prophet Mohammed. Khrushchev spoke at a cele-) WASHINGTON (AP) -- The|retary Dean Rusk and 'some of. Ont Pay ise teh che our-Dei-ito @ week. The position con-!prizes, were announced today.| Chinese make up 42 per cent|bration of Poland's 20th anni-| Organization pf Ameriean|the other. Western Hemisphere jcent pay rise with the prospect/tinues to-deteriorate despite ap- The awards will be made by| of Malaysia's 10,000,000 people,|versary as a Communist nation|States is expected to ask alljforeign ministers meeting. here within a month. 'o a minimum. iati Ge i-li in|week to join in a new crack-|vulnerable on its economie : a . a tute, an association of private|Malays resent the strong Chi-)ish ambassadors walked out in| wee! J Ld ly hi NB done dll heaped an| 'dividuals that has the ap-jnese hold on the economy. The! protest against attacks on U.S.\down on trade with Cuba. front. To them it makes sensé ion is demanding an immediate|extra burden on Britain's al- | Should the bid be even par-|to seek to apply new pressures | y ic " isi |backing of Commonwealth gov-|dominance in the federal gov-|party chief Wladyslaw Go-tially successful, Prime Minis- € pow hy pon Pay A ee eereape. Bed pe bmn how |ernments. | ernment. | mulka, iter Fidel Castro's creaky econ-/Proposed for adoption he | week by 25 shillings ($575) Un-| many big firms to deliver their| The institute is headed by for-| lomy would suffer serious new|0f Castro's support of terro: ion wees Ron Smith - claims| own intra-city mail has added ae Weak dadien enlcketer Sir| S activities in Venexrueta last within a month is Impossible' lem ens Chronie taltic Prob: Tr vie Constantine and the iai-| WILL GREET QUEEN badly needed imports. George Woodcock, secretary-| Even before the strike,|tial list of members includes) orga erg! cn 3 MAE ppoo pep od poe 2\C ported to be in E ut the trend in Cuban tra Council, described his meeting) through London sorting offices|lisher Lord Nr tae ail b } ruck with non-Communist countries with Maudling Tuesday as\each day were kept on the| Appeals for funds wi e |buses are urgently required to de "short and sour" move by huge amounts of over.|launched late this fall. The} replace worn - out _-- for four years. Britain pred : |transport. People stand in long,| France have both broken wit aug mortem mater noes' TS Extended One Year and foundations as well as from) jat the stores. |boycott in order to sell trans- sources outside Britain. | OTTAWA (CP) -- The Queen)Queen's representative in Can-| The price of gasoline, which)portation equipment. Danae: pend on how much money is will get a personal welcome/ada. |Cuba gets only from Soviet)European allies may follow this raised. on mene or Canadian governor - general,/parties gave their unanimous|lon as against 34 cents a year; The proposed new move to annus) Bee 4 a\Georges P. Vanier, when she|warm-hearted approval of the|ago. Production of sugar. tighten the economic noose arrives. in the fall. extension, and paid glowing|Cuba's big export crop, is off) around the Castro regime would lyear appointment was to have|his wife. | In the judgment of State Sec-! policy. The United States has 'expired in September, has been| ---- granted a one-year extension, . got ashore. They wanted $350, far more than I could pay. Newport people are nice ecutives of the three Toronto'to look into a report that some used professional strike-break-|the three papers. son told Stanley Knowles (NDP publisher. of The Star, and OH! TO BE IN ENGLAND Cleric Cleared grams were sent to Mr. breakers (who) have been de- sturdy Newport lamp post, minister Rev. R. D. Horsburgh| Members of the International were dismissed Tuesday. ing they had been locked out) the exact nature of the ajleged S0tiations. fence. pervision of multi-purpose com- encourage sexual intercourse by publish since the strike using commodation for sexual inter-.the ITU have remained on the | true | Way to unite Michael Ellison and Jane Perkins. Michael, 28, is on this side of the Atlantic after sailing alone from England in a 36- foot boat rigged like a Chi- nese junk. Jane, his betrothed, is wait- ing for him in Leicester, Eng- land, Michael is one of 15 skip- pers who sailed single-handed from Plyniouth May 23. After battling head winds Mike lost his foremast in mid- ocean June 11. He sailed the rest of the way on a mast made' from an oar and a prayer, and reached Newport July 8, after 46 days at sea "IT priced a new mast when but everything is too expen- sive over here. Why even a haircut costs $1.70. I can wait until I get back home to get a haircut for 30 cents but I had to get a new mast." Walking down cobblestoned Thames Street on the Newport waterfront Mike found an ideal mast, a knocked down lamp post. . Light company officials sold the lamp post to Mike for $10. Mike mounted it on the bow of the Ilala and even left on a "No parking" sign. The former merchant sea- man has been repairing rig- ging and hopes to start the | long sail home within a few days. . Of Pro Strike-Breakers daily newspapers sent tele-| professional strike - breakers grams to Prime Minister Pear-|from the United States have ag- ers in their dispute with their) The denials were sent by printers. John Bassett, publisher of The --Winnipeg-North Centre) in the| James L. Cooper, vice-president ~\and editor in chief of The Globe Knowles | WITH MY BRIDE-TO-BE In phrasing his question, mr. | Morals Charges MaWPORE, Ri. (AP) -- 1 nied entry from the United CHATHAM (CP) -- Eight) Cc eens (CP) States to Canada to take part love is sure to find a of contributing to juvenile delin- , air Lona quency by encouraging sexual/Typographical Union (CLC) Juvenile court Judge W when the papers implemented Fox ruled the counts as listed "¢W work rules that had been offences and so did. not give, At that time the representa-| adequate opportunity for the ac-|tives of the 680. printers still) The charges read that the|/puters which the newspapers minister did '"'unlawiully and/plan to install. a child; by act word or deed supervisory and non-union em- did promote sexual intercourse ployees to carry out. composing course for a child." job. TORONTO (CP) -- Senior ex-;Commons that he would be glad son Tuesday denying they have|gravated the strike situation on Earlier in the day Mr. Pear-|Telegram, Joseph §. Atkinson,|!0ng drawn-out battle and Mail. Copies of the tele- Knowles referred to "strike-| With a bit of luck and a charges against United Chureh| this dispute." intercourse among teen - agers walked off the job July 9, claim-| by the Crown did not specify agreed upon during previous ne- cused to prepare a sound de-|Were disputing the matter of su-| wilfuily by act, word or deed, The papers have continued to by a child or did provide: ac-'room tasks. Unions other than ROADBLOCKS TO HEALTH SERVICES Lack Of Money, Planning Time OTTAWA (CP) -- Lack of|tious," and all are worried money and time for planning! about cost. |Prime Minister Pearson an- {nounced in the Commons Tues- | S. Vietnamese Extend Fight acai after the an- | SAIGON (AP) -- South Viet--nouncement, a Govern- jnamese Air Force planes are/ment House -spokesman said | dropping ig ting Hb oyna tat Gen. and Mme. Vanier are! Communist Nort iet Nam and! A | are training to extend their|*® steet the Queen and teen ;combat operations, the air force| Philip when the royal aircraft commander said today. lands 'at Summerside, P.E.I. on Air Commodore Nguyen Cao} (ct, 5, |Ky told reporters at Bien Hoa} The Queen is to officially open gittieid that Russian-made jets) ihe new Fathers of Confedera- were attempting interception of| tion Memorial Centre in Char- the flights. He reported the! jottetown the following day. North Vietnamese "have radar . and very good anti-aircraft." The governor-general and his Ky said he has personally wife. now are spending their piloted a plane over North Viet Summer vacation at Tadoussac, |Nam and that the raids con-| Que. and will return to Ottawa tinue. in early September. Both were | reported to be very happy about She said tne provinces favor,costs of hospital treatment for) stage - by - stage implementa- mental and tuberculosis pa- the extension. Gen. Vanier, who was ap- pointed in August, 1959, is not the first governor ~ general to have his term lengthened. Five others, including his predeces- |sor, the Rt. Hon. Vincent Mas- sey, were granted extensions. Prime Minister Pearson told | Meanwhile, the subject is con-|the Commons that the extension sidered ripe for debate at the) had been granted in recognition emerged Tuesday as two for-) No conclusions were reached. midable roadblocks on Canada's|Indecd, Miss LaMarsh said it road to the kind of medical and|will take her own staff six to health services envisaged. last eight months to "break down" month in the Hall royal com-'the 4'4-pound 500,000-word Hall mission's report. report before she can decide Health Minister Judy - La-|what to recommend to the cab- Marsh said after a two-day|jnet closed meeting with provincial) Next step, she said will be health ministers that all were/for Ottawa to choos? the parts agreed that such a system sf jot the scheme on which it feels inevitable. But she added that] it can afford to share costs with some provinces are "pretty cau-|the provinces. CITY EMERGENCY 1% t0 develop a policy on how PHONE NUMBERS |much of the plan we would be POLICE 725-1133 in a financial position to offer FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 tion, but she gave no inkling what stages Ottawa or any the provinces would prefer of| tients." premiers': conference next of Gen. Vanier's dedicated and of} This latter recommendation month at Jasper. Alta., as well distinguished service. as the tO was accepteg in principle by the| as at their meeting 'with Prime to by psychiatric services shepherds have been wound- ed or killed since near-civil war erupted between Greek- and. TurkishCypriots. Dozens Shepherds in Cyprus. watch their flocks in fear, and the once peaceful profession has become one of most dangerous jobs on the | troubled island. Twenty-one tackle first, conference, Miss LaMars® said.|Minister Pearson at the full| . = The ' Hall report proposed a However, it would cost the fed-| federal - provincial conference| Car-Carrier Firms fo hig lg national system eral government an estimated | scheduled for Charlottetown under which everyone would belo. i Sept. 1-2. pee s | $53,000,000 a year beyond the sae ag full oer hs $420,000,000 it is paying this) The Hall commission's recom- Agree On Wages ate ¥ trenaake aad year toward regular hospital) menhdation for a federal-provin-|; TORONTO' (CP) -- A three! care and eyeglasses for children ach abeene _ |¢ial conference on the health-jyear agreement providing for | under 18, and prescribed drugs| ,5)¢ Said she gave the provin- question . within six] ee rig hirkagdls to 31 se F 4 with patients paying the first $1 cial ministers no indication that ire os. - ;,.;an 'hour has 'been tentative y} H on ; ach prescription, The|Ottawa wotld be willing to as- ewer bie bons vides ie |agreed upon by Local 880 of the | : scheme would even include ma-|SUMe these costs. istertal meeting Nete: a8 Fo eee onal. Brotherh 9.0.4: of SHEPHERDS WATCH IN FEAR temity benefits. Of the over-all Hall commis- realistic and precipitous," Miss | Teamsters _(ind.) and car-car- The commission said the prov-|sion recommendations, Miss|LaMarsh said. She had saidjrier firms in Ontario and Que- been kidnapped. Panayis the provinces," she told a press inces would set these programs) LaMarsh said there was general] earlier that before the program|bec, it was announced Tuesday. Yanni, a 77-year-old shepherd conference in motion, "phasing in" various!agreement on another confer-| could be implemented, it would| The terms must be ratified by is shown above with. part of The minister: said 'this offer! s as they saw fit ence in "early 1965," though no|be necessary tc await the pro-!the 700 members of the Wind- his flock. Yanni says he is would be regarded as a basis nwhile, other steps could) date was set. She hoped the fed-| posed federal-provincial study|sor-based local. The companies the not afraid but his wife does HOSPITAL 723-2211 for discussion--not a. take-it-or-/be taken 'right away. Notably,|eral offer would be prepared by|of tax resources in relation to|haul cars from auto planis to more have been fired at. At not want him to go to the sau 'leave-it proposition. Ottawa could start sharingithen. 'constitutional responsibilities. 'dealers. least 10 have vanished or fields at all. (AP Wirephoto) A 7 '

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