Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Jul 1964, p. 1

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Thought For Today Talent is a necessity, but a little patience 'is worth much more. VOL. 93 -- NO, 175 ll OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JULY 27, 1964 Oshawa Cimes Authorized as Second Class Me Ottewa and for payment Weather Report Continuing warm with clear skies. Cloudy periods late Tues- day. Winds southerly 10 to 20. Moe in Cash. EIGHTEEN PAGES. Greek Says Put NATO On Cyprus LONDON (AP) -- Premier George Papandreou of Greece|against her. was reported here today to| Informants reported Papan- have suggested for Cyprus a/dreou showed a great deal of North Atlantic alliance military| flexibility, but insisted that Cy- base which would include a con-| prus should eventually come un- a springboard for aggression tingent of Turkish troops. Papandreou was in London last week for talks with Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas. Home. They discussed possible| new solutions to end the Cyprus} der Greek government, So far Greece has disclaimed officially that it is at this stage seeking union with the Mediterranean island. Britain has remained uncom- Young Rioters' Hatred Inbred RACIAL STRIFE AT A GLANCE \By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rochester, N.Y. -- Hundreds dispute on which United Na-|mitted on the NATO base pro- tions mediation now has} posal. reached a stalemate. Turkish diplomats here have} The NATO base would be sep-| not been officially informed of arate from the British bases atthe plan. They said, however,| Akrotiri and Dhekelia, inform-| that it does not provide a basic ants said. Papandreou, how-|solution for the 100,000 Turkish- ever, suggested the British) Cypriots who form one-quarter could merge their forces with! of the island's population. | NATO contingents, Turkey still insists on federal) Archbishop Makarios said on government in Cyprus and his arrival in Athens today_for| Turkish. circles here argued talks with the Greek govern-\that. more compensation will ment*that 'no NATO bases can| have to be found for the Turk- be included in any solution, but/{sh minority. GRIM HOFFA I Hoffa Guilty Of Fraud |walk, exploded and burned. The battle in Harlem and in Brook- 4 |Negroes, burned to death. JEAVES COURT if there is enosis (union) with) Greece, that is another eri The Cypriot president told re-| H | T porters at the airjfort that cy-| ar. em ruce prus and Greece "have not ) " viated from their common pol- B C icy although pressure has been rings uts exerted on Greek 3 ser veo pandreou from Washington an I P 1 London." | n atro S WOULD USE NATO ; NEW YOR K(AP)--Police pa- Papandreou is reported to/trols have been sharply reduced have insisted that NATO play ain Harlem and Brooklyn's Bed- greater part in solving the pro-|ford - Stuyvesant section as tracted dispute. This would pre-|peace prevailed in th e areas vent Cyprus becoming a second |quring' the weekend Cuba, he said. | Under his reported proposals, a NATO base would have a non-Greek commander, would} provide Turkey with an anchor-| age in Cyprus and would elim- inate the necessity of withdraw- ing the Turkish contingent now) stationed on the island under the Zurich agreement It) would also guarantee Turkey that Cyprus will not be used as|Sunday night, three Molotov - --§-Vietnamese Force Routs Red Rebels SAIGON (AP)--A division of South Vietnamese troops swept across a coastal valley flanked by jungled mountains Sunday. A U.S. adviser said 36 Commu-} nist bodies were left behind. The government troops also took one Viet Cong prisoner and} seized 12 weapons at a cost of four government soldiers killed.| The operation was in Phuyen province, near the town of Tuy- hoa, 220 miles northeast of Sai- gon. Details were limited, but the operation appeared to be a bigger success than government forces have had in more than a week. Mountains around Tuyhoa and in. most - coastal sections are heavily infested by guerrillas. No major Communist attacks were reported during the week- end for the first time in about two weeks, Meanwhile, the South Vietna-| mese govern ment announced the United States will. expand) its military forces and civilian) support groups in South Viet! vam. TO STEP UP WAR The announcement followed press reports that President Johnson had ordered a stepuo in the war against the Commu- nist Viet Cong. The announcement came after two hours of talks between Pre- mier Nguyen Khanh and. the United States ambassador, Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, and: his deputy, U. Alexis Johnson in the mountain resort of Dalat. | i} lcocktails -- kerosene hottles--were thrown, one into a real estate office doorway, an- other into the entranc eof a tavern, while a third burned in the street. A man in the tavern was .reported burned on right arm and neck. Katzman said Sunday he will ask the council to see Mayor Negro leaders, saying the ra- cial situation may be entering a constructive phase, urged quick action to deal with the is- sues underlying Negro unrest-- jobs, housing, schools and al-| leged police brutality. Police} patrolled Sunday in pairs, in-| stead of in groups. At various spots in Brooklyn) + filled the City Councilman Arthur J. Robert. F. Wagner's support in creating a citizens committee to investigate the shooting of Negro boy by a_ white police-| man. The boy's death sparked| last week's riots. fraud the $280,000,000 |eounsel for arrest of judgment|convicted of |--a directed verdict of acquit-|ranging more than $20,000,0 'Could Draw 20 Years CHICAGO (AP) -- James R.j|der present $2,500 bond arrange-; Hoffa, president of the Interna-| ments until the hearifgs. | tional Brotherhood of Team-| One defendant, Benjamin Dra- sters, faces a maximum ser-|now, 56, a former Minneapols tence of 20 years in prison and| businessman now serving a| prosecution since: 1957--and his|Pressed bitter resentment of a $13,000 fine after he and six| others were found guilty sun-| day of a massive scheme to de- Team- prison term for tax fraud, was returned to jail, HOFFA IS TRUSTEE Hoffa, a trustee of the pen- |sion fund, was convicted on jthree. counts of general fraud and one count of conspiracy in sters pension fund. No date has been set for sen- tencing -- new motions by the defendants to be heard nert taal month asking the court to snt|* Rann a wes Nae aside the verdict or order &|guilty of at least one fraud new trial. Also on tap are aj'-|charge and one of conspiracy'. peals to higher courts. |The indictment included 20 mail Judge Richard B. Austin set| fraud charges and one conspit- Aug. 17 for rulings on motions! acy charge. made immediately by defenve| The men | were) ar- nw) specifically fraudulently tal despite the jury's findings--|in loans from the pension fun or a new trial. He ruled the de-| and diverting more than $1,000,- fendants could remain free un-|000 to their own use. | | A LA BRYNNER Smooth Skulled Siren _ Shows Shorn Shocker PARIS (Reuters)--Jacques Esterel launched the hairless head today at the opening of the Paris fashion week. His beautiful model, Bibe- lot, whose nickname means "work of art," had her head completely shaved to feature this eccentric new look which emerges as a cross between an Amrican Indian chief and Yul Brynner. Press comments were '"'re- pulsive," "ugly"? and '"'hide- ous," although every woman applauded Bibelot's courage. The 23 - year - old French model said she was still un- decided whether she will let her hair grow again. "It de- pends what other women are going to do," she said. In the meantime, Helena Rubinstein provided Bibelot FULTON PROMOTES REVAMP Clear Commons Clutter ~~~} Attorney - General Robert F |Kennedy hailed the decision and complimented the jury and prosecutors in a statement from his summer home in Hyann's} Port, Mass. "It stinks," said Maurice |Walsh, Hoffa's lawyer, when) asked about the verdict. 'tt was a guessing game on the jpart of the jury."' The courtroom defeat may mean an end to Hoffa's reiga as head of the Teamsters, tne} largest North American union) with more than 1,500,000 mem-| with 15 different wigs to wear in private life. Each journal- ist at today's show was given a lock of Bibelot's blonde hair as a souvenir. bers in the United States and| Toplessness, legally banned! Canada, Sources in Washington| in France, appears take com- |said his latest conviction could! pared to the shock of a shorn | headed mannequin. | . Bibelot never appeared with | Bus Plunge Kills } an entirely bald head but her | wes bare scalp was visible to the | 7 } crown of the head beneath a } 19 Folk Singers tiny skull cap or snoods made | yepyNaL, France (Reuters)-- of ostrich feathers tipped on the back of the head. singing group today plunged The greatest shock of all |through the parapet of a bridge was Bibelot's first appearance | over a railway and landed on| in the shapeless, pregnant)the tracks, killing 19 persons looking white bridal gown | and injuring eight, police said. worn with a tiny white satin |The bus was carrying the folk calot just covering the peak-| singers to their home in Perpi- of her bald head gnan, in southern France | | | ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)--An|older people. But the young fel- exhausted fireman felled by|lows, the lean and well-muscled jheavy smoke was wheeled from|teen-agers and men in _ their 3 flaming house on Clarissa Av- ecrlv 20s, shed no tears, jenue in Rochester's riot-\cuow BRAVADO wrecked Negro section. Their attitude throughout riot- "He should have got burned|jr ; that began Friday night has jup long ago," a Negro boy said./been one of militant reckless- | Here in the brilliant sunshine|ness. There is a bravado to} of a Sunday afternoon the voy|them--and the chill quality of and hundreds of other Negroes|boys who have begun to believe! had watched a gruesome|that life is a oneway road to| |drama. ' death and they are on it, put A helicopter being used to|there by white men. ; spot potential riot activity had) The role of young Negroes in| |hit the peaked gable of the| Rochester parallels that of those frame house, fallen to the side-| Who met police in hand-to-hand } white pilot was killed. Two per-|lyn's Bedford - Stuyvesant sec- sons in the house, presumably tion. ' : "There's a don't care attitude this about these boys," said Emest For some in the crowd, / . enny, a -Negro social worker: spectacle was sickening and| ; iniy| Lhey're saying to the white sobering. They _were mainly| society: 'You're going to kill me| | psychologically if I live, so why} jnot kill me with bullets, 'NOT AFRAID' "The thing is that they are not afraid. These are brave |boys." | "They have lost respect for jauthority," said Lieut. Andrew |Sparacino, head of the Roches- "begin to speed up the alliance-|'e! Police department's youth making" among other top| division. Teamsters officials. | Boys ang young men from the It was Hoffa's fifth federal|tWo major Negro areas ex- whites especially of the police, and talkd with a_ belligerent Straight forwardness. second conviction in six months. In February he was sentenced to eight years in prison and fined $10,000 at Chattanooga,| "'Man, there ain't no cat going Tenn. for attempting te bribe to frighten me," said a youth of a jury. He has appeaied that|19. decision, | "They kicked that out of me The case went to jury Friday when 'they kicked hell out of me after 13 weeks of testimony and|one time when they busted a sparring between prosecution|crap game. They grabbed the and defence. During the tria],|dough and then used the clubs. the jurors were kept under lock; A boy of 14 who proudly wore and key at the Great Lakes|a wound on his wrist, said: Naval Base 30 miles north of} 'We are just different. My Chicago and permitted only one;mama and pa, if it was up to monitored telephone cal! a day.|them, would of locked me in the The U.S. District Court jury|house last night. They scared. q| returned separate findings on/But they old and old peoples get) gporToO (CP-AP)--The rear |147 charges--21 naming each/scared. I went out and I stayed) defendant. They had deliber-| out. I didn't make it back home ated 17% hours. |to maybe 4 o'clock in the morn- Besides Hoffa and Dranow,|ing. But nobody going to tell me fhe defendants are: $a mue]|What Io do." Hyman, Calvin Kovens and Abe| A young man of 20 bristled I, Weinblatt of Miami Beach; |over the 8 p.m.-to-7 a.m .curfew Zachary Strate Jr. of New Or-|imposed upon the: city. leans and S, George Burris of} New York, son of George, was/he says all you people got to go freed on a directed verdict dur-|to bed at 8 o'clock and. not stick ing the trial. 'your nose outa the house. House Awaiting Vacation News OTTAWA (CP)--The govern-; Parliamentary sessions norm- ment will ask the Commons to-|ally begin early in the new day t) grant it interim spending/year. The current one began authority fortwo months, Au-|Feb. 18, gust and September. | The new fiscal year starts for This will pave the way for a|the government April 1. But be- short late-summer recess, the|Cause of the pressure of law- first the Commons has had|Making and the knowledge there ruary. jing appropriations for the new But the government is insist-|f!scal year never are approved ing that the Commons take ac-/DY April 1. tion on its resolution to adoptiwork ON GRANTS the maple leaf flag before it) In the current session, now in takes its holiday. jits sixth month, few of the An indication that the govern-| 1964-65 spending appropriations ment expects to have Parlia-:have been finally adopted. The ment back at work late in Sep-| government has been operating tember was given in the deci-/since April 1 on month - by- sion to seek only two months'|/month grants of interim spend- spending authority. If the holi-|ing authority. day were to be any longer, the) Last month, when Mr, Gordon government would have to ask/asked for such authority for for a spending bill covering Oc-| July, the Commons spent eight tober. days discussing it. Such debates Seeking interim spending au-|can ramble over any subject GENEVA PARK, Ont. (CP)--| exafnine departmental spend-)woud leave time in the House)MPs can conduct without th/thority is one of the awkward conceivably connected with the ing proposals and to conduct!for MPs to "talk, to demand,|necessity of appointing a royal|necessities of governmen' in' government of Canada, E. Davie Fulton, leader of the Conservative party. in British) Columbia and former federal justice minister, today proposed! a three-point reform program to help Parliament "get on with the-business of the country." He said the House of Com- tons must: --Give its committees much more scope and authority to CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 non-partisan studies. --Authorize "greatiy in- creased" research and ad- ministrative help for mem- bers of Parliament. --<Accept both a permanent Speaker sternly applying rules and a system of time-alloca- tion for debate on major leg- isation Mr. Fulton spoke to the 33rd Couchiching conference of the) Canadian Institute of Public Af-) fairs. He said the duties of Par- liament do not change, even with "a five-party situation in a system designed for two parties."" Canadians have with- held a clear mandate for:their government, but they still de- mand leadership | He believed his proposais still + to inquire, to require explana-;commission. The defence com-) tion, to criticize occasionally| mittee had developed 'a con-| to withhold or delay consent'strictive and non-partisan ap-| until all aspects have been con-)proach which will make a sig- sidered, or ful information di-|nificant contribution to consid- vulged." , eration of our policy in- 'this Text of Mr. Fulton's speech/field,"" Mr. Fulton said. was released in advance of de-| The permanent Speaker en-| livery. . f : visaged by Mr. Fulton would He said the Commons' esti-\noye the "unquestioned author- 'mates committee and other si standing committee. should be|tY and support of the House." able to question not only minis-|He would apply sternly rules in} ters on policy, but department favor of relevancy and against} officials on facts. This wouldirepetition in debate. He would get detailed questioning out of hold the daily question period the House and allow for better-| strictly within its scope And he informed discussions in the would act as final arbiter on House. questons of order and privilege He complimented the wark of "without being harassed by' a the present defence committee,|series of so-called appeals from an example of inquiries elected|his rulings." | verely burned three oil workers Canada under the parliamen-) Delaying interim spending au- tary system but no one has yet thority is a favorite opposition found a way to avoid it. |way of holding the government ~----~|to task for its deeds, or simply |Of embarrassing it politically, If jinierim supply is delayed long jenough, civil servants might go Gas Rig Blaze without their mid - monih Burns 3 Men cheques. Opposition usually SMILEY, Sask. (CP)--A nat- crumbles before that crisis is ural gas well fire which se- reached, however. If the government expects Parliament to adjourn some time in August and take a holi- day through September and well into October; it should ask for spending authority to carry it- self to the end of that month. Most observers, however, are near here Saturday night was still out of control early today. An Imperial Oil spokesman said the. fire was burning be- tween 1,000,000 and 2,000,000 cubic feet of gas a day. at a loss of about $200 a day. predicting that' the Commons Fire fighting equipment has|will, assuming it gets any holi- been flown from Regina and day Edmonton to the well site. | Foot Grafting "The man comes on TV and| | of Negroes engage in a third night of rioting. Governor Nel- son Rockefeller orders 1,000 members of the national guard to make themselves available | to city officias. Buffalo, N.Y. -- Mayor Chester Kowal holds emer- gency meeting with Negro leaders aimed at preventing possible racial violence. | New York -- Police feel the situation may be rturning to normal in the city's Negro areas. The force patrolling those areas has been reduced. McComb, Miss. -- A dyna- mite bomb was tossed at the home of a Negro couple but the explosion caused no dam- age Davenport, lowa -- Negro leaders appeal for calm after weekend incidents of racially mixed fighting and brick throwing. Attempt Fails In Ottawa OTTAWA (CP) -- Doctors at) Ottawa General Hospital said| today a unique operation had failed to save the-left foot of a nine-year-old girl. A team of surgeons per- formed the operation on Su- zanne Lafontaine of Bouchette, \Que.,. in an attempt to save |her left foot: which had been severed about an inch above the ankle. | | | critically Sunday when a heli- afire. --which saw the height of the Fighting ROCHESTER QUIE AFTER 2-DAY RIO Injures Hundreds, 4 Die ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -- This riot-scarred Lake Ontario city emerged today from a bloody weekend of racial vio- lence with four dead, hundreds of injured and massive prop- erty damage, An uneasy peace was backed by a force of na- tional guardsmen. Governor Nelson A. Rockefel- ler activated 1,000 . guardsmen and ordered them into Roches- ter to stand by for anti-riot duty if needed. A detachment of 12 open trucks with 18 guardsmen each toured the city's trouble areas in a show of force shortly after the arrival of the guard Sunday night. The men carried rifles with bayonets fixed but had, no ammunition. Three persons were killed and a county official was injured copter surveying a_ potential trouble spot smashed into a three-storey house and set it A man was killed by an auto- mobile when he was struck dur- ing wild rioting Saturday night racial explosion--and staggered into the street. Two men were shot. One was in critical con- dition. More than 600 persons, nearly all Negroes, were arrested. More than 300 persons were in- jured, including 35 police offi- cers and several firemen. There are about 25,000 Nezroes in the city's. population of 325,000. STORES LOOTED Looters ran 'wild, 'pillaging and smashing, especially Satur- day night. Liquor stores were a | In Rail D unit of a two-car diesel train snapped its couplings Sunday night, as it was speeding with holidayers on the way home |from the beach and overturned |down an embankment, killing |105 passengers. The' accident occurred near Custoias, about 14 miles from Opofto, which is some 200 miles north of Lisbon. Hospital sources said more than 100 were injured in the worst disaster in the history of 105 Persons Die isaster bly because it -was schedule," one witness said. The train was returning from Povoa de Vaazim, a popular beach in north Portugal, 18 miles from Oporto, | Blaring sirens of ambulances from Oporto and nearby com- munities blended with the ter rified screams of women and children. Oporto radio stations appealed for doctors and blood donors. Volunteers lined up in front of hospitals: behind} favorite target. Be State and local police, worke ing with little rest, were targets of bricks, rocks, bottles, full beer cans, molotov c and sheets of glass in one out+ break after another. They answered with tear gas, high-pressure streams from fire hoses and warning shots from their guns. Several individual rioters were clubbed into sub- mission when seized. The Roche ster jail was jammed and a clerk said the property room was filled with "everything you can think of" in recovered loot. 4 A dawn-to-dusk curfew was Imposed, although there was widespread defiance in the Ne- gro sections. The sale of all liquor, guns and ammunition, was halted indefinitely. The peak of the rioting oc curred Saturday night in the Jefferson Avenue area on thé city's west side, a well-kept sece tion populated by the city's more prosperous Negroes. area is across town from J Avenue, where the racial vio+ lence broke out late Friday night when police sought to ars rest a drunken youth at a street dance. Police brought in dogs and there were conflicting reports as to how they were: used. A Negro woman said a on had. bitten a 13-year-old girl, but police denied this. ek os : ; . d Inevitable result ¢ of ering conflicts. Negroes charged the police with persistent brutal- ity, the same allegation made in the New York City racial outbreaks. Efforts by some white par- ents in Rochester to block schoo] integration also were blamed, Because of hous- ing patterns, enrolments in some schools are predominantly Negro, Tensions between Negroes and white police intensified through- out the rioting. Many police- men complained that more forceful steps, such as gui aimed at rioters, had not been taken. Local officials of the National Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People called for an end "to looting and rioting." But they said police had te share the responsibility because (Continued on Page 3) the privately owned Portuguese Railway Company. A company spokesman said the rear unit of the train jumped the track and "'ca- reened down a section of track flanked by walls, slamming | back and forth between them." | "It dropped from the. em- |bankment and turned over |where the walls came to an| end," he added, | The impact destroyed one) | side of: the steel-and-wood car,} | crushing passengers as it caved) |A bus carrying a French folk|since its session began in Feb-|i8 really no need to rush, spend-|!"- | SOME SUFFOCATE | Some of the dead suffocated | under the bodies of fellow pas- eengers, Witnesses said the rear unit appeared to fishtail as it eft a curve just ahead of the walled-| in stretch of track. Passengers in the front car were not hurt. The normal capacity of each unit was 68 passengers, but wit- nesses said the car was over: | crowded, | "It.was coming fast, proba- Race Tension Shaken Oft In Singapore SINGAPORE (AP) -- It was almost "business as usual" to- day as Singapore sought to |Shake off the tension built up |during last week's bloody racial riots between Malays and Chi- |nese, | The daytime curfew was shortened to 2% hours, from| noon t o 2:30 p.m., but the ban| }on street movements. still was| in effect fromé6 p.m. | 5:30 a.m, Shops and offices reopened for their first full day of business since the flareup last Tuesday at all, resume its work be-|of. riots which left 21 dead and) electric 'fore the end of. September, {460 injured, ELECTRONIC ARM The Rehabilitation Institute of Montreal has launched an appeal for $30,000 to buy Canadian rights to. this bio- artificial arm,. de- | signed by Russian scientists, 6 which is driven by a small motor based in the hand. Once in production here, it would cost an amputee about $300: (CP Wirephoto} +

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