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

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Weather Report Mainly sunny ~and warm, be- coming more humid Wednesday, winds southerly 15. : Thought For Today Rae. Don't worry about the younger' generation -- they'll slow down like the rest of us. , Auth rized es Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottewo ond for poyment of Postage in Cash. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1964 Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy VOL. 93 -- NO. 211 TWENTY PAGES Pacifists Sit Down In Protest LA MACAZA, Que. (CP)--! Nor would they attempt to Fifty-one pacifist demonstrators|scale the barbed wire which are seated'on the road into the/fences the base. RCAF base here, sworn to halt} "We're sorry to inconveni- traffic into it until Wednesdayjence you,"' he told guards as ' ; morning in protest against its|}the demonstrators took their nuclear - armed Bomarc mis-|positions Monday. Ch a : s : =| Strike Deadline Nears oma . iles, "We are not too concerned,"'| j a | As Neg tl t Debat The sit-downers took their po-|a base officer later said on the | 0 a ors e itions on the road Labor Day|demonstration, | @ bh } ai lat 10:30 a.m. In June, base} Guards at the base are wear- LA" ; | guards dragged members of the| ing no guns. They appeared un-| & Atheeti, Grewtee same group repeatedly from|armed after the first demon- the gateway during a simi';r/stration on St. Jean Baptiste but smaller demonstration Day, June 24. f Dan Daniels, of. Montreal,| Thirty of the sit-downers are| § spokesman for Project La Ma-| women. Many come from out-| § caza, an offshoot of the Cana-|side Quebec province. Rev. Don| § dian Campaign for Nuclear Dis-|Heap and Rev. William White-| # armament, said .demonstrators|law of Toronto, two Anglican) |would let food and medical ve-|priests, are among the 51. hicles go through, but bar mili-| While the 51 stage their sit- f itary traffic, But they would not/ting demonstration, 40 others lresist if guards laid hands on/parade with anti - nuclear pla-| them, he said. cards SUSPECT TAKEN strators. from a cook - pri 3 FOR DRY RIDE \they have established» off from the side of the road. They sleep NORWALK, Conn. (AP)-- Police could tell the Nor- in sleeping-bags. \¢ As an alternative to its mili- tary use, Project La Macaza 3 Le ioe hall |proposes the Bomare base be- bar a ae een hey come a summer camp for poor| * |children. | answered a burglar alarm As pacifists, the demonstrat-| Monday, but they couldn't | (1° oppose not only the em-| on the U.S. space centre and find a suspect.- = placement of nuclear - tipped is moving towards Cape Ken- Then the manager missiles on Canadian soil but! nedy, Fla. at 12 miles an hour rived and turned on also the use of force in protests; packing winds of 130 miles an oer alsctcidlly started a lagainst it. | hour. She is centred about 400 large drier, the drier began spinning, and police found their suspect. They dragged Richard O'Boy, 32, an from. the machine and charged him with breaking and entering with criminal intent. He was held in 'ien of $2,000 pendng a Sept. 26 appearance in circuit court. "He's very embarrassed hal "ay ¢ DETROIT (AP) -- Negoti-| And the president, Reuther jators made a last-ditch attempt/related, told him in turn that today to reach agreement on a|the government is not planning _\new labor contract between to get involved but rather is de- Chrysler and the United Auy»ending on the good sense of ;Workers Union, with a strike|the negotiators on both sides of deadline only hours away, ithe table, As the clock ticked off the! Reuther told the rally, which i\final 24 hours toward. the|included thousands of UAW re- 10 a.m. Wednesday deadline,| tired members, that none of the /|bargaining teams were ex-|Big Three companies has of- "\pected to meet in 'round-the-|fered any improvement in pen- _ clock sessions, * sions for workers already re- The negotiators decided to/tired." break off talks Monday night) "We will not sign until pen- and begin the marathon discus-|sions are increased for you -\sions this morning. UAW Pres- older people and there is full )\ident Walter Reuther observed: | payment of hospital - medical Wernings mummy |\I leave here tired but more|care for retirees," Reuther Gale 'hopeful than when I came in,| promised, 816 |We agreed that we could do} Chrysler, GM and Ford made Wernings «m4 more productive work with a virtually identical offers to the ifresh start (today)." UAW last month, including CAPE THREATENED | Barlier, Reuther told a Labor/higher pay, Increased holiday Day rally in Detroit's Cadillac) and vacation pay and improved miles due east of the Cape. |Square, that 'a mile separates/retirement pension benefits for Meanwhile, smaller hurricane |Where we are and were man-|workers now on the job. But Ethel is expadind di' Suat boutth jagement is." there was no proposal to in- As seg 4 sg He told an estimated 100,000\¢rease pension payments for of Bermuda tonight. |persons that when he left the|those already retired, --AP Wirephoto Map "Hatt fatale eet Hudson's Bay Men Missing bargain around the clock for apart and have real problems."| TRENTON, Ont,. (CP) ~ The/ erated that UAW doesn't BERN LGA * ETHEL @ Hyrriggm® Union Jacks Burned By Montreal Youths language Hurricane Dora set sights ar- the U.S. Advance Best Balanced TOKYO (AP) -- U.S. Treas- ury Secretary Douglas Dillon told world monetary leaders to- day that the United States eco- nomy is expanding in 'the Pacific Triangle Visible: Martin By DON HANRIGHT tained in the communique > TOKYO (CP)--A North Paci-|which ended the discussions, fic triangle of Canada, the|third in a series of cabinet-level Matin, a French morning newspaper, MONTREAL (OP)--Scores of| Park, the scene of a similar in- youths carrying flags and)cident a week ago when 46 sep- shouting "revolutionary %!0-jaratist sympathizers clashed) One of-the mob's leaders was gans" staged a rowdy demon-)with police. believed to be a sepagatist but stration Monday night in mid-| Police were tipped off in ad-|"most of them were hot-headed town Montreal, burning Union|vance and used a squad ofjkids striving for popularity," Jacks and overturning three| mounted policemen to break upjInsp. Paul Picard said, "Once cars. |the parade. But an hour later| we got the leaders, many of the Police arrested 76 and said\the youths, carrying Quebec/others 'eft." ex-convict, | | two days" if necessary to reach!) agreement and avoid a strike. Reuther preceded President Johnson that the two sides in negotiations are "quite a way) But Reuther added that he has|RCAF says a Hudson's Bay great hope and has seen other|Company factor and his clerk ° situations '"'that looked just as|at the Hudson Bay post of Fort unpromising," Severn, 1,000 miles. north. of In 'his. speech, Reuther reit-|here, have been oH ~ since they appeared to;be in diffi- they would be charged today}fleur de lis and French tricolor The mob, estimated at 300 about it," a police sergeant longest, strongest and best-bal- with disturbing the peace, re- fusing to obey police 'orders disperse and holding a patade without a permit. The disturbance erupted about 7 p.m. when the demon- ' strators marched to Lafontaine Order Restored At Lake Resort GRAND BEND, Ont, (CP)-- Police restored order Monday after charging 77 persons in a weekend of rowdyism which led to the Riot Act being read in this Lake Huron resort commu- nity 40 miles northwest of Lon- don, Ont. Both police and local officials took a tolerant view of the dis- turbances. Murray Desjardins, village clerk, said an outburst early Sunday was "just a lot of| noise--it sounded like a hoote-| nany." | And Cpl. Robert Fulton of the OPP described the second dis- turbance Sunday night as mare like a usual wéekend. Most of the 59 persons charged for liquor offences were minors. Five charges were laid for traffic violations and 13 under the Criminal Code. BURN FLAGS | the foot of the Dollard des Or- meaux Monument and several more set afire in front of a building occupied by Montreal- |ple interfered with police try- Four of those facing criminal flags, reassembled in the park./persons at one point, shouted ae, such slogans as "Vive le Que- t| bec Libre' (Long Live Free Quebec); "Vive le FLQ" (Long live Le Pront de Liberation Que becois); and "vive l'indepen-| dance." Although the crowd yelled FLQ slogans, police said they weren't associated with @ par- ticular organization. The FLQ was a terrorist ring responsi- ble for a series of bombings in Montreal n the spring of 1963 that killed one mdn and maimed another. neg A Union Jack was burned a read. The charge carries a maximum penalty of life im- prisonment. Police named the four as Jo- seph Matte, 23, RCAF Station | Young Rioters Centralia; Robert Fisher, 18, Smash Resort Wyoming, Ont.; Edward Mini- elly, 21, Watford, Ont., and Da-| HAMPTON BEACH, N.H. vid Irwin, 23, St. Catharines. |(AP)--Three hundred steel-hel- : jmeted police and national FIGHT ON STREET guardsmen, many with rifles The disturbances reac hedjand fixed bayonetts, kept an un- their peak Sunday morning|aesy peace' in this debris-strewn when more than 500 young peo-|seaside resort Monday in the aftermath of a night of wild rioting by 10,000 teen-agers. The pre-school fling saw jeer- ing youngsters storm the police Station, smash shop windows and pelt police with stones, gar- bage and beer cans weighted with sand. More than 20 persons were injured. One boy, Peter Zaniboni of Everett, Mass., was struck in the face with birdshot from a ing to break up a fight on the village's main street. Surround- ing a police cruiser, the crowd chanted 'Roll it, roll it' and several youths started rocking the vehicle. After radioing for help, the policemen left their car. The mob then surged toward the police station, Police failed to disperse them and finally, at said, "He keeps doing things like that.' Royal Visit Fears Noted LONDON (CP)--A sense of uneasiness and concern is. re- flected by at least one British newspaper as the Queen pre- pares for her trip to Canada. | "How safe will the Queen be in Canada?" asks The Daily Sketch, a mass-circulation tab- loid, which says British news- papers are being bombarded with letters urging that the Oc- tober trip be called off. Noting that the Canadian gov- ernment is planning elaborate security precautions to protect the Queen against terrorists in Quebec, the newspaper asks in almost a full - page article whether the precautions will be sufficient. It says many Canadians are worried that the terrorists may Strike at the Queen as part of a campaign against "English domination." United States and Japan, is be-|conferences. coming" "increasingly visible," |External Affairs Minister Paul {Mattin said Monday: - He called for elose consulta- tion among the three countries to help assure Asian peace and |stability required for their large |three-way trade. | Martin also noted that in this partnership Japan and Canada jcould make their Voices more jeffective "both with regard to our common interests in the Pacific and to world questions jas a whole." | He spoke to the Canada-Ja- pan Society shortly before de- parting for Ottawa after a weck in Japan, chiefly for a minis- terial conference. | Returning with him were Trade Minister Sharp and Fish- eries Minister Robichaud. Fi- nance Minister Gordon re- mained in Tokyo for the meet- ing this week of the Interna- tional Monetary Fund. At the conclusion of talks Sa- turday Canadian and Japanese cabinet delegations called for a "peaceful, realistic and equit- able. solution" of the China problem. No other details of the possible solution were con- Indias Premier Mariin,- leading "the 18-man|4nced. advance. of any." peace: want government... intervention, fully in a freighter canoe Mon- lay. Canadian delegation, had dis-\"4me period, . . . closed-earHer that Canada was}, He told fellow -governors: of) consulting other countries to|te International Monetary) find out whether a solution was|Fund at their annual conférence: feasible to the problem of rec-|hete that during the last fiscal yen : ognition of Communist China/¥ear the U.S. rate of growth ake its seating in the UN. Me in industrial production and in was reported to have told the|the economy as a whole was conference that any solution|better than five per cent in real would have to be acceptable to|/'¢rms and that the gross ta- the United States. tional produ ct increased by) Gordon said in an interview|more than $40,000,000,000, Monday that Canada will not| But he said that despite the tolerate damage to well-estab-|improvement in the U.S, bal- lished Canadian industries by|ance-of-payments deficit 'we unrestrained imports of low-jare only half-way back to" ex- cost Japanese goods. He said/ternal balance." He added: this position was made clear to the Japanese delegation, The communique said both sides agreed Japanese re- straints in exports of so-called "sensitive goods' to Canada should be kept to a bare min- imum. This year these re- straints apply mostly to tex- tiles, footwear and tablewear, and make up only one-quarter, of Japan's total exports to Can- ada of about $150,000,000. intend to." Speaking on the second day of the five-day conference of the IMF governors, the World Bank and two other affiliate or- ganizations, Dillon threw his weight behind proposals by 10 of the leading industrial nations of the IMF to expand the IMF's resources through general and selecting increases in the quo-| tas of member nations. jin the bargaining. Makarios Seeks Russias Terms President Makarios will send a delegation to Moscow this week to seek concrete terms for the Soviet offer of aid to the Greek- Cypriot government. "We cannot relax--nor do we'called for Russian military aid last month after Turkish war planes attacked Greek-Cypriot positions. He has also asked the United Arab Republic for help. to have offered Makarios $30,- 000,000 in economic credits and|meanwhile that the Greek-Cyp+ to have left the way open for|riots have tightened their eco- discussion of Soviet military aid)nomic blockade of the Turkisli- to Cyprus. jsaid the Russian offer was con-| force. ditional on Makarios continuing to insist on. sélf-determination for the island republic rather than an agreement to unite it with Greece, a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- tion. : Makarios has been under pressure from Greece to refuse Soviet help and he had seemed to be weakening in his decision to open formal negotiations with the Kremlin. The United Nations reported NICOSIA (AP - Reuters) -- The Greek-Cypriot president The Soviet Union is reported |\Cypriot community despite An authoritative source here| warnings from the UN peace piecnlipoeacntideeiinh charges were to appear in court)2 a.m. Sunday, Mr. Desjardins today accused of refusing to!quelled the disorder by reading disperse after the Riot Act-was the Riot Act. s ] hotgun. Doctors said he will ose the sight in his fight eye.| Most of the revelers were! Faces New Crisis NEW DELHI (AP) -- Prime|from New. Delhi under the U.S. Candidates Hit Big Issues By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) Candidates on both sides of the U.S. . political fired volleys on such issues as nuclear weapons control, taxes) and civil rights in the first major skirmishng of the presidential electon campagn. openly acknowledging 'it as a campaign speech, took sharp issue with Republican nominee Barry Goldwater on the ques: tion of nuclear weapons con in a@ Labor Day address jn De- tréit Monday. And in Indiana and Ohio the vice-presidential nominees, Re- publican representative William FE. Miler of New York 'and Democratic Senator H phrey of Minnesota touched, re-) CITY EMERGENCY | PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | fence have} trol, | Hura:| for battlefield use, weapons |herded out of town, but many were arrested as they fled into the ocean trying to avoid cap- ture. 'US. Death Toll Climbs Past 500 spectively, on taxes and civil rights among other things. CHICAGO (AP) -- Traffic fa- Goldwater didn't mix into the/talities in the U.S. over the long scrap Monday. But from the|Labor Day weekend soared Arizona senator's camp came|Past the 500 mark early today, word that he will outline to-although National Safety Coun- 1964|night a plan for reducing taxes,Ci! officials said the number of either turn. the. Kerala admin- iby five per cent a year for five) deaths would not approach rec-/ istration over to the Commu- ' shi lyears if he is elected in No- ord figures. Presdent Johnson, while not Se } mber. -- Lal Bahadur Shastri's|rarely used device called pres- jruling Congress Party was|ident's rule. thrown out of power in Kerala! The motion, the second in the state today by the Communist-|/17 years of India's independ- led opposition on a vote of nojence, attacked Shastri on confidence. charges that his government The fall of the Congress gov-| bungled and precipitated a food }ernment in the tropical state on|crisis now sweeping the coun- |India's southwest coast came/try. | by a vote of 72 to 50, with 15) Shastri's Congress Party jdissident Congress party mem- holds an overwhelming major- | bers siding with the opposition. ity in Parliament and there is |. Shastri, who also faces a m9-|aimost no chance that the Com-| jtion of no confdence in the In-|munists, allied with the Social-| dian Parliament, must noWlicts independents and right.| wing Hindus, can topple his government in a vote expected Thursday or Friday. inists, or run the state's affairs Johnson spoke at an AFL-CIO sponsored Labor Day rally in) Detroit's Cadillac Square, the! place where Democratic candi- dates have begun their cam- paigns since 1948. Goldwater, inan Aug 25 speech, had suggested a way be found to provide NATO with| small, tactical nuclear weapons TIMES HOME D Effective this week, The delivery price will be increas The five-cent per week years, is a necessary one i which he said "may truly be} C'S called. conventional weapons.' ""Make no mistake," Johnson said Monday. 'There is no such thing as a conventional nuclear weapon." He said the judgment to use} nuclear weapons is "a political decision of the highest order' and added: 'No president the United States can divest himself of the responsibility for such a deci- sion." many times in recent years. home. delivery price has re longer possible, however, to Your carrier boy will be week, However, since there this week, he will be collect: price will be in effect f of single copy. INCREASED BY HIGHER COSTS Cost of providing local, national, international news coverage, together with production costs have increased view. of the higher- cost factors. The Times newsstand price will remain at 10 cents. per But, coming on the heels o! food demonstrations and wide- spread arrests throughout In- dia, the no-confidence motion was a severe setback in pres- tige for Shastri, who just three months ago succeeded the late prime minister Nehru. Demonstrations against food jshortages and rising prices con- tinued throughout India, though on a smaller scale thah. last jmonth, when more than' 18,000 |demonstrators were arrested. The worst floods in 40 vears) ELIVERY PRIC Oshawa Times carrier home ed to 50 cents per week. increase, the n view of rising 4 ( first in many newspaper c During this time the Times mained constant. It is no hold to the present price in | {dians homeless, inundated collecting the new price this are only five publishing days ing 45c. Next week the 50c ' crops. t Sixty-five lives have been lost jaeross northern. India, tles. You ge to SEE 'em. Caused the din in Maple Leaf . night. ould hardly be heard any far- ther away than the front-row}? d jof two performances, 5,500,000 acres and caused dam-|dens termed this the greatest! le. age estimated at $41,000,000--|one-day turnout so far on the ; |most of it to. badly needed/Beatles' 33-day North American|ing victims were found underjin the scuffle. jin, POLICE STRUGGLE WITH BEATLE FANS OUTSIDE TORONTO HOTEL YOU DON'T HEAR 'EM, YOU SEE 'EM Beatle Fans Loud, Orderly By R. J. ANDERSON 000 in Kansas City later in the TORONTO (CP)--As the ec-/|tour.) She was right on both counts,|the stage developed. | No home ep mi¢niy?,(0nto's innate conservatism--or} nee Trees the presence of 250 police.| *|men in the auditorium, Paul, John, George and Ringo|, There were 40-odd cases of hysteria at the end of the after-) that roll Jardens ock 'n' our, jthe seats when the lights ,wént! day static gal said on the way out,! It also was one of the most|Montreal but the time of theirjin a 27-minute performance at you don't go to HEAR the Bea-|orderiy. No barriers were|departure was being kept se-'the matinee--the evening show |knocked down; no fan.rushes to|cret by their managers. on performance and a dozen|/BREAK POLICE LINES seats but they were seen by|° 8° at night but nothing that; There, about 30 girls were|' Miss Canada--Carol Ann BAl« have left nearly 6,000,000 In-|sell-out crowds of 16,700 at each|the 100 nurses on duty in twojovercome as about 3,000 fans|mer of Toronto--was there. So The Gar.|first-aid stations couldn't han-|broke police lines in a dash for} was Trudy Metcalfe of Toronto, the hotel entrance. Beatle Paul/head of the self-professed larg: Ushers' said one or two faint-|McCartney lost part of his shirt/est (54,000: members) Beatles The Liverpool four leave to- "There certainly way noise, fn for two' performances in and out of the Gardens where was a few minutes longer--the The youthful singers , arrived Liverpudiians played and sang team' goal ever) Perhaps this was due'to Toi-|from Detroit early Monday and|!? numbers, Press-box report most of the wear and tear on/€'s had to rely on front-row au- ltheir teen-age fans, and on the/thorities for this information. Beatles themselves, jing their brief appearances at/have had a sore throat came dur-| John Lennon was supposed to but whether it affected his voice couldn't be notice® downtown hotel. fan. club. in the world; So. was No mob scefies developed as|Mayor William Mills of King. At an estimated $93,000 forjup but this was nothing to a\the Beatles were sneaked|ston. He presented the Beatles y jin the. wake of heavy monsoun|an hour's work, it also was' the|medical corps that had been|away from their hotel by a po-|with'a key to his city and made |downpours, touching off floods|most pr.cfitable. (They've|geared to handle serious inju-jlice patrol] van and into the|/them honorary citizens of King- signed for a guaranieed $150,- ries. None was reported. 'Gardens by a rear entrance. ~ ston,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy