Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Aug 1966, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO, 168 10¢ Single @5c Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1966 he Oshawa Fines Weather Report Little Change Expected, Chance of Thunderstorm Sun- day Afternoon. Low Tonight 62. High Sunday 85, Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash TWENTY-TWO PAGES CANDY FLOSS Eating all the things that go with spinning rides and crowds of happy people is part of the fun of going to the Oshawa fair. One of the tastiest of these items is the fuzzy mass in the photo Blend Of Traditions At Lucis Wedding WASHINGTON Johnson, the president's younger daughter, marries Pat- rick J, Nugent, 23, today amid a blending of triumphal music and sentimental and religious tradi- tions, Months in the planning, the wedding will take a little more than an hour to complete Weather for the wedding day was expected to be partly cloudy with a high temperature in the lower 80s, It all comes to a climax at high noon, after an hour-long carillon concert, as President Johnson escorts his vivacious 19 «- year - old daughter to the great marble altar in the Na tional Shrine of the Immaculate Conception--the largest Roman Catholic church in the U.S Seven hundred family friends --some of them high level offi- cials--and relatives were invited to view the marriage. Luci the eighth daughter of a presi dent to marry while ter father was in office. A_dramatic is bh entrance WAS planned for the 26-member wed- ding party after a 20-minute drive in limousines from the THEY'RE MR. AND MRS. TODAY Laci Johnson and Patrick Nugent ho were ata Ma Natie Shrine macuilate t Washington at marne onception noon today, SS SRSA UAE SON (AP) -- Luci| White aliite eae .) GETS 'EM EVERY TIME AT above, Larry Pearson, 13 (left), Patrick Deegan, 14 and Charles Andolsek share their 'Candy Floss" as they and 7,080 visitors combined yesterday to produce the largest crowd in 12 years to attend the three-day fair. Square dancing and live- stock judging were major attractions of the day as well as horse races, Old MacDonald's farm, a new exhibit this year, can be curving|the church--more than 100 feet driveway of the church. from the first row of pews. | The wedding party steps out) The setting is splendid, From} before a battery of televisionian arch behind the altar, a| cameras to make a long climb/great gold - and ~ red mosaic| up 37 steps to the high-arched|Christ in Majesty--3,600 square| doorv of the church. feet--looks down | Luci's 12 bridesmaids, includ- Luci and Nugent kneel on ing her sister, Lynda, the maid) white satin pillows in front of of honor, lead the slow-paced |+)¢ altar for the 10-minute wed-| procession in their stately floor-| ding ceremony performed by length pink dresses down the|pey Jonn A. Kuzinskas of Chi-l -foot-long aisle to the woot cago, a lifelong friend of the paniment of a 150-voice male})igeoroom choir and hg twin aeepe organ aon Johnson wore a silk-and- gard cosmo -- 'striped 2°, pees A soverblowe on en- nd be . sembie by New ork esigner nage - morning coats for) 4 qeje Simpson, with a matching} je Pecesron, yellow chiffon turban. Mrs, Nu-| Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle |», ay RE RR RE, of Washington joins in the cele- - sar cheat coat aH. P svt bration of the nuptial mass} onat Uireinia Wester at along with two priests who-had 2 eee Sees pote' 7 been religious advisers of the . a, bride and groom, The marriage ceremony itself 4 " begins a few minutes after the/OMly a little over a year ago mass starts and became engaged last Most. of the wedding guests. Christmas Eve. Their friedship as: well as the president and blossomed at the time Luci con- Mrs. Johnson who have front.\Verted to Catholicism on her row seats, will have trouble see-| 18th birthday in July, 1965, ing the ceremony which takes! The bridegroom's parents place in the vast sanctuary of} Were the hosts Friday night at ja wedding rehearsal dinner and dance for 300 in an exclusive private club that lasted until a little after midnight The Johnson's gave Luci and young Nugent a U.S. govern- ment savings bond in what was described only as a "substan- tial' amount, as a wedding present, The young couple also re- ceived more than 400 wedding gifts, the latest a porcelain tea and coffee set from President de Gaulle and "an American Salad bowl" in Steuben crystal from members of the U.S House of Representatives BAN ON RECORDS House to the veil. Lacy and her bridegroom met FAIR 29 BY HA "WORST HATE SEEN, SAYS KING oT (AP)--Racial vio- lence wracked an all - white neighborhood Friday for the second time this week and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., felled by a rock, said the eruption was fostered by the worst hate he has ever seen King promised the marchers would return to the area. | More than 6,000 frenzied white residents of the southwest \side Chicago Lawn neighbor- |hood rioted during and after a | march by 800 civil rights dem- | onstrators | The civil rights group is de- |manding open housing. The Chi- jcago Lawn residents say they |had built up the neighborhood and that Negroes would degrade it ' 19 - year - old white youth was wounded in the shoulder by ja knife thrown towards King CHICAGO seen tonight as teenagers dance to music supplied by Ritchie Knight and The Midnights plus Shawn Jack- son and The Majestics, during a march, The youth was released after hospital treat- ment Police arrested 39 white per- sons, including three women. Hospitals said 28 persons were brougift in with injuries, includ- ing two persons on -stretchers, an unconscious man, a little girl | whose eyes were cut by flying Oshawa Times -Photo | glass and three policemen, ---------------« | "It hurts, but it's not an in- jury," King shouted above the HONEYMOONERS ;cursing, screaming, mob in |Marquette Park after he fell to an jone knee when a rock hit his TOLD IT ISN'T SO [nese | "I've never seen such hostil- GLASGOW (AP)--A young |ity in a demonstration before couple on the sixth day of [and I've been all over the their honeymoon were | south," King said. awakened early Friday by | «7 have to do this--to expose a policeman who told them: | myself--to bring this hate into "Sorry, but you're not the open," King shouted to re- married. You had better go /norters, "I have never seen home." such hate--not in Mississippi or The policeman explained | 4jahama--as I see here in Chi- there had been a slipup in cago." the wedding arrangements King, chairman of the South- and the ceremony they went ern Christian Leadership Con- through last Saturday was ference, got to his feet, ripped not legal. off his tie and began forming There had been a mix-up the demonstrators into a line for over the notice of intent to |the march. marry and while the groom The violence occurred in a thought it had been posted | polish - Irish - Lithuanian mid- for the necessary three qie.class neighborhood. The res- weeks at his local church it idents are mostly Roman Cath- had not. olic Violence first broke out. in Chicago Lawn, 74 miles from downtown Chicago, last day. Sixty persons were in- jured, 17 were arrested and more than 30 of the marchers' cars were burned. Seeger's Fans Loyal - But Wet ORANGEVILLE, Ont. CP)-- MET WITH JEERS Rain fell for 1% hours before') The demonstration began in the curtain went up on the Mari-|the racially - tense area when posa Folk Festival at nearby|four groups went to separate Innis Lake Friday night, but real estate offices to picket. more than 3,300 enthusiastic| When the demonstrators 'milled fans turned out for a folksong into Marquette Park, a_ scenic. |program led by American star/recreation area, to form for the 'Pete Seeger. march, they were met with Toronto singer Ian Tyson Jeers, catcalls, curses, rocks acted as master of ceremonies and bottles from the white res- as 100 provincial police and 18 | idents, mostly youths security guards patrolled the More than 2,000 whites milled private estate five miles south around King after he was struck, of this Caledon Hills town, No|Screaming "white power" and incidents of rowdyism were re- throwing rocks. They also ported. stopped cars which brought the The New Lost City Ramblers|™Marchers into the area. opened the program with blue-| Residents perched in trees grass songs and were joined by|and dropped eggs, firecrackers Irish folksinger Owen McBride|and rocks on the marchers and blues singer Johnny Young When the demonstrators-- Seeger ended the perform-)white and Negro men and ance with a series of songs and/ women, priests and nuns--knelt some audience - participation|to pray, firecrackers were numbers, thrown into the kneeling group, The festival continues until and the crowd screamed ob- Sunday afternoon. scenities and waved banners. SPREADS ... KING AND KNEELING MARCHERS Sun- | Bs 'All-Out Liquidation' Aim China Purge Says Taipei TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)--The Chinese Nationalist foreign of- fice has told foreign diplomats stationed here the current Com- munist party purge on the China mainland "indicates that an all- "THEN GOVERNMENT ATTACKED 'Beatles Brew More Trouble ords spread and a The Beatles launched nally got into LONDON (CP)--The trouble because of a stat by John Lennon, who s: Beatles are now Meanwhile, George another member of the Jesus display happy smiles. They were photographed follow wedding rehearsal ment and its proposal ht pirate radio stations broadcast pop music fro AP Wirephoio i the British coast, Beatles appeared headed for more trou- ble today as a ban on their rec- campaign more popular Harrison, stirred up more trouble by com- menting on the British govern- to Harrison was quoted as say Save - ing in a musical paper Why a crummy t The government makes me sick. This is becoming a police st They should leave alone. At least they which is more than the have dont CAUSED CONCERN A BBC spokesman said ticle caused the corporati some in the Save- i] was Beatle the had a BBC ement tions ords to CHOV group, the ar- con is still onto Beatle of the though there was no ir reaction from the Two American day on Britons t ban which m off They placed radio Beatles campaign. an advertisement personal column of The The - Daily Tel h Radio stations are banning records because of Len- non's statement So far about 20 U.S. radio sta- have and the other banned Beatle rec- ban is spreading including Ont countries in Pembroke However, The Beatles concert scheduled for Toronto Aug. 17 CHUM, the only Tor- siation to feature music and a co-sponsor concert, said it plans no on aC NARA SR RA AR ASR ROR A RRS SIEGES SE SSIS A RRR tS LRN RRR RS ILA ERS SO RR a INERT Frenzied Whites Riot In Chicago | | } Law In Day HAMILTON (CP) -- Wildcat strikers outside the Steel Co. of Canada Ltd. plant behaved Friday night and the over-| worked local police, who had ar- rested 29 strikers during the} day, heaved a relieved sigh. | A police said the last striker} had been hauled away to jail at 5:30 p.m. after a day of violence) during which 500 fighting -steel-| workers battled about 70 police-| men, | $100 bail each. Most of them had been charged with obstruct- ing police, creating a _ dis-| turbance or assault. | arrested in .the evening for throwing stones at a truck en- tering Canada's largest steel plant was denied by police. To avoid any recurrence of the day's skirmishes police had their day staff work overtime to complement the night staff. By/t 11 p.m. when the pickets IKERS JAILED ILTON POLICE 500 Steelworkers Battle Of Violence line, clearing the way for supervisory and office person- nel to enter the plant, The afternoon fight started jafter a union official announced ja general membership meeting Sunday afternoon at Hamilton's |Civic Stadium in an effort to jend the wildcat walkout which has put some 17,000 men out of One striker said "I think we The strikers were released on| Will be asked to go back to work Monday and give the company seven days to come up with a new contract, "If we do go: back, then the The report that 15 men were|company will be forced to come up with the contract we demand because if they don't we will walk out again and it'll cost them millions." A company official estimated Friday night that Stelco is los- ing $1,250,000 a day in sales and he workers are losing $250,000 in wages. changed, about 80 policemen 'were on duty at the main gate of the Hilton Works, the larg- est plant in Stelco's vast opera- tions, PUB CLOSED In another attempt to curb violence, the brightside House which stands beside the plant, closed at 5 p.m. The spot is a handy drinking place for strik- ers and police advised the owner to close the bar, which he did willingly. A crowd, estimated at 1,000, milled around the main gate late in the evening, but only about 500 were steelworkers. The remainder were spectators. The pickets, members of the United Steelworkers of America (CLC), showed their antagon- Inco Workers Get New Offer SUDBURY (CP)--The 16,000 wildcat strikers at International plants will be told today of the latest company contract offer which informed sources say was rejected by union officials in a closed session Friday, It was also understood picket captains and shop stewards rec« ommended at the private meet- ing that workers return to work so that a conciliation board can be appointed along lines of rege ular bargaining procedures, The illegal walkout began July 14, ism by cursing p ig motor- ists and walking slowly in front of traffic which the police were trying to keep moving. By midnight, when it ap- peared there wouldn't be any fighting, most of the crowd went home at which time the police force was reduced to about 20 men. About 70 pickets remained, The main clash, which flared just before 3 p.m. when a striker called a company super- visor "scab", followed these events: --An attempt to move a train loaded with scrap metal into the plant failed when 200 strikers rushed a police line. At least two officers were knocked to the ground and five strikers were arrested. --A mass sitdown by strikers on Burlington Street near the plant's main gate blocked traffic. --Police arrested 11 pickets during the morning after a gap was opened in the picket British Empire Games today, fifth. out liquidation movement is in} the making." | This was one of the main} points in a briefing on the main-| ning her heat in 1:10.5, land situation given by the for-/ eign office spokesman, Patrick | Pichi Sun. | The transcript, which became | available today, quoted Sun as saying Chinese Communist Leader Mao Tse-tung suffered a defeat in seeking to maintain his control over the ideology and organization of the Chinese) Communist party, | As a result, Sun said, the} foundation of Mao's rule has been weakened. Sun made these points: --The Chinese Communist re- gime is facing a serious po- litical and economic crisis. With the escalation of the war} in Viet Nam, the tension in|= Asia keeps mounting and the} Chinese Communists are fac-|= ing encirclement --The split between the Chi-|= nese and Russian Communists| has widened. --The Chinese Communist re- gime has been increasingly} isolated as a result of diplo-|: matic setbacks in Asia, Af- rica and Latin America. F m Nine hours of bargaining planned. Ann Landers--10 Church--12 City News--9? Classified--14 to 17 Comics--11 Editorial--4 NEWS HIGHLIG Alex Oakley Finishes Fifth KINGSTON, Jamaica (CP) -- Ron Wallwork and Ray Middleton came one-two in the 20-mile walk at the eighth US. 'Have-Not' By '75 Says PC CHOICELAND, Sask. (CP)-- Opposition Leader Diefenbaker Said Friday that by 1975 the United States "will be a have- not country in things that are necessary for the modern age and for defence requirements." He was addressing a meeting in this community 50 miles east of Prince Albert which is seeking support for development of iron ore deposits in the area. Mr. Diefenbaker called on Ca- nadians to develop the country's natural resources for the benefit of Canada. Fe said Canada must follow a course making capital available for development. But he added that Canada should welcome foreign invest. ment, warning that "policies af- fecting Canada must be made in Canada." iTS winning the gdéld and silver medals for England, Norman Read of New Zealand picked up the third-place bronze. Oshawa's Alex Oakley finished Vancouver Swimmer Triumphs KINGSTON, Jamaica (CP)--Elaine Tanner, Canada's mighty mouse from Vancouver, broke the British Empire | Games record for the 110-yard backstroke today in win- Malleable Talks At Standstill between representatives of the strikebound Ontario Malleable. Iron and local 1500, United Steelworkers of America failed to settle the seven- week-old strike. Lew Ripley, the local's president said to- day the welfare program, a main issue throughout nego- tiations, was discussed extensively. No further talks are al | .-In THE TIMES Today.. Candy Stripers On The Job--P, 9 Canadian Swimmers Break Record--P, 6 Pickering Church Marks Centennial--P. 5 Obits--17 Sports--6, 7 Theatre--17 Weother--2 Whitby, Ajax News--5 Women's--10

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