Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville,; Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. 4 VOL. 26--NO. 150 10¢ Single Copy 55¢ Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1967 WHITBY STUDENTS UNVEIL 'SCULPTURE' Li SO UM a JERUSALEM (AP)--The Is- raeli sector of Jerusalem and the Arab Old City, which Is- rael seized from Jordan in the six-day war, became one Israeli city today, Interior Minister Moshe Sha- piro issued a proclamation re- uniting the Israeli and Arab ISRAEL - AR Ghe Oshawa Times showers row 78, Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash Weather Report Cloudy with a few scattered today and Friday. Low tonight 60; high tomor- TWENTY-FOUR PAGES uit sectors of the 3,000-year-old city of David for the first time since Jordan seized the walled Old City and Israel occupied the new sector in the 1948 Pales- tine war. Israel acted despite warnings from the United States, the So- viet Union, Britain and the Vat- AB SEC ican and increasing pressure at the United Nations, ISRAELIS CAUTIONED The U.S. state department which does not recognize the ac- tion, says: "The hasty administrative ac- tion taken today cannot be re- TORS RE-UNITED garded as determining the fu- ture of the holy places or the status of Jerusalem in relation to them." Earlier Wedndsday, the White House annealdh to Israel to avoid quick annexation of the Old City } | NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- Act- ress Jayne Mansfield, her law- yer and a Mississippi youth died today when their car struck a trailer truck on a narrow high- way in eastern New Orleans. afternoon. Students who helped create the six-foot tall wire and metal struc- ture included Sharon Mc- Lean, Grade 10; Sally Gar- rett, Grade 12 and Grade Anderson 'Street Collegi- ate and Vocational School students in Whitby unveil- ed their "Spirit '67" sculp- ture at the Whitby Cen- tennial Park Wednesday | Three of the 34-year-old Hol- \lywood star's five children were jtaken to Charity Hospital. A po- |lice spokesman said the children |--Marie, 3, Miklos Jr., 8, and |Zoltan Hargitay, 6 -- were "not hurt too bad." Two other chil- 10 student Gerry Ellis, all from Whitby Township. The sculpture was part of the town's Centennial Teen Day which included a tug-of-war and pie eating contest. A street. dance was held by the students at .the town fire hall Wednesday night. --Oshawa Times Photo OTTAWA (CP)--There was a forecast of possible showers to- day as Ottawaprépared to wel- -j¢come Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip for their centen- nial visit to Canada, a busy seven-day effair-centred almost entirely in Ontario. The Queen's BOAC jet from London was due to roll up to the reception area at Uplands Thousands Visit Ottawa To See Elizabeth, Philip RCAF base at 5:30 p.m, EDT. As the bustle of last-minute/ ee preparations neared an end,| a Ta thousands of tourists - poured! CARNERA DIES | into the capital hoping to have) 'Primo Carnera, 60, for- a look at the royal visitors at mer heavyweight bexing dren were not with her. Police identified Miss Mans- field's male companions as Same uel Brody, her lawyer, and Ronnie Harrison, 20, of Missis- sippi City, a small town on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Miss Mansfield had left Bi- loxi, Miss., about midnight and Special spectator areas are to}Parliament Buildings. The i lth gaa pee Ag pnipsng be: provided at-all the open-air |Queen will be, there 35 minutes | joa, on a television program at events, roped. off from the offi-/to inspect @ guard of honor, | noon cial area. The weather outlook | place a wreath and meet offi-/ police said the actress was for the weekend was generally |cials of veterans' organizations. | decapitated. good, _ | She then will go to a one-hour} Many were hoping to get their|fojk-art pageant presented by|ROAD WAS NARROW first brief glimpse of the Queen | groups from across Canada. It} The accident happened about late today during her 10-mile| wij} take place on a special/30 miles east of downtown New drive to Government House | stage in front of the Parliament|Orleans on a winding, narrow after a 15-minute welcoming | qj] lawns with a large area set|stretch of the two - lane route ceremony at the air base. laside for the public. |known as the Old Spanish Trail. WILL SEE INSPECTION | Friday evening is taken up by) pio: sgl Parinontad gee But the first real opportunity|a diplomatic - corps reception | Pensacola, Fila., ver 0 4 for the public is scheduled at/and a state dinner at Govern-|'ruck, said a ® car. phe 2:15 p.m. Friday when she and| ment House. * eenseoly ee a Ling wets Fey the prince arrive at the Na-| saturday's program, marking] Ramp 1d tah ty Bnet tional War Memorial near the the 100th anniversary of Con-| Oe ie ae a ; | A doctor at Charity Hospital a variety of weekend events. | champion, died Wednesday night in his native Italy. (See story on Page 10.) (AP Wirephoto) Elusive Cong Hits, Runs _ TORONTO (CP), -- Bank, ac SAIGON (AP)--A crack bat-| the threa's of a gun-wielding| talion of 500 Viet Cong guerril-|bank robber Wednesday and las faded into the jungles today | followed the bandit through a 'Accountant Defies Threats, Assists In Bandit's Captur | 4 |the constable, pursued the man | aid Miss Mansfield's children | between houses, The man dis-| " appeared. | were undergoing x-rays. ' | "None of them seems criti- Bag ow it "yank neighbor-{¢al" he said. 'We want to keep hood. Police run up lanes,| them here for observation, pend- looked over fencesand under ing arrival of some relatives. autos. | The hospital said Miklos suf- When they walked into ajfered a fractured arm, while The accountant followed close|nearby conservatory building,|the other two were treated for behind him up the street, hailed | Louis Tudor, a clerk, told them, | abrasions. a passing police car and with|"There's your man, going out) Miss Mansfield had been ap- federation, has been designed as our front door!" pearing at a supper club in Bi- the highlight of the visit. | Joxi. Her engagement began Weather permitting, the June 23 and was scheduled to after a running two-day battle|subway, shops and alleys until in which it inflicted heavy|police joined the chase and/Queen will attend an open-air casualties on a South Vietna-| made the capture. isession of Parliament on the mese Ranger battalion and) The chase started after thejlawns. It will begin at 10:30 evaded a searching force of|bandit entered a downtown|a.m, with an ecumenical reli- more than 2,500 troops. {branch of the Royal Bank of|gious service, followed by ad- The running battle 40 miles|Canada where Durfy works and/dresses from the Speakers of northeast of Saigon matched|forced a teller to hand over|the Senate and the Commons. the pattern of hit-and-run en-| $1,000. The Queen's formal address gagements that have sent U.S.| Durfy followed the robber out! of reply, in effect a speech to casualties up sharply in recent the door and down into the/the nation, will be given about days. The weekly casualty re-| subway. The robber port released today said 274 \into a stibway car, then dis-|tional radio and TV networks. Americans were killed and j|rovered it was stationary and'It is expected to be brief. 1,258 were wounded last week. | jumped out again. PLAN RECEPTION The death toll was almost dou-; When Durfy caught up with) 'There will be a late-afternoon ble that of the week before. |him on the stairs, the man/reception at Government House Information on the ~battle|turned and pulled out a gun/¢or senators, MPs and govern- jumped!11:15 a.m., carried live on na-| end July 4. Brody's wife had accused him in a divorce action recently of committing adultery with Miss Mansfield, who was separated from her third husband, Matt Cimber, a stage director. Miss Mansfield and Cimber had a child, Antonio, 1. | Heavy Rains Cause Floods St. Thomas (CP) -- One of the heaviest rainfalls in the his- tory of the city deposited 3.09 inches of rain on the area today causing flooding and power fail- jures, Miss Mansfield was _ born Several gravel roads in the|April 19, 1933, in Bryn Mawr, area were reported washed out|/Pa., and grew up in Phillips- and one is under water, par-|burg, N.J. Her real name was | tially isolating the village of| Vera Jayne Palmer, Later she |Springfield, 16 miles north of}moved to Texas and graduated here. from Highland Park High School Hydro service n the west part|in Dallas and attended the Uni- Triple Fatality Cras Kills Jayne Mansfield 22:10. # ae ACTRESS JAYNE MANSFIELD «++ Was Enroute To New Orleans t mn sun r] Race Riots Flare Again In Buffalo . 11 Injured By Gunfire 'As 1,000 Go On Rampage BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -- At|night," he said, "and call it a looting and win- dow-smashing."' 'INTENSE' SITUATION Assistant Detective Chief Floyd J. Edwards, highest rank- jing Negro in the police depart- jment, called Wednesday night's outbreak "more intense": than Tuesday's but this feeling was | shotgun blasts as more than 11,000 Negroes, most of them youths, rampaged through this} city's lowest east side for the second straight night. Lack of jobs and recreation facilities were cited 'as causes of the trouble. Windows were shattered and| stores looted in the turmoil! Wednesday night. | The disorder spread to neigh-| boring Niagara Falls where Po-| lice Chief John J. Collins rushed| 50 helmeted policemen to the! northeast section of that resort! city following the smashing of! several windows. | The disturbances mark the! funn major outbreak of racial unrest in northern New York State since the Rochester riots \of 1964. The Buffalo streets quieted | near dawn. | Crowds of several hundred|/8% rock - and - bottle + tossing} youths, ranging from pre-teens | to their early 20s, kept 400 police! busy firing dozens of volleys of} Police Chiefs Discuss Laws HONEY HARBOUR, Ont. (CP) -- Delegates to the con- ference of the Ontario Associa- tion of Chiefs of Police met behind closed doors Wednesday to discuss laws governing strikes, No notes were made by the recording secretary and no texts used. Kosygin Visits Cuba Countryside HAVANA (AP) -- After two days of talks in Havana, Pre- mier Fidel Castro is showing Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosy- gin some of the Cuban country- side. | Tass, the Soviet news agency, said that after more talks Wed-| nesday the two leaders toured Havana dn Pinar del Rio prov- inces before going to Guane, not shared by street workers who fanned into the mile-square trouble zone dispensing advice to both Negroes and police. Negroes looted stores where windows had been smashed. They ran home bearing cloth- ing, cases of beer and soft drinks, three-foot long sausages, cases of cigars and insecticide, | 'Man, there won't be a roach \left on Adams Street come to- \n.orrow," said one looter as he \looked at a carton of insecticide. "See if my kinds ain't clean tomorrow," said a woman bear- several assorted items of jclothing, all for small babies. And, a woman who had re- fused looters permission to store some items inside her house ac- cepted without protest a three- foot salami and a carton of cigars for her husband. Among some young men, the talk turned to causes of trouble, MANY JOBLESS The lack of jobs were cited: "I hear the same thing all over,"' said a social worker. "I heard it last night. "Ask these kids, 'Are you working.' They say, 'No.' 'Would you like to work.' The answer is, 'yes!', "T've been to 600 meetings this year--600. And, I've only gotten 310 jobs, I have 3,000 ap- plications now. I haven't the heart to turn these kids down.... 'We need 6,000 jobs immedi- ately and double that figure again in two weeks," Lack of recreation also was mentioned. "Recreation is a full-time bus- iness now," another young man said. "There is one skating rink } } in the city of Buffalo. |tear gas shells along the four | strife-torn blocks of Sycamore Street. Many of the youngsters van jished after dark, leaving the sstees /streets to looters and arsonists. | More than 30 persons were ar- rested. At least a dozen fires TV Show were set. Eleven persons, in-| Some eae --__--__..;cluding two policemen, were hit by shotgun blasts. Windows = were smashed in more than a t eeting dozen cars belonging to white {persons who tried to cruise 5 \through the troubled area. | Police said the two officers n Tl es |were shot accidentally by a | third policeman. After the meeting, one chief! Spokesmen at Emer gency said many of his fellow chiefs Hospital said they had treated deplored the difference in ap-|nine persons with buckshot plying the law in one munici-|wounds, The two officers were pality compared with another.|treated elsewhere. Numbers of No resolutions concern-| thers suffered cuts and bruises. i aka taco ie ansed. Police Commissioner Frank; ng strike Jaws were passed. |w Felicetta refused, as he had/ Tuesday, Joseph Thurston, di-|Tyesday night, to call the out-| rector of the Toronto port po-|pursts a riot. lice, told the conference that the| «7 et) t Liquor Control Act should be Hera: change (ie: word: to changed to permit police to| : = search people for liquor without < "allan Clarke 'NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Allan Clarke of Cornwall, in-} coming president, disagreed | with Mr, Thurston, saying per-; . . mission for search is an at-| Russian Kills Self In Red Square tempt to use the act to search people for other items. MOSCOW (AP) -- A 67-year-old Russian, who had The delegates did not act on| once been sentenced to prison for trying to slash his wife the suggestion ; and son, blew himself up Wednesday night in Red Square, rs : * Tass said today in the first official version of the accident. The convention also was told! 'Tass, the official rews agency, did not indicate a reason that deals made by prosecutors} fo; the suicide J and defence lawyers in im- i paired driving cases are de- lay | northeast of Saigon was/and shouted, "I'll shoot you,|ment officials before a dinner sketchy. T'll shoot you. lat Prime Minister Pearson's ut : oie residence across the street. of Elgin County was disturbed when a feeder line was cut off for more than four hours. versity Angeles. versity of Texas and the Uni- of California at Los ' tip. one of Castro's pet agricultural projects near Cuba's western moralizing police who 'ders. OPPOSES MOTION OTTAWA (CP) -- An address to Queen Elizabeth expressing "our deepest loyalty" was passed by the Commons Wed- nesday after separatist MP Gilles Gregoire angered his col- leagues by opposing the motion. The address will be read by Speaker Lucien Lamoureux Sat- urday before the Queen speaks to an open-air joint session of the Commons and Senate, mark- ing the 100th birthday of Con- federation. Mr. Gregoire was hissed and heckled bitterly when he spoke against the motion, He said he had nothing against the Queen personally, but objected to. call- ing her the Queen of Canada and opposed the whole systen: of a monarchy. Shouts of "get out' and "sit down" flew thick and fast when U.S. NAVY PILOT - North Vietnam sey in Hanoi last week, The Communists claim his was the 2,000th U.S. plane shot down: over the North. AP Wirephoto released this picture, received by plane in Warsaw today, saying it shows a U.S. Navy pilot they identify as Henry Haines Collins of New Jer« the diminutive independent MP for Lapointe said "on division" to record his opposition to the address. Charles - Arthur Gauthier (Creditiste - Roberval) referred to the royal visitor as "the Queen of England' and criti- cized the monarchical system, but did not oppose the motion, PRAISES MONARCHY Prime Minister Pearson praised the monarchy at length when he moved the adoption of the address, seconded by Oppo- sition Leader Diefenbaker. Young Liberals') and many other groups in Quebec have campaigned for a presidential republic form of government and called the monarchy a ves- tige of British colonialism. "The Crown, through Queen Elizabeth, who in her own life represents so much that is fine and good in our society, is an integral and valued part of our constitutional structure,' the prime minister said, reading from a prepared statement. Mr. Diefenbaker referred di- rectly to French-Canadians and others who favor the abolition of the monarchy, "Sir, our freedoms, the rights of Canadians and, in particular, those of our compatriots who are French - Canadian, were achieved by and under the Brit- ish Crown," WANTS ENCORE He recalled that Queen Eliza- beth opened the first session of @2eiament after the Conserva- tive victory, in the 1957 election and expressed the hope she will repeat this ceremony, in the fu- ture, NOT QUEEN OF CANADA charges against second offen- Separatists Views Annoy Common David Lewis (NDP -- York South) said the present system of government is a great achievement because it com- bines the dignity of the mon- archy with democratic rule by Parliament. A: B. Patterson, Social Credit House leader, said the Crown is valuable as the head of the po- litical system and the nation, The royal family was "the es- sential unit of human society at its best." Robert Thompson, former So- cial Credit leader, asked whether the Commons will ad- journ: earlier than usual today to allow MPs to greet the Queen and Prince Philip at Uplands airport. Mr, Pearson said he did not know of any special arranges ments, but said he would check, Hong Kong Food Shipments Stopped HONG KONG (AP) -- China, which normally supplies about half of Hong Kong's food, started a four-day ban on food shipments to the British colony today and many Hong Kong food prices rose 30 per cent. Local Com- munists, trying various means to bring Hong Kong to an economic standstill, requested the embargo. Ss | Rirline Tickets, Cheques Stolen NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) -- Police were investis gating today the theft of $16,000 worth of airline tickets and travellers cheques from the rooms of six tourists at the Sheraton Foxhead Motor Inn. The rooms of Joseph Husler, Esther Von Warburg, Anna Marie Jucker, Bruno Mantel and May Kesling, all from Switzerland, and Rob- ert Calistic of New York were entered Wednesday night. tsunami ne vi gii i IE EE AAR .. In THE TIMES Today ., Brooklin Trounces Toronto Maple Leafs--P, 10 Baby Found Dead In Plastic Bag--P. 13 Long Jail Service Recognized--P, 5 Pickering News--5, 6 Sports--10, 11, 12 Television--17 Theatres--9? Neather--2 Whitby News--5; 6 Women's--14, 15, 16 Ann Landers--14 Ajax News--5, 6 City News--13 Classified---20 to 23 Comics--17 Editorial---4 Financial--19 Obituaries --23