Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Jul 1967, p. 1

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! rrints are in deeply fringed r only, own Pillows filled with goose you to sleep... » you wake, And cover is feather+ Ae ror 10,00 HONE 725-7373 v, young kind M 2.00 of eye make- 2 n like liquid e cake does it . 26 all day. One ie he'll help. you stein purchase 'HURSDAY, JULY HONE 725-7373 intil 9 p.m.). - ferred to Raiford or elsewhere." Home Newspaper} Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowmans ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Onte ario and VOL. 26--NO. 164 Durham Counties. 10¢ Single SSe Per Week eae Ghe Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JULY 17, 1967 livered Weather Report Clouds, scattered thunder- showers tonight, Tuesday morn. Low tonight 58; high tomorrow 78. Authorized os Second Class Mail Po: i ment Ottawa and for payment of "yi Ber siiy TWENTY PASES Showing as much deter- mination as their fathers show around a bar- gaining table, these five- year-olds race for the finish line in one of dozens of races held Saturday at the annual Lotal 222, United Auto Workers picnic at Lakeview Park, Sat. William FIVE-YEAR - OLDS VIE FOR "222" PICNIC PRIZES Harding, secretary-trea- surer of the local, said he would not hazard a guess as to how many persons ' at- tended but many estimates exceeded 20,000. Races, games, rides, dance bands and speeches were among the highlights. The twice- NO NAMES OF DECEASED YET AVAILABLE Head-on Crash Kills On Highway-Near Espanola ESPANOLA, Ont. (CP)--Nine;the Kamsack crash was the worst in Canada in 20 years. persons, four of them children, were killed in the head-on col-| No names of the in. , ice said the. becident - lision of two cars on Highway|Espanola crash fiimsee boned tn Sood weather abouts 17. about six miles west of this|ately available, a Northern Ontario community to- day. a Canadian car accident since nine were killed in a head-on collision near Kamsack, Sask., June 22, 1965. The Canada Safe Council said |consin car plates and the other It was the worst death toll in} was believed to be from south- ern Ontario, consin car, four of them chil- dren. A girl was seriously in-| was eastbound about 40 miles jured. Police said one car had Wis- Six persons died in the Wis- Three adults died in the set- ond car. ' .m. Police said the children were all under 10 years of age. The wreckage had to be wedged apart to free the sur- viving girl. The car with Wisconsin plates been from the Ottawa area. west of Sudbury and the Ontario Nine RACE RIOTS CONTINUE IN PLAINFIELD AREA | 7 | 2 | FOR US. RAILS Anti- Plan WASHINGTON | White Policeman Slain Strike : "Open Insurrection" Seen PLAINFIELD, N.J. (AP) --\Gleason was surrounded by Ne- Gunfire flashed through a 14- gro youngsters. W i i fire gro } ' . Witnesse: | block Negro district and within! he pulled his pistol. A stot cr ¢ >¢ ) I 4 KS sight of police headquarters! fired and the young man. Bobby Sunday on the third night of| Williams, fell. : racial trouble in this suburban| city. (AP) -- Con-!shopcraft unions and most of Another shot felled Gle. ! ' ason |8ress moved today to end ajthe country's railroads, so had s and the y gsters month-long legislative impasse|nowhere to turn but to Congress) A White policeman was shot|oyer pj si nes and quickly approve legislation|for a new law. and died after being beaten and peat fim. pk e gi Mad to end the walkout and stamped him. He 'started today's crippling which; The Senate and House of Rep- rail|resentatives each passed a. no- | work stoppage. {strike bill this spring but a con- Congressional leaders sum- ference committee has been moned to the White House Sun- haggling about the differences day in the walkout's early hours|for a month SS t ym Nisbet oe 8 Pacey ye cate' was raising his hand and they y occasional gunfire was|just kept kick im." heard early today. , : oe con I'welve persons were hurt, 19| Hardy, Negro Councilman Ev- of them shot during what Mayor erett Lattimore and two other George Hatfield charged was|Nestes guided a white re- promised to get anti-strike legis-| Congressional sources said "planned, open insurrection" in|P0ter_into the troubled area lation to Johnson s desk by to-|the committee would be shunted| this community, 18 miles south.|PUt quickly had to escort him night. The strike was, expecied/aside and the Senate would|West of riot-wracked Newark, |°Ut to avoid trouble. Hardy re- to affect 80 per cent of U.S. rail) pass its bill calling for a '0-day; A 22-year-old - Negro wioseleneg iene Bhifed: pepe pest | vised: ey're shooting at any- |trackage by noon. jno-strike period followed by a's i y | | _Indications were that jek loncssanient imposed a pr tere ae siege Bs o2 og vag thing fuel tion would provide for a possible|if no voluntary agreement were! critically wounded oe ee - danny settle-| reached, : ment which is bitterly opposed} House leaders promised af-|tiy fe the unions. firmative action on that plan le Ge ae becca eh | But Joseph W. Ramsey, vice-|though the House earlier struck! head uarters c sal at police \president of the Machinists Un-|the government-imposed scitie-! shot Wal Thay. cane pate =" |PETTY RUCKUS Trouble began with looting, aimed mainly at liquor stores, after two nights of lesser vio- lence. Thirty - seven persons were arrested and 17 were hurt Also injured was an attrac- postponed picnic "'went over jion whose locals began the;ment provision fro H E i i pretty good -- but, I'm glad j|Walkout, said union national "We've had a a a ie |GUARD SUPPORT peer ige As gh ea reid it's. over," chuckled Mr, |headquarters 'would certainly|It's time for action," said Sen-| National guardsmen and\. sis Harding. urge respect for the law' ifjate Republican Leader Everett state police moved in to back| NO shots had been reported \Congress acts. \Dirksen. |up local officers reinforced by until, Sunday night. . --Oshawa Times Photo $$ _ ---- -- | | President Johnson used up his} House Speaker John W. Mc-| helmeted patrolmen from neigh-| After the policeman's death, \anti-strike powers earlier in the|Cormack said he is certain of|>°ring towns. shots rattled through the West \lengthy pay dispute between six!action today. Governor Richard J, Hughes|End of the city, a Negro area jsaid he was 'shocked and dis-\°f individual houses, apart- mayed"" by his state's second|ments and two low = income episode of shooting and death. as Projects, It is not a Shots echoed through the|'¢mement region nor a slum of night, clearly heard at' police|tt© Sort which burst into fury headquarters, Some came from|\!"_Newark. automatic weapons. - Detective Lieut. Daniel Hen- nessy said he saw Negroes in a car speed around a corner fir- ing a sub-machine-gun, He said BEAUTY WINNER HAS TENDER AGE| Newark Has Lull As. Gunfire Eases (Reuters) -- Shapely Anna NEWARK, NJ. (AP) -- Newjfire while looting Doyle won a beauty contest here Sunday and was crowned Miss Wendover, But it was enly after the store, and a car was westbound at a point spacer Ope rerio og yd el saad a hs ae fl lh lhe he was atop a roof returning ~ ¥ os 5 - - wh ere is a slight curve taf -mhe was only 12. five violent days Sunday, bu fiptes said ed si Ne M id the way. "I didn't think to tell them |gunfire and firebombs, mush-/ably still lie undetected on r00ms | en werd pinned by shots in-lin arr . The injured girl is in serious conditon in Espanola General Hospital. Four adults died in the Wis- rooméd in prarhy, Hiaintheld, or inside buildings. where national guardsmen were/ More than 1,100 persons have called in after a white police-/peen hurt in the worst racial side the central fire station forjreason to believe th United nearly eight hours, States has decided to suspend Police mounted rooftops t0/the bombing of North Vietnam: how old I was before: the contest. . . . Anyway what difference does it make?"'. consin car. Two adults and three children were killed in the Ontario car, which police said may have man was shot and beaten to/riot inthe United States since death as Negro gangs fram-/Watts in 1965, Property dam- ee liga tea ane The report by Victor Zorza, paged. age estimates soared past $5,-/the woman was hit in the ankle/one Of the paper's commenta- Trouble also echoed in Jersey | 900,000. by one of 17 bullets sprayed|tors on international affairs, City where a group of teen-| Hughes sald the 11 p.m. cur-linto the car in which she and|says "some Washington offi- agers was scattered after/few throughout the city might/a male companion rode. cials, when questioned about Negro Director A girl about five was seriously injured in the Canadian vehicle.| #RESNO, Calif. (AP)--Police s | ° e e 37 Killed . Egypt, UN Truce Officials Reach Accord On Suez Plan. directs a job program, was| Springfield Awe nue reported) day. In Prison Camp Blaze Egypt and United Nations|new ceasefire that halted the!canal, five UN truce officers) truce officials have reachedjair and artillery battles Satur-|and seven assistants were set agreement on details regarding) day. |ting up headquarters in a hotel| JAY, Fla. (AP) -- Thirty- the work of UN ceasefire ob-| But the Israeli government at Ismailia, the midpoint of the seven prisoners were killed Sun-|Servers in the tense Suez Canal|said the UN had informed it the| 104-mile waterway. area, Egyptian foreign minis-jceasefire observers could not) The observer unit on the Is-| day at a state prison road camp when disgruntled convicts fired scrap paper and inadvertently turned their locked barracks|ported hitch which delayed the into a flaming oven state offi- cials said today. Fourteen of the 51 prisoners inside the burning barracks, which recently became racially- integrated were rescued, Six were taken to hospital with burns and eight were trans- ferred to the jail at Pensacola. The fire was set by prisoners, said Louis Wainwright, director of the state corrections divi- sion. A guard saw two prison- ers--one a Negro and another white--touching lighted matches to newspapers, Wainwright said. G. C. Mayne, Jr., assistant warden at the camp, earlier said the barracks erupted into flame when battling prisoners, a Negro and a white, broke a gas line and smashed a fluorescent lamp. VAPOR IGNITED Wainwright, after conferring at the scene with three agents of the state fire marshal's. of- fice, said vapor from the broken fluorescent lamp was ignited by the burning newspapers. "I'm sure they didn't antici- pate what would happen," Wain- wright said, ."but they antici-' pated there would be some slight damage and this would cause some of them to be trans- The state pentitentiary is at Raiford, Wainwright said he didn't know exactly why the men were displeased. 'That's what we have to find out. There has been no indication that any racial problem was involved at all." Asked why more prisoners did not flee the burning build- ing after the door was un- locked, Wainwright said: "The guard told them to get out. Ap- parently they panicked." Among the dead was a pris- oner who started the newspa- per-fed fire, Wainwright said. try sources in Cairo said today. The agreement followed a re- start of observation work along the canal Sunday. The points agreed on were. not disclosed. Meanwhile, Egyptian and Is- raeli guns along the waterway were silent for the second straight day. In a surprise development on the diplomatic front, Premier Houari Boumedienne of Algeria and President Abdel Rhan.an Aref of Iraq left Cairo for Mos- cow, the Algerian news agency reported. The two Arab leaders Sunday night ended discussions in Cairo on the Middle East war after- math with Presidents Nasser of Egypt, Nureddin Atassi of Syria and Ismail el Azhari of Sudan. A-communique on the talks said the five Arab leaders agreed to take effective meas- ures to wipe out all traces of "Zionist imperialistic aggres- sion." ; They. also approved a propo- sal by Azhari that Arab foreign ministers should meet soon in Khartoum, Sudan. Small teams of UN observers, acting under a Security Council mandate, were on both sides of the canal, making preparations to observe the operation of the Summit Meeting Set For Bangkok BANGKOK; Thailand (AP)-- Premier Thanom Kittikachorn of Thailand said today the gov- ernment chiefs of the seven na- tions allied in fighting the Com- munists in Vietnam will hold a summit meeting in Bangkok in October. Thanom said the meeting would be preceded by a foreign ministers' conference in Saigon. lstart functioning until "a num-|raeli side raised the blue-and- ber of questions regarding the Egyptian stand" were cleared | up. The semi « rns ye Cairo} newspaper Al Ahrafn said the start of the UN patrbls was de-| layed by continuation of talks) in Cairo and Tel Aviv by Lt.-| Gen. Odd Bull of Norway, the! head of the UN Palestine truce} organization. AP correspondent Dennis! Neeld reported fron the Israeli headquarters at El Quantara,| on the canal, that Egypt had re-| fused to allow direct communi- cation between UN observers on opposite sides of the canal. The Egyptian government an-| nounced it had informed Bull any Israeli attempt to move boats on the Suez Canal would be considered a violation of the ceasefire and Egyptian forces would immediately open fire. ESTABLISH BASE CAMP On the Egyptian side of the white UN flag over a headquar- ters at El Qantara, and a large Israeli escort took three observ- ers on a tour of the canal to stake out spots for observa- tion posts. The first unit was made up of four officers and seven UN civilian employees. The Australian leader of the group at El Quantara, Maj. Ronald Skinner, said there would be a gradual buildup of observers along the canal. The obsetvers moved into the canal area after the third suc- cessive weekend of fighting fol- lowing the June Arab-Israeli war and a new ceasefire worked out Saturday night at UN head- quarters in New York. The Egyptian government said 50 Egyptians were killed and 134 were wounded in the) fighting' Friday and Saturday and that many were civilians. The Israelis reported eight of their soldiers killed and 42 program was shot in the arm/for firing from a car at a Negro) and thigh Sunday night after a day of sporadic violence involv- jing Negro youths. Shot In Arm smashing several windows with] be lifted today, and that collec-| "It was really brutal,' David|the present state of play be- rocks and firebombs, and in ad-|tion might begin on the piles of/Hardy, a Negro reporter for the/ tween the United States and the said the Negro director' of|jacent East Orange where po-| garbage starting to rot in the|Plainfield Courier News, said/Soviet Union, put it thus: 'On Fresno's summer Anti - poverty|lice arrested three white men|cordoned-off Negro area that|of the. attack which took the lifejthe ABM (anti-ballistic missile) lcovers almost half this city ofof patrolman John Vincent|Moratorium, the U.S, has gone ney, | 400,000 |Gleason Jr., who joined Plain-/8S far as it could to meet the = | Hughes said all schools, liq-|field's police force in 1958, the Russians. On the Vietnam bombe« Guardsmen stationed on every|yor stores and bars, shut grid (oe his police lieutenant father|ing, we may go further." | | retired. 2 Zorza adds: "This view has | Witnesses said Gleason had|been stated with sufficient au- were killea| moved se off a -- pening to suggest that the de- e Se Ras _._iwhite youths menacing a band|cision to 'go further' dued sniper fire after dark, dnd| Thursday, 1} olny one seven of Negroes. He was caught be-|the fuscia on the weir a looting and fire-| Saturday. Only two were white, 'tween the two groups. bon-bing has already been The white youths ran anditaken." Police said Dennis Mathis, 28,, corner along Newark's ravaged | Friday, will remain closed to- hit by a bullet fired by a white] scattered but considerable sub-| persons private patrolman. Police were} attempting to learn whether the} incident was accidental. The|/no more of the , , bullet, they said, ricocheted. | bombing that left the Negro|@ detective and a fire captain. Reports that Mathis had. just|shopping area a mass of broken! "The 5,000 guardsmen who left a meeting of other Negro) hoards and glass. lsearched cars and suspicious! leaders attempting to restore} . . | persons in the riot area Sunday) order' to Fresno when he was| Three more riot deaths sane be : a ce it hit. | day brought the Newark total to ides stay, Hughes said, until the Mathis was reported in satis-|24. A woman was shot before|§n!P factory condition. dawn, a youth died from gun- is restored. ennui eaa eee er MYNME NEWS HIGHLIGHTS am | Peking Mobs Pelt Diplomats | PEKING (Reuters) -- Two British diplomats were pelted with tomatoes today at the gates of Britain's diplo- | matic mission here by Chinese demonstrators protesting | against the arrest of Chinese newspaper men in Hong Kong. About 1,000 slogan-chanting demonstrators from the | official New China news agency and other Peking news- papers, marched to the mission to present protest pelie tions ers are isolated and order} Six Forest Fires Burning TORONTO (CP) -- Six forest fires were reported burning in Ontario today by the department of lands and forests. Located by districts, the fires are in Kenora, three: Sault Ste. Marie, two, and Port Arthur, one, In the 24 hours ending at 8 a.m. today six new fires were report- ed and 10 extinguished. Moderate fire danger ratings are reported throughout the province, except for Lake Huron wounded. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)-- when her reign ends and she returns to school her class- mates will forget she was Miss Universe. "I'd rather be Sylvia," said the stunning brunette whose ad- mirers say her smile convinced the judges she was the loveli- est of the 56 contestants. Miss Dominion of Canad: Donna Barker, 20-year-old Tor- onto stenographer, did not reach the semi-finals. of me as Miss Universe; I wish will be a senior when she re- Wainwright declined to give|He said the actual dates had their names, ; not been fixed, turns to the University of Ala- bama after her reign. Miss Universe Makes Plea "Just Call Me Sylvia" Sylvia, whose 5-foot-714 inches Sylvia Hitchcock, 21, hopes that! are packed nicely into a 35%4-, 2414-3614 frame, said she started life as a tomboy. She collected eggs on her father's chicken farm, played touch football with 'her brothers, stole tomatoes jfrom neighboring farms and built huts out of tomato crates |the gang carted off. She also started'life as a loser in beauty contests. Sylvia, whose friends call her Sylvester or-Sam, defeated Venezuela's Mariela Perez ° "But they probably will think|Branger for the crown, Third jwas England's Jennifer Lewis, they wouldn't," said Sylvia. She) pgweq by Finland's Ritva Helena Lehto and Israel's Batya Kabiri. district, which reports a high rating. Two Fugitives Recaptured KINGSTON (CP)--Provincial police today caught two persons who escaped from Collins Bay penitentiary. Don- ald Ronald Jepson, 25, of Toronto and Thomas Agnew Barnes, 21, of Newnzarket, Ont., were reported missing from the minimum-security prison Sunday night. They were recaptured five miles west of Kingston. SMT AMSA TEMG LAT LA TLL LLU 'Wiad! DU | tet |. .. In THE TIMES Today .. | UAW Members Ratify Contract Demonds--P. 9 | Five Hurt In Crash Near Whitby--P. 5 | Scarborough Wins Jr. Softball Title--P. 6 uteri Ann Landers--10 Pickering News--5 E : Ajox News--5 Sports--6, 7, 8 2 F s | City News--9? Television--15 : Classitied----17, 18, 19 Theatres--14 2 j . i a ae 4 Comics--15 Weather--2 Z SYLVIA HITCHCOCK the 1966 holder, Margareta pageant held on Miami Editorial--4 We NE ss : throws up her hands in Arvidson, left, of .Sweden, -- Beach. Financial--16 Women's--10, It, = 'glee after receiving the | She won her title Saturday * : Obituaries--19 H (AP Wirephoto) lk . Miss Universe crown from night in the annual beauty US. Suspension

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