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Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Jun 1963, p. 1

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' ' THOUGHT FOR TODAY ~ Most people can read the hand- writing on the wall -- they just refuse to believe it, AE ti a Eg ae ap NP gg ae gpa riper apt ly ol =a ena gS emer VOL. 92---NO. 153 ~ "Wwe woe AN age Song eet _* WEATHER REPORT \ Playgirl - Outlines Vice Worl --- Playgirl Marilyn (Mandy) Rice - Davies etood her ground today as the slashed away at her story of a love affair with the third Viscount Astor hd the ~ sation-packed vice ring Dr, Stephen Ward. Ward faces eight charges, in- huding running a caligin stable for upper crust Britons and liv. off the earnings of Miss Rice-Davies and her red-hai roommate, Christine Keeler. Ward's ae a aoe opened t "s ing by try- to break Miss Rice-Davies' story. "Tt is quite untrue," he said, "for to suggest that you have "Of course it is not untrue," ashe replied. I am not going to myself in court." also stuck to her Gaim of Friday that she knew actor Douglas Fairbanks Jr. She said their acqauintance in- volved a screen test and two along with Christine. Miss Rice-Davies, a key wit- ness in the case against Ward, admitted she tried to kill her shortly after the death of who hed kept her for) asked her if she knew) told her parents she' commit suicide last No-/ because her lover, Rachman, left her noth-| will, ; wies said it was fool- ; i457 ,3%h Bat 4 r Burge asked her if she de- stroyed a two-way mirror in the; "¢oowing the NAACP line" in/ been inadequate coverage by the! apartment she shared with) Rachman. : "Yes, that would be sometime in 1961," she replied. After Rachman's death and her suicide attempt last year,' Miss Davies was taken to Mid-/ @lesex Hospital in London asd her parents went to live with "i used her of a accu r her role in the case to get pub./ licity by claiming affairs with famous persons including Lord Astor and Fairbanks. She admitted that she realized the more sensational the case the more money she could make by selling her story to the press. "Every person in this case Is under contract to some paper and I don't see why I should not be. "T am under contract to sev- eral newspapers." if she fe, any malice Remove Gland From Neck Of Prime Minister OTTAWA (CP) An ob structed salivary gland was re- saceesstuliy from the moved righ side of Prime Minister Lather King, president of the) Recording his first television Fearson's neck in Civic Hospi- tal here today. shea relations with Lordithe tical broadcasts. toward Ward, she said: 'Not any more, I did not even want te come here," Burge: "You were said Lord Astor paid Tent of an apartment she end Miss Davies shared in London, Lord Astor, 55, who lives at Cliveden, Buckinghamshire, rented Ward a cottage on his estate frequently, referred to in the case. Under cross - examination by Burge today, Miss Rice-Davies QUEEN OF FESTIVAL Lt.-Governor Earl Rowe of ers at the floral ball Friday Ontario crowns Deidre (Dee- night. She will preside over repeated she and Lord Astor bad made love. Dee) Fleury, 18, queen of the the three-day festival. Brampton Festival of Filow- (CP Wirephoto) Senator Irked By TV Negro News U.S, broadcasting networks are) covering the news. | CBS president Frank Stanton was the witness at the time. He | said his network's men are diq street brawl and the beating up| A 66-to-1 longshot, V rected only "'to be as objective as possible." | He was called to testify on) pending bills to waive " time" provisions for some But he himself in the midst of a setto between senators when) the racial issue was injected, | Senator John 0. Pastore) (Dem. RI), chairman of the Senate communications sub. committee, broke into Thur.) mond's questioning of Stanton to tell the witness: "You can an- swer the question or make a speech too if you want to." At this Thurmond flared an- grily. Stanton testified that CBS de. cisions on what gets covered and what doesn't are based on news judgment not "on the ba- sis of color." FEELS SLANT TO NEGRO But Thurmond insisted that people in general feel CBS and the other two major aetworks slant their news coverage to faver the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and what he termed "this Negro movement." Thurmond said that "almost every five days" Rev. Martin Southern Christian Leadership Conference, is on television and | Maryland, MONTREAL (CP) -- Judge Emile Trottier Friday com- mitted four youths to voluntary statement for mur- man Wilfren Vincent O'Neill, 65, killed when a time-bomb ex- ploded outside an army re- cruiting office Aprit 20. mond Jacques Giroux, 19, rapher, and Yves Labonte, 18, clerk, are to appear for volun- tary statement July 5. Voluntary statement is a stage in Quebec legal procedure at which the defence may sub- trial. Preliminary hearing of a fifth person charged with tal murder in O'Neill's death, Georges Schoeters, 33, a grad- uate economics student ,was ad- journed to July 3. Hudon, Villeneuve and Giroux refused to testify | Ward to say this because) WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sena-, ficial Medgar Evers in Jackson,. Rachman gave enough in jeW-/tor Strom Thurmond (Dem./Miss., than to the killing of a eiry and mink to keep her for)s.C.) said at a Senate hearing) white man during a racial dis-/ Ragusa | Friday a general opinion is that) turbance in Lexington, DUBLIN (CP ~ Reuters) -- won the second of Irish Sweep- today in a that saw the odds- Epsom Derby win- when he ic Mo of a group of white youths in/Chroi, was second and the jush-owned Tiger third. Stanton said he was not fam.|. Irish - owned we iar with all the cases va on Mae pi runners agreed te supply Thurmond! state with a report on how the inci./made soft by heavy rain. dents had been handled by CBS. | > Stour ue te oe Sou oe James Hagerty, vice ~ presi.';. cacy 5 dent of news at ABC, tend a Seen. ay © organ statement in New York saying Roena Just 2. setae Loe "I disagree violently with my to be friend Senator Thurmond." | E 00-t0-7 "In covering the news, ABC) aot end Tiger ot ye "eed is acting as reporters, not Par) Ragusa third in the Epsom tisans and we always present/pomy and nine lencths behind both sides of a controversy./winner Relko was ridden b While I can only speak for ABC heres = cc oem. rarnet Bougoure, news, I am sure this is true of the industry itself." The winner, owned hy J. R NBC officials withheld com. ment pending a study of Thur. mond's remarks from an offi. cial transcript of the hearing. He also protested there had/stakes tional networks of the killing of aon favorite, white soldier in Washington by|ner Relko, scratch' a group of Negroes during a/went lame at the N.C. ining Sweepstakes tickets. Macmillan Calm During Scandal LONDON (AP)--Prime Minis- ter Macmillan said Friday night he would not panic over the Profumo scandal and he intends to lead the Conservative party in Britain's next election win a fortune dow with the scratching of Reiko. 16 OFFICIAL STARTERS Relko did not eniy 16 runners competed in the race. There was no immediate ex- interview since a sex and se-/P@zAation for Relke's sensa- curity sterm forced his war t#enal scraching. The start was The Gtyearcld prime mimis- asked Stanton: "Why don't you minister, John Profumo, out in Gelayed for 10 minutes--appar- ter came through the hour-long have people on the other side at disgrace, Macmillan said ¥ in good shape and his x is reported as satis- struction was a cyst and a spokesmen for the 4 said the Mr. Pearson, who went into hespitel Tharsday for a physi- cad examination m preparatvon operation, spent aboul im the opereting room ¥ wes performed by Dr. 's chief of surgery. least one time out of three?" He complained the networks my health and strength, I hope /Yves Saint-Martin dismounted ets on the favored Reiko had given far more publicity to'to lead the party at the next Doubt aout the hot favorite in-/stunned minutes the assassination ef NAACP of. ently for no reason. "AR being well and if I keep Then seddenly French jockey election." creased SUPPLY MOTION OPENS WAY Liberals May Face Vote Of Confidence OTTAWA (CP)--The minority) government may face) ancther vote of confidence in the whole first four of the bill's 19 clagsesjadvouated im a book written were passed in commitice of Finance Minister Gordon, "Th: ; planners are with us. . . . believe they have the answers aging tO Sl the problems that face the Nse T vativel tien" : MPs kept up a strong opposition : ery telidays except 'Christmas and New Year's. any griev- baker described the proposal as Party will prepese one or two) Ont; amendments : Tights of the provinces and a Power that would be vested in) rales, the mo- "nearly complete abdication of the cabinet. The bill ts sched-/ ldays, prier te the introduction) It gave the cabinet the power 2eain' Tharsda: TORRE spending e@sti- legents will be imtregeced [ster The Commons rarely observes | jen Day or other statet- Easter, | Debate droned on for the sec. end day Friday on the govem-) snent's Dill te-set wp a new Ge- partment ef indestry. The bil ifimally received secend reedimg)main reason for cycation of the woald be no uMnecessary expan- UBC. we deparupot + : 'WOULD AMEND Opposition Leader Diefen- Mr. Dieiembaker indica'ed "2 jete intrasion" imte the is later te redace the in » uled t come wp for debate vy. te "push basiness around, te di-| Defence Prodaction Minister jmates for six departments. Es-irect them, to order them to de Drary, already designated as 'mates for the other depart-'certain things." E the next industry minister when! Even the Socialist government the Ieg! S$ passed, count. of Saskatchewan had never gonejered Mr. "Ss criti- 0 fat. He predicted thet the/cismns point by government will onpese! He said the bil, Jost as had opposed act only im the another measare te create alwoukd maintain clese liaison TRataci~.] PevekopmMent and jean! with the provincial departments fered @ indestry. His own powers Mr the woald be very lonited ane there Diefenbaker said SeMSS-| The judge asked the Crown "ness box during Hudon's pre- point. | @epartment would H at ipretiminary hearing and Judge 'Emile Trottier ordered them jheld in cells until the heating 'resumes, ito consider charging them and \Schoeters with obstructing jus- tice. Maximum penalty for ob- lstructing justice is two years. | Schoeters, called to the wit- | y hearing, ad "on imy patriotic and political con- lvictions I refuse to testify" and ithe judge ordered him removed non-capital der in the death of night watch-/i mit evidence intended to quash/® tworia Rifles bombing. Dates were not set. No request for bail was made among the I8 accused, was Youths To Appeal FLQ Trial Basis of "political ie grounds of "political principle" Sino- Hits Crisis Pitch MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Rus- Chinese diplo- mats from their embassy here > in a move which Western ob- servers said brought the Sino-|China directly Soviet dispute to a new crisis Hi ie S ui Pe rid | 23, only woman The three others also said] they refused to testify on journed until July 2. Three Canadians Win Sweepstakes y tt was learned later that one) whose skin is white. | By THE CANADIAN PRESS j Tiger. A iotal of 129 Canadians held) tackets onal lottery. Holders of tick will collect prizes based on the total amount of the pool and ex- |pected to be between $2,000 and! $3,000. 'Those who held tickets! je ai jon non-starters will get smailer prizes. residual |. Five Canadians who i i§ i ei ee Start of the race i g ft Lb +, 4 uf d Si gi f i j A pas Ay i i i: ai i | 5 es i ; s if fie vi an |phame CiniG cation will resume on Tees- @ay. The Times wishes its faders a sale and happy holiday. as Gmt the idea wasisien of the civil service. > Mullion and trained in Ireland) qe Canadians today wonjof the winning Ragusa tickets! by Paddy Prendengast, won the/jrish Sweepstakes prizes of/was shared by two Toronton- first prize of 49,152 ($137,458). / 519.909 each based on Ragusa'sjians under the joint noinde- The race carried the hopes Of] victory in the Irish Derby. Nine|plume of We're Off. They were millions of people throughout won prizes of $60,000 by holding|S. White and Mrs. L. Caldwell. the worl' who had bought Irish .weenstakes tickets on second-|It was also learned that the Ot- C place Vic Mo Chroi and two/tawa ticket on Tiger was jointly] Many saw their chances t0/won third-place prizes of about/held by E. F. Palmer and V. go out the win-'s39.999 each with tickets on|Storey under the nom-deplume |\Cini-Greg. Mrs. Sue Powell of King t _|plume Black Cat on her ticket starters orders, So officially ets on the 13 horses that started @7@¥a on Vic Mo Chroi, cred- : ited her black cat with bring- wal collect prises based on e(ite er the lack of the draw. who used the nom-de- Readies For China Action BERLIN (AP) -- Premier Khrushchev turned today from a lukewarm Berlin reception to a major Soviet-bloc summit con- ference called apparently to consolidate its strength for an ideological showdown with the Communist China, feud broke into the open again as at least five Communist lead- -- responded to Khrushchev's Coinciding with the summit talks, the Kremlin published a Khrushchev speech in which tht Soviet premier: Wages War On Police Action gion and race commission of the National Council of The five-point program called upon ministers in racially-tense general line of our foreign pol-| areas to set up 24-hour vigils in icy." 3. Charged that the Chinese Communists have "extremely |prisons to prevent what it termed 'police brutality" jagainst civil rights demonstra. sharpened" their relations with/tors under arrest. Moscow and accused them of) resorting to'a "racial approach"' | in an attempt to win Asians and Africans to their side, rather than to the side of Communists Khrushchev made the speech, last week at a meeting of the! central committee of the Soviet Communist party. Tt was at that meeting the Kremlin ruled out publication of a bitter Chinese attack on Mos- cow, Peking, opposed to coexis-| tence with the West, in effect) called for Khrashchev's scalp.| The 38,000-word document also! tried te dictate the agenda for) the meeting the Chinese and Russians have scheduled Friday | in Moscow in an attempt te iron) out their differences. { j } The program also called for: 1. National governing bodies of the council's member de-|. nominations to withhold finan./~ cial aid for construction pro-|: jects of individual congrega- tions unless contractors guaran- tee against racial discrimina- ion in hiring. 2. Conducting of mass - vices actress the United Stal during "'one great' dom" for the purpose ing attention on the civil rights legislation. |vices would be held on a day to be chosen later. 3. The establishment of inter- faith groups im cities to check on desegregation of churches, |ti ferences" i aati en and Hl 5 g ¥a § 2 z a i rid ety! fre ee i ig ze ir ry FI 5 s ideo ig Gio BPs il Lil [ rf housing, schools and employ- ment. eat . Dominion Day. Pabi- |" ss

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