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Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Aug 1963, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY Men should keep their eyes wide open before marriage and half shut afterward, Oshawa Times Partly cloudy tinuing cool. W. and Sunday, 1 At A AP a a a eeeyesne WEATHER REPORT Sunday and con- inds light tonight VOL. 92--NO, 187 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1963 Authorized os Second Class Mai! Post Office gs es Ottawa and for payment of Postage Cash. SIXTEEN PAGES Ban Urgec For Navy Negroes By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS|ing ordinance and 54 were ar- A south Louisiana political/rested, At East St, Louis, Ill, leader says he wants the Pla-ja soft drink distributing firm quemines Parish (county) coun-jagreed to hire two Negroes cil to declare businesses in the/after a demonstration in which parish off limits to the navy in/20 persons were arrested. a sort of public accommoda-} One civil nights demonstrator tions regulation in reverse, received minor injuries when Leander H. Perez, 72-year-oldi/he backed against a moving political boss and outspoken seg-|work truck at an apartment regationist, plans to make the/construction site in the Queens recommendations at the next/section of New York. Pickets council meeting Aug. 28. jparaded at a housing project} He also suggested Friday that/in Manhattan and sit-ins con-| children of personnel at the/tinued at the offices of the gov-| naval air station at Belleernor and the mayor. Chasse be barred from public] In Washington, Labor Secre-| schools and that civilians stay| tary Willard Wirtz described as/ off the sprawling base five) constructive a meeting between) miles south of New Orleans, [construction industry manage-} Rear-Admiral Charles H. Ly-/ment and union representa-} man, district commandant, said/tives. | if these suggestions are carried) Agreement was reached to) out he is ready to take the mat-/meet monthly with labor de-| ter to court, _ jpartment officials to implement "Ninety per cent of the chil-/an anti-bias policy in the enroll-| dren to whom Perez refers live|ing of apprentices, | not on the base. but at various} A. federal grand jury at Ma-| places in the parish,"" he said,jCom, Ga., returned indictments "and I do not see that they/Charging three members of an could be excluded from the par-/anti-segregation organization at ish schools because of their/Albany, Ga. with obstructing fathers' occupations." }justice and six others with per-| jury. AIDS NEGRO PERSONNEL Included were the president The directive which caused/and the acting president of the the commotion was issued July|Albany Movement, a biracia! 26. It authorized the armed serv-jgroup active in the southwest ices to declare off limits to}Georgia city where hundreds of servicemen any areas where demonstrators have been ar- "relentless discrimination per-jrested in the last two years. sists against Negro servicemen - - and their families." Base com- ae - 9,000 Arrive manders were empowered to make such declarations but only. with prior approval of the serv- ice secretary concerned. At Goldsboro, N.C., _ Negroes were jailed during what was described as the larg- est racial demonstration to date in the city of 35,000. Folk Festival the arrests occurred wheninks" arrived 9,000 strong Fri- some demonstrators left the/gay night and more were pour- line of march and forced their ing in today for the third annual! he into a theatre and restau-/xtariposa Folk Music Festival. } Negroes resumed protest an et -- -- ma at Williamston, N.C..|cien, and shout at the opening| im the face of a new anti-picket.-" Opening! concert, Another 3,000 milled! {Kennedy prepared to bury his son today with a special mass/in the chapel at Cardinal Cush- for | personal friend, Richard Cardi- 'At Orillia = & about 100/ t Ti la Archbishop of Boston. jthe Otis Air Force Base Hospi-jator and Mrs. Edward Kennedy jtal recuperating from the Cae- jsarean Police Chief H. A. Lane said) ORILLIA (CP) -- The folk-| Which she gave birth to Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, Wednesday, dent Children's Hos pita] Medicaljneral were Mrs. Kennedy's | Centre nearly 40 hours aft | birth, mediately. @ Lm NEARER RES ARES SMA Justice Rules City Controls School Funds TORONTO (CP)--Mr. Justice Campbell Grant ruled friday right to regulate the capital ex- penditures of publ-c school boards, The Ontario Supreme Court 88 ruled that w ici- pal counehisen bigger oe under Ontario law te ' money required by schoul boards for operating expendi- SEN HELICOPTER TAKES KENNEDY TO F Kennedy Funeral Mass#'ciss By Cardinal Cushing BOSTON (AP) President|tives, were invited to join the president at the services today children said by his close/ing's residence, The group included the presi- Catholic/dent's two brothers and their wives--Attorney - General and at|Mrs, Robert Kennedy and Sen- Cushing, Roman Mrs, Kennedy remained |--and his three sisters and in|their husbands, Eunice and Sar- Igeant Shriver, Jean and Steven Smith and Patricia and Peter The third child of the presi-/Lawford. died Friday at Boston's) Also invited to attend the fu-| section delivery = 9 his|mother and stepfather, Mr. and) /Mrs. Hugh D. Auchincloss, and Condolences from all over|/Mrs, Kennedy's sister, Mrs, Sta- he world started to pour in im-/nislaus Radziwill, ' Other members of the family Only 13 others, all close rela-'planned to visit Mrs. Kennedy ween a, the gates. Mos' the ni 'Cosa Nostra' as pir Sie toen"ay Informants Multiply town. i WASHINGTON (AP) -- Fed- | When the sun came up today| ithey were still singing, gathered eral agents are getting a closer Crowd nearly in small groups around banjo) mckers and guitar players, But police reported no major diffi- 'culties Many of them students, the doubled 'the' pop-| jook than ever into the inner Ulation of this town of 14,000/Christian Hanna is back in Can-/port, citizenship papers, and, he/tors workings of the country's orga-/@nd forced police to turn off the! nized crime network, it learned Friday, They have in-|//#™med streets formants risking their lives vir- |. Set in the home of humorist tually everywhere in the syndi- Stephen Leacock and named for cate . ' the Orillia-like town of his Sun- The startling disclosures dur- shine Sketches, the | festival ing the last year by mobster Crew. 10,00 people last year) Joseph Valachi, who described/"¢ caught the town and fes- in detail the nation-wide crime "Va! officials unprepared. organization called Cosa Nostra,,, Couchiching Park in the cen- are leading to even more weak|Te Of town became a bottle- links in the iron chain of silent/ UW, tent ~ filled all - night discipline which has kept the|&ttY, Residents were left sleep- syndicate in business for years.|'°SS. Dleary - eyed and deter- ' nS we aa te mined it wouldn't happen again Cosa Nostra "families" are) But citizens had: second mifiltrated across the country |thoughts as they counted the! with informants, it was learned /profits from the biggest influx We're getting more good in-\in the town's hisory formation now than we've ever, This spring festival promoters ten before," one government|and town council worked out a source said. 'These guys are/deal that they hope will keep the really getting upset. Everyone) visitors in hand. is wondering what the next man! The cost of adding 10 men to has said about him." the police force for the three- Attorney - General Robert F. day event wil! be paid by fes- Kennedy has termed Valachi's tival promoters. The all ~ night revelations a major intelligence activities were shifted to the breakthrough in the justice de-/camp. partment's campaign against Today's concerts feature The the muiti-dillion - dollar organ- Travellers from Toronto, Elan ized crime industry Stewart of Toronto and Jacques Valachi, now hidden away in Labrecque of Montreal. @ top secret place, started talk. Headlining Friday's show ing when he feared he had been were The Town Criers from Lon- merked for death. aon, Ont. Ian Tyson and Syl- va Fricker of Toronto, Alan Mills of Montreal, Stu Phillips of Winnipeg and Bonnie Dobson of Toronto. AUDITORIUM PROGRESS Charge Laid In $200,000 Ore Theft WHITEHORSE, Y.T. (CP)--A farmer employee of United] Keno Hills Mines Limited at Bisa, Y.T., was arrested and charged with theft of are Friday) following a police investigation! into a shipment of $200,000 'in |Sver ore to an Amepran smel- jier Gerald Henry Priest was ar-| rested in Vancouver by RCMP. The arrest capped a two-week investigation by RCMP) launched after United: Keno} todred a complaint in connec-| tion with the shipment from the} Yukon of about 8 tons of ore! The ore now 'is impounded in| two railway cars at the East Helena Smelter at Helena jMont. It arrived at the plant! itwo weeks ago. j $1,000,000 $900,000 $800,000 $700,000 $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 $50,000 Home In Canada Wanted By Hanna MONTREAL (CP) -- George) where because he lacked a pass- ada, The celebrated "man with-/claimed, a homeland was traffic lights to unsnarl the car-jout a country," who turned out! It turned out he had apparen-jchamber but the effort proved/who raise funds for capital ex- to be a hoax and was deported,|tly pulled a hoax, The govern- arrived at the newsroom of the/ment was told Hanna did have! Montreal Star this morning ja country--Egypt, His real) He said he wants to live in'name was Ahmed Aouad Canada Lawyer White said after Han-| Hanna: telephoned Vancouver)na's call: "He's still as mixed lawyer Don White, one ofjup as ever. This is pathetic.) several lawyers who tried to/He's landed himself in a whole) help him after he first entered/mess of trouble all over: again."'/ anada illegally in 1956 r , ADVISES SURRENDER atianna said foday be owed) 'The lawyer advised Hanna t Brazil and managed to slip past)=°..0 "7 Pouce Dut he rep ied: c via "cat imm pl iy Boost 9 No, -- I'm coming out there it docked here Friday morning bediguigdoas Let them catch me. 7 ime. He said he wanted to go to Van-/" 3). couver "where everybody was) Hanna said he had been seca a tossed out of both Egypt and very good to me _ |Lebanon, thrown in jan Ja- He was deported from Can-\nan wandered the streets of ada in October, 1958, after a se-|Brazi] then decidéd to come ries of immigration court bat-ipack to Canada "where all my tles fought by people who be-/friends are." : friended him. The Vancouver lawyer, who He had arrived in Canada 18%/had been keeping in touch with] months earlier, stowed away on/Hanna, confirmed his story, | a Norwegian freighter that) The RCMP was notified that! docked in Port Alberni, B.C. {Hanna had illegally entered the! At that time, he told a story/country. He left the newspaper of spending a year on the high/office an hour after he went seas, wandering from port to'there. He did not say where he port, being refused entry every-)was going, } j MAN WITHOUT A COUNTRY | wouldn't be coming home. thane Into tures, the councils can refuse to} provide money for capital ex-| penditures out of Current reve- UNERAL nue. His rulingcame as he djs. missed with costs a metion Dy fof Ajax, 25 miles east of here, to raise $60,000 in the 1963 tax levy for construction of a school gymnasium, board's contention that it was ithe town's duty to provide the a Spits the serv- 'dole at the -hospital: during the money under the Public School ices, ' Act The ritual of the Mass of the) m A : Holy Angels, to be celebrated by| vu -- = a the Boston prelate, was estab-/SU@"¢s in te cient lished for children who died be Board Act to protect ratepayers vat from extreme fluctuations in fore reaching what the church considers the age of reason --|the Property tax rate would be RU OOFER YOR. {school boards were allowed un The infant will be buried at)iimitea rights to demand money Holyhood cemetery in Brook: ro, pérmanent works .in any line, the suburban community) ci ven year. where the president was born. |*° Cee Patrick Kennedy died 39\MUST HAVE CONTROL hours and 12 minutes after he| jou the BALA Mpa .jcouncil is responsible fo' was born, He succumbed to hY-| phases of municipal financing, aline membrane disease -- @ it must be able to exercise membrane formation of the'some control over the: capital lungs which doctors said pre-,expenditures of the various vented oxygen from reaching)boards and commissions which the blood stream, : jfunction within the municipal The president stood by when|system and for which council the boy died at 4:04 a.m. EDT/must levy taxes and provide after teams of doctors and tech-/funds, Mr. Justice Grant said. nicians struggled in vain with} If councils do not have such experimental methods to pre-|control, they could lose the serve the young life. lability to keep taxation at a rea- His son died while in a unique |Sonably uniform rate, he added. high - pressure chamber used} R. B. Robinson, solicitor for; with hopes of easing the pre-/the board, said the decision mature infant's breathing. Doc-}could be regarded as a prece- was/dent and "will come as a sur- the prise to a lot of school boards the breathing little by using said eased a that municipal councils have the! § bypassed and made useless if) Mr. Justice Grant rejected the XS Former Haitian President Paul E. Magliore expresses himself with vigor at a news conference in New York. Fri- day as he calls for the end of the regime of dictator Fran- cois Duvalier, Magliore said that "everyone is united as a whole to get Duvalier out. We are behind the military activ- ites of General' Leon Can- tave." too strenuous for the boy's penditures this way." heart diately after the death for the| Y th Ch ed air base hospital on Cape Coal ou arg to see his wife. He made three visits to the hospital, each time accompanied by one of his The baby's brother and sis-| Of RC P 7 t ter, Caroline, 5%, and John Jr.) nies 2%, had been told of the birth.| _ rene They had to be told by the pres-| NEW YORK (AP) -- Robert ident Friday night that the Charles Burger, 18, a one time brother they were expecting mental patient, was charged --/ing of a Roman Catholic priest. Police in suburban Yonkers, where Burger was arrested, termed the slaying "senseless." a |They said the youth offered no' . F inal Session [Rev. Francis J. McShane, 42, jin the Manhattan apartment of the priest's sister, i Assembly Burger was returned to New York for arraignment. general assembly of the Luthe-thony Tocco, who has known ran World Federation went into Burger for two years and aided its final working session today|i" the arrest, said "he wasn't to complete action on several/@ bad kid but he had a terrible controversial resolutions and re- temper, a very violent nature." : though his father is alive, he Bn Bd bale ¥ got behind)... heen living in a foster home s y in long debate). Wanliere ark of th over the doctrine of justifica-/" oe ee 3 e) hon. Unable to agree on a draft Father McShane, police said,| theme of the assembly, dele- Nig | z . a ., (met early Thursday at a piz-) ia sent # back to commit-| ria in Yonkers. They drove in| ; separate cars to the Manhattan) Another decision facing the apartment of the priest's sister, delegates was whether to set who was away on a cruise, and! svonal research to further the' New York Chief of Detectives ecumenical movement, especi- Lawrence J. Kearney quoted! ally with the Roman Catholic Burger as saying he "went bet- Church serk and blacked out." The delegates agreed to: Burger's undoing was in driv-/ ate with South Africa on Luth-'tan apartment, leaving it there' eran churches affected by that/and driving the victim's auto nation's resettlement program back to Yonkers under its policy of separating the races and a new post of assistant ren-/ s eral crear | On 89th Birthday 3. Revise the federation's| =. commissions | NEW YORK (AP) -- Former @ Hold assemblies every ax resieemt Herbert Hoover, well : . : ~ "along in a comeback from a 5, Strengthen material and/g9rm birthday today j spiritual activities of Lutheran) As a concession to his conti- churches in Latin America, nuing convalescence, however, 6. Set up an exchange pro-/Hoover dispensed with the in- gram among younger African,|formal press conference he cus- President Kennedy left imme- In Slaying brothers i a in with murder today in the slay- jmotive for the fatal stabbing of HELSINKI (AP)--The fourth) Yonkers detective ports Burger's mother is dead, Al- of the document, the central yrriended the youth when they) up a foundation of inter-confes-'the: slaying followed. i 1, Let the federation negoti-|ing a stolen car to the Manhat.| 2. Create regional secretariats) Former President instead of five years serioys iiness, is celebrating his Asian and Latin American/tomarily holds the day before a! churches. 'birthday. --AP Wirephoto Police A MONTREAL (CP)--A United States Federal Bureau of Nar- jcotics undercover agent, work- ing in Montreal, was the key man in breaking up a multi- million dollar international nar- cotics ring piping drugs from Europe to North America, Police in Paris, Montreal and New York Friday announced the arrest of five men. and seized 13 pounds of heroin with an underworld retail value of $3,000,000. Those arrested are Roger La- violette, 40, Alai: seule" Anatole Ethier, 35, Rockland, Ont., and wealthy Paris restaurant owner Roger tenes Belk, New York su: pervisor of the narcotics bur- eau, described Coudret as '"'the biggest international dope ped- dier in business in the world." The arrests climaxed more than a year of undercover work here and in Europe by the nar- cotics bureau, the RCMP, and the French police, Phaneuf was rrested Wed- nesday at the Paris interna- tional airport where he as waiting to board an airliner for Montreal. FIND CACHE IN TRUNK Customs officers found 20 smal] plastic bags of heroin un- der the false bottom of his sheet-metal trunk. The huge shipment was ap- parently destined for New York via a Montreal' pipeline, which was tappec by the U.S. under- cover agent, The RCMP. said Friday the a Montrealer, one of those ar- rested, and discussed with him the possibility of buying heroin in kilo lots and larger amounts. One kilo is two pounds, two ounces, "After a number of mectings in the summer of 1962, the Mon- treal group agreed to sell large Hospital Robbed By Two Gunmen CLEVELAND (AP) -- Lake- side Hospital was robbed Fri- day night by two gunmen who escaped with an undetermined amount of valuables kept for pa- tients at the University Hospi- tals complex, plus $5,000 in cash, The robbers walked past the open door of the cashier's of- fice at the close of the visiting hours. They used adhesive tape to tie cashiers Gary Fields, 25, and Mrs. Dolores Jolly, 36. After the gunmen fled, Fields crawled to an emergency alarm on the floor and pressed it with his body. In getting away, the men ap- parently mingled with the hun- dreds of visitors leaving the hospital, Phaneuf, State rrest Four Canadians quantities of heroin which they would obtain in Paris, and after smuggling it by plane or ship to Montreal, would deliver it to the agent in the United States," RCMP Inspector Raoul Carriere told a press confer- ence, Laviolette was arrested Thursday while waiting to board a Montreal-bound plane at the French airport. The French restaurant - owner was picked up in Paris and : Rusk Seeking West German Support BONN (AP)--U.S, State Sec- retary Dean Rusk arrived to- day to rally West German sup- port for the limited nuclear test- ban treaty and for further talks to ease cold war tensions. Rusk left Moscow in a cheer- ful mood following a wide-rang- ing discussion with Soviet Pre- mier Nikita Khrushchev. West German Foreign Minis- ter Gerhard Schroeder greeted Rusk here, "I am looking forward to the chance to discuss fully the talks in Moscow,"' Rusk said. Rusk scheduled the 20-hour stop partly to soothe West Ger- man apprehension over the lim- agent gained the confidence ofjited test-han pact which Com- munist East Germany plans to sign. Bonn fears the. treaty could be manipulated to force recognition of the eastern re- gime and seal the division of Germany, West Germany wants as- surance that the test ban treaty will not be used to jeopardize the freedom and security of West Berlin. Chancellor Adenauer and For- eign Minister Gerhard Schroe- der were expected to insist to Rusk that the West receive such a guarantee before West Ger. many adheres to the treaty. They were expected to make similar demands in considering Khrushchev's proposals to ease cold war tensions--an East- West non-aggression pact, re- ductions in military spending and ground inspection teams on both sides of the Iron Curtain to guard against surprise at- tack. Rusk conferred with Khrush- chev for 2% hours Friday at the Soviet premier's lavish Black Sea retreat in a relaxed meeting followed by a fast game of badminton. Khrushchev, 69, claimed vic- tory over Rusk, 54. "Practice," Khrushchev said when Rusk told him '* you play well." - Hunt For Mastermind In U.K. Train Holdup LONDON (AP) -- Fiying squads from Scotland Yard raided homes in London's East End today, hunting bandits who got away with £2,569,000 ($7,- 707,000) in the world's greatest train robbery, An international search order also went out for the suspected mastermind. Most of the loot was in dog- eared but easy-to-spend paper currency that banks were ship- ping to London for repulping Scotland Yard described the suspect as a master planner who would be able to maintain almost military discipline among a gang taking part in such a stupendous theft. Detectives said the man has not been seen in any his usual haunts. They believe ne may have sought to establish an alibi by leaving Britain several days before the Glasgow-Lon- don mail train was robbed Thursday at a lonely spot 40 miles northwest of London, CALL IN INTERPOL Interpol, the international po- lice organization, Aas been asked to search for the suspect: in the holiday resorts of south- ern France and Spain. The possibility that three 'maximum security post office rail cars were sabotaged to clear the way for the robbery also was under investigation, Postmaster - General Regi- nald Bevins, in a television in- terview Friday night, revealed that three of the post office's special security cars were out of action with mechanical de- fects when the massive load of used banknotes had to be moved from Scotland to London. "I do not rule out the possi- bility that the three vans were tampered with," he said. "I am disturbed at the delay in get- ting these trains back into serv- ice. We are investigating this." The special cars are used by the post office for large money bad a Injured Golfer's Condition Critical TORONTO (CP) Harold Kalles, 41, whose throat was slashed by a broken golf club in a freak accident Mon- day, remained in critical con- dition today He was blasting out of the rough at Oakdale Golf Club when his club hit a tree, snapped and the head flew up and, cut his jugular vein. shipments on all regions of the state-operated railways. One of the three which were out of ac- tion normally would have been used on the Glasgow-London run, WILL GUARD TRAINS Bevins said in future plain- clothes police would be as- signed to the trains, previously junguarded, and an end-to-end train alarm system installed which would warn all personnel aboard of any emergency. Detectives here hunted for signs of mail bags that had been burned or destroyed. In- sutance companies and the post office tried to flush out a stool Pigeon with rewards totalling £260,000 -- some £10,000 more than the loot from Britain's previous mail robbery in 1952. It would be tax free, with no questions asked. Cecil Hart, 63, head of a firm of. theft-loss adjusters, is re- sponsible for dealing with the reward. His son and partner, Anthony Hart, said the usual process is for the informer to suggest a rendezvous, He is picked up by an auto and rides around for a while with an ad- juster, telling what he knows. HUGE DRUGS RING SHED BY FBI

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