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Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Jun 1964, p. 1

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Thought For Today Friend: A kindly person who listens in rapt ' VOL. 93 -- NO. 153 attention while you say nothing. Authorized as Second Class Ma Ottawa and for payment Weather Report 'Chance of thunderstorms to- night. Variably cloudy. Sunny, slightly cooler Wednesday. Ib-Post- Office 'Deportment - Seta iggy 2 Family Spat: Then Blaze Kills T TORONTO (CP)--A family of three died early today in their blazing suburban York Town- ship home only five hours after police were called to stop a do- mestic quartel. Dead are Peter Savge, 40; 'Mildred Savage, 35, with whom hree jan's body to determine the" cause of death. The body, badly} burned, was found in the living room. | Firemen found the bodies of Mr, Savage and Lisa in the girl's upstairs room. Police said) = \it appeared he was trying to) he had been. living for three|carry the girl to safety when he years, and their daughter, Lisa,|was overcome by flames or 3. smoke. s Homicide detectives were} Firemen and arson squad de- called after they learned thatjtectives were seeking to deter-| police had been called to the! mine the cause of the fire which} home neighbors Monday|destroyed the house's interior.| night to stop a dispute between They said it appeared to have} il Controversy Spotlights Delay Until F Child Rights Marchers | ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla, (AP)| Officers stood shoulder to! ¢ The racial controversy in St./shoulder in city square Monday) g Augustine took a new turn when May Be Called OTTAWA (CP) -- With a for-jiscamingue) said Defence Min st of Red Ensigns fluttering|ister Hellyer has announce round Parliament Hill as dec-|plan to integrate the armet the man and woman, Coroner Dr. Murray Naiberg ordered an atitepsy on the wom-) Packer Picket -- Held After 'Touching' Car BRADFORD, Ont. (CP) -- A striking vegetable packer was arrested Monday when he touched the car of an executive of Holland River Gardens Lim- ited as it crossed a picket line in this town 25 miles north of Toronto. The man, Manuel Madieras,|onto, said the dead man'e mar-|Tus : ; ; 46, was charged with obstruc-|riage broke up five years ago.| United Nations proposals for ne- tion. He was the fourth person to be charged since the strike of 350 members of the Interna- tional Teamsters Union (Ind.) at|his name from Didusewicz by told three vegetable packing plants) here started a week ago today, Police said the dead woman|kari Tuomioja of Finland may) president Johnson last week and/parts unite started in the room where the) : ;woman's body was found. |THROW STONES Neighbors, awakened by the smell of smoke, thought the house's occupants were asleep and ran around. the *building,| throwing stones through win- dows and yelling in attempts to} waken them. Flames forced them back when they tried to enter the house. Neighbors said Mr. Savage moved into the area with the woman and child about seven months ago. They said he was employed by a Toronto firm un- til the end of May, bt had not worked since then. | Mr Savage's sister, Mrs. Serge Demyanenko, 26, of Tor- His wife, Lena, mother of a girl, 19, and a boy, il, lives in nearby Port Credit. She said Mr. Savage changed deed poll. segregationist were on hand and there were no incidents. --(AP Wirephoto) A GROUP OF NEGROES and whites, guarded by a heavy force of police wade in' attempted wad at St. Augustine Beach, Fla. yesterday after a week of eins. Only a few Turks Threaten Again To Launch Invasion LONDON (AP) -- Turkey has the right to intervene individ-|Dougias-Home he had informa- threatened anew to invade Cyp-\Ually to uphold the constitution. tion that Greece has_ secretly unless Greece accepts) Archbishop Makarios, the|raised its garrison on Cyprus far Greek-Cypriot president of Cyp-/beyond the 950-man ceiling al- lowed by the 1960 treaties | gotiations to settle the strife be-|rys. has said he considers the tween the Greek- and Turkish-\constitution and its special! Cypriots. rights for the Turkish-Cypriot government would accept only Turkish Premier Ismet Inonu| minority no longer binding.|one of two solutions to the cri- the British government|Greek Premier George Papan- Sis: (1) A partitioned Cyprus Monday that UN Mediator Sa-\dreou, after conferring with|with the Greek: and Turkish da in a federal gov- (2) "Double eno- a juvenile counsellor charged Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and other leaders of the integration movement with contributing to the delinquency of minors. Warrans signed by Fred Brinkhoff Monday named King; Dr. R. B, Hayling, a Negro den- tist; Rev. John Gibson, and J. §, Jackson. The four were charged with using minors who were wards of the juvenile court in integra- | tion marches through the city.) The integrationists claimed progress in their battle against race discrimination Monday when the state put into effect new and tougher measures to control violence. For the first time in the month-long series of demonstra- tions, officers pushed aside an- gry white segregationists to al- The Turkish premier said his jow integrationists freedom to demonstrate. The integrationists -- a few whites among them---romped in the surf at St. Augustine Beach, protected by more than 200 of- night to provide a protective) orations for Canada's 97th birth-| forces with much fanfare,. but corridor for integrationists en-'day Wednesday, the Commons/he doubted whether this would gaged in the customary night) resumes today its debate over] in itself make the services more march to the old slave market.) the government proposal to re-/modern and efficient. y As usual, there was a shout-| Place the ensign with a maple) Mr. Martineau favored inte ing, taunting crowd of whites|leaf flag. ' |gration, but he feared that the waiting in the square, but no| The big question: Will the Liberals would end up with violence. Previously, officers) government press on with the) "just as much brass" and ser- stood by until trouble started., | flag fight to the bitter end, or) vicemen, or more. State Att Dan Warren! Wil it furl its design after a few| Gordon Churchill and Marcel state Atiorney Yan warren) more days of debate and put| Lambert, both former Conserva- announced that in the future) o¢ the showdown vote until the| tive cabinet ministers, ex- persons arrested for attacking) fall? os , Pedeger: eet ayen about the Ma ith| There have been growing in-| idea a single, supreme coms nercere: wee ae chareed wiih dications that the government|mander, A committee leader- a felony under criminal infor-)¥i1) choose the second course,|Ship is safer and enables con. mations filed by him. switching to a few bills with| flicting views to be aired, they Warren said one white segre-| wide voter-appeal such as stud-| argued. : : gationist, 27 - year - old William| ent loans and driving for a par-|. Former fisheries minister An- Thompson of St. Augustine, was|liamentary recess by the end of|8us MacLean said it might be named in an information filed| July. |better to integrate defence lead- Monday. Conservative MPs warned last! ers at the cabinet level, He sug- ie said i wie probable: that! week that they will talk loud and] gested the portfolios of defence, t 1 t 10 other informations | 8 in opposition to the flag xue.| Sasaciate defence and defence af tee lolution, This would virtually|Production be menged into one tee, Walred pot geal ove poi a summer recess if the| to eliminate duplication, tigating a possible conspiracy | overnment pushed shed. sith UAW dae he flag without interruption. | among segregationists for re-| "Justice Minister Favreau, | venge F iesiage on ---- pine | government house leader, 'met, used force to subdue whites! privately with opposition house jattempting to interfere with) jeaders Monday to discuss a: pri- to back up demands for wage/had a 20-year-ol1 son by a mar-|have only one more chance t0 presumably being informed of ernment, or ewes: ( demmonatrn tions: Semi list of pre-revess logiciel increases. | riage in her teens, settle the dispute by peaceful Sister Of Flees Regime MEXICO CITY -- Fidel Cas-| tro's 'sister Juanita has defected, charging that the Cuban prime) minister betrayed his revolution) and sold out Cuba to the Rus- sians. She compared the Castro government with Nazi Germany, saying that terrorism, religious persecution and espionage were the rule. "The people of Cuba are) nailed to a cross of torment im- posed by international commu- nism," Juanita Castro Ruz said Monday night in an emotion- charged statement to Mexican television commentator Guil- lermo Vela. With tears in her eyes and a breaking voice, the 31-year-old) woman read a_ six page| denouncement of the Cuban re- gime headed by her brothers b Fidel and Raul. Miss Castro, one of seven Cas- tro brothers and sisters, refused 'Yo say how she came to Mexico from Cuba: She may have been aboard a Cuban Airlines. plane that arrived Monday. Her sis- ter Emma has lived in Mexico City since her marriage three years ago to a Mexican engi- neer. HAD SUPPORTED FIDEL Miss Castro said she had sup- ported her brother's revolution against dictator Fulgencio Ba- tista by collecting money, arms and medicine both in Cuba and abroad. After his victory she dedicated herself to building . schools and hospitals, she said, but she soon realized Castro had abandoned the ideals of his rev- olution and '"'we were being de- ceived." She said there are now 75,000 political prisoners in Cuba and the island is "an enormous pri- son surrounded by water." p ithe country in a two-week ref- JUANITA CASTRO 'CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 r means, | Inonu told a press conference ithat Turkey considers it still has the right to intervene mili- tarily in Cyprus despite the presence of the UN peace force on the Mediterranean island. "There is nd contractual pro- vision which would deny Turkey the right of intervention during | the presence of United Nations troops in the. island," he said. "his possibility of interven-| Castro She reported the Cuban peo- Ple lack food, clothing and Other essentia ' : what nappened to Py pa tion is not something we desire in medicines which Castro re-\\*.' but it could arise when the' ceived in exchange for prison- needs ha situation become ers captured in the 1961 Bay of inescapabie. Pigs invasion. i Inonu said the next few days Miss Castro said : .q would show if Greece is pre- helped others Brocatl . = pared to accept diplomatic pro- inferno of today's Cuba," add- posals to negotiate the issue ing Castro's secret police are Turkish diplomats said Tuom- "comparable to the worst ele- ioja is expected to propose that ments of Hitler's Ges "» |he 'make a fresh attempt to rt Sore reach a settlement. in separate PERSECUTES CHURCH negotiations with the Greek and Castro's regime, she contin- ued, subjects political prisoners subversive infiltration t out Latin America and eutes churchmen. hrough- perse- Turkish governments. "If these negotiations should jto inhuman treatment, directs {i!, we do not see how we could escape the absolute necessity of exercising our treaty right to intervene in the island," a high "T myself witnessed how my Turkish source said. rother's militiamen opened fire "We have prepared to send upon a catholic demonstration in|°U". tops into Cyprus on four which I participated," she said, (different occasions up to now "I saw the boy carrying the ban- and the latest occasion was on ner of the Virgin of Charity June 5 beaten to death by these men." "Only the intervention of the She said anti-Castro groups in-|United States stopped us from side Cuba are "anxious 'to re-|going, but the Americans now ceive help as soon as possible"|realize, and we understand they ut are not strong enough tojhave told the Greek government bring down a government "sup-|S0, they will not be able to re- ported by thousands of Russian/strain us indefinitely." troops." The Cyprus _ independence She called on the Organiza- agreements of 1960 made Brit- tion of American States to sup- ain, Greece and Turkey the port "definite action" against guarantors of the island repub- the Castro regime. 'lie's constitution and gave them TSHOMBE HINTED HOPEFUL Congo's Government Tenders Resignation LEOPOLDVILLE -- President|Adoula's resignation coincided Joseph Kasavubu today an-\with the departure of the last nounced that he has accepted UN troops--Canadians. and Ni- ithe resignation of the govern-|gerians--ending the United Na- ment of Prime Minister Cyrille'tions military operation in The Adoula. Congo The mandate of Adou:a's cab-| an RCAF transport took off inet officially expired today, the with 58 members of a Canadian fourth anniversary of the Army signal unit. A min Congo's independence utes later a chartered DC-6 left But Kasavubu asked the g0v-\with 85 men of the Nigerian jernment to stay in office until) A¢my's 1st Battalion a new constitution, now before tou mon aboard: w UN's last commander, Gen. J. Aguiyi-Tronsi geria, ending e UN operation that be months after Belgium Jun chy Congo fow as the Maj.- of Ni- military gan only two pendence from 1960, brought hao jerendum, has been approved, as lit is expected to be There was widespread expec- tation that the new government would be headed by Moise Tshombe, the secessionist pres ident of Katanga provines lwhose defiance of Adoula's gov- ernment was ended by the UN Congo force early in 1963 Tshombe returned from self- to The Canadian were handed poinsetta blooms as they mounted the ramp for the first imposed exile in Europe. last|!¢g of their long flight to Tren- week and embarked on a recon- ton, Ont. The. was ciation mission 'to bring to- Pisa, Italy. » gether the st turbulent Afri Fhe UN ended still can country's feuding politi the cians, first stop Belgian col in r lack of money. today i0 ony for | The announcement ofjThere were no parades or cere-| ' started about three months ago.| re training purposes--to help Con- I the Turkish threat, cabled Mak- oo Re a partitioned Cyprus with arios that '"'a Turkish landing the Greek-Cypriot part united would mean war." with Greece and the Turkish- Inonu had béen conferring ©YPriot part united with Turkey. with Briitsh leaders since Sun-| The Greeks and the Greek day after talks with Johnson Cypriots have rejected partition, The Turkish premier told Brit-|, 4 Communique issued after ish Aaya siedster Sir Alec Inonu's talks with. Douglas- ) Home said Britain and Turkey} consider the .1960 treaties are} NO TIMES TOMORROW hstill -vatid t In Washington, 'Turkish infor- mants said the Johnson admin- istration had assured Turkey no Cyprus solution humiliating to The Times will iot be the Turks would ever be im- published tomorrow, Wed- (posed. nesday, July 1, in observ- ance of the Dominion Day holiday. Normal publica- tion will resume on Thurs- day, July 2. In Paris, U.S: Ambassador Charles E. Bohlen outlined to President Charles de Gaulle the substance of the Washington meetings between Johnson and the Greek and Turkish -pre- miers. LBJ Spurs Hunt For Rights Trio PHILADELPHIA, Miss. (AP) workers who at the direction of President Johnson. The Mississippi Highway Pa- frol also made it clear it. was in this hill country of east cen- tral Mississippi to stay until au- thorities find out what hap- pened to the missing trio. Mrs. Rita Schwerner, 22-year. old wife of Michael Schwerner man, 20, another white New ithey were freed from j after posting a $20 bond in a traffic case. EFFORTS EXPANDED Before Mrs. Schwerner vis- ited the White House, the presi- dent's press secretary, George Reedy, told reporters efforts to tion. HAS PRIORITY : Prime Minister Pearson told reporters Monday the flag ques- tion is on the priority list, but declined to say whether the government wants to push the }issue to @ vote before calling a recess Meanwhile, a single defence chief. | Third reading was given to an jinterim supply bill to provide) |the government with $469,308,-/yearly wage, 321 for normal expenses in July.| |The bill had been under debate} |for six days. | Later, the measure was held! the 'Commons) The search for three civil rights} Yorker, and James Chahey, 22,, passed two housekeeping meas-| vanished nine|a Negro from nearby Meridian,| ures Monday, but marked time days ago was stepped up today|were last seen June 21 when|0n a third bill to replace the} ail here|Chiefs of staff committee with | Negotiations Open In US. DETROIT (AP)--New con- tract negotiations between the United Auto Workers union and General Motors Corporation open today in the GM in midtown Detroit against a backdrop of statements about |high wages and high profits. GM said Monday that. its 354,- 000 hourly-rated workers are "among the highest-paid indus» trial employees in the world." The firm cited an average including over- time, of $7,500. But UAW Vice + President Leonard Woodcock took issue, He said GM recorded before-tax find'the men had been stepped up in the Senate after several| Profits "of $383,000 every hour senators charged that the joint Of the year" in 1963 and can lof Brooklyn, one of the missing|¥P and expanded. Bo Not Plot Victim | WARSAW (AP) --Robert F.| Kennedy replied that Oswald Kennedy says that his brother,|was a 'misfit in society'? and the assassinated president, was'|Oswald's professed belief in not the victim of a conspiracy, communism did not prompt him or of communism to. murder the president The U.S. attorney-general told) 'Ideology in my opinion did a Polish questioner in Krakow "Ot motivate his act," Monday night "there is no ques-| Said. "It was the single act of tion" that Lee Harvey Oswald 2" individual protesting against killed president Kennedy and Society." 'did it on his own and by him-| There has been considerable self," x speculation in Europe that the Slayings of Kennedy and of Os- wald by Dallas cafe owner Jack Ruby were part of a conspiracy. Kennedy Khieronym Kubiak, 25-year- old head of the Polish student union, asked Kennedy for his version of his brother's assassi- IS FIRST TIME nation in Dallas, Tex., last Nov. Aides said it was the. first 23 time the attorncy-general had -| spoken publicly about who killed | his brother. The question came up during the second day of his visit to |Poland. Before leaving the coun- spiritual jantly centre of predomin- Roman Catholic oland. gave Kennedy reception, Deputy Foreign Min- listr Jozef Winiewicz was ported to have told Kennedy Monday night that he did not! understand the "strict political realiies" of Poland's tions with the Soviet Union. 2 Die, 13 Lost In Offshore Oil Rig Blast MORGAN CITY, La, (AP)--A multi-million dollar floating oil rig exploded off the Louisiana before dawn 'today, At t were killed and 13 others were missing, The U.S. Coast Guard said at least 27 survivors, some badly| burned, had been picked up. | Helicopters and boats were} ferrying the survivors to this coasta! town 70 air miles west of New Orleans re- monies to mark the departure of the UN troops. Those on hand included the civilian chief of the UN Congo operation, Bibinno Osori of Mex- ico, some 50 members of the diplomatic' corps, and friends. PAKISTANI STAY The gradual,UN withdrawal About 50 Pakistani soldiers run- ning an ordinance depot here will stay as part of the UN's civilian operation With the military pullout com- plete, only 400 Nigerian police remain in The Congo--all in Leopoldville and mostly for) © two persons golese authorities keep order With the resignation of the Adoula government, Tshombe's reconciliation mission went ahead in high gear Tshombe announced Monday night that Antoine Gizenga, head of Stanleyville's 1961 Com nunist supported breakaway government, will be freed soon from the island-prison where he hag been held for 244 years. the 'Morgan City. ' \t least 42 men were aboardin men, asked the president Mon- sissippi to join in the search. Mrs. Schwerner, after meet- ing with the president at the White House, told reporters Johnson advisd her he couldn't send so many, Schwerner, 24, Andrew Good- 'No Negroes' No Issues Canada Told GENEVA PARK, Ont. (CP) Canada has no race problem be- cause there are '"'no niggers" and Indians are segregated on government reservations, Wil- liam Simmons of Jackson,' Miss., an administrator of the Citizen's Committees of America, 'said Monday. Addressing 77 high school stu- dents at a week-long conference try this afternoon, Kennedy was|on race problems sponsored by} | scheduled to go ts Czestochowa, |the United Nations Association! of Canada, Mr, Simmons said Federal and state authorities, | bby Say S J] K |day to send 5,000 men to Mis- joined by 100 sailors from an airfield at' Meridian, continued their search in the hills and snake-infested swamps of Nesh- oba County. State game war- dens, using radio - equipped skiffs, dragged the muddy! Pearl River and other bodies of | water in the area. The only clue to the baffling disappearance was the finding jlast Tuesday of the charred jhulk of the station wagon driven by the three. Mrs. . Schwerner last Friday | visited the spot where the vehi-/ cle was burned. Monday she made a_ perso- nal plea through Washington re- porters to where to volunteer to aid in the search. "It is eight days since thy disappeared," she said. "I don't know what happened. I have to knew." |Senate-Commons special com-| Well afford new union gains, mittee on consumer credit is "The fabulously -wealthy Gen- | guilty of scandalous waste of|eral Motors Corporation is brag- [public funds. The committee|ging today about the value of | hired an Ottawa lawyer at $250/past contract gains," said ja day to act as counsel and in-/ Woodcock. "Just about every | terview witnesses. jone of these gains was won by The Senate took the unusual| the UAW for GM workers over step of referring the supply bill|the tooth-and-nail opposition of to its estimates committee for|the GM Corporation." detailed study. UAW President Walter P, The Commons took less than) Reuther was to open the GM 10 minutes just before adjourn-| session today. He also plans to ing to pass an export credit bill| be on hand when talks begin at through three stages, including|Ford Motor Company Wednes- final approval. jthe Senate, empowers the Ex- tion to increase its liability to day and at-Ohrysler Corporation This measure, also headed for| Thursday. Negotiations at American Mo- | port Credits Insurance Corpora-|tors Corporation begin July 8, Wages, at least direct money | $60,000,000 from $400,000,000.|payments, are not expected to | coverage by the Crown corpor- Americans every-|The bill also widens insurance|be the overwhelming issue in jthe talks which are likely to ation and exempts it from pay-|continue for several weeks, Ex- ing income tax. | piration date of the current Big | In the. defence debate, Paul/Three labor contracts is Aug. Martineau (PC -- Pontiac-Tem- 31. Canadians cannot be expected! tact "T believe I am the first citi- zen's council speak in Canada, which indi- cates that our views are not ience at- this near Orillia. "And I see that in Canada you have no race problems because you have no niggers and your Indians are segregated on gov- ernment reservations," he conference site added. Although crowds everywhere|to understand a situation with) an enthusiastic|which they have so little con-} representative to connec-|known to you," he told the aud-| He said propaganda has dis-| turbed and distorted the Ne- gro's actual feelings and exper- ience in the south' The south- ern Negroes themselves were emib ssed and resentful of northern agitators and mission- aries who went to Mississippi. British ITV Men Strike On Wages LONDON = (AP)--Thrde~thou- sand television employees de- 1 to strike at midnight to- ght against Britain's commer- | Two young children died in fire that swept small home in twin hulled rig, which was\cial TV network. The network! right background after it was operating 78 miles southwest of|said it hopes to carry news bul- hit by pilotless jet fighter "Iietins and perhaps old movies,' plane early today. The plane a upset several automobiles parked in yards before it: ex- ploded agaist home. Neigh- bors who escaped iniury talk & PLANE KILLS CHILDREN with firemen. Killed. wére @ brother and sister, Todd Gif- ford,'10, and Pamela, 8. (AP Wiraphota) |

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