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Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Jul 1964, p. 1

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NN GT IGOR EE GON REM," POSE OEP L OE. OOPS OF cate sin iin dil cin ditinetia Line tein cate cilia , / Ny Oshawa Gimes = 'Weather Report -- Variably cloudy and showery. Continuing cool. Winds. south- erly 10-15, Thoug For Today Rapid reading is a fine art -- as long as you remember to slow down to read the fine print in a contract, Se ee | EIGHTEEN'PAGES © "MOL. 93 -- NO. 164 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JULY 14, 1964 i 7 MD FOUND GUILTY Scranton Up = i , extremism, control over nuclear SCRANTON STILL HAS APPETITE Pressmen Strike Detroit's Papers DETROIT (AP)--A strike by| The pressmen and paperhan- members of the Internationaljdiers union are the only two Printing Pressmen and Assist-|craft. unions without a contract ants Union and the Plate andjat The News and Free Press. Paper Handlers Union today} The average hourly wage for halted. publication of both De-|members of both unions cur- troit daily newspapers. rently is $3.74 for 37% - hour Pressmen's Local 13 andjdaytime work week and $4.05 platehandlers Local 10 went on|forn a 35-hour night-time work) / strike" at the morning Detroit) week. » Free id the evening De-| Both unions voted to strike Monday in a «unless. the publishers 0 dispute. bis }made "a new contract offer. No! Lawrence A. Wallace. secre-.new offer was made. | tary of the Detroit Newspaper) "We have offered both unions | Publishers Association whichj|benefits comparable to those} represents both papers in con-| accepted by the other printing) tract dealing with craft unions,|trade unions," Wallace said. | said no further negotiations) TELLS OF OFFER | were scheduled. | "The pressmen have been of-| The Detroit News made na we a 2l-month contract with} regular edition schedule Mon-|a weekly wage increase of $4.55) day before union members went! retroactive to March 1 and an on strike at 6 p.m. EDT. jadditional increase of $3.75: a| In Ring For Final Round By HAROLD MORRISON SAN FRANCISCO (CP)--Wil- liam Scranton's campaign for the Republican presiden- tial nomination has virtually crumbled. But the spunky Penn- sylvania governor won't give up, hoping somehow to turn the tide through a heated conven- tion floor debate over political weapons and civil rights. Meanwhile, Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater continues to amass delegate voting strength as state -after state reassessed positions to climb on the rolling Goldwater. victory bandwagon. With 655 of the 1,308 votes needed for victory, Goldwater claimed more than 800 first- ballot pledges. Aside from the Scranton camp, political pundits and surveys indicated he is a sure winner. That still leaves the question of what kind of platform the party will adopt. Goldwater has refused to denounce the extrem- ist John Birch Society which supports him. He has spoken of the need of turning over small} nuclear weapons control to the} North Atlantic supreme com-| mander and: he voted against! the new civil rights law. The Scranton forces, deliver- ing a minority report on the proposed platform, will attempt| during a special floor debate to-| day to crack Goldwater's armor fon all three points. " They filed three major {amendments to the platform, | with 781 votes if they stick with him, including 42 he gobbled up Monday when Ohio delegates were released by Governor James A. Rhodes to vote for the man of their choice on the initial ballot. If there was any chance that Goldwater might ask Scranton to share the ticket with him, it apparently disappeared finally when the Pennsylvania gover- nor said Monday night that he did not write a bitterly critical letter forwarded under his sig- nature to Goldwater Sunday night. But Scranton assumed the responsibility for it. It was generally understood in the Goldwater camp that his choice for vice-presidential run- ning mate was Rep. William E. Miller, New York Roman Cath- olic, who heads the Republican national. committee. But there was reservation that if former president Eisenhower should re- quest it, some approach to Scranton, might be made. RightsMan Says Barry Like Hitler LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP)-- Negro leader Roy Wilkins, in a speech before the American Newspaper Guild convention Monday, likened the apparent which was written by a com-|domination of the Republican {mittee under firm contro! of|national convention by Goldwa- Goldwater sympathizers. They|ter forces to Hitler's Munich will try to force votes on these|beer hall putsch more than 30 late today when the statement|Years ago. of party positions comes before| Wilkins, executive secretary the delegates. lof the National Association for |the Advancement of Colored DELEGATES RELEASED People, received a standing The latest Associated Press|ovation from ates after saying in an . ni | ""Phose who Say that the doc- Union Claims GOP Used jtrine-of ultra-conservatism of- Struck Plant icisco now." jfers no menace should remem- jber that a man came out of the beer halls of Munich and SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--Re-| Earlier, delegates heard the publican national convention |guild's president accuse United party headquarters was pick-|States publishers of "'a. frigid, |rallied the forces of rightism in |Germany. All the same ele- |ments are there in San Fran- Prime Minister Sir Alec. Doug- ' ri The The. Free Press did not pub-|week effective March 1, 1965--|eted Monday by the Interna-|Counting-house attitude toward lish its regular Tuesday edi-|with the union having the op-|tional Typographical Union, in-|@ free press." tions. PICKETS MARCH Pressmen and platehandler pickets marched in front of both The News and Free Press| and in front of radio and tele- vision stations WWJ AM - FM! and WWJ-TV at the strike dead-| line. Members of other unions tion of applying this amount to/volved in a nine-month strike the wage scale or diverting it/of major San Francisco com- to a jointly administered hos-| mercial printing shops. pital, medical and surgical) About 350 ITU pickets demon- plan. ee strated at the Hilton Hotel in Wallace said the contract of-| protest of what they said was fer also included increased|the Republican party's "delib- fringe benefits. erate choice" of plants usin wae ore! , e 8B The Plate and Paperhandlers) strikebreakers to print conven- Union was offered a 24-month|tion material. AT 'CLAMP' PROBE PM's Race Move Hailed By Papers By JOSEPH MacSWEEN LONDON (CP) -- Canada's proposal for a Commonwealth declaration of racial equality shares headlines today with} Britain's six-point plan for! closer economic co-operation in| the family of nations. | Prime Minister Lester Pear-| son's draft 20-line declaration was submitted to the 18-coun- try Commonwealth conference of prime ministers Monday at a crucial moment when it was debating the timing of South-| ern Rhodesian independence. The Guardian reports the move this way: | "The most important political) event. at yesterday's session .. .| was the deliberate decision by| the Canadian delegation to| cross the racial gulf and place} themselves firmly beside the} Africans and Asians in the/ struggle to bring about African) majority rule in Southern Rho-| desia." Besides his call for an un- equivocal statement. on racial equality, Pearson offered a "crash program" of education and specialized training for black Southern Rhodesians for roles in government. Canada's proposals came as a surprise and apparently had more impact than subsequent economic plans put forward by been in i vance, Douglas - Home urged a richer + to - poorer projects program under which the more prosperous countries would sponsor technical assistance programs to developing coun- tries. Sir Alec, who regards his} plan as an extension of deci-| sions reached at the Montreal Commonwealth economic con- ference of 1958, also proposed: --Projects for technical as- Bodies In River Not Rights Men sistance in which one spon- soring country would co-ordi- nate the contributions from several. --A centre to train Common- wealth public servants, local officials and members of pub- lic corporations. | -- A Commonwealth founda- tion for the. development of contacts between professions to help improve standards. | ~-A Commonwealth medical jconference to be held in the | autumn of 1965 to pinpoint areas | where medical aid | needed. is most! DR. BROWN Go-Slow 'Posties Snarl UK Mails By ROD CURRIE LONDON (CP) ---Several |years ago, when New York garbage collectors threatened to strike, some wit calculated that in eight days Manhattan would bury iself alive in its own garbage. It probably would take a lit- tle longer, but Londoners would no doubt bury themselves. in But because the mail service is so good, the British tend to use it' more than most other people. They are incurable note- writers; Only one in four of Britain's 120,000 postmen and sorters jumped the gun by joining the unofficial strike Friday, but-by Monday morning an estimated 20,000,000 letters and 300,000 Did Not Morgan TORONTO (CP) --Toronto surgeon Kenneth A. Brown was found guilty today of. violating the Ontario's Coroner's Act in failing to report the death of patient Patricia Morgan, 32, to a coroner last fall. Magistrate James Butler im- posed a fine of $300 plus costs, with the alternative of 60 days in jail, on the 45-year-old doc- tor. Maximum sentence possible under the charge is $500 or six months. Five other charges against Dr.. Brown under the Coroner's Act were dismissed by the court, The specific chargé on which Dr. Brown was _ con- victeq was failing to notify a coroner of the death in circum- stances such as may require an investigation. Magistrate Butler said the ev- idence showed that in the case of Patricia Morgan such cir- cumstances existed 'and the accused, Dr. Brown, was aware of such circumstances." PHYSICIAN'S DUTY "It was plainly the duty of the attending physician to no- tify the coroner, he said. "This court realizes that those involved in this case are citi- zens of good repute and high professional standings," the magistrate said. "It sympa- thizes with the accused but it Report © Death Tive others were charged with six-count indictments an- der the coroner's act. One was convicted and one acquitted last week. The cases are the first in Ontario involving non-report- ing under the act. Dr, Brown, almost . totally deaf as a result of an operat. ing-room accident several years ago, tolq the court towards the end of the 4%4-day trial Monday that he doubts the clamp was left in Miss Morgan. Evidence was that the clamp was found entwined in a bowel at the au+ topsy. ; Dr. Brown said he believed the clamp could have been placed in the body in error early in the autopsy and found later. Damage to the bowel was consistent with a blockage of blood, he said. be When first told of the discov- ery of the clamp, Dr. Brown said, he believed the report may have been a waming from hospital authorities to keep quiet about disagreements on procedure during the Oct. 18 abdominal operation on Miss Morgan, a former cancer vite tim who had an obstruction bé tween stomach and bowel. fans * their ote mail faster than they I rer British postal strike that started last Friday--the first since 1896-- proves the point. Within 24 hours, tons of mail started Vietnam Reds scntaaount too; Attack, Kill policemen were kept busy od 3 Americans ing the weekend pasting "box full' signs over the slots in city SAIGON (AP) -- Three more \U.S. Army officers--a major parcels were piled up in post joftices. in London, alone. _.. post boxes. It soon became obvious that,| and two captains--and 16 South Khan Salutes cannot allow the scales of jus- tice to unbalanced by|: Be, even though the men returned to work Monday, they would not get the piles cleared away be- fore the official one-day strike Thursday, followed by two weeks of work - to -rule proce- dure, The postmen demand a 10- per-cent wage increase and re- ject the four-per-cent offer by Postmaster - General Reginald Pevins, The basic maximum working on the newspapers re-'contract with a wage increase} fused to cross picket lines, andjof $4.55 a week retroactive to this is understood to havellast Dec, 1 as well as increased caused the newspapers. to halt/fringe benefits and an addi: publication. |\tional wage increase of $490 a WWJ AM-FM and WWJ-TV|week effective Dec. 1, 1964, with! are owned by the Evening|the union having the option of| News Association, publishers of|a¢cepting a fourth week's va-| The News, cation after five years and a Spokesmen for the radio and|$2.50 a week wage increase in- television stations saiq the|steaq of the $4.90 increase. strike would not interfere im-| Rohan said the unions were mediately with regular gram activities, at anytime, TO PROTECT FOREMEN Printers Spurn Haggle Again TORONTO (CP) -- Negotia-;Daily Star, one of the papers} tors for the-three Toronto daily|that has been publishing since} newspapers and their striking|680 ITU members walked out| printers met under Ontario La-jlast Thursday. The ITU called! bor Department auspices today/the situation a lockout. | following the wnion's denuncia-| The papers--the others are tion Monday night of proposals'the morning Globe and Mail] TALLULAH, La. ATM)--Two|legal test of enforcemertt of the \salary now is £13 ($39) a week} Vietnamese rangers were killed Monday in. a Communist am- bush on a highway notorious for such attacks. A U.S. soldier and 21 govern- ment troops were wounded in the rain of heavy-weapons fire jthat the Viet Cong guerrillas poured into the 16-vehicle con- voy 35 miles north of Saigon. There was no_ indication of Communist casualties. The ambush occurred on Describing the medicai pro- fession as "great and noble," Magistrate Butler said it was important that public confi- idence in the profession be |maintained. | Dr. Brown is also charged on |four counts involving falsifying a death certificate under the Vi- tal Statistics Act. The certifi- cate gave the cause of death as acute internal obstruction and cancer. After convicting Dr. Brown for violating the Coroner's Act, Magistrate Burns began hear- ing one of the four charges in- volving the falsifying of the death certificates. LONDON (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearso n's plan for a standby United Nations peace force is an "excellent idea," President Ayub Khan of Pakis- tan said Monday. The Pakistani leader, a field marshal, said it is essential to have peace - keeping forces ready to go into action quickly when trouble flares, as in Cy- prus. Ayub's reference to the force came in answer to a written question at the end of a lunch- eon at which he was the guest of foreign and Commonwealth press associations in London, FOR PRESIDENCY jions -- the printing press- pro- willing to resume contract talks | The Graphic Arts Employers ; ; Association, representing the|Partial bodies pulled from a printing firms, has said that the|"iver near Tallulah have been strike is a bid by the ITU to identified tentatively as two Ne- take over jobs now held in the|8T0es missing from Meadville, printing shops by four other un-|Miss., since mid-May. ' ; The disclosure by police men, lithographers, photoen-|S9Urces in Jackson, Miss., gravers and stereotypers. where both remains were The ITU contends the strike|taken, discredited earlier spec- involves only deman ds for|Ulation that the first mutilated |higher wages and improved|body found Sunday might be |working conditions. one of three civil rights work- -- ers who vanished in Mississippi | June 21. The sources said there were indications that the second body may be that of Henry Dees of |Meadville who disappeared Off jabout two months ago. They er. | them and that identification would be based almost solely on The developments apparently|body were traced to Charles signalled the collapse of talks;Moore, a Meadville, Miss., Ne- day strike of 680 ITU printers|Louisiana to seek work. -- at the three newspapers--the| Elsewhere, court decisions said the mutilated condition of halves were found -- made it articles found on the bodies. which began Monday morning|'to whose family said he had morning Globe and Mail, and | spurred plans for school inte- by the newspapers. the bodies -- only the lower T virtually impossible to identify oday | Effects found on the first in an attempt to end the five-|left home on May 20 to go to and the afternoon Telegram--|The Telegram and Th Star,) gration, and fire bombs and ar- Civil Rights Act, A justice de-| partment motion filed in fed-| eral court seeks government intervention on behalf of three Negroes suing a white restau- rant owner who refused to serve them. The. attorney - general also filed a counter-suit against an Atlanta motel which sued to test the constitutionality of the new civil righs law. Two more Negro churches went up in flames in the vicin- ity of Kingston, Miss., and po- lice said a fire bomb. was thrown at a Negro home at Natchez but failed to ignite. At Columbia, S.C., a federal judge ordered five Negroes ad- mitted to Darlington County schools in September. Darling- ton is the third South Carolina county ordered to desegregate and two other counties face bearings on similar suits. Elsewhere: A state Supreme Court jus-} tice in New York upheld the board of education's order that |big cities there are four to six for London workers, about £2 more than those outside the/nects Saigon with the Cambo- city get. |dian border 80 miles to the Although the British gener-|north, Five other Americans ally have a pretty terrible rep-| have been killed in ambushes utation when it comes to effi-j}on the road in the last two ciency in public services, the| years. postal service is the exception.| The deaths Monday brought They boast that it is the best in|the total of U.S. military men the world and it probably is. In|killed in action in South Viet the London area and in other;Nam since December, 1961, to |157. Another 983 Americans have been wounded in action. bloody Route 13, which con- jdeliveries a day. Hint Mikoyan Quitting 'Road' By GEORGE SYVERTSEN MOSCOW (AP) -- Anastas I. Mikoyan, Moscow's veteran Khrushchev's chair as first see- retary of the Communist party and to be working closely with LONDON (Reuters) -- The platform of the Republican party presented to the San Francisco convention "can be newspaper says today. lican. program 12 white children attend pre- dominantly Negro schools out- side their neighborhoods in travesty of all the best tradi- tions of a great political party. "More than this in embodying] party The Guardian says the Repub-| is "a Sede | come. nau »| 'REPEAL 20TH CENTURY' The union and company rep-|at a series of meetings Mon- resentatives were brought to-day offered the union a lifetime| gether at 10 a.m. EDT by La-|guarantee for present employ- bor Miniter H. L. Rowntree injees aga inst unemployment| ths minister's office. Louis|caused by automation. | Fine, chief government concili-| In. return the publishers asked ator, was to attempt the strike for the elimination of "feather-| settlement. bedding'"' and the removal of} Robert McCorthack, president|foremen and assistant foremen| of Local 91 of the International/from the union's jurisdiction. Typographical Union (CLC),| The publishers sofight to elim- said as he entered the meet-jinate reproduction of advertise- ing: "'We always hope for suc-|ments received in . prepared! cess," form from other sources, This His words were echoed: al- type is later destroyed without most exactly. by Burnett M.|being used Thall, vice - president of the; The newspapers have contin- jued publication since the walk- ay cacy eee BLASTS PROPOSALS PHONE NUMBERS Mr, McCormack said the pro- posals were '"'tantamognt to a POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 declaration of war on the Tor- onto typographical union and cannot be construed as anything other than a union-busting cam-| |paign."" | {son were fiery symbols of rural evening papers. h : ; Pana tthe Wesker racial tension in Mississippi. Queens. lall the worst aspects of a cer- U.K. Press Sees Barry Stoking Anti-U.S. Fire tain strain of American thought, it can be depended upon to feed feelings of anti - Americanism throughout the world," ' the |depended upon to feed feelings| newspaper says in an editorial. jof anti-Americanism throughout aily Ma' ) \the world," a leading British| page editorial it now seems in- The Daily Mail says in a front evitable Senator Goldwater will win the nomination and the world "must wince at the out- . Today the grand old of 'responsibility'. and 'equality' and 'peace' is about lh | travelling salesman, is reported to be preparing to move into the Kremlin front office. His appointment to the largely ceremonial post of president of the Soviet Union is to be an- nounced this week during the session of the Soviet parliament, according to unconfirmed _ re- ports in Moscow and Cairo. The shift, apparently marking the final stage of the 68-year- old Bolshevik's public career, was expegted to set off a chain Kosygin. HAS BEEN THIRD ° Kosygin, 60, a dour industria} management specialist, hav been third man in the govern- ment lineup since 1960. He is a member of the presidium but has little to do with everyday party affairs. Mikoyan's successor in his troubleshooting specialty must, like the black«moustached Ar- 'menian, have Khrushchev's abe reaction' in the Kremlin hier- archy. Soviet President Leonid Brez- nev, 57, currently touted as Premier Khrushchev's heir ap- solute confidence. parent, would probably benefit 5 from such a move. Giving up the _ presidency The publishers said in a writ- ten statement issued from their public relations office tnat to the best of their knowledge the A three-judge federal court of Montgomery ordered Ala- bama Governor George Wal- lace and state school officials LATE NEWS FLASHES to place its faith in a man who wants to repeal the 20th cen- jtury," the editorial declares. | The San Francisco corre- offer of a guaranee against unemployment from automation is the first such offer to em- playees in the publishing busi- ness in North America, to '"'promote and encourage' the elimination of racial dis- crimination in the state's pub- lic schools. | The court also banned pay-| ment of state funds as tuition The statement also said: . Because of damage to|grants to pupils who choose to| tia's former role as a support for the regular army will be | equipment, the publishers arelattend private insistent that full supervision of | schools raher. than their composing rooms be re-| institutions. stored to management. They re-| The order called" the most fuse ever again to be put in a| sweeping decree in the' history"| position where foremen and as-\of the National Association for sistant foremen are required by|the Advancement of Colored| union law to walk off their jobs) pegpie's legal defence -- fund,| at the call of the' 'union |grew out of a suit filed during "It is understood that those) the integration of schools in foremen and assistant foremen)Macon County, Ala., last Jan- who remained on the'r jobs|uary, have had their union cards} In Atlanta, Ga., Attorney - lifted and-or have been subject|/General Robert F. Kennedy to $5,000 fines." Imoved to set up a full-scale segregated | integrated Militia Reverts To Support Role OTTAWA (CP). -- 'Associate Defence Minister. Cardin - today. announced :a: complete militia. restored. \Accident Claims Ninth Life QUEBEC (CP) -- A ninth received Saturday night in a David Simard, 3, of nearby overnight. Tutt Stays On As Principal GUELPH. (CP) -- Donald trict High Schoo! principal wh charges of forgery in connection with upper school exam- ination papers written by his remain as principal of. the Fergus school. He told the Commons defence committee the mili- |spondent of the London Times | Says the Republican party has {passed from moderation to ex- |tremism, The party '"'has been had." | The correspondent says the |resolutions committee embodies somersault in policy for the would free him from protocol duties to devote full time to: building his position in the party organization, where -the vital battles for the succession to Khrushchev will be fought some day. Mikoyan's semi - retirement probably would entail the trans- fer of two of his most important functions to other officials, These are: Assumption of the premier' | person has died from injuries two-car collision near. here. Levis. died in hospital here Tutt, 52, Fergus District Dis- 0 was acquitted last week on son, Donald Bruce Tutt, will jean government and leader of "all the dangerously farcical ideas of the senator as the pro- gram of an alternative Ameri- the free world." "The super - patriot has. de- manded absolute victory with absolute "weapons against an absolute enemy in black and white terms that must send nor- mal men running for the hills for cover,"' the report continues. "The Republican party, the grand old party, the party of Lincoln is now indusputably the duties during Khrushchev's in- creasingly frequent, absences from Moscow. And his unique role. as Khrushchev's personal repre- sentative in diplomatic trouble spots. First Deputy Premier Alexei | Kosygin apparently has taken over the first of these jobs. He was pinch-hit government chief during two periods this summer when both Khrushchev and Mi- koyan were out of the country. At the same time, Brezhney Goldwater party." 4. was reported to have taken over f "ANASTAS MIKOYAN *

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