Thought For Today The man who travels in circles eventually finds out he doesn't know which way to turn. VOL. 93 -- NO. 167 ¢ Oshawa Time 7 ~ OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1964 Authorized as Secor Ottawa ond for nd Class Mail Post Office poyment of Postage Weather Report Sunny, hot and humid Saturday. Chance of Thunderstorms. i Sash. EIGHTEEN: PAGES * Van Doos Try To Block Greek Guns By PETER BUCKLEY While United Nations officials NICOSIA (CP)--Two units of|--both military and political-- heavily - armed Canadian UN/began hurried negotiations to troops were rushed into the Ky-| prevent the battle, Lt.-Col. An- renia Mountains today as|drew Woodcock of Quebec, com- Greek-Cypriot forces moved in|manding officer of the 1st bat- heavy artillery for the first|talion, Royal 22nd Regiment, time and threatened to advance|/began deploying men around on the Turkish village of Tem-|Temblos to act as a deterrent blos below the mountain range|to possible attack. in northern Cyprus. bering, He sttipped Canadian forces The Canadians, mecded zt] {rom several villages in the Ky- = Gets a bois renian moustain area and be ' n stween|fore dawn had about 80 mem-| avert a Tk ~_ rarkish| bers of the Royal 22nd and two fotions' -- jtroops of the Royal Canadian "aepebueon high-level ne-|D£4800ns--eight armored scout 'ations were going on i jcars with two men each ' 2 jplaced in strategic positions be- Nicosia between UN _ officials BIC r and Cypriot government author. 'Ween the opposition factions. ities' to prevent the attack by the Greek-Cypriots on Tembios. The situation was described as extremely tense but at least one deadline for a Greek attack was passed without incident and there were some hopes that the situation would calm down. GREEKS DEPLOYED Greek-Cypriots had deployed about 150 National Guardsmen around the village during the night and equipped them with two 20-pound field guns, two 40- millimetre anti-aircraft guns for ground use and eight mortars around Temblos, a little cluster of stone and mud-brick houses The Canadians were provided with six medium morars and four heavy machine-guns as well as individual. weapons. in! case they became involved in! an attack. It was understood the Cana- dians had established observa- tion and control posts at all ap- proaches to Temblos, The Greek and Turkish forces were described as being between 400 and 60 Oyards apart. | The UN sent members of the Danish contingent from Nicosia temporarily into the villages from which the Canadians we-e withdrawn. BREATH OF LIFE Excavation worker Tony Lisi _receives life-giving oxy- excavation in Port Dalhousie, Ont., near St. Catharines. Lisi, | ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (AP)\negroes. Two of the restau- Florida White Picket |Brings Troopers Back Some demonstrators, particu- BARRY BACKS UP EXTREMIST LINE Rejects Moderation In Dealing With Reds By HAROLD MORRISON SAN FRANCISCO (CP)--Sen- ator Barry Goldwater has set the stage for a gutter battle in| | Governor Farris Bryant. has or-|rants face law suits under thejlarly girls, struggled. and|the November U.S. presidential! dered state troopers back to St.|Civil Rights Act. Augustine following Negroes, In Greenwood, Miss., shrieked while being forced into election campaign, accusing the} with|@ school bus that served as a|ruling Democrats of collectivism) |Ku Klux Klan run St. Augus- |vows to break new racial bar-|FBI cameras filming the ac-|Paddywagon. When they balked, and decay at home and cow- jriers raised by white segrega-| tion, 108 pickets were arrested helmeted police jabbed them |ardly fear of communism. | tionists. Thursday in a racial: uproar| With nightsticks. : "Extremism in the defence | Dr, Martin Luther King, Ne-/ marked by flailing nightsticks,) At One point, a white man of liberty is no vice," said the lgro integration leader who led |... Fe : 3 ran into an FBI agent who was| Republican candidate for presi- massive demonstrations last TEMPERS FLARE ' _ {filming a turbulent scene. The dent in his acceptance 'speech |month, planned to talk to Bry-|_ Tempers on both sides twice impact knocked him stagger-/phursday night at the Repub- lant today before deciding neared the flash point during|ing. The furious agent recov |lican national. convention |whether to resume the massive|the demonstration in. front ofjered quickly but police seized) windup session. |marches, wade-ins and sit-ins|'he Leflore County courthouse. | the man, told the agent, "we'lll is right-wing ideological out- |which ended June 30 when a|it was part of a 'Negro voter take care of him," and hustled purst came as he moved to ce- | registration drive. thim out of sight, |ment control of the Republican Police Slay Angry Lad * | | "We are not going to let the| jatives, 'It is the cause of Re- |publicanism to ensure that |power remains in the hands of the people," he said in accept- ing the nomination. cheering a rally} told a 300 at jtine," King jaudience of | Thursday. | "If it can be solved by ne- : buried for an hour in loose | gotiation, good. But if it means gen from a rescuer after his Calling for a sacrificial role crowded with refugees. Turkish - Cypriots moved in POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS fighters into the formerly unde- On the Political front there fended village since tension be-| Were these developments: gan building up in the area a 1. The British foreign office) week ago. announced that UN Secretary- UN sources believe tension|General U Thant would arrive began mounting when a newjin London next Weenesday for Greek Cypriot police chief took/talks with the British govern- over control of the Kyrenia dis-] ment. trict and began tightening up on) 2. In Ankara, the Turkish ¢ap- movements of Turkish-Cypriots| ital, the leader of the Turkish who control the Kyrenia Pass!community in Cyprus, Ravf overlooking Temblos, on the/Denktash, said President Ma- bye highway from Nicosia to) ;arios would Bony bag 4 to e north intervene in the island. Greek leaders issued an ulti- statement, Denktash said the - matum that Turkish - Cypriot} possibility of large-scale Greek fighters must withdraw bYlattack in Cyprus is increasing, § a.m. , otherwise Greek}ang that Greece intends to forees would attack. achieve Enosis (union | with _ In Nicosia, government secur-| Greece) "even at the cost of the ity officials contended that throwing the world into the 'Turkish fighters from the Saint) +.» mountains Pager ae me _-- 3. In Washington, state de- Temblos had advance uring 3 4 2 ; partment officials said the num- the Page tigger se he the rea-|Par MGresk trades on Choris son for the ultimatum. may actually run as high as By BRIAN CHARLESWORTH Southern Rhodesian Prime Min- ister Ian Smith made it plain today he has no intention of abiding by Commenweaith lead-, ers' proposals for talks on a new constitution for this British colony. don at the close of the Common- wealth prime ministers' confer- ence Wednesday would consider delegates' mands head was uncovered following a cave-in yesterday at a sewer sand, was not seriously in- jured. --CP Wirephoto Rhodesia Spurns Equality Move SALISBURY (Reuters)-- A communique issued in Lon-) said Britain de- for an independence was awaiting Smith's reply to an invitation to private talks in London, the Southern. Rhode- Sian leader rejected the confer- ence proposal outright. "I treat this interference with the contempt it deserves and brush it aside,' he said. CONTRARY TO PRECEDENT Earlier, in an official state- ment, Smith said the detailed discussion of white-ruled South- erm Rhodesia's affairs by the Commonwealth leaders was "contrary to precedent and we must once more put on our walking shoes, we will do it that i : © way, We are determined to be) NEW YORK (AP)--Scores of| f fj s ohys-|Steel - hel meted patrolmen| lical ent on ae [poured into an Upper East Side |. Negroes attempted to be/Meighborhood Thursday to pre- |served at 28 places Thursday|Vent a riot after a police lieu- and were turned away at 23, | tenant shot and killed a Negro said a member of King's South-/youth, ern Christian Leadership Con-| In the violence that followed, ference. White -segregationists|4 Negro policeman was hit on have been picketing the busi-|the head with a full soda can | nesses that first agreed to serve|and suffered what his doctor Negroes. described as a concussion. | The trouble emerged from DAMNED IF WE DO ithis peaceful scene on a hot "We're damned if we do and|symmer day: |damned if we don't," said one| James Powell, 15, was on his) mote] owner who asked that his|way to summer school for | name not be. used. "pe iclasses in..corrective reading. SCLC contends that within the; police Lieut, Thomas R. Gil- jand restaurants integrated un-'dio to a repair shop in the area. der the provisions of the new) Apartment superintendent Pa- Civil Rights Act and then re- trick Lynch was hosing down} segregated with the beginning|the pavement in front of his| of picketing by whites a week |puilding. | ago. White segregationists deny|SPLASHED BY WATER charges of intimidation. They) Police said the | last 10 days, the city's motels|jigan was taking his home ra-|his police badge and identified! apart-| After Janitor's Insult and several of his companions. | Some teen-age witnesses said the man did it deliberately, saying 'I'm going to wash the black right off you." Powell, police reported, be- came outraged and started to- ward the superintendent with a pocketknife. Gilligan heard the commotion |and raced to the scene, finding| |the superintendent had locked) himself in 'one of the floor apartments, Powell, the lieutenant said, stood in the apartment en- trance, a knife in his hand. Gil- ligan said he showed the youth ground himself as a law officer, Told to drop the knife, Gilli- gan said, Powell refused and ad- vanced toward him. The police- man said he fired a warning shot which accidentally struck the youth's wrist, but that still by he kept coming. jin which the power of the U.S. would be used to win the war lin South Viet Nam and free the East European satellites, the new Republican presiden- tial standard - bearer virtually told -the moderates to get out | lof the party if they didn't like| |his views. Rather jextremists Paper Strike Parties Meet, than reject political as the moderates had demanded, the 55-year-old Arizona senator got his biggest hand from delegates 'when he said: "Extremism in the de- fence of liberty is'ho vice. Mod- eration in the pursuit of justice is no virtue." ETENXDS. WELCOME He welcomed all those who would join his cause sincerely, As for others, he didn't expect them "'to enter our ranks in any case." Goldwater portrayed a world in which the U.S. would use "every sacrifice' to.redeem the suffering of those in the world who wanted freedom from ty- ranny. He thrilled to the idea of Eastern and Western Europe being joined and then linked with North and South America in an alliance in which the U.S, is the "great central pillar." "The good Lord raised up this mighty republic to be a home for the brave and to flourish as the land of the free,"' he said, "not to stagnate in the swamp- land of collectivism -- not to cringe before the bullying. of communism." Clad in a dark business suit and wearing, as usual, his horn- rimmed glasses, Goldwater marched triumphantly into the glare on the podium after his unanimously elected ' run- ning mate, Representative Wil- liam E, Miller of .New York, had accepted the vice-presiden- tial nomination. Balloons cas- caded down on the Arfzona sen» Parley Again TORONTO (CP) --The Tor- onto and District Labor Council Thursday night called for a |boycott of Toronto's three daily newspapers by the city's trade junion. movement as the strike 900 printers and mailroom ator as pandemonium broke loose. Miller, noted as a rough-and- tumble campaigner, played down his role with a_ short speech in which he said he was happy to be standing in the campaign at the side of "a man who more than any other I have' ever known in American life conference to be attended by! .cainst the principles of justice superintendent acciden- lemployees went into its ninth » 7,000 because of mea pry Ship Explodes The Greeks are allowed only a As Sailors Flee Safely HALIFAX (CP) -- Seventeen seamen escaped the burning vessel Trepassey early today shortly. before she blew up and sank 100 miles off the Nova) Scotia coast. RCAF search and rescue headquarters here reported all members of the crew of the ex- plosives-laden vessel were safe aboard two other ships: The 336 - ton Trepassey was carrying 90 tons of explosives for underwater explora-| tion work. The RCAF said the ship blew up and went to the bottom about 100 miles off Cape Sable on the southwestern tip of Nova Scotia. A. fire started in the ship's engine' room and the crew abandoned her when they were unable. to check the -- flames. The Polar and North 'Star,| working in the same area, took the men aboard. All three ships are owned by| | MAJOR RETURNS force of 950 men under the in- dependence treaty. Meanwhile, a British major returned home Thursday night after a 24-hour absence and the British high commissioner said he had been held captive by! group) "what appeared to be a of Turkish Cypriot irregulars." Maj. Christopher Phillips, 35, had been missing since he drove to Nicosia's Turkish quarter for a language lesson.. Dr. Fazil Kuchuk, Turkish-Cypriot vice- president, said if it was proved Turkish irregulars had seized him they would be punished In the Cyprus -parliament, Greek-Cypriots renewed. their demand. for a complete with- leaders of all parties in South- ern Rhodesia. The delegates also called for the release of African political leaders de- tained by the government. Within an hour after - Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home told the Commons Thursday he as we understand them" He also said his government would continue to press for a negotiated independence based on the present constitution. Britain has refused to grant independence on the ground JACK LIBERATES LIMB IN LIMB that the present constitution would mean the domiration of} jthe country's 4,000,000 Africans |by 50,000 whites. |. As a result of the stalemate, Smith threatened to issue a uni- OSHAWA (Staff) -- Twelve- |lateral declaration of the col- year-old Kenneth 'Butch' Holt, 752 Rowena, was trap- ped for 15 minutes yesterday | --in an apple tree. He jammed his knee tight between two branches, while climbing in the tree, then drawal of British forces, accus- ing them of siding with. the Turks. Turkish - Cypriots have been boycotting the parliament since the outbreak of. communal violence last December. couldn't get it out. Fire Fight- ers. were called and used a car jack to lever the branches apart. jclergymen have been ordered! | ony's ain. Two American Methodist independence from Brit- to leave Southern. Rhodesia by July 22. The government gav eno ex- planation for its deportation or- lder against Bishop Ralph Dodge | of Terril, Iowa, and Rev. Ro- bert Hughest of Birmingham Ala. EQUALITY CAMPAIGN the Trepassey Shipping Com-} pany of nearby Dartmouth and| were undef charter to Geo-| physical Service Incorporated} doing offshore exploration for the Shel! .Oil Company Capt, Cecil Walters said in a ship-shore telephone interview that "tat about 2:20 or 2:25 (a.m. ADT) this morning she pet, ga ei By _ | blew up." ) OTTAWA (CP) -- Establish- CREW CHOKED UP ment of a commission on the Capt. Walters said no one was) Status of women in Canada was) injured. "Everybody was work- Suggested Thursday by Health ing as fast as they could but Minister Judy LaMarsh. there wasn't much we could do. Miss LaMarsh, in a major We all rushed around with fire;speech on women's affairs to extinguishers . . . but we got! the Federation of Business and choked up with smoke. So we Professional . Women's Clubs, put out the boats and rowed announced formation of a new away from her." 15-member advisory council of, The fire started in an elec- consumers to advise the federal| trical switchboard and the ship| government on consumer mat- By BRENDA LARGE was without electric power. Un-} able to send an S O S by radio or signal other ships by lights, Capt. Walters used a "talking machine" at the vessel's stern! to.a'ert the North Star and Po- la Star which were within a of the Trepassey CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 "mice ters. the legal treatment of women in respect to civil and political rights."' DISCUSSES RIGHTS Canada's only woman cabin- net minister said she thought there had been "a great dis- parity" in the legal rights of women across the country. The new advisory counci] of consumers was termed by Miss LaMarsh as "possibly the most significant development in some time for Canadians gen- She also urged the federation erally, but for Canadian women to start an immediate campaign especially." It to put hundreds of Canadian women in top governmnet and business posts. She suggested that the status, members, of women commission might be| man, | is to.work 'in conjunction with the federal food and drug directorate. She said the names of 14 women and would be one announced similar 'in scope to an Ameri-! within the next few days. can one which submitted a re- port to the late President Ken-| member nedy last fall. Only last month the 25;000- Consumers' tion of Canada passed a resolu- "As was done in the United|tion requesting the government States, we might well look into/to set usuch matters as educational op-| ment of consumer affairs portunities nity services, employment Lib- its | Judy Pushing Probe Of Womens Status jernments, labor standards and|might be created in a speech the penitentiary, About the/the risk of a retrial which could to the consumers' association annual meeting, Miss LaMarsh comniended former Progressive Conserva- tive cabinet minister Ellen Fairclough for her efforts to get more women appointed to pub- lic office. SUGGESTS LIST She also said she had sug- gested that the, federation's new national president, Nazla_ L. Dane of Toronto, start a list of qualified women which could be submitted to the federal gov- ernment when appointments to top positions were due By promoting more women in every sort of public position, jshe said, the federation could |help to celebrate the 50th an- up a separate depart-| ville | niversary of women's suffrage in Canada in 1971, Canadian Associa-| women first received a federal} vote in 1921. Jean Casselman (PC--Gren- Dundas) was among women members of Parliament more and commu-/eral backbencher Pauline Jew-and Senate attending the ban- inj ett of Northumberland -had sug-|quet at which Miss LaMarsh| ithe federal and provincial gov-! gested that such a department' spoke. jwide interest became even say 25 business places have vol-|ment untarily agreed not to serveltally splashed water on Powell 'LIFER' AT MOTEL day. All- three papers, The Star, |The Telegram and The Globe and Mail, have continued to publish since the printers walked off their jobs July 9, |SHOT DEAD | Several more shots rang out jand Powell fell dead in the gut- jter, his knife several feet away. Soon after 200 children, all |students of the summer school speaks the truth to the people, courageously stands for princi+ ple and devotes himself coms pletely to keeping America ree," CHANGES ATTENTION declaring a lockout after new work rules had been introduced by the publishers. | Union - company talks under| Louis Fine, Ontario's chief con-| ciliation officer, resumed today. Mr. Fine got negotiations re- |started Thursday following |Monday night break-off. | The action by the labor coun- cil followed a resolution drafted by Local. 91 of the International Typographical Union (CLC) representing 680 striking. print- ers. The resolution requested the council's unqualified sup- j}port for the ITU. jand mostly Negroes, collected jat the scene, | Boys and girls began to ad- jvance on the handful of uni- formed police but were driven baat Soon about 75 policemen were at the scene, some wear- ling riot' helmets | Cans, books and stones were Cell Again Awaits MD RAiter One Day Furlough | COLUMBUS, Ohio. (AP)--Dr.|. The papers necessary to re- |Samuel Sheppard' was expected| turn Sheppard to the prison ar-| back in rison today afterjrived here about 7 p.m., but)". : Epos spending his first night of free-|state officials could not locate), Finally, the teen-agers were dom in years in a motel here. a federal marshal to serve herded into the school and : elasses began for 750 of Man- hattan's youngsters who need the special] instructions if they | path swam, had meals served| Custody. He was expected to be lin his room and visited with] Picked Up today. : relatives. And he was reunited is fiancee, Ariane Tebbenjo- the fall. before entering penitentiary)' Vorcee, arrived at the motel | ine years ago for the 1954)Lhursday evening. The couple a pis of his wife, posed for photographs and went 3 CAPSULES IN ONE | Marilyn. 'for a 20-minute swim in the oie ; paca ° Sheppard's lawyer, F. Lee | } S j m Beats case which has attracted world- Bailey, said he is' contident é ' eda & ' Sheppard will be released again : by ; more bizarre in the by Monday or Tuesday, No site R { R ] ; F 7 The 40-year-old former osteo-|them and take Sheppard into are to move ahead a class in ith a fiancee he did not know|hanns, a 34-year-old German The controversial murder) Motel Pool. last two es |has been set for the hearing on A federal district judge ruled!the stay, which will be before |mittee, Wednesday that Sheppard 'ad/q three-judge. panel. been denied constitutional rights) Sheppard steadfastly has con- in his trial and ordered him re-|tended that a bushy-haired in- leased from prison, setting the|truder beat his pregnant wife stage for a retrial. ito death July 4, 1954. Although Thursday, the one-time Cleve-|only months away from a possi- land suburbanite walked out of|ble parole, Sheppard now faces same time, a U.SAppealsl/result in a first-degree murder Court judge stayed the district|conviction and a possible death court order. That meant Shep-|sentence. Originally, he was pard had to return to prison at/found guilty of second-degree least until a hearing can be con-;murder in a two-month, trial ducted on the stay order. that ended Dec. 21, 1954. LATE NEWS FLASHES Van Doos Seal Off Village | | CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) Two Sentry satellites and a tiny Pygmy satellite rocketed into great egg-shaped orbits today, in a complex triple launching that could lead to U.S. develop- ment of a fool-proof system to detect illicit nuclear explosions in space. The trio of radiation-sensing packages rode into space atop a single powerful Atlas-Agena jrocket. Early tracking informa- tion indicated the payloads were close to the intended course ranging from 120 to 63,- 000 miles above the earth. All three space messengers were flashing clear radio sig- nals to ground stations. Because of an intricate flight than 200,000,000 miles into space to discover whether any nation cheats on~ the partial nuclear test ban treaty by exploding a rocket - borne bomb far from earth. The 4.5-pound Pygmy was to aid the study by measuring electrons during wide-swinging sweeps through the Van Allen radiation belts. The two nuclear detection sa- tellites were to draw a radia- tion chart of space, including what happens when their sensi- tive instruments are struck by surges of charged particles from a solar flare or cosmic ray shower With this knowl- edge, operational | would be. able quickly to differentiate between natural radiation and that created by a NICOSIA (CP) -- Neariy 100 heavily-armed Canadian troops were stationed around the reéfugee-packed Turkish village of Temblos today as feverish negotiations went on to prevent an armed clash between Greek- and Turkish- Cypriot forces. Dief Puts Rest Before Flag OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition leader, Diefenbaker -sug- gested: to Prime Minister Pearson. in the Commons today that he remove the flag debate from the government's priority legislative program and let the House take a much - needed summer recess. plan intended to station the twin Sentry satellites at the high point of the course, offi-|. cials will not know until about | Sneak nuclear. burst. ' 10:30 a.m. Sunday whether the| Officials of the Atomic En- launching is completely suc-|¢T8y Commission said the pair | cessful. of Sentries could be used as a Small rockets aboard thé pair| limited operational too! -- just are to arrest them at widely|/@S two earlier satellites in the | [scattered points 63,000 miles up|S¢ties have been utilized. The lone about 18 hours after initial watchdog satellites were launching, the other about 37/hurled into orbit Oct. 16, just hours later. |six days after the nuclear test- }ban treaty was signed by more |MORE PLANNED than 100 countries. The treaty | The Sentries, each weighing| prohibits nuclear testing in the 493 pounds, are forerunners of|dtmosphere, under water or in \a network of satellites which|space, but does not forbid un- will veer electronically more! derground detonations, | Girls Cross Channel In Relay DOVER (Reuters) -- A relay team of 15 London school- girls today completed an English Channel swim after bat- tling with the waves for 16 hours and 20 minutes. The formalities having been observed and the 28th Republi- can convention over with, Gold- water turned his attention to taking over the command of the Republican national com- (Continued on Page 8) satellites & 3 SATELLITES AWAY