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Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Jul 1964, p. 1

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| | eager jainsentila Thought For Today Radishes have a lot in common with music -- the way they keep coming 'back like a haunt- ing refrain. VOL. 93 -- NO. 169 sigh e She Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JULY 20, 1964 _ Batre op Second payment Weather Report Sultry air continues, broken only by evening cloud, thunder and showers, i. Class: Malt Ma! Office» Department o in Cash. Postoge EIGHTEEN: PAGES Harlem Riot - Kills One, Injures 100 NEW YORK (AP)--Violence|department and the district at- flared again in Harlem Sunday/torney. : night, with police the targets of| Before the funeral services, jeering mobs and_ missiles) police sealed off a 57-block area hurled from tenement roofs in| in the centre of Harlem. Outside racial rioting that began Satur-/the funeral home, a crowd of day night and raged into Sun-|about 500 gathered. Inside was day morning. |a capacity crowd of 150 mour- Helmeted police still patrolled) ners. the area today, but they said "tension has lessened a great| broke up a band of 100 young deal." Negroes who had been march- Sunday night, five civilians|ing toward the funeral home, were treated at hospitals for] i gunshot wounds, Twelve patrol- MOTHER COLLAPSES " men were injured by flying ob- After the services ~ boy $s jects. Also injured were a tele-| Mother, Mrs. Annie Powell, was vision cameraman 'and several assisted into a limousine, where : she collapsed. newspaper men. : oe The initial outburst followed) Private burial is scheduled A few minutes earlier, police © Wallace's Withdrawal Fe Brings Barry Backing BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) --jstates rights talk-than in a {Many southern conservatives |quarter of a century, I was the }were hopping on the Goldwater|instrument of this . . . my mes- bandwagon today in the wake|sage has been heeded." of Alabama Governor George! warps UNTIL CONVENTION SAIGON (AP)--In a slashing attack 50 miles southwest of Saigon, Communist guerillas left the thriving district capital of Cai Be a shambles today with the bodies of about 40 protest rallies over the fatal/for today at Hartsdale, N-Y. shooting of a Negro boy by a| At about the time funeral white policeman. The violence|setvices were under way, bot- left one Negro man shot to|tles and other missiles' began death, 132 arrestéd, and more|crashing in the street. Patrol- than 100 injured, including a}men, waving nightsticks, began dozen patrolmen. charging into crowds that The new flareup followed fu- eee from behind police WHITE HELMETED New neral services Sunday night for 15-year-old James Powell, slain last Thursday by Police Lieut. Thomas Gilligan, who said he fired when the boy came at him Police fired shots into the air.| York policeman knocks down Three bus-loads of specially-| @ negro during last night's trained anti-riot police arrived.| Tioting in Harlem. Behind | them another police officer: (Continued on Page 3) | attempts to subdue a negro. |Wallace's withdrawal from the| | presidential race. | Southern reaction range d| \from praise to "he let us| |down." Others felt the with-| | drawal would have no effect on He pledged endorsemnt to no one in advance. He indicated) > he would know more after next month's Democratic national convention. at. Atlantic City, N.J. Wallace, a Democrat, said & viet the race between Republican The weekend disturbances left |Candidate Senator Barry Gold- one dead and at least 100 in- | Water of Arizona and President law | Johnson, he has made no decision on whether he would attend the convention. NAM ATTACK SITE jured including several ' Wallace said he would sup- enforcement officers and "I'm going to call the group) port the major party candidate newspapermen. together that's been working) who proved to be the more con- (AP Wirephoto) | with me on unpledged electors} seryative and zealous in sup- with a knife. Throughout the sabbath, Ne- gro leaders, in speeches and in conferences with police and city officials, had demanded Gilli- gan's arrest. LEADERS BOOED The Negro leaders--including James Farmer, national direc- tor of the Congress of Racial Equality, and Bayard Rustin, : leader of last year's civil rights) NICOSIA (CP) -- A row of:the UN force trying to keep the| march on Washington -- urgedifield guns was trundled away) peace on this embattled island, Negroes to stay home Sunday|from the vicinity of the Turk-|were fired on Sunday in a brief night. But both men were booed/ish-Cypriot village of Temblos|clash outside the foothill vil- at a rally when they called for|Sunday as Greek-Cypriot forces|lage of Pilerin, 10 miles north-| Greeks Remove Guns But Tension Remains and ask them to form an OF-/porting the principles of local ganization of Democrats for) government, private enterprise | Goldwater," said Roy V. Har-)anq states rights, jris, of Augusta, Ga., a cam-) Within hours after his ap- paign worker for Wallace. |pearance in Washington, Wal- Former governor Marvinjlace returned to Birmingham Medicare Griffin of Georgia, a close ally) for a hastily-assembled strategy) Costl Pl of Wallace, said he would vote|meeting with his slate of un-/ y an for Goldwater. "I have not left) pledged -- presidential electors. | : the Democratic party," he said.| Lieutenant-Governor James Al-| OTTAWA (CP)--Health Min- "They have left me." len, leader of the slates an-|ister Judy LaMarsh cautioned Wallace withdrew Sunday as nounced afterwards 'that. the|today that a comprehensive an independent presidential can-| presidential electors "have no|medical care program involves making the announce-| intention of delivering the Dem-|great expenditures which re- Judy Wars Turk-Cypriots and two Greek- Cypriots. Ninety-six other Canadian UN didate, e troops with light armored cars| ment over a televised program,|ocratic machinery over to the patrolled the Temblos area try-|He said: "There is now more! Republicans." cial discussion. Her opening statement to the jquire detailed federal - proyin-| non-violence. |heeded strong United Nations| west of Nicosia. Police 'Commissioner Michael| 'ePresentations. J. Murphy said Harlem's crim-| Both Greeks and Turks, how- 'na! element found the Saturday| ever, were making little visible t riot "a convenient excuse) progress in carrying out the to go out and kick a few doors|terms of am agreement made and windows in." with the UN for withdrawal of He has rejected demands to\armd men from the area on have a civilian board review the|the northern sea coast of Cy- Powell shooting. Gilligan has} Prus. been retained on duty pending) Three members of Canada's an investigation by the police! Royal 22nd Regiment, part of Newlywed 'Lifer' Fears Trial, Jail CHICAGO (AP)--Dr. Samueljbe taken Wednesday. A three- Sheppard, happy in his free-|judge panel of the Sixth U.S. dom from prison and in his}Court of Appeals will decide) new marriage, faced the future; whether Sheppard shall remain} today with hope and fear. free on $10,000 bond while the He and his bride of two days,| State of Ohio appeals the order the former Mrs. Ariane Tebben-) which freed him. johanns, a German divorcee,| Dr. Sheppard, 30, and the 35-/ made arrangements to fly to year-old blonde he married Sa- New York City. She said they|turday dined with friends in will have interviews there, but she didn't go into detail "We cannot make any plans," she told a reporter. '"'We'll stay available. Perhaps by Wednes- day Dr. Sam will have to go r and received telephone calls from others. | He spoke of teaching or do-| ing other non-medical work un-| til his licence to practice medi-| back to the penitentiary." cine is restored. Or, his new But Dr. Sheppard and his wife suggested, he could do ad- lawyer, F. Lee Bailey, said they expected the physician to remain out of prison, where he|They plan to live in Rocky} served almost nine years for| River, another community in slaying his first wife, Marilyn,|the Cleveland area, in 1953. While obviously happy, Dr. Sheppard walked out of the penitentiary Thursday on the/living "'under the shadow of re-| order of a. federal judge who arrest and retrial." | ruled he did not have a fair; But he also said: "I do not} trial. expect to be sent back to} The next step in the case will! prison." DIABETES CONFERENCE A United Nations spokesman said no one was injured. The UN od L. Cpl. J. R. # Belanger of Ed dston, N.B., . Jean Guy Doiron of Le Bouthillier, N.B., and Pte. J. D. C, Véilfeux of Quebec City were fired on while escorting two Turkish-Cypriot shepherds who had been seeking lost sheep. ern slopes of the Kyrenian Mountains, when three bursts of automatic - weapon fire came from a fortified Greek-Cypriot Position, RETURNS FIRE The nearest bullets came within six feet of the vehicle. Belanger ordered Doiron to re- turn fire, and one machine-gun burst was sent toward the Greek position. All firing then ceased. The incident was only the fourth in which the Canadians have returned fire since their arrival here in March no va sualties have resulted from any of the exchanges, two involving their honeymoon hotel Sunday|-- Klansmen Burn 'Red' Rights Law ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (AP) ministrative work in his fam-|A copy of the U.S. civil rights} ily's clinic in Bay Village, Ohio.| aw was burned Saturday night} while about 200 persons at a Ku Klux Klan rally applauded. J, B. Stoner of Atlanta, Ga., counsel for the white-suprema- Sheppard told a reporter he is|cist Klan, touched a match to! the bill. He Said the civil rights law was a Communist plot to turn the leadership of the United States over to the Ne- gro. World Meet Begins With Hopes For Cure = . : : ; { TORONTO (CP) -- Current\in an interview Sunday thatjof persons wth an_ inherited! predisposition for the disease. | medical research into the/current study of conditions pre- causes and effects. of diabetes ceding the onset of diabetes could lead ultimately to meth-\could lead to development of ods of prevention or even a cure preventive méthods. He said in- for a disease now considered creased understanding of gian- incurable. dular functions and their stim- New theories and results of\ulation by drugs raises the hope the latest research into aspects|that science may learn how to of a disease that afflicts possi-\regenerate pancreas. cells bly 180,000,000 people will be whose 'degeneration causes dia- discussed at the fifth congress/bhetes, of the International Diabetes| yeanwhile, the experts are Federation which opened today) in engaged in studies de- with some 3,000 medical and'cicneg to find out precisely how ist delegates from 44 coun-jthe pancreas gland and one of ries : P i ' wits products, insulin, work on Dr. D. W. Clarke, a memberithe "pody and interact with 0 _the socal organizing COUNC!) sther glands and organs, These for the triennial congress, said)/fundamental questions underlie most of the research and the- ories to be presented in more than 160 technical papers and at between CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS 15_ Panel__ discussions now and Friday. POLICE 725-1133 SEEK METHODS Also high on the. list of prior FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 ities in diabetic research are EOSPITAL 723 2211 methods of detecting diabteies B, é (au-ee Surveys conducted recently in Britain and the United States suggest that the prevalence of the disease may be as much as three times higher than thé currently estimated 60,000,000 cases throughout "the world. A new simplified blood test, de- veloped in the United States and opening up the possibility of detection surveys on a na- tional scale for the first time, will be discussed at the con- gress, On prediabetics, some doctors believe there are-¢lear signs of the approach of diabetes a dec- ade or more before the onset of the adult form of the disease These signs may be: found in enlarged blood - vessels eyes, for example. Other studies under way in- volve finding ways to reduce the impact. of complicating ail- menst associated with diabetes including problems in -- vision, land prediabetics, the definittn|blood crculation and kidneys,! in the}: federal-provincial conference of health ministers said the fed- eral government still is deter- |Turkish-Cypriots to obey the| LBJ Lashes Out At Extremism disengagement agreement and! JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP)--|ator Barry Goldwater on involy-| pull back from the village. The Turkish village near the be-| President Johnson Saturdayjing the federal government in coastline has been a crisis area for a week, Temblos, its population) |Swelled by Turkish-Cypriot ref-| jugees from other areas, had| |been in a no-man's land | development of essential health services. penditures from provincial and federal treasuries. | "Expenditures of this magni- {tude may only be considered | within the over-all structure of ' |organizations" which he said) Goldwater is the Republican | |_ Two units of the Royal 22nd) ..¢ violence, terror and savag-|party's nominee to oppose Dem- |Regiment, sent in Friday as a) ery to deny American Negroes|ocrat Johnson in the Nov. 3 |shield between Greek and Turk-|their constitutional rights. U.S. presidential election. jish forces, continued on duty in| At the same time, Johnson by mined to press forward with "It must be realized however, \that the recommendations of the (Hall royal commission) re- |The group was returning in a|tween the opposing communal| condemned "clandestine hat e|curbing street crime. |Port will involve substantial ex- | vehicle to Pilerin, on the south-| forces. women and children in the wreckage. The Viet Cong were reported ; to have reached the South Viet- namese army post of about 200 men by blasting their way through huts occupied by mil- itary dependents. All of thes¢ huts were burned. The 200 or so civil guardsmen defending the town suffered 12 killed and about 20 wounded. The guerrillas shot indiscrim- jinately into all the huts, which SLAY VIET BABI IN REBEL ATTACK | * ter was shot down while return» ing from a medical evacuation mission, a U.S, spokesman said. Premier Nguyen Khanh mean- while said his South Vietnamese government "cannot remain in- different' to calls for extension of the anti-Communist war into North Viet Nam. He told a boisterous National Day of Shame rally Sunday that many South Vietnamese groups-- Buddhists, Roman Catholics, Students, refugees and national- ist leaders--have urged a push to reunite the country, " The rally observed the 10th anniversary of the Geneva igned July 21, 1954, jaccounted for the lly high jnumber of other civlian casual- ties. First reports said the Viet iCong pulled out after about three hours of intense fighting, without overwhelming the main centre of government resist- jance. There were indications ithe enemy suffered casualties, jalthough no Viet Cong bodies japparently were found. The Cai Be army post radi- loed for help about 3 a.m., and |flare-dropping planes and artil- jleny barrages were sent. The Cai Be radio went dead a short time later but came back on the that the post still was fighting. north enemy was reported however. Three U.S. officers and four men were wounded Sunday in | the Mekong Delta area 50 miles jsouth of Saigon, Their helicop- jthe area. indirection criticized civil) DEFICIT LOWER our sources of revenue." | The UN arranged a dis-| ionts advocates who go outside| Johnson reported, too, that engagement agreement around)tne jaw to promote their cause.|the federal budget deficit for| the village Friday after Greek-| 14. yrged them to tread "the|the fiscal year that ended June Cypriots brought 11 field BUNS, yath of peaceful petition and/30 was $8,300,000,000--$500,000, - | two anti - aircraft guns, five|iega) recourse, of free speech 000 lower than predicted two armored cars and a battery Of! and free election." months ago. | mortars. The agreement was i I set stions F rat sident, at an open-| in response to que , ee ee we gg conlerenck at Phis [Johnson twice took issue with | A second disengagement was! ranch, pledged that '"'the fed-/ positions attributed to Goldwa- arranged by Gen. Kodendera),,a) -government will always ter. OTTAWA (CP) --The Com- Subayya Thimayya of India, promptly assist local author- First, Johnson was asked|mons retums to debate today the UN commander, and the/jtiés to maintain orders longa bout Goldwater's Thursday|on the government's proposed "| Greek-Cypriots 'moved their ar- as the lives and security of our! suggestion that the federal gov-|Student loans legislation amid tillery to the coastline, saying! tejjow citizens 'are in danger." |ernment concern itself with|signs of concern among Quebec it would be used for coastal de- Johnson read a 'strongly -| curbing crime in the streets of|students. |fence only, Troops from both h , t : tremist big Cities. The president ex-| Student associations at Laval |sides also began withdrawing) ?' rased statement on enrrens nes he vi that this was|University and the Uni ity of | . activities before fielding ques-| Pressed the view that this was sity a e University of ek dodged back and occupied | ns that prompted him to chal- tantamount to urging a national| Montreal'made public letters to pee Pomne, 'enge the views of Arizona Sen-/Police force and said '"'this|the federal govergment Friday Fo ee : i |would do more than anything|asking for a two'week suspen- | else to concentrate power in|sion in the legislation and estab- e t Washington." |lishment of a committee to hear arry xpec Ing Second, Johnson sought to|Tepresentations from the °stu- capitalize on the claims of some |d-nts. partisans that a Goldwater elec-| The associations proposed tion victory would increase the|that the committee be com- | chances of war. He did not re-|posed of representatives of the fer directly to Goldwater but/federal and Quebec govern- seek to rally Democrats and/said that 'no single statement/mnts and Canadian student as- independent voters to theor act of mine will be in the/|sociations. Goldwater: cause. direction of provoking war." During the three days of de- --Goldwater, as he did in the) Johnson also announced. that|ate on the bill last week there California primary campaign,|the United States and Britain|Were suggestions that Quebec will rely heavily on television have jointly tested a British-/Students are concerned that the Boost From Ike PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -- Re-| publican presidential nominee} Barry Goldwater, counting on an active campaign boost from! former president Eisenhower, is} setting his political counsellors Que. Students See Aid As Meddling loan bill is an invasion of pro- vincial jurisdiction over educa- tion. The measure authorizes the jfederal government to guaran- jtee bank loans of up to $1,000 a year for needy students to fi- nance university ang other forms of post-high school study. | The loan idea has received general support in the Commons although opposition parties have |raised a number of objections, including one that it intrudes in a provincial field of jurisdiction. | The Commons' schedule calls! \for a return to discussion of leg- jislation putting into effect fis- cal arrangements agreed upon jwith the provinces. once the student loans bill has been dis- posed of. The loan bill is at the second-reading stage -- appro- val in principle. air in an hour. or so, reporting Pagal tim, pel sunrise Bes » eleme! South namese Army's 7th Division mounted an operation to try to map the Viet Cong hit-and-run force, blocking canals and roads|#fter the vote they wauld ap- and west of Cai Be.|Ply to the province for a goy- Only slight contact with the ae strike vote. agr t which partitioned Viet Nam inte the Communist North and the anti-Communist South, Nickel Men Vote Down ° Wage Offer THOMPSON, Man. (CP) -- Conciliation board proposals for a contract for 2,000 miners and surface workers at International Nickel Company of 's Thompson. mine were voted down Sunday by union meni-~ bers. : Officials of Local 6166;-United Steelworkers of America, said provincial government app tinted the conciliation board last month after negotia- tions between company and un- ion broke down over wages and the length of the contract. The Steelworkers union is seeking its first contract with Inco at the Thompson mine since it won bargaining' rights there away from the Interna- tional Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.). The previous contract, which expired March 1 was negotiated by Mine-Mill, | The conciliation board report, which is not binding on either company or union, was first made public at the union meet- ing. It recommends at 11. per- cent - wage increase over @ three-year contract, The Sunday night meeting re- corded 76 votes in favor of the proposal, 886 against it and 213 abstentions. In previous negotiations the company had offered an eight- per-cent pay increase over & three-year contract, while the union sought an 1l-per-cent in- crease over a two-year con- tract. Union officials say the reason they want the shorter contract is so that.they will be able te bargain. simultaneously for Inco employees at Thompson, Sud- bury and Port Colborne, Ont. to carny his message to the)made nuclear device under- lrace against President Johnson.| voters. ground in Nevada. He said the Goldwater flies back to Wash-| The Arizona senator obviously| device, described as having a ington and his Senate desk to-.was not unhappy about the|jow yield, was detonated Friday day. withdrawal of Alabama Gov-/at the U.S. atomic energy test) Tentative thinking on the ernor George C. Wallace from|site. Goldwater campaign shapes up|the presidential race. And he|- this-way: has made it clear he views the} . --It is likely to be a series of traditionally Democratic South) Whites Hurt, Blame Negroes In Atlanta forays for major addresses\as fertile land for Republican with Goldwater based in\yote hunting in' the campaign Washington and Phoenix, not|ahead. an extended series of whistle-| His formal statement, relayed stop appearances. - through press secretary Ed- --Goldwater forces are draft-|\ward J. Nellor, said: "'The gov-| ing plans for formation of alernor's action was a surprise to| citizens committee, its head)me. I have no further comment not. yet chosen, which would at this time." ATLANTA (AP) -- A white man was critically injured in a disturbances in a restaurant Sa- turday night and two members |of a white family were hit by a |shotgun blast reported fired by [Negroes as racial violence erupted in Georgia's capital city. LATE NEWS FLASHES Court Ordered Amputee Dies MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--A 78-year-old woman whose right leg was amputated below the knee by court order to save |y, was in satisfactory condi- tion after he was shot by Re- dell Crosby, a white restaurant her life died today. Adzhubei Mum On K Tour Hint owner. Lawson and five other] | whites attempted to chase Ne- DUESSELDORF (AP)--Alexei Adzhubei, editor-in-chief acts ts Chonby's itegeatad of the Soviet government newspaper Izvestia, arrived today Sacing anes 'police: reponeae | and dodged quéstions about whether he was laying the | : : . Paes 4 th! qj # th ; se : | Crosby was charged with| groundwork for a visit by his father-in-law, Premier Krush- |shooting another and released| chev, to West Germany. on $1,000 bend. | | In another incident in the| same neighborhood, a_ white! family said four Negroes. in a jto work on battle plans for the Greeks And Turks Withdraw Troops NICCOSIA (CP-AP)--Greek- and Turkish-Cypriot forces around the village of Temblos in north Cyprus accepted Passing car. fired. a shotgun Ruined frame of this former tods a Gaited Ni ies f : blast: at them. Bullets hit two : nday a ns ed Nations agreement and wihtdrew their | imembers of the family, police| W@Shing machine factory is forces from the area, said, | @lhouetted against 'the flames Be during early morning: fire in central Ottawa today. Every available firefighter in the city was-called /,it to fight the FACTORY BLOCK BURNS spectacular blaze which de- stroyed the block - long strue- ture. (CP Wirephotoy

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