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Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Sep 1964, p. 1

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Thought For Today If you talk too fast, you're apt , to say something you haven't 'thought of yet. Price Not Over -- 10 Cents per Copy VOL, 93 -- NO. 206: ¢ The Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1964 'Weather Variable Report cloudiness tonight, Wednesday sunny with a few cloudy periods, cool, Authorized os Second Closs Moll Post Office Department wa end for payment of Postage' in Cash. SIXTEEN: PAGES UAW e |Tense Cypriots | Await UN Move By BARNEY PETROVIC NICOSIA (Reuters) -- Greek- and Turkish Cypriots today awaited the next move ig the island's ticklish economic block- ade issue. The United Nations mission '\was expected to issue a state- LEADER ARRESTED, WEA in raid on Negro "freedom"' movement headquarters near where Negro rioting began last Friday night. At left some eee ueNG Ase PONS SEJZED of the weapons seized in raid, and a-small calibre pistol are displayed at police station. --AP Wirephoto Shayk Muhammad, at right, sits with lowered eyes in police station in Philadelphia Monday night after his arrest including makings for Molotov é had been no action after the Cyprus government announce. ment Sunday that the economic jblockade against the Turkish- Cyprios would be eased: | Cypriot Interior Minister P. C. Georghadijis said the restrictions on the Turkish-Cypriots were made necessary by confirmation that large quantities of food and cocktail fire bombs, knives Great World F amine 'May Kill Billions' By ALTON BLAKESLEE gardless of boosts in food pro- past famines involving "only" CHICAGO (AP)--A world fa-|duction, he said, adding: about 10,000,900 people mine striking "hundreds of} "It is hard for us sitting CRASH PROGRAM URGED millions or even billions of hu-jin rich, comfortable, overfed 'Phere is still time for man beings" is near, a scien-/America to realize that the) ..a:h program that might avertiofficers say no link has been|pletely satisfied" with the con- tist-economist warned today --_ greatest disaster in the history|tne situation--by supplying fer-|established between the group|Versations. : "Tt will be the most colossalj0f the world is just around the/tijizers" that could boost yields|and Quebec separatist lJeaders.| The talks in Alexandria pr catastrophe in history," de-|corner. of rice, wheat, corn and other, "I am not ready to say there} : clared Dr. Raymond. Ewell,, "Historians of the future maY|crops by 50 to 100--per cent/are serious persons who en-|'° defend the independence of vice - president for presearch,|remark on whether it was mOrc|more, he said. courage thefts and murders in|\Cyprus and the announcement State University of New York/important to have worked to-| pants to produced the: mil-|the name of independence," of possible joint defence ar- t falo. vards ti é ; IChi , sail Sonera at Buf wards putting a man on the| ons of tons' of 'needed fertili-|Chief Inspector Russell Scnecal jrangements between the two Such a famine' in Asia, Af-/moon during the 1960s, or to} of the Montreal anti-terrorist Police Doubt | Theft Plotted By Separatists MONTREAL (CP)--While po-| lice have described participants in Saturday's gunshop holdup in which ll rao were|President Gamal Abdel Nasser. war puropses, Meanwhile, Cyprus President '0- rica and South America by the/have worked towards averting|zer would cost about $5,000,000.-| (424 said Monday. night. 1970s and later seems almost|the world famine of the 1970s.""/000--"'about a tenth the cost of] police continued their hunt! srtimebitas: thod,. atheros Bf aseorey Segue 'a ys putting a man on the moon,"for the fifth participant in the| ood production, |likely that the famine wili/pr, Ewell said raid on the International Fire-| Sect the American 'Chemical m9 Sikivins ch ra He. suggested. an international, rm Company: 'THe five sought! mines thie cwnabeating tly + he qy.{azency: might-be formed to di-|4*™S- } pt Rlopibthated eae pl ay hg = In| eet the sompiy of fertilizer, and) Leslie McWilliams, 58, a store/from ae yea hier ge fers, and several " ether ysoumteins ExErtS Se ee nade bet "stag raid' Aly aithe Greek - Cypriot archbishop . ; Asia. Afric ati or.(aucing better varieties of seeds,|"aider Dut police sal rea : ; --* miske outright gifts of - ue and Latin Amer more irrigation, more pesti-|Pinish, shy Gor Me epep aha ane was 7 nee \cides are also needed; but their)/May have been killed by a po-) f 4 increase local food yields ab seo pr Boer areas will effect is ine: he hy jlice bullet in the confusion | The island has been the = The deadline even for suc-|ncrease - en saa 1,000;000,009 ie ie a Four suspects captured on/of sporadic fighting between its ceeding this way is only a fey ct hae bag but food ithe scene, described by police| Greek and Turkis -Cypriot com- years away, he said. jou poh as not been increasing, as having "revolutionary tend-|munities since December, icc: teria dediemniii é said. jencies," are being held as ma-| A UN force has been on the Wad eck Gee mcs Se ee imente could no*| iterial witnesses in " coroner's Sc in a bid to e ultimatcjexist under such famines. Peo-| jinquest into the killings later) keep i answer, Dr. Ewell said, but its|ple would be too weak to work.) \this week. Reorts Monday reveal any details. Reporters: asked Makarios at Alexandria whether he still negotiations with Russia. Dr. Ewelt said the only im- mediate step open fo avert it is for the United States and Eu- Fire Damages Que. Hospital | in. Geneva ment following a Turkish-Cyp-| riot charge Monday that there} |material had been stored for Makarios was back from three |days of talks with Egyptian alkilled as "revolutionaries," top|He pronounced himself '"com- -- sional made the raid on Muhammad's said U.S., British and Turkish jrepresentatives at the dead- locked Cyprus. negotiations would be leaving in the next day or two. Reliable sources there said "The talks as we know them are finished." The death knell of the confer- ence, observers said, was sounded last week by the Greek and Cyprus announcements that they wanted to hand the ques- tion over to the UN General As- sembly. Former state secretary Dean Acheson will return to Washing- ton from Geneva Friday to re- port to President Johnson on the talks. Home Bombed In Montreal MONTREAL exploded early today at | { lice reported No one was injured but dam- lcountries, Makarios would notlage to the home of Alderman| Mario Barone was estimated at between $3,000 and $4,000 Win- dows in nearby homes were a.m. iBarone, a contractor, was asleep in the house with his wife, three chiléren and several other youngsters who were | guests No motive for the bombing was immediately established and the alderman said.he knew jof no reason, police reported St Leonard, a city of 15,000 population, is on the eastern tip of the island about nine miles |SOCIETY PROBED ong|wing of the Laval Hospital to-|ta1, He was shot in the thigh| ----|day. There were no injuries. during the exchange of shots. Some 125 nurses and staff jmembers living in. the wing} |were safely evacuated when the : Flee Apartments \fire broke out at 2:45 a.m. | Patients on the top floor of| In Peterborough : Mother s Search U Bodi NCOvErS Bodies wero p caenovan oy Eight apartments were evacu-| LONG BEACH, Ind; (AP)--A|Edward Zriny, making a routine ther pavilion in the building. By CY FOX mother's search for her teen-|check, went to the boy's home| One hundred firemen con-|#ted here early today when) moNTREAL (CP) -- A huge age son Monday night led to the|but found no one there, As hel|fined the flames to the top| {ire broke out in a restaurant/contingent of sociologists, laden bodies of her neighbor's twolturned to leave, Mrs. Lucillelrioor although other parts of ete Were 2° iMt-\with learned opinions on the smali children stuffed in a craw!|Dobeski 41, drove up in a car shade apbaitans ciate sd sagas ete (problems of human society, space beneath a pantry trap|with her mother, Mrs, Frank|(%¢ building suffered some wa-| Firemen kept the blaze con-\piunges into a score of discus- door. (Malecki, and the officer asked tet and smoke damage. Thejfined to the. basement of the|sion sessions today as the A police officer who had come|the women if they knew the fire .was jrestaurant, owned by Trento) american Sociological associa- to.ask about her boy heard the| whereabouts: of Richard. hours Vadala of Kingston. Structuralition's annual meeting gets woman's screams. Mrs. Dobsel hel oe damage was limited to $1,500! down to business. : s went into Leo L'Esperance, med-|but Fire Chief Cl se Ben- The battered bodies of Kerry, : 0 hy US Pe rance, € »bu ire Me arence en , se s Johnston. 3. and his sister, | "Ouse to look for him. Shejical superintendent, said pa-|bett said smoke damage to ic peli F Shawn, 6, were lying in the screamed moments later. The/tients and staff members were | apartments and a billiard hall acted to expert scrutiny on dark, sandy. - floored storage ae her standing above orderly and,calm.. There was sa pod wr restaurant will Monday, the meeting's first area. The girl's' hahds were|'#© '@Pdoor. pani SEE LOU Ae day, but much time was spent effects on the food-population|/be affected mentally, yet mod- suspec y S problem will be slow. Yet un-jern, medicine would keep many Bia tectaries. Cases, less birth control is applied also,|starvin ) the famine would still come re- QUEBEC (CP)--Fire caused oid and of Hungarian descent, t ig people from dying ofjheavy damage to a fourth-floor|is under police guard in hospi- diseases as happened am Occupy put ont after two and prisons topics sub- j | {served so well 100.years ago.| Premier CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 ~ tied behind- her back: les pupa ues % jin getting the association's spe- fheir necks. | another year of work. Aqgsse. was organized in a Almost 2,000 delegates were ehae ae car sas expected to be registered by to- suburb for shar obe-| day, the great majority from 6, a youth with a known; > the United States. i rd of child mistreatment} on a 3 @ | 10n OW It was problems of U.S. race ee ; ' : . z jrelations that preoccupied many spit: S| pode Se etay (eee : lof the delegates at the Monday PS; '| By STEWART MacLEOD Robichaud of New! meetings, with notes of both op. The slain youngsters were the) CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) |The .object of this meeting™\is| Brunswick thought there was ajtimism and foreboding being only children _of Mr. and Mrs wh a three-year start on the}'0 arrive at an acceptable form-|"'very good chance". of success. |sounded about U.S. progress to- James Johnston. who lived next) rect of Canada, Prince Edward|ula that will allow the conti-| There ate two items on the|ward equality for. all ethnic door, ' l{sland today threw itself head-|tution to be amended in Ottawa| agenda of the conference. One|groups. Deputy Coroner Donald Tran- jong into celebrating Canada's| Without reference to Westmin-|jc the constitution question and| Thomas F. Pettigrew, a lec- beaten and stabbed. 'They' Unlike other provinces, which) On the eve of the conference, "other business," ¢ . 'oneal N goose 2 S, | e eve of the , siness," an authorita-| sity ye pre. were pretty messed up, he will have their birthday flings|there were indications the lead-|tive source said, pa Sab bab gien 6 hi pe said, lin 1967, this is the centennial of/ers would have little difficulty Theoretically, the premiers| THROATS SLASHED 'the island's histore role in: the)achieving their goal. lan bring up any subject they hate fs any /making of 'Canada,-- the day| Prime Minister Pearson de-|,);. ; , A blood-stained length of clay!! . i 3 : wish. Premier Roblin of Mani- raves aze sewer. pipe 'and a broken brick|!" 1864 the Fathers of Confed-|clined to speculate on the dis-/toha said Monday night were found near ° : : | na ' moulding the provinces into a miers were clearly optimistic. : " i . oO ation, "We'll have to wait and sec\UP. 2 committee to study the! 0 ave Ir ay nearby, The throats of each) ; $i Sacre b eae + ici, »{federal-provincial tax: structure child had been. slashed, police They were doing it again_to-/but I am always optimistic,"|: i ' } pier age Are day--actors, not politicians this|said Premier Robarts of On-|!" all its aspects. ; "STONEY CREEK, Ont. (CP) se The Johnstons: had called po-|time--to Show a delighted is-/tario. _ Meanwhile, the premiers en-/Brian Long, 19, today rushed lice 40 minutes before-the bode] 20, Po ousands| The chances of success are|joyed themselves before lettinglinto a blazing home to rescue s before d-| ot ys Same eta "pairs paes3 n_ earned. its title as "the/ Bennett of British Columbia, |!¢ms of the present. From the/scious «in -her. bed. childre SsIng. 'cradle of Confederation." One of the most significant moment they stepped from) He carried" Linda Among the spectators wete)comments came from Liberal| 'heir planes Monday they were/daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Rob- |Prime.. Minister Pearson. and|Premier Ross Thatcher of Sas-| Caught in a rousing round of ac-ert Kipsey of this' town five the 10 provincial premiers. 'This| katchewan, His province, under| HViHes that will keep them g0-'miles southeast of. Hamilfon, is believed to be the first tee a, Cor government, was the|img to midnight tonight. through -thick smoke and flames all] chief objector at an earlier con-| : }Canada's elected leaders gath-/ference ona constitutional/scheduled for today was arri-| Brian said he was awakened ered together in this little city'amendment formula. Mr. That-|val of a-replica of the Queen|by. screams and ran to the of 18,000. ; ¢ declared himself to be/ Victoria, the shin that carried|nearby Kipsey home. Mr. and They will be doing more than ('very sympathetic" on the sub- Sf John A. Macdonald. and|Mrs. Kipsey had--carried three watching, They will gather|ject now, "There is a prettyjotper Fathers of Confederation|of their children to safety, but Wednesday around the same|god chance: it.-can- be .done,"'| into Charlottetown Harbor fromjhad missed Linda in the. con- he Cords were knotted about) El t 1 L 1 S cialized councils organized for a had been released in June} j ski said both children had been! centennial. ister the other is listed as simply turer in social -psychology at the bodies, |¢Tation came ashore to begin|cussions but some of the Pre-/hoped. the conference. will set| Police said a pocket knife also} | rs just how Charlotte-|199 per cent," said Premier| history give way to the prob-/a four-year-old girl lying uncon- since. Confederation that | The bi ggest event of alljto safety, 014 oak conference table that, IQuebee exactly 100 years azo.!fusion, = ge Kipsey, | pase unknown. te ' Race Relations Experts {school desegregation in the U.S. South. He said whites in the South now have greater respect for the intelligence of Negroes and that resistance to desegregation is declining at a time when Negro insistence and militancy is growing. But Arnold M. Rose, profes- sor of sociology at the Univer- sity of Minnesota, said school desegregation in the U.S. north and west is being slowed by a continuation of segregation in housing. Such segregation is gradually decreasing from a peak it 'reached in the late 1940s, Prof. |Rose said, buk "it will no doubt become the focus of the race conflict in the near future." (CP)--A bomb) the} duced an Egyptian pledge of aid|front door of the home of an) jalderman in the Montreal Is- land suburb of St Leonard, po- St Leonard. police' said Mr LEAVES CANADA Police Chief James Por- rance of Sarnia said Monday former city constable Richard Gunn (above) left Canada for the United States in July. Gunn was ordered by the On- tario Supreme Court earlier this year to pay $88,791 dam- ages to a man who was beaten into imbecility during an arrest. --CP Wirephoto DETROIT (AP) --. Specula- tion mounted today in this au- tomotive capital that the United Auto Workers Union and Chry- sler Corporation may be a lot nearer agreement than UAW President Walter Reuther has indicated. The speculftion hinged on Reuther's assertion Monday night that his political favorite, President Johnson, will keep a Labor Day speaking engage- $ment in Detroit. Until Reuth- er's "he will be here," there had been some doubt, which the White House hadn't allayed. The speculators asked: Could any politician ask for a better Labor Day kickoff for a campaign than an announce- ment -- on free U.S.-wide tele- vision -- that agreement had been reached on a contract an- ticipated to guarantee three years of peace in a bellwether industry. They also pointed out that Reuther had threatened to strike at last Wednesday mid- | PHILADELPHIA (AP)--The | } would go ahead with plans for|shattered by the blast at 2:05 national headquarters of a Ne- gro a was vacua | inside -Fiot-torn on North Philadelphia Monday where quiet reigned today after a weekend of looting and. pil- laging. The four - square- mile area still was under tight security, with a 24-hour curfew in effect and more than 1,200 policemen on patrol, Mayor James H. J. Tate said the restrictions will remain in effect at least until Labor Day, Sept. 7. A squad of 100 policemen African-Asian Cultural Centre, two blocks from where the riots broke out late Friday night. In- spector Millard Meers, who led the raid, said police found flammable fluids used for mak- ing fire bombs, a loaded revol- ver, two bayonets and a knife. 'Prince Albert Schools Open Mayor Believes Pattern To Riot | They arrested Shakyh | Mu- hammad, described by Meers ; W MAY BE NEAR DEAL AT CHRYSLER Reuther Announcement Inspires Speculation . night. any. of the Big Three-- General Motors, Ford or Chry- sler--who failed to meet UAW terms. A few hours before that deadline .arrived, Reuther) sin- gled out Chrysler as the No. 1 target for a strike or else, Reuther insists that produc- tion workers must get their "equity," measured: by what executives and shareholders are pocketing from the indus- try's most fabulous profits ever over the last 18 months, Compared with extra divi- dends for shareholders and bon- uses for executives, Reuther said economic offers by the Big Three thus far were "poor." While speculation increased that Reuther might be planning a kickoff announcement for the Democratic nominee for presi- dent, an industry spokesman - privy to bargaining said: "Don't count on it." Reuther himself virtually guaranteed there would be no strike before Johnson's Labor Day speech when he unexpect- edly announced last Wednesday that there would be no walk- out, as he had~threatened, at contract expiration at midnight Aug. 31. All three companies since have agreed to extend existing three-year contracts to Sept. 9, and Johnson, who has pro- fessed the federal government has no intention of intervening, has sent in its chief trouble- shooter, Willlam E. Simkin, jas. a former member of the ad, 'posted of explosives and violating the mayor's proclamation to stay off the streets. come mediation and eonci liation is on tecord as favor- tic. ticket of t ore li ticket cen' e Republican ticke' of Goldwater and er, WAS MUSLIM LEADER Muhammad, 33, came here from Greensboro, N.C, He has been arrested four times. Mu- hammad once described him- self as a Muslim leader and also said he represented the Philadelphia Fighters for Lib- erty and Justice. 'The raid came amid reports that the North Philadelphia riots might have been planned according to a basic pattern. Tate said: "I believe that it was designed and planned and that something triggered the action. There were too many people ready to go," he said. He said 'the FBI is close to the situation -and that he ex- pects to confer with the U.S. atorney and the district attor- Floods In India Cover Vast Area ° NEW _ DELHI - (Reuters)-- Prime Minister' Lal Bahadur Shastri today flew over stricken areas near here which have been hit by the worst floods in 40 years. But monsoon ran clows forced Shastri's Viscount back to base after less than one hour of a planned three-hour flight, Officials who flew with the prime migister said: he saw a vast sea Covering thousands of acres of cultivated ground, with only tree tops and gmail hills visible. The roofs of village houses showed above the flood ney's office. in many places. REGINA (CP) -- Mediation has averted a school strike in Prince Albert but teachers in Regina stood fast on demands for salary increases and agreed Monday to strike if the re- quests are not met, Schools in Prince Albert were to open on schedule to. day with teachers at their nor- mal posts. An agreement cov- ering 126 teachers was an- nounced by Harry S&S. Hays of Saskatoon who mediated the dispute, Terms of the two-year agree- ment were not immediately dis- closed. | NEW YORK (AP) -- Robert |F. Kennedy, 38-year-old 'brother lof the late president, embarks |today on his own elective polit- ical career with his nomination as Democratic candidate for U.S, senator from New' York. Some observers believe his jeventual goal is to follow the | footsteps of John F. Kennedy to .|the White House In the Senate race, Kennedy, who now is U.S.: at- torney - general, will challenge the Republican incumbent, Kenneth B. Keating. Keating was refiominated by acclamation Monday by a Re- publican sfate convention that overlooked 'his refusal to en- dorse the party's presidential nominee, Senator Barry Gold- water. And, at Saratoga Springs, the Conservative party nominated |Henry Paolucci, a 43-year-old)' jassistant professor of history at College and a_ political annosa bath Keat- Robert Kennedy Starts lst Race Robert! ing and Kennedy on the ground they are too liberal, As the Democrats gathered for their convention, charges of "carpetbagger' continued against Kennedy. They, were Republicans, TO BE OPPOSED While the attorney -, general was assured of sufficient votes |\for nomination, Representative Samuel S, Stratton carried his underdog fight to the conven- tion. Stratton was the leading ontender for the' nomination efore Kennedy arrived on the scene with powerfil backing from party leaders in the New York City 'area, Kennedy, who-has. lived in Virginia and - voted' in Massa- chusetts, recently rented an es- tate: on Long Island to. estab- lish New York residency. His supporters say he is) legally eligible to run as long as | made-by both Democrats and|' A distraught George Burns, assisted by his son Ronnie d--comedian Jack Benny ahi) ileaves 'Forest Lawn's he is a residentof the' state on aleation day. New. : * \ Church.pf the Regrne fol- lowing funeral rites Monday. for his longtime wife, Gracie po hag Pei gg died 'ollowing aheart ) attack: at her home. © --AP W.

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