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Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Jul 1965, p. 1

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Sg Shee yee os . Matinann dak atk ae 'Weather Report' Thundershowers but clearing - tonight. Mostly sunny, cool Tuesday. Low tonight, 48 and Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- ' manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94 -- NO, 155 80 hye | per Week Teme" Delivered Oshawa Fines OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JULY 5, 1965 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottewa and for payment of Postage in Cash, high tomorrow, 70, EIGHTEEN 'PAGES. A woman sweeps glass away from the front of a Russell Point store while two National Guardsmen stand guard over the Ohio Young Mobs ibid community of 600 residents racked Saturday night and early Sunday by a riot of 1,500 college-age youngsters. The Guard moved into the And Police 'North Italy 4 od -~ |today. | Victor Copps today announced \ a $1,000 reward for information| gained a grip. |leading to the eonviction of an| jarsonist responsible for nine| was in an apartment complex. fires during the weekend in| The fires prompted a wave downtown Hamilton. The mayor met with Fire|downtown apartment dwellers, Chief Reginald Swanbor-|many of whom formed co-oper- ough early. today and approvedjative patrols in their buildings. the reward offer "because of} the threat to human life." apartments were reported to Property damage 'now totals|have moved in with friends, more than $30,000, two resi-| Police and fire department dents have been taken to hos-|personnel inspected apartment pital, four firemen have col-|buildings and advised owners lapsed from exhaustion and/and superintendents to clear out four other firefighters have been|basement garbage and step up treated for injuries. their security. The $1,000 reward must be| "A fire in a laundry room serv- ratified by board of control ating a number of small apart- its meeting Wednesday. |ments over a store Sunday night A special 40-man police arson|brought more policemen to the detail patrolled the central resi-|scene than it did firemen. dential area Sunday and con-/SEARCH SPECTATORS tinued its stepped-up activity) The area was sealed off by police as detectives dashed into It is augmented by auxiliary|the apartments. Other detec- police and off - duty city jail/tives began photographing spec- guards who volunteered their) tators. duties. | Anyone carrying a bundle or APARTMENTS TARGET jacting in a suspicious manner Three fires struck apartment|was stopped and searched. Ar- town shortly before dawn and sealed off the riot area while thousands -- many of them sightseers--flocked to the town. (AP Wirephoto)- Hard Hit buildings Friday evening, an-|son was later ruled out. lother three began Saturday! The three fires Friday broke 25 US. Jets | Hit Viet Cong jof fear and near panic among Several women living alone in| t Feud In Resort Areas By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSjeru just before midnight Beer - drinking, carousing youths staged riots and disturb- ances in five resort towns in Ohio, Missouri, Iowa and New York this July 4 weekend, re- * gulting in more than 700 arrests, with heavy property damage and a number of minor injuries. The youths, teen-agers and college students, battled officers with fists, bottles, fireworks and rocks until they were carted away to police stations. At Geneva-on-the-Lake, Ohio, early today, a second straight night of rioting was put down by local police before the ar- rival of national guardsmen or- dered out by Ohio Governor James A. Rhodes. Rhodes earlier sent the na- tional guard into Russells Point, in western Ohio. Early Sunday at the north Iowa lakes resort of Arnolds Park, more than 500 _beer- Souaay. A total of 175 youths were jailed. An estimated 8,000 youngsters jammed the resort. The rioting was touched off when, police said, they arrested three youths riding on a motor- cycle. The crowd protested and began manhandling the officers.| Authorities said the youths) brought cases of beer .into town) and crowded into cottages and cabins. Besides shattering win-| dows: of nine business places) and automobiles, they . over- turned a police car. Six injured| persons were treated at hospi-| tal. | THOUSANDS TAKE PART | Of a holiday crowd of about} 8,000, police estimated some 2,000 to 3,000 persons took part} in the Rockaway Beach rioting. Fines of $15 to $60 were as- sessed. Property damage was esti- mated at several thousand dol- drinking youths rioted. At least 60 of them were arrested. A city ban was placed on the sale of alcoholic beverages through Monday evening. National guard units ready to move in case of re- newed outbreaks. YELL FOR BEER It broke out as a mob gath- ered Saturday night when ta- verns began to close and shouted "We want beer... we want booze.' Until they lars, was ordered into Geneva-on-the- ROME (AP) -- Storm « bat- tered northern Italy slowly emerged today from the wreck- age of a day of tornado and hail storms that left at least 15 dead and hundreds injured. But freak weather continued) to plague Italy. A hot Sirocco wind from Africa gave Sicily a second day of 104-degree Fah- renheit temperatures. An aged woman died of heat exhaustion. SAIGON (AP)--U.S. officials said that "about 25" B-52 jet bombers from the Strategic Air Command took part-in a raid today on Viet Cong positions in South Viet Nam. They came from Guam, 2,200 miles away. The raid was staggered, with three planes in each flight and each flight moving over the tar- get at intervals of 10 minutes, a spokesman said. The attack on a big tract of jungle, 35 miles The 15 deaths during the last two days brought to 34 the total) northeast of Saigon, began about 1 a.m. and continued in- number of Italians who died|termittently until 5 a.m. during the last 10 days in a The planes dropped 500 tons back and:a fouith was unable to drop its bombs because of a malfunction. It was the first time. the giant bombers had been used in war. In that raid, they dropped |750 - pound and 1,000 - pound bombs. The U.S. defence de- partment later announced few Viet Cong casualties resulted, but it said the raid broke up a troop concentration and de- stroyed an important communi- cation centre. Last week, a task force of Inearly 3,000 American, South |Vietnamese and Australian sol- combination of heat wave andiof bombs into the jungle, the|diers swept, the D-zone in the summer previous' deaths were due heat. exhaustion. Dozens more} were believed to have drowned! trying to cool off. been good. He said it would be several days before authorities could storms. Most of the/spokesman said, and the pilots/piggest joint operation of the to|felt their bombing patterns had|war, But no contact was made with any large Viet Cong force. | While bombs fell on D-zone today, Viet Cong guerrillas The toll in Sunday's northlassess the effect of the latest|swiftly overran Ba Gia, a key \Italian tornado and hail storms|raid. No ground operation went rose as police worked through|into the jungle after the raid, the night and all day today, sift-/and he did not know if any such ing through the rubble of wrecked homes and farms in a operation was planned. The spokesman said the area |government outpost 330 miles Inorth of Saigon. They inflicted heavy casualties before with- drawing in the face of a gov- ernment counter - attack. One storm belt that stretched across|hit by B-52s today was not the|American was reported killed, In Ohio, the national guardjnorthern Italy just south of Mi-|same one hit by B-52s June 18.\raising the number of U.S, com- lan. Damage was estimated in However, both the June 18 bat deaths to 460 since Decem- |Lake to prevent a recurrence|the billions of lire (millions of/raid and today's raid were in alber, 1961. early Sunday, in which 29 per- stood|of rioting Saturday night andjdollars). Heavy rains continued in Ven- large jungle area northeast of Saigon known as D-zone. The jsons were arrested duringjice today. Police boats were|zone is controlled by the Viet jthree hours of battling at the/forced to rescue dozens of peo-\Cong, and has been designated resort on Lake Erie. ple marooned along its canals. |for years as a "free bomb| Four hundred national guards-| The hot wind in Sicily|zone," meaning combat planes! | Tananese Party 'Loses Ground jmen sealed off Russells Point|caused numerous fires and waSjare free to dump bombs and) TOKYO (Reuters) -- Japan's jall day Sunday, and there was/strong enough to knock cornices|rockets into the area whenever|ruling Liberal Democratic ino further outbreak. Early Sunday, more than 100 from buildings. Sunday's tornado lasted were dispersedjyoungsters, mostly college stu-|scarcely 20 minutes, But it was they lack another specific tar- get. The official announcement of party today lost ground to the loppositions Socialists in returns following Sunday's partial elec- with tear gas and fire hoses,\dents, were seized and 72 jailed/enough to cause widespread'the B-52 said it had been re-|tion for the upper house of par- Baker said, the youths '"'acted|as the result Of rioting that in- death and destruction. like a bunch of wild men," At last 60 rioters were ar- rested. Ozark Mountain resort, thou- lvolved some 1,500 persons. Sixty - four persons were treated at hospitals, at and bottles. Some were cut by Hail stones. weighing a quar- ter of a pound 'hit the Po River ing and leaving 60 quested by the South Vietna- mese government. The first B-52 raid on D-zone least|village of Torricella, splinteringj|was conducted June 18, Of the At Rockaway Beach, Mo., anjhalf being cut by flying glass'the roofs of almost every build-/30 bombers sands of beer-drinking youths/firecrackers exploded insidejhomeless. One woman wasjcollision over the South China battled officers and smashed windows. The serious ridting Land-Air Drive Is Carried Out beer bottles. | killed. ' | : LIMA (Reuters) -- Peruvian| authorities today pressed a ma-| jor land-air offensive to crush Communist-led terrorists in the Andes mountains. A government minister said the operation is designed to "eliminate subversive extrei- ism, once and for all." Infantrymen and police units worked their way towards ter-| rorist jungle strongholds, while air force planes droned ovyer- head. Interior Minister Muguel Ro- talde Romana has accused the Soviet Union, China and Cuba of stirring up the peasants in the mountains. | Roving terrorist bands have} sacked farms, burned buildings, | dynamited bridges, waylaid tra-| yellers and killed members of| police patrols. Their activity | has increased during the last} three weeks, PRINCE Sea, another was forced to turn liament, However, the Liberals were certain to retain their comfortable majority. Prime Minister Eisaku Sato uild-| n that started outjappeared to have suffered ajsheet families|from Guam, two were lost in alpersonal reverse in 'his. first|sheet metal workers, roofers jelectoral test since assuming of- fice eight months ago. HAMILTON OFFERS $1,000 REWARD Arsonist Sought For Nine Fires 4 | HAMILTON (CP) -- Mayorjafternoon and a ninth was|out in less than 90 minutes, all caught early Sunday before | within a few blocks of each jother. All were apartment All except one of the fires) buildings. Chief Swanborough said burn- ing papers in the basement were used in each case to start the fires. q The five fires Saturday went \this way: |. Two cans containing a flam- mable substance started a blaze in the basement of an apart- ment building at 56 Duke Street. The fire caught hold directly junder the apartment of Ada |Pritchard, Hamilton Centre |MLA, who had just returned home from hospital. She was rescued by her husband and firemen who carried her out. Damage was set at $5,000. | An hour later at 2:55 p.m. a ifire was set by oily rags in the |basement of a triplex at 8 For-| 'est Avenue. The occupants fled lunharmed. Damage was esti-| mated at $500. 700 Strike At London LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Some 700 carpenters went on strike in London and five nearby count- ies today, halting work on construction projects worth mil- lions of dollars. Spokesmen for both the build- ers and the union said they an- ticipated a long strike. A union spokesman said he expected 3,- 000 to 5,000 tradesmen will be made idle, The carpenters, about 480 of them in London, are members of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America (CLC). They said they planned to picket about 44 major projects in various stages of construction. The contractors made no at- tempt to continue working. The projects were shut down as picket lines were organized. The strike follows months of negotiations with the London Builders' Exchange, repre- senting about 25 contractors who handle most of the con-| struction jobs in Perth, Huron, Elgin, Middlesex and Oxford counties. |persons died on the highways. _ QUEBEC (CP)--Chief Jus- | tice Frederic Dorion announced today he will correct a state- ment in his report in line with "a modification" made by for- mer justice minister Guy Fav- Teau, The chief justice of Quebec's ' Superior Court said he has re- _ ceived a letter from Prime | Minister Pearson and a tele- The telegram said Mr. Fav- reau wants to clarify his testi- mony before the royal commis- sin investigation led by Mr. Justice Dorion into the Ray- -- Denis-Lucien Rivard af- air. Mr. MR. JUSTICE DORION If the. trend' continues, the council said, this could be the worst Independence Day week- end in history--exceeding the Favreau said he 'wants aes [to State expressly that "I did jnot mention the name of Mr. | |Rouleau to Prime Minister ye 0 ] a |Pearson Sept. 2, 1964." | The telegram added that 'I ' | would like to see this clarifica- De ath Toll |tion of my original testimony | considered as part of the evi- dence as you, Mr. Dorion, al- ready suggested." Piles Up ACCEPTS CHANGE Chief Justice Dorion said in CHICAGO (AP)--Motorists by|@ statement: : the millions streamed home to-| "I have no hesitation about day as what could be the most|accepting this clarification from fatal July 4 holiday weekend in)/Mr. Favreau and I consider it U.S. history drew to a close.as an addition to the answer The holiday ends at midnight|originally given by him, as re- Monday. ported in the evidence on page The Associated Press tabu-|7,308 of the evidence. lated 384 traffic deaths since 6| "With that additional evi- p.m. (local time) Friday. dence I declare that my report The National Safety Counciljpage 123, French version, said the count has _steadily|should be modified by the cut- been running about 10 to 15 per|ting out of the words 'executive cent higher than the Memorialjassistant of' the minister for Day weekend in May, when 490| citizenship and immigration.' "Consequently I give instruc- tion that this modification ap- pear in all copies of the report. He added that he asked An- dre Desjardins, lawyer for the MODIFIES" HIS REPORT Chief Justice Accepts Favreau Clarification commission, to go to Ottawa to see that the modifications are made correctly. "T believe that Mr. Favreau's action, besides clarifying a situ- ation which raised a lot of com- ment, constitutes another proof of the dignity which character. izes Mr. Favreau." Chief Justice Dorion declined to elaborate on his statement. The report said it was on Sept. 2 during a plane trip from Charlottetown to Ottawa that the then justice minister informed Mr. Pearson that "his (Mr. Pearson's) parliamentary secretary was involved in the Rivard case and supposed to have brought pressures on to the counsel for the United States government to incite him to agree to bail being granted {to Lucien Rivard." The modification described today would serve to drop the reference to the parliamentary secretary--then Guy Rouleau-- and replace it with a reference to the immigration minister's then executive assistant, Rays, mond Denis. The point in the development of the case, when Mr. Pearson was informed of the involve- ment of Mr. Rouleau, since re- signed from the parliamentary secretaryship, was the essence of a disagreement between Chief Justice Dorion on the one hand and Mr. Favreau and Mr, Pearson on the other. Mr. Pearson reiterated his statement on Nov. 24, 1964, that it was not until that very day that he knew of Mr. Rouleau's role in the case. Mr. Favreau also contended that he did not tell the prime minister of that role on Sept, 2 and he backed up the prime minister's Novem- ber statement. 556 fatalities in 1963, a four-day holiday observance. The council had predicted be- tween 470 and 570 traffic deaths this weekend. : Last year, 510 persons lost their lives in traffic accidents At American LONDON (Reuters) -- Police today guarded American build- ings here, including the resi- dence of the U.S. ambassador, following a bomb blast Sunday night at the American Express Company offices in the heart of during the July 4 weekend. It was a three-day weekend like this one, The 78-hour holiday weekend period ends at midnight (local time). The council estimates motorists will have driven a total: of 9,000,000,000 miles by then. p London. The current count includes a| There were no injuries in the number of accidents resulting) expiosion, probably touched off in multiple family deaths. by political extremists 'who have a grudge against the United States," a police spokes- man said. The bomb, thought to have been made from a piece of pipe stuffed with explosives, slightly damaged the rear door to the Girls Rescued In French Cave LACAVE, France (Reuters)-- Seven French girls blinked their London Bomb Blast Hits Express Co. |busy Piccadilly Circus, but did not blow it open, Masonry and cars parked nearby were re- ported damaged. Newspapers reported that part of a note left with the bomb. contained the name of a Caribbean country, but police refused to identify it. Police immediately stationed guards at the residence of U.. Ambassador David Bruce and other buildings, including the American Embassy, The explosion occurred shortly before 10 P.m., as crowds of 'movie-goers left thea- tres in and around Piccadilly American i way to the surface today after] en eee ee SEEK WAGE HIKE The carpenters are seeking! an increase of 75 cents an hour} spread over a three year con- 15 days of isolation in a cave} Circus and headed home, 350 feet below ground near here. The girls, wearing dark glasses, were driven to a tract--25 cents an hour plus six|nearby hotel to have a normal per cent vacation pay instead of|lunch and re-acclimatize them- four per cent. The hourly rate under a contract which expired April 30 was $3.17 an hour plus 10 cents welfare benefits. The exchange has offered a 95 cent increase spread over a five year contract. Charles Nolan, chairman of the exchange's negotiating com- mittee, said the offer would pro- vide an increase of $38 on a standard 40 hour week by May 1, 1969. He said the contractors intend to stand firm on the of- fer. Eight construction trades have signed a new five year master agreement with the ex- change still unsigned in addi- |tion to the carpenters are the metal workers, roofers, bricklayers and the tile and ter- 'azzo workers. selves to surface life after their isolation. experiment. Doctors had checked the girls' psychological and physi- ological reactions by remote control during the last two weeks, by telephone from a neighboring cave. The women were told Sunday night the experiment was over, almost a day before it should have been, according to .their reckoning. They spent the extra night in the cave to prepare themselves for the bright lights of the world above. As they walked out of the cave the seven girls, Annie; Irene, Barbara, Janine, Fran- coise, Marie-Madeleine and Ni- cole, whose ages range from 21 to 36, appeared in good phys- ical form. They have been iden- tified only by their first names. the auto in which they were detachment of the OPP is TORONTO (CP) forests reported 17 forest fir in a car accident. Rubirosa, (9 PHILIP Prince Philip On Griddle By RAYMOND E. LONDON (AP) PA LMER- Prince in effect, ment by a motion which would, be a challenge But his to special i Darrieux, died while being t logne. Seven Researchers comments carry a CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) mpact, particularly NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 3 Killed Near Newcastle BOWMANVILLE -- A woman and two children, all from the United States, were killed at about noon today when riding collided with the rear of a transport on Highway 401, west of Newcastle. The driver of the auto was also injured. The Bowmanville still investigating. 17 Forest Fires Burning -- The department of lands and es burning in Ontario today, all under control, They are located by districts as follows: Pembroke, five; Tweed, four; two; Gogama, Sudbury and Parry Sound, one each Porfirio Rubirosa Killed In Paris PARIS (Reuters) -- Porfirio Rubirosa, former Dominican diplomat and international playboy, was killed here today Kemptville, three; Lindsay, former husband of American millionaire Barbara Hutton and French actress Danielle aken to a hospital after the accident, which occurred in the fashionable Bois de Bou- Badly Burned -- Seven young researchers were badly burned early today when a bubble chamber Philip found himself in the mid- die of a hot controversy Sun- day. The prince, often an out- spoken man, stirred up a hor- net's nest Friday night in a speech in Edinburgh in which he urged patience in' settling the future of Rhodesia rather than "risk a blood bath." The Rhodesian question is a ticklish one and Prince Philip's plea for patience ran counter to pleas of African prime minis- ters~ who have been urging Prime Minister Wilson strongly for immediate action. Wilson and Prime Minister Ian Smith of Rhodesia have been negotiat- ing the constitutional future of that British African dependency where 225,000 whites rule 3,500,- 009 Africans Labor Legislator Hugh Jen- kins said Saturday he intends to calse the matter in Parlia- Prince Philip. The motion will state that "this House believes that it is a condition of consti- tutional monarchy that royalty shall not give public expression to contentious political opin- ions." SPEECHES NOT POLICY Although the prince, as the Queen's consogt, is inevitably associated with the Queen in her constitutional role of head of state, his position is, in fact, that of a private citizen--though a very special one. His speeches are not, as are the Queen's, an expression of public policy. A Buckingham Palace spokesman made it clear that Philip was speaking spontaneously when he mentioned the ' Rhodesian issue. The government was not aware of his remarks before- band. abroad. Jenkins said he regards Prince Philip's speech as "par- ticularly ill-advised at the pres- ent time." The Sunday Telegraph com- mented "the Prince's outspok- enness On public affairs does not imperil the delicate Rhode- sian negotiations. Unfortunately it does imperil the dignity of the Crown." Criticism of Prince Philip came from Lord Brockway, the former Fenner Brockway, left- ist Labor member of Parlia- ment who is chairman of the movement.for colonial freedom. He predicted the duke's speech would have "a very unfortunate effect upon Africa and the unity of the Commonwealth" by' en- couraging Rhodesia's white gov- ernment to resist African na- tionalism, co containing liquid hydrogen exploded at a nuclear experi- ments centre run by Harvard University and the Mas- sachusetts Institute of 'Technology. The chamber, part of a $12,000,000 project financed by the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, set off a two-alarm fire in the Cambridge electronics accelerator centre. ...In THE TIMES today... Toronto Man Drowns Off Lakeview Pork ---P 9 Green Gaels Suffer First Defeat -- P 6 Obits -- 17 Sports 6, 7 17 Theater -- 12 Whitby News -- 5 Editorial --- 4 Women's -- 10, 11 Financial -- 17 Weather -- 2 Ann Landers -- 11 City News --9? Classified -- 14, 15, 16, Comics' -- 13 ; . an

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