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Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Aug 1965, p. 2

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a ERAN SE ORE Ce SENT py . hd Meat hi tit inte fics 0. Wi: bie nt na die ie A ee eat gee tae oe eae or ar ieee he < te, te te tne: BLE EM tad Week at ear ties, Ba ea oe De ~ a . 4 Rr &. NEGRO GIVES EYE-WITNESS VERSION IN LOS ANGELES White Pair, 60, Beaten Mob Shouts Kill, Kill Robert Richardson, Negro advertising salesman for the Los Angeles Times, wit- nessed rioting in southeast Los Angeles for eight hours, He wrote the following story for the newspaper, LOS ANGELES (AP)--It was The crowd called the minis- ters hypocrites. They cussed them and spat on them. Some Negro officers tried to disperse the crowd, but they were jeered at, sworn at, called traitors and stoned, : The Negro officers were given a worse time than white offi- SOMEBODY UP THERE MAY BE A BEATLE Teenage girls, part of a 10,000 standing watch outside New York's Warwick Hotel, keep their the Beatles lodged on the top eyes peeled for a glimpse of two floors, The B.itish per- formers arrived from Lon- don today to begin a two- week U.S, and Canadian tour, (AP Wirephoto) U.S. Navy Bolsters Ranks To Meet Viet Nam Needs WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. Navy moved today to bol- ster its ranks to meet the in- creased needs of the war in Viet Nam by ordering an extension for four months in the enlist-| ments of all regular navy and marine crops personnel, The extensions were ordered in a telegram sent Friday night by Navy Secretary Pau! Nitze to all major navy and marine corps commands, The Pentagon confirmed the order early to- day after news of it began to leak out at some of the com- mands which had been notified.| The extension order follows} by less than a month the navy's decision to draft men for the |first time in nearly 10 years. Navy enlistments have been lagging, and an appeal by Nitze for voluntary extension of tours \drew a disappointing response. | The extension order affects neither reservists on active duty nor those who already volunteered to extend their en- listments, It goes into effect Aug. 20 for marine crops en- listed men and Sept, 15 for navy enlistments, The number of men affected was not known immediately. SIGNS ORDER It. was learned that Nitze signed the order shortly after 6 p.m, EDT Friday night, He then dispatched the following telegram: "Effective immediately, all regular navy and marine corps personel will be involuntarily extend or reenlist in accordance with current. directives." The navy still has legal au- thority carried over from the Korean War to order involun- tary extension of active duty, but only after it has received the approval of the defence sec: retary The army and the air force do not have this authority and) would need congressional ap-| proval in order in freeze enlist- ments , | Whitby Girl, 2, Killed In WHITBY (Staff) -- A | year-old Whitby girl-who would) have celebrated her second brithday today, was killed last night when her father's car, Crash Whitby Township, about a mile east of Brooklin. The Zimmer car was east- bound when it missed a bridge construction detour, crashed through a snow fence, flew over plunged into a construction ex cavation. Dead is Rosa Zimmer of Lupan dr, Alfred Zimmer and his wife, Marga, are in Oshawa General Hospital. Their son, Otto, 16, was not hurt. | The accident occurred at 9:30) p.m. on the 6th concession of | the old bridge and slammed into! a 12-foot deep excavation. Mr. Zimmer suffered a lacera- tion aboye his left eye and an injured knee, Hospital officials described his condition this morning as good, Mrs, Zimmer has laccerations to both knees and is in fair condition. | Three Firms Get The Nod | To Export Natural Gas By WILLIAM NEVILLE OTTAWA (CP)--Three West- ern Canadian companies have been given the go-ahead to ex- port another 150 billion cubic feet of natural gas a year to the United States. At the same time, the national energy board, firmly supported by the government, has: flatly rejected suggestions that gas éxport markets in the U.S. be arbitrarily allocated among @estern producers. Trade Minister Sharp, in a » @tatement issued late Friday, nounced that both the board) a the federal cabinet have approved the following applica- tions: Alberta and Southern Gas) Company Limited to export 74.83 billion cubic feet a year through Kingsgate, B.C., markets in northern Califor-| nia. | Trans-Canada Pipe Lines} Limited to move 68 billion) cubic feet a year through} Emerson, Man., for sale in| North Dakota, Minnesota and} Wisconsin. | ---Canadian - Montana Pipe} Line Company to export 7.3) billion a year from Alberta to Montana. INSTALL FACILITIES In addition, Alberta Natural] Gas Company will be author-| ized to install new facilities to) ensure that Alberta and South-| ern receives the needed addi-| tional gas. Trans-Canada's licence will! the other two effective 12 months later. All run'to Oct, 31, 1989. One final step--approval on the importing side by the U.S, Federal Power Commission-- remains before the exports can officials at Falmouth, They be yp and Mrs begin. Hearings on these appli- cations are to begin within a few weeks in Washington. The three successful applica-| tions were heard by the energy) board at public sessions here) last March and April. The board, in assessing the; supply factor, estimated cur-| rent gas reserves at 41.2 trillion cubic feet, It said a surplus of! 44 trillion still should remain after deducting Canadian do- mestic demand through 1985 o| and export commitments either already licensed anf for which the board is ready to grant au-' thorization. Oshawa Players | Score Heavily | In the eighth day of competi- tion in the huge summer na-| tional championships of the) American Contract Bridge, area continued to score heavily. In the Army Leavitt Pairs, a single session championship| with a field of 684 players, T.| L. Peel, of RR 4, Oshawa, and Mrs. E. H. Teipart, of Clarence, | New York, took the top score, | League, players from heavily HERE an Over 300 attended the Warden's Picnic in Darling- ton Provincial park Wed- nesday. Warden Arthur Blanchard of the United Counties of Durham and Northumberland enter- tained county council and Darlington Township council employees and their fami- lies with lunch and_ sports programs d THERE Graduaton exereses were held Wednesday evening for the final course in dog train- ing for the current session. Classes are not scheduled to resume again until the fall. Following are the dogs and handlers who received the qualifying Outhouse, | | nod; Stan abrador re- Copy Editor Lost At Sea? FALMOUTH, England (AP) A fleet of amateur searchers prepared to hunt again today for American newspaper man Robert Manry, the lone sailor) crossing the Atlantic in a 1344-) foot sailboat. Sea and air searchers Friday failed to sight the 48-year-old Cleveland, Ohio, newspaper copy editor, who is aboard the Tinkerbelle. He was last sighted Monday. | Heavy seas hampered the hunt. A Royal Air Force crew} reported 30-foot waves. Manry was believed to be 100; miles or more off the Cornish! resort of Falmouth where his) children, 13-year-old daughter Robin and 11-year-old son Doug- las, were awaiting his arrival. Manry's 46-year-old wife Vir-| ginia took part in the search' jdate from Nov. 1 this year with) Friday, She was taken by an official of her husband's news-| paper, the Cleveland Plain) Dealer, on a trawler which left Falmouth Thursday, Strong headwinds may have blown Manry off course, said lieve he might be as much as} 200 miles out to sea, with his| normal speed of about 40 miles a day halved by southeasterly) winds and rough seas, | Manry set out from Fal-| mouth, Mass., 76 days ago on) his 3,200-mile lonely journey. Six Killed In Blasts HELSINKI (Reuters) -- Fire and explosions raging in an) army ammunition dump 45 miles from Helsinki today! killed at least six persons, two of them children, and then! spread to a building housing! mortar bombs. The exploding mortar shells) jsent shrapnel whistling among} jfiremen and rescue workers at the Uusikyla dump, near Lahti.) Only one of the six dead was a soldier. The casualty list re-| ported by a Finnish news| jagency was expected to grow as} rescuers dug into rubble. So far) they were unable to reach the} lheart of the site where explo-/and some early fairs in the} lsions continued at a one-a-min-/township. Mrs. ule rate. All local inhabitants within a two-mile range were evacuated and the area cordoned off by) soldiers, Windows were shat- tered over the two-mile radius. A thick pall of smoke hung over the area. Trees burned like matchsticks, Roads were) |blocked by rubble, branches,|about six months for the whole jexploded and unexploded am- production of the average six- munition, boulders and other debris The ammunition was stored lin seven underground shelters, '" 1948, Mother, 26, the most terrifying thing I've seen in my life, It's a wonder anyone with white skin got out of there alive. I saw people with guns, The ery went up several times-- "Let's go to Lynwood," an all- white neighborhood, Every time a car with whites in it entered the area the word spread like lightning down the street; "Here comes whitey -- get him!" Tht older people would stand in the background egging on the teen-agers and the people in their 20s. Then the young men and women would rush in and pull white people from their cars and beat them and try to set fire to the cars, One white couple, in their 60s, happened to be driving along Imperial before the blockades were put up. They were beaten up and kicked until their faces, cers, Light-skinned Negroes such as myself were targets of rocks ing riearby would shout, "He's blood, He's a brother--lay off." HUNT WHITES | As some areas were block- aded during the night, the mobs would move outside, looking for more cars with whites. When there were no whites, they started throwing rocks and bot- tles at Negro cars, Then near midnight, they began looting 'stores owned by whites. Everybody got in the looting --children, grownups, old men and going into stores, | Then everybody started drink- ing--even little kids eight and inine years old, That's when the lery started, |whitey lives!" That's when I began to see guns, I believe the mobs would have |moved into white neighbor- "Let's go weer and bottles until someone stand- and women, breaking windows #oe Blood covers cheek of a motorist as he peers through window of his car broken by | object thrown at him while | driving through west side were numerous and arrests were many in neighborhood near a fire station where @ Negro woman was acciden- tally killed by a hook and FOR QUICK ACTION TRY THIS EASY-TO-USE TIMES WANT AD ORDER hands and clothing were bloody.|hoods, but it was getting late Kills Six Then Self KILL! KILL!' and many of them had to go to I thought they were going to) work Friday morning, | SANDUSKY, Ohio (AP) --Aj/be killed, How they survived I} But some said, "wait till to- young mother shot and killedjdon't know. Those not hitting night and Saturday. We'll really her sleeping husband and five|and kicking the couple were/roll over the weekend. We'll jchildren, then shot herself to standing there shouting "Kill!|/really get whitey then!" |death Friday at their home) Kill!" CAN'T STOP THEM jhere, the coroner said. Finally, they bin them) They knew they had the upper | Cor Jos » gaid}loose and an am ulance was|hand, They seemed to sense ie of ae wager artim | called and they were taken that neither the police nor any- 26, was on the floor of a bed-|@Way. os Jone else could stop them, room in which her five children| Two white men driving down| I heard one say, "just wait | Avalon Boulevard ducked when till one of the blood gets shot-- lay deac, each with bullet ; ; peter Prog 1 of the head, | rocks bombarded their car.) then heads will really roll. Then | they hit a) whitey will get his!" |Buden said a five-shot, .32-|When they ducked, t : Did you ever watch pig lcalibre pistol, which Mrs. Sar-|car with Negroes. Pr sa They were beaten so badly/ and see one or two peel o' | : ios ice re Mra day ban body on 8 man's eye was hanging out| another direction, and then the four unfired rounds. of the socket. Some Negro min-| wholte flock zooms off? That's) The husband and father, Har- isters made their way through) how it was with the mob. One old Edward Sartin 37. was| te crowd and carried both men | or two would take off and--!/ found dead in a double bed in/into an apartment building and|zoom--the whole street would the garage behind the house,|°2lled an ambulance, jump on somebody Sartin, an employee of the U.S.| gypsum plant here, was in night) clothes. rie had been shot three] times in the head, | The shootings took place be-| eons ff in Photograph Far Side tween Zand Sam rey ae' Of The Moon Russia | were not found until nearly 12) | hours later. The slayings were : | discovered by Mrs. Mary Tay: MOSCOW (Reuters)--The So-; The picture-taking lasted one lor, a sister of Sartin. 'viet space station Zond 3 has/hour and eight minutes, and A neighbor, Mrs. Charles|photographed the far side of theltransmission of the pictures Moore, called police when she|moon, the official Soviet news|back to earth began July 29, heard Mrs. Taylor's, scream: |agency Tass s@id today. when the space station was "They're dead, they're dead." The agency said the automa-|about 1,375,000 Coroner Buder said no note), space station photographed |{fom the earth. was found and there was no evi-/ ' | The pictures were 'good dence of a struggle. Sheriff's|® portion of the moon's hidden! enough to show numerous de- deputies were checking reports|side that was not covered in &'tails of the lunar relief of great the Sartins had been quarrel-similar Soviet picture - takingjinterest to science," Tass said, ling. shot in 1959. adding that they will be pub- The children shot to death} Zond 3 was launched _last/lished. | were Rita, 6, Harold Edward,|July 18. Tass said it began tak-| It said a special commission miles away | area where Negroes demon- ladder truck last night, strated last night, Injuries (AP Wirephoto) ' | Ww : "WEATHER FORECAST to' wand sor 'Very Warm On Sunday | '°*'S -: $432 | 3 DAYS .. $2. Thundershowers Seen T TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts|Kitchener ........ 68 } DAY See $1.08 issued at 5:30 a.m, EDT today:|/yoy - Synopsis: Cooler and ct . } air will be coming into the) "| * northern Ontario late today but|St. Catharines..... 70 seeeeeee not before warm air from the|TOronto .++.++¥+es Dakotas, where recorded tem-|Peterborough «+++» perature maximums Friday|Kingston were from 90 to over 110 de-/Trenton coevecencs grees, makes its way into On-|Killaloe tario, The heat wave will end| Muskoka Sunday for the northern sec-| North Bay tions but Monday will be an-Sudbury .. other very warm day for south-|Earlton ,..+++++0. orn Ontario. J Sault Ste. Marie., Toronto, Hamilton, Lake St.|Kapuskasing ..... Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron,|White River....+. Niagara, Lake Ontario, Wind-|Moosonee sor, London: Sunny with a tow) imine eeeeeee beeeeenee cloudy periods today and Sun- day; chance of a thundershower Sunday, very warm. Winds southwest 10 to 15, increasing to 20 to 25 Sunday, Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Killaloe, Algoma, North Bay, Sault Ste. Marie, Sudbury: Var- iable cloudiness Sunday; show- ers and thunderstorms tonight and Sunday, Winds southwest 15 to 25. A little cooler Sunday. White River, Timagami, Cochrane; Variable cloudiness and very warm with chance of a shower or thunderstorm to- |Bryan, seven months. jarea, | Leonard Roberts and Gordon added: Jr., 5, Kenneth, 3, David, 2, andjing the pictures July 20 at ajwas set up to analyze the pho- \distance of 7,500 miles from the|tos and 'name lunar craters day. Mainly sunny and not so }moon, jand ranges." jwarm Sunday. Winds southwest --------" 195 to 35 today and west 20 Sun- day Anniversary | Police Brutalit ae Is Observed olice Brutality Charged w acksrock crc) -. con AS Demonstrators Parade gratulation sare being extended to Mr, and Mrs, Charles Fuller.) SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP)jseven officers with brutality who celebrated their 50th wed-| Fourteen demonstrators staged|and took the case to the police ding anniversary July 31. a pre-dawn march in front of|commission. The commission Residents of the area have/nolice headquarters today,|agreed to hear the misconduct been enjoying their. vacations.| promising rene wed protests| allegations, but after the court John Coates and) over simmering charges of po-|cases against those arrested family have returned ey lice brutality. = | were concluded, | Or ahaha ie ao Two fires in a Negro neigh-| Civil-rights "leaders demand Don Gibson and family were Pe beh dpeton page yada that the city re-assign the seven xscanor tid north of Que ring ety 18 0 pulmo, accu oicer,,hey ave Robert Miller 'Carol and David,|_ Henry Twigrs, leader of the) );, - oT enjoyed a motor trip to the wy repay gpa one Bruce Peninsula, Mr. and Mrs. Mi Pha las Aupeioe," urn In| demonstrators were to arrive . = |teday from Boston and New Don Beer, and Mr. and Mrs sii Cliff Wennop have returned from| Twiggs, a member of the/Haven, Conn, a motor trip to the Port Arthur| Springfield chapter of the Con-| Twiggs also said an economic, g ress of Racial Equality,'poycott against Springfield Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Sunday: Windsor 70 St. Thomas | London DRUG STORES OPEN THIS SUNDAY 12:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. KARN DRUGS LIMITED 28 KING ST. EAST PHONE 723-4621 RITSON DRUGS 264 KING ST. EAST PHONE 725-5370 JURY & LOVELL LIMITED 530 SIMCOE ST, SOUTH PHONE 725-3546 Spokesman Twiggs said more |merchants is planned. | | Goop FooD BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12 Noon to 2 P.M. DINNER $:30 to 8 P.M. | are patients in a Sudbury hos-| 'We are sure those who set pital. They were injured in ajthe stores on fire were not Ne- motor accident south of Sud-|groes. We are strictly non-vio- bury. lent," Miss Laurel honored by about Macki 'W of ber/CUARGE BRUTALITY friends at. a miscellaneous) on oe bi in i shower at the home of Miss/@fler police dispersed ® Crowe FULLY LI Sylvia Lawrence. Miss Law-|that had gathered before a} oe ROOM | CASH REQUIRED WITH QRDER rence and her mother, Mrs,| 5Pringfield night spot and ar-| | ' ac f HOTEL LANCASTER | Walter Lawrence were the host.|Tested 18 persons, 17 of them) ™ | Negroes. } cana: SERVICE STATION S rire Civil rights leaders charged 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Members of the Women's In-| stitute, at their August meeting, | _ CITY OF OSHAWA OSHAWA ESSO SERVICE KING ST. W., AT PARK RD, -- 728.1601 were told a committee is com-| PLANNING DEPARTMENT CLERK PRESTON'S SUNOCO STATION piling an historical book about) SALARY RANGE--$4,373.00 - $5,067.00 - 3614 hour week, 925 SIMCOE ST. NORTH Cartwright Township for display Aug. 28 at the Cartwright Cen-| Effective Nov, 1, 1965---$4,635.00 ~ $5,371.00 - 3614 hour week, EDUCATION: Full High School. CRANFIELD'S B-A STATION 331 PARK RD. SOUTH tennial Fair. During the meet- EXPERIENCE: Applicant must heve @ of 1 ye FLOYD PRICE SUNOCO STATION ing Mr, K, Samells gave some) with Plenain: ard, Knowledge of Zening By-lews. $31 RITSON RD, SOUTH Ralph Larmer| and Mrs, Richard Van Camp were named delegates to the Leadership Training Class at Orono Aug. 31 and Sept. .1. interesting facts about the first] DUTIES: Clerieet, h dete, ¢ Committee of Adjustment. Repidly Std Say --~ 75,000 populetion, Pension Plen -- Full Employee Benefits, Applications close August 31, 1965. os Fed writing giving experience, quelificetions and other pertinent je : Personnel Officer, City Holl, Oshewe, Onterie, 16: duties for WORK. GOES SLOWLY It takes the Walt Disney studios an hour to produce 15) feet of.color cartoon film and| Now Is The Time To Order. Saisite catinge: Your Winter Fuel .....s.0 won the "triple crown" of U.S. racing, the last being Citation On Premium Quality @ Ruh.....2.. Days.... Starting see ee eeeeenes Enclosed is $......0000 NOTE: Prices shown are with erder. Bax Number Ste extra. All ads myst be run on consecutive days. NAME; CITY OR TOWN: ® MAIL TQ: lonly one of which was known lto be affected so far. The mor- jtar building was on the surface. SAVE FUEL OIL triever, Chief Mrs. American Liz cocker PO1l Marion Panyle of Oshawa is on a seven-week "OSHAWA Casidy, DON DOWN SHELL STATION training scheme at HMCS Cornwallis, Cornwallis, Nova Scotia. The sea cadets were especially chosen for this training which includes sailing, marching and small arms handling. Spaniel Jakobs Kima man Fancy John German shepherd, Tony Neordman, Ger Little John and Gwyn Roberts, minia ture poodle, Charlie. shepherd Nearly 1,000 men from the nearby garrison of Hennala and all fire departments in the area converged on the scene, -Bul they were reported to be ham pered by the rubble strewn over, the roads by the blast. \ PHONE 668-3341 DX FUEL OIL Serving Oshewe - Whitby - Ajex and District FAIR" Aug. 19, 20 21 Alexoandra Park OSHAWA TIMES CLASS. DEPT. OSHAWA ALLS DRIED! 97 KING ST. EAST GANGEMI SERVICE STATION 809 SIMCOE ST. S. '4

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