Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow. manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, } VOL, 94 -- NO. 190 ye per Weak Heme Gelvered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, AUGUST 16,th 1965 Authorized os Ottewa end for pavment Second Closes Mall Post Office Weather Renort Sunny, some clouds -- a-little- warmer weather due on Tues- day. Low tonight 62, high to- morrow 85..- rtment of "postage In Cash EIGHTEEN PAGES 31 KIL Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown of California is be- sie; by Negro children to shake his hand as he inspects the southeast Los Angeles area ravaged by riots for the past five days yesterday. Brown \ l : broke off a European vaca- tion trip to return to Cali- fornia to take charge of efforts to end the disorders. National Guard troops man a barricade yesterday near a. church in Los Angeles' riot-scarred Watts district. Only a few wor- shippers tried to attend services as military and police officers occupied the area and kept movement of Negroes to a minimum. (AP Wirephoto) SEVERAL BUILDINGS BLOWN UP | Four Police Die In Saigon Blast SAIGON (AP). -While "two the headquarters, Then a green girl accomplices engaged a, and White sedan drove up and ayd.-in. conversation, Viet) he challenged it. ong. terrorists drove a jeep) WORK M CARS | and ® cay, loaded. with explo-| He was.killed' tv a burst of sises into South, Wet Nam's na') machine-gun fire, The girls fled iénal police dreadquarters 'to-|to 'a European cag down the day and blew up several build-'street. The drivers of the jeep) ings. and the sedan ran from the! Four policemen were killed headquarters building, their by tle blast and terrorist gun-| movements covered by fire, fire, reliable sources said.}from another European car About 20 persons were wounded,| parked just across the street| including possibly six American! frony the entrance, | cans, the sources said They entered the car across The terrorists escaped under) the street and drove off as both cover of machine-gun fire from | vehicles inside the compound two other cars outside the po- exploded lice compound, A -- guard; One getaway car made a pass claimed he hit one of the es- near a small police substation caping men. j several blocks away and opened The explosion severely dam- up on a guard, severely wound- aged the home of the director! ing hith. of the national police, Col Police later found the other Pham Van Lieu. The headquar-) getaway car, abandoned and ters cénsists of 'three buildings| booby trapped. After defusing in a block-long complex of po-|the bomb, the police found sev-| eral sub-machine-guns 'inside. this). The attack was the first seri ous terrorist incident in Saigon More than 40 lice buildings Informed sources gave account of the daring raid: At 9 a.m. two Vietnamese|in seven weeks girls walked up to the guard at!persons were killed June 25 - the headquarters entrance and| when terrorists set off explo- engaged him in conversation. (sives at the My Canh restau His attention diverted, he| rant on the Saigon riverfront. hardly noticed a jeep driven by; MARINES LAND a@ man in uniform move past; Twelve hundred more ma him and into the front yard ofirines landed at Da Nang Sun- day, -following up. 2,890 who landed at Chu Lai Saturday, In all, 6,400 are to come ashore in the next few. days. Premier N gu yoeretiao. Ky: called for an~altianee of anti- Communist mations in Asia to} fight North Viet Nam and Red China. Ky arrived Sunday in Taipei, Formosa, to talk with President Chiang Kai-shek dur- ing a four-day visit. He is scheduled to visit Thailand later, Asked whether he would ask the Chinese nationalists to send troops to Viet Nam, Ky replied only that he had come to For- mosa to discuss matters of mu- tual concern 'and, if necessary, military matters." Communist China called South Korea's decision to send a_15,000-man combat division to South Viet Nam a 'new and serious. step" in the war. The decision fo send troops "will only rouse the South Vietna- mese people to stronger oppo- sition," said the New China jnews agency. 'Ill-Treatment Count Denied JOHANNESBURG (Reuters)-- Pravda Sees Race Riots Blow To U.S. By REUTERS Negro riots in Los Angeles dominated newspaper headlines jaround the world again today with several editorials notin that the race clashes exploded, ironically, when things seemed {ode getting better for U.S. Negroes, South African newspapers suggested the sudden uprisings might make American leaders more tolerant of South Africa's apartheid, or race separation. In Moscow, Pravda said the riots were a new blow to the prestige of the United States and to "the myth of the Great Society" proclaimed by Presi- dent Johnson | In a report from its New |York correspondent the Soviet ;Communist party newspaper said the riots had seriously frightened the American au thorities. A commentator in the Chi- jnese Communist party newspa- per People's Daily said the Ne- igro rights were linked with pro- ltests against the Johnson ad- ministration's foreign policies abroad. |EQUALITY 'MOCKERY' | In London, in an_ editorial headlined "The American iTragedy," the Conservative Daily .Telegraph recalled Pres- ident Johnson's recent "'bigger catalogue"' of the American Ne- gro's ppsition. t ED IN L.A. - RIOTS SPREAD \ Negroes Carry Attacks To All-White Sectors By JAMES BACON LOS ANGELES (AP)--Vio- lence spilled over from the Ne- gro area of Los Angeles en- circled by massed troops and spread today to other southern California cities. For the first time in six days of bloody violence, lawless Ne- gro bands carried the attack to all-white sections with sniping, fire-bombing and rioting. The sudden spread of terror- ist attacks came as authorities declared the main riot area-- the 42-square-mile Negro area in south Los Angeles--virtually under control. A high-ranking police officer said the attacks Sunday night and early today seemed! "pl and organized." He didn't say by whom. The death toll stood at 31. RIOTS IN L.A. AT-A-GLANCE LOS ANGELES (AP)--The | toll of Negro riot strife in its | sixth day in Los Angeles Dead: 31, including. two white peace officers, one white fireman, and 28 civil- jans--one Japanese - Ameri- can, one Mexican-American and 26 Negro-Americans, Injured: 809, including 692 civilians, 77 peace- officers, 36 firemen, and four national guardsmen. Arrested: 2,285 adults niles, Fire damage: Estimated at $175,000,000 with entire blocks burned to the ground. 2,679, including and 422 juve- After five days of I and seemingly spontaneous shooting, burning and pillaging, peace seemed near at dusk Sunday. DARK BRINGS VIOLENCE Then, with the dark, came spreading violence: Negroes rioted in a colored section of Long Beach, 15 miles south of the old riot centre at Watts; Long Beach Officer Richard Lefebre, 23, fell, mortally wounded by a shotgun blast, --Nightriding gunmen, identi- fied by witnesses as Negroes, blasted shots at homes. in all- white Sylmar in the San Fer- nando Valley. ~Firebombs flared on Holly- wood Boulevard in Hollywood and lumberyards were set afire in Wilmington, at the harbor, and near downtown Tas Angeles. 4 In San Diego, 120 miles south, Negroes riote' '* ough, a 30-block " aie tas stabbed. Three ttores In suburban Van Nuys a warehouse burned, police cap- tured nine Negro men and shot and wounded a Negro @uardsmen from the California 40th and 49th National Guard armored divi- sions began to tip the scales Saturday night after Lieuten- ant-Governor Glenn Anderson, acting in the absence of Gov- ernor Edmund G. Brown, de- clared a state of insurrection, Brown cut short his European vacation, returned here, and Sunday toured a Watts area subdued by more than 14,000 guardsmen and 1,000 police-- but still ringing with bursts of sniper fire. | Brown's party turned back! just short of an area where! gunfire blazed. Early today the statistics told results of six days' rioting: Killed -- 31; injured -- 801; ar- rested--2,603. In every southern California community with big Negro pop- ulations tension mounted, crowds gathered, and police! added extra crews. | The terror in the streets) off" Sunday by a burst of 20 rounds from a national guard machine-gun at a Watts road- block. Guardsmen said she refused to halt. Police said her car held a dozen Molotov cocktails. ~-A two - storey apartment building in a white section in the harbor district was set afire Sunday night by a gaso- line bomb, Police and fire- men controlled it, -A. hidden gunman fired at cars on the Golden State Freeway Sunday night in Los Angeles. When police got there he wa sgone. 'We know some of the terror- from Watts with loads of gaso- line bombs."' Inside the military perimeter thrown around the - sec: tion by guardsmen, shortages developed. Whole biocks of businesses were looted and burned by pil- laging mobs -- among them many drug stores and markets, Most of those which remained undamaged were closed. An 8 p.m. - to « dawn curfew kept residents from seeking food and drugs elsewhere. SHORTAGE SERIOUS Governor Brown announced Sunday night: "There is a serious shortage of food in some neighborhoods in the riot areas, It is impor- tant to re-establish normal, busti- ness and public service in south Los Angeles." At Miami, Fla., Dr. Martin Luther King said he planned to travel to Los Angeles "in the next few days' at the request of Negro leaders in the area, He said he would visit Watts, once order was restored, to deal with underlying social "re ng Beach, police, aided Los Angeles officers and ss tional guard units, curbed laws lessness at the city's Negro sec tion and said control was com- plete there, , They said the officer killed by gunfire may have been hit by a discharge fired as another officer struggled with an armed Negro. It wasn't determined im- ists are sneaking out of the Watts area,"' said a police of- ficial, "We stepped cars of men LOS ANGELES (AP)--"They don't even know which shoulder; to put a gun to, but they want a gun to protect themselves." Hundreds of alarmed white residents of this riot-torn city were arming themselves and at least one gunshop owner ex- pressed amazement. "I've never seen anything like this in my life," Roy Weatherby, operator of a gun- manufacturing and retailing firm in suburban South Gate, said Saturday. "We've limited our sales to Caucasians," said gunshop owner Tom Gilbert. 'We don't want to create an incident." But Weatherby was selling to both Negroes and whites, "They're all scared," he said. "One Negro man wanted a gun to protect his home. The place next to his had already been burned."' Gunshops and sporting goods stores reported tremendous in- mediately whose gun killed the policeman, The San Diego riot was alse heading toward white sections|/brought under control, Sales Ot Guns Flourish "To Both Negroes, tes creases in yoo a Be guns. Some gun and pettnualion supplies were exhausted. Others hired extra ey personnel to cope with the rush. SOME WON'T SELL However, some major depart- ment stores withdrew guns, am- munition and hunting knives from their shelves. The gunshops were closed Sunday. Most customers asked for hand-guns. But when told the county requires a waiting period for concealable weapons, many chose a shotgun or rifle instead. "T just want it for protec-. tion," said one. "I don't have a gun... but with all that looting and the racial situa- tion... Another said he lives in a racially - mixed neighborhood and "100 Negroes were milling around my home last night. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS |A guard whose allegations of | ill-treatment helped spark a row jabout South Africa's jails | pleaded guilty in court today to making a false statement under Don Valley Parkway Seen Unnecessarily Dangerous "bse iin Se TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Mortonjover cars travelling at high\was one of two guards whose ; j Shulman, chief coroner of Met-/speeds are found aiong the road-| sworn affidavits were used by bs a Sage in an ropolitan Toronto, says ---- and are unprotected bY) the anti-government Rand Daily|¢ditorial: e message from nl = eae ype il pool we me Mail ina recent: article about lige geet Hige he io ated =when the Don Valley ne Keport says Cars *'treatment of prisoners at the/Ments i : ve Parkway was built four years\been skewered on guard rails) jaj) at taaene, near here. | ment, beac gS essential, are ago, have made the stretch ofjalong the' parkway which are r ' we not enough. It is not sufficient highway unnecessarily danger-|not curved away from the road. _The Rand Daily Mail's prisonlir the Negroes remain in the! aos " 7 ae a age ene allega- poorer quarters of the town! : . _ POINTS TO RECORD tions of electric shock treat- and are given the menial jobs."' ag atic? oe ge jg st Dr. Shulman says there were ment. of prisoners The é; mmunist Daily , safety precautions known four deaths and 86 injuries on South Africa's justice minis-lWorker which published an 4 at least 10 years were ig-/the 7.8-mile long parkway dur-|ter, Balthazar Vorster, has re-jeight-column banner "Califor- nored in construction of the ex-/& the first five months of this|fused the newspaper's demand|nia Battlefield," said the Los pressway se: on eS |tor a judicial inquiry into prison{Angeles riots were the "'fruit of Concrete bridge abutments ut Metro's traffic' commis-| conditions. He has said there is/the vicious treatment of Amer-| and lamp posts, unprotected by,Sioner, Sam Cass, said Sunday|no need for this since the matterlican Negroes by generation|which Partizan won 3-1, ended/half hour. Four taxis in which will be thrashed out in thejafter generation of white ra-jin 10 minutes of fist fighting)/they finally left were stoned. ard rails and placed within anight that changes in the park- w feet of the poser Hetoy are|way to make it safer are un-| courts. cialists."' lon the field between players,|None of the Players was hurt. responsible for many of the/likely. deaths which have' occurred in) Much of Dr. Shulman's criti- the last few years, the reporticism is justified but Don Valley states. |terrain made it impossible to Steep slopes which can flipibuild a perfect road, he added. It said theoretical equality was a mockery when one con- sidered the Negroes' income, unemployment rate and_ social conditions in comparison with caused a rush among white citi- zens to arm themselves. Home- owners with guns watched through the night in countless homes. Among the acts of violence: --A 47-year-old Negro wom- an's legs were "almost cut JFK Wanted LB] "Bobby" Assures MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -- John F. Kennedy chose Lyndon B, Johnson as his running mate in 1960 because he considered him "the best man to carry on,' Senator Robert F. Ken- nedy (Dem, N.Y.), said Sunday night. "He's fulfilled all of our hopes since then,"' said the younger brother of the late president. Firemen were favorite tar- gets of sniper fire in the riot-torn section of Los Angeles. (AP Wirephoto) A National Guardsman wards off snipers as fire- men battle a furniture store blaze in Watts yesterday. Police Shots Conclude Game . After Soccer Riots in Belgrade BELGRADE (AP) -- Police}officials and spectators. The fired warning shots into the airjreferee expelled one player Sunday to break up a soccer/from each team and managed riot at Sarajevo after fans/to end the game. stoned Pde wena Foor sad The rioting outside the sta- team Partizan, wrecked twoidium started as fans kept the taxis and shattered windows of Pertinad Migs baal © other cars. The season opening match,|their dressing rooms for one- Four Face Non-Capital Murder BROCKVILLE CP) -- Four men were charged with non- capital murder here today in the death of a Glenburnie, Ont, man, who died Sunday, eight days after he was beaten. Charged are Joseph Michael White, 33, of Brockville, John Mark Cawley, 23, of Ottawa, Harold George Renaud, 27, of Westport and Edward Speagle, 23, of Montreal. Quint "Survivor" On Mend FALUN, Sweden (Reuters) --:The only survivor of the Olsen quintuplets, born to a Swedish schoolteacher's wife 16 days ago, today was pronounced over the critical stage. The quints were born after their mother underwent hormone treatment to make her fertile, Four of the children died within hours. 33 Forest Fires In Ontario TORONTO (CP) -- The department of lands and forests reported 33 fires burning in Ontario today. Located by dis- tricts they are: Sioux Lookout 12, Kenora seven, Port Arthur six, Fort Frances and Geraldton two each, and Kapuskas- ing, Cochrane, North Bay and Pembroke one each. Six fires are not yet under control, the largest a 1,700-acre fire in Port Arthur. ' Test German Tanks In Canada BONN (Reuters) -- West.Germany's new Leopard class Beatles "On Qnd." - 55000 Cheer Petrolia Aged Home Workers Respect Ultimatum, Return SARNIA (CP)--Striking em-) Fred Joyce, area representa ployees at the Twilight Haven' tive of the union, said 33 strik home for the aged in nearby|ing roadworkers off the job for Petrolia returned to work today|42 days, would also return to after: they received registered work as a'result of the county's letters from Lambton county, ultimatum. He said the road council instructing them to re-| workers would report back turn to the job or face dismis-|Tuesday and return to a full . os work schedule Wednesday. ie. emale employees.) members of district 50, United wpiight Hay perth yl Mine Workers Independent Un-| ig aven, about 100 of the ion, were issued work-schedules/159 residents were sent home and paid wages up to Aug. 5, with relatives or moved to By MARY CAMPBELL NEW YORK (AP) The Beatles stood on second base, and for some 55,000 excited fans in Shea Stadium Sunday night it was better than the World Series, the All-Star game and 50 grand - slam homers rolled into one The crowd--mostly teen-age girls, with a sprinkling. of boys and parents --. couldn't hear much, despite 29 loudspeakers facing the horseshoe - shaped stands. Most people way up in the three balconies, couldn't see much either But many had a good raving cry~individual outbursts rang screaming to howling and hys- teria. with jumping up = and down. The nearly wniversal, sus tained screaming prevented anybody hearing the Beatles' famous vocalizing and guitar and drum playing. The Beatles rode in a red Wells Fargo armored truck, during which they were pinned with badges designating them honorary Wells Fargo agents. "It was fun--we felt like cow- boys," Paul McCartney said just before going on stage. EASY ON BUMPS The Beatles rode in the back of the armored truck. Driver Starr told him, "take it easy ow the bumps." All four gave Lee autographs for his eight-year-old daughter, Joann, After their 35-minute, 12-song performance, the Beatles step- ped from their stage atop' sec- ond base into a waiting white ambulance, They transferred from the ambulance to the Wells Fargo truck and were driven through streets lined with po- licemen to the heliport at the nearby world's fair. They flew to the Wall Street heliport in Manhattan in a chartered heli- copter and returned by limous- ine to the Warwick Hotel. Some 25 girls jumped from their seats and attempted to run onto the field during the performance but were grabbed by guards. After the last song, approxi- mately 25 more teen-agers at- tempted to rush onto the field. All were caught and removed. Officials in the main first aid station reported 60 young girls were treated for "cuts, bruises, scrapes, bloody noses, exhaus- tion and hysteria," The Beatles, who arrived in New York Friday,: will fly by charter plane late Tuesday morning to Toronto for a con- . tank and three other types of tank will be tested under winter conditions in Canada from next December to Febru- ary, 1966, the defence ministry' announced here today. Ann Landers--11 City News--9 Classified 12, 13, 14 Comies--16 Editorial--4 Financiel--15 ., In THE TIMES today... No Highwey 7 Hook-up Seen -- P. 9 : Brooklin Seniors Win. Third Straight -- P. 6 Obits--14 Sports--6, 7 Th Whitby News--5 Women's--10 Weather--2 Join Lee of Brooklyn said Ringo cert Tuesday night. the day they went on strike. (nearby sursing hemes. | ing from ordinary weeping and em = er;