Weather Report Rain and thundershowers this afternoon and tonight. Con- tinuing very warm. Low to- night, 68, High Wednesday, Home Newspaper : Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- at a -- Hhe Oshawa OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1965 Authorized Clase: Oftice Department pinay iy gag ag tn Cath, Postage TWENTY-TWO PAGES EVEN AUTOS TURN OUT TO WE With Beatle hat set at-a takish angle and a fringe dangling over his "eyes," this character seems-ali set to welcome the Beatles to Toronto today. The face is Se a eee oe LCOME BEATLES the tail lights of a car and the fringe is, of course, a mop. (CP) Jet Plunges Into Lake il] 30 Aboard Perish CHICAGO (AP) -- A United Air Lines jet airliner with 30 --* aboard plunged into) ke Michigan Monday night 'h and five bodies were recovered today. ad been recovered. Earlier the cutter reported ported intercepting a message; Waukegan, Ill., about 45 miles from the U.S, Coast Guard cut-)north of Chicago. ter Woodbine that. four bodies) Thunderstorms broke out dur- ing the early morning along the jnorth shore of Lake Michigan, jsighting debris and some lug-|/hampering the search. There The victims were not identi-/gage. The Woodbine is one of|were earlier reports of debris fied immediately. |S everal York to Chicago, disappeared) passengers and crew of six. in a blinding flash and a roar @f explosion northeast of Chi-|jet presumably crashed into the depth lake, killing the 30 aboard. lake water eago. The 150 to 200 there ranges from et | guard reported James Seymour, a radio op-|spotted the debris and luggage erator at Crystal Lake, Ill), re-iabout 15 miles in the lake off| The Boeing 727 three-engine The spokesman said the coast that US. Backs Down In Battle With Russia On UN Bills By MAX HARRELSON UNITED NATIONS (AP) --| day over the new U.S. policy ending the threat of a U.S Soviet showdown over unpaid ity was not prepared to enforc the charter provision. peacekeeping assessments The diplomats agreed that the U.S. retreat, announced by) Ambassador Arthur J, Gold- berg, opens the way for re-|terest to hav sumption of normal operations| General of the General Assembly after bilized in these troubled days. FEELS SHOULD PAY a@ year of paralysis. The American abandonment of the fight to force the Rus- sians to pay up drew approval and condemnation from mem- bers of the U.S, Congress. Offi- cials of the Johnson adminis- tration anticipated a new cam- paign for a close look at fu ture requests for U.S. money for the UN, Reaction from Soviet tes to the UN was cautious,|s t Chief Delegate Platon D majority had abandoned its attempts to! : : enforce the voting penalty in|the United Air Lines jet--Flight UN diplomats were elated to-| Article 19. He said private polls 389 which left La Guardia Air- jamong diplomats and UN offi-|port on Long Island at 8:52 p.m. lcials had shown that a major-/EDT -- called for landing in- e "We will not seek to frus trate that consensus," he said,/of Wyckoff, N.J., "since it is not in the world in.|tadio instructions to enter an e the work of the ithmo- Assembly He said the United States to support He also said that the United States reserved the right to re- fuse to pay assessments if it guard at Chicago's North dele- felt "'strong and compelling rea-nue Beach, said ons exist for doing so.' "There can be no double vessels searching for The plane, bound from New) possible survivors among the 24) UAL engineers sai they | the lake but d that the materials found were not from |the jet. The crash was the first of a 727 plane, a craft with a pas- senger capacity of 92., Boeing officials in Seattle said that 160 of the 727 model] have gone into service since December, 1963. It was the second airliner claimed by Lake Michigan Fifty-eight persons died when ja New York-Minneapolis DC-4 lof Northwest. Airlines crashed lduring a storm June 24, 1950, | | |ASKS TO LAND O'Hare airport officials said | being found in structions on schedule. The plane was due at 10:27 EDT Capt. Melville W= Towle, 42, acknowledged approach pattern with a crisp, "Roger," after the plane had jbeen located by radar about 15 Brown Says ° Bui The Rioters Disagree It's Finished' Riot over? Yes, says Gov- ernor Edmund G. Brown, the Los Angeles police de- partment and the California national guard, | No, emphatically no, says a cross - section of Watts' Negroes surveyed by two Associated Press reporters, By JAMES BACON and BILL BOYARSKY LOS ANGELES (AP)--"The! riots will continue because I, as a Neery_an immediately con- sidered a criminal by the po- lice and if I have a pretty woman with me, she's a tramp --even if she's my wife or mother. That's the Watts' Ne gro status with the Los Angeles police department." Thus spoke a young man who admitted he helped fire the market he was standing in front of. He was answering the ques- tion: Did he agree with Gover- nor Edmund G. Brown's state- ment the riots were over? He was one of 50 people ques- tioned on the status and cause of the riots. All agreed that it's not over. Rey, E. L. Hicks, a Baptist minister who didn't participate in the riots, predicted: 'There will be rioting here until police brutality stops. The governor may say it's over but 'we work among the people an we know what is going on. The riot is not over, it's just a qui- etness."' CAUSES REMAIN James Robertson, 37, and un- employed, said the causes have not been removed--poverty and | hopelessness. | "It may not happen for 20 |years but that is not to say it |won't happen, if 'things don't change." Police Chief William H. Par- |ker and absentee landlords and) merchants, mostly Jewish,| seemed to be the favorite) | scapegoats | | Mrs, Rosa | mented: H "Tf Tacker is removed, the} rioting will stop but I'm afraid| lit won't until he is." Another woman chorused: "Or if Parker would just keep! } | lie Richardson com- ' Pravda Blames ThelCapitalist MOSCOW (Reutersy -- The Communist Party newspaper Pravda says the Los Angeles riots show clearly that capital- ist America is unable to solve the Negro problem. "The oppression of capital, racial discrimination , . . in- | jmiles from the lake shore off Fort Sheridan. A moment later, at 10:20, the/ still felt the debtor nations were plane disappeared from the ra-jsays in a story from its New obligated to pay back assess-\dar scope and efforts to reach| York correspondent. ments and that failure of the/it by radio met with silence. At} penalties'the same time, dozens of per-|leading position on its foreign had impaired the UN's effici-|sons reported they saw a blind-|news page, under the heading, ency. ing flash and heard the roar of} an explosion over the lake. | Wallace Whigam, 27, a life| Ave-| "There was al sudden ora ge flash on the} northeastern horizon like break Morozov commented that "'un-\standard among the members|of day, and then a deep rumbl- less we are mistaken and de-|of the organization," he said ing sound," evitably give rise to, and will continue to give rise to, bursts of indignation," the newspaper Pravda gave the report the Street Fighting in Los Angeles. The newspaper says despite its concessions to the Negroes --voling rights laws, the ban- ning of discrimination in public places -- the 'bourgeois state" could not give Negroes the most important thing, "work and hu- man living conditions." Hills id riot too if ba aon @ thet life NEGRO RIOTS AT-A-GLANCE LOS ANGELES (AP)--The toll of Negro riot strife in its seventh day in Los Angeles; Dead: 33, including. two white peace officers, one whte fireman, 27 Negro ci- vilians, and three other civil- jans. Injured; 862, including 733 civilians, 85 peace officers, 37 firemen, and seven national guardsmen. Arrested: 3,124, including 2,676 adults and 448 juve- niles. Fire damage: Estimated at $175,000,000, Police cost: per day, $250,- 000 National guard cost: day, $250,000. Per his big mouth shut. Every time he talks about Negroes, he in- sults us." Parker responded to demands he be fired: "It's the first time in history that it took the sack- ing of a city to insist the police chief be fired." An unemployed man who said he spent most of Friday and Saturday nights throwing rocks at policemen said: "Maybe the people of Beverly y spent a cop's club in their face. Or # they had to get out of an automo- bile with their hands over their head to be questioned for doing nothing at all." An anti-Semitic note was in- jected in some answers. "All those stores that were burned are owned by Jews who live in Brentwood and Beverly Hills,' said one Negro. "They have been bleeding us for years. Even our baked goods are a day old when they get! here--the leftovers from Bev-; erly Hills. "None of these merchants! ever has put a cent of profits back into bettering the Watts business district," he said. A Dupuis ST. JOHNS, Que. (CP)--Rev- enue Minister Eric Kierans of Quebec testified Monday he for- warded a confidential report on the Yvon Dupuis affair to Guy Favreau despite rumors thet "the investigation should cease or too much damage will be done." Mr, Kierans said he wen ahead with an investigation of the Dupuis affair despite what he called evidence of "'interven- tion by backroom men in poli- tics." Mr. Favreau was then federal justice minister. Mr. Dupuis is a former federal minister with- out portfolio who faces trial in the fall on influence-peddling charges. Mr, Kierans was testifying at the preliminary hearing of Roch Deslauriers, 31, a St. Johns chiropractor, on a 'charge of fabricating a document. The charge, and 11 counts of perjury, were laid against Des- lauriers following his testimony at the preliminary hearing of Mr. Dupuis, who was com- mitted for trial on charges of accepting $10,000 for his influ- ence in an unsuccessful attempt to get a racetrack for a group including Deslauriers. At the end of the day, Judge Honorius Michaud said he would decide Sept. 1 whether there was enough evidence to order Deslauriers to stand trial. The judge also set the same date for preliminary hearing on il charges of perjury against Deslauriers. AFTER 'ADMISSIONS' Under questioning by Ray- mond Daoust, private prose- cutor in the Deslauriers case, Mr. Kierans testified he sent the report to Mr, Favreau Jan. 30, 1964, "mainly and almost Report Filed: Kierans ERIC KIERANS entirely on admissions made by Mr. Dupuis" during an inter- view he had with Mr. Dupuis. A number of newspaper men testified later they had come into possession, late in Janu- ary, of portions of the confi- dential dossier that Mr, 'Kier- ans sent Mr, Favreau, Gerard Pelletier, former edi- tor-in-chief of Montreal La Presse, said he received the dossier from Mr, Kierans. Mr, Pelletier testified that he met Mr, Kierans twice in late January. After the second meet- ing, he had sent a reporter to pick up the confidential file from the revenue minister's of- fice. Mr. Pelletier said the file did not prove very useful to his newspaper. MARINES GET 26 MORE half dozen others echoed his feelings | A Jewish clothing ierohent who owns a shop in Watts and} ives in the Beverly Hills area| told a reporter: | "To sell good merchandise you have to inflate the price. You have to charge more. But you can't sell this kind of mer- chandise in a low-income neigh- borhood because you can't col- lect for it "So we sell the less expen- sive merchandise. It's an opera- tion that goes on everywhere-- wherever there are poor peo- ple, white or Negro, in every city, "As for taking the money out --is there anything says a man has to live where he has his store? A lot of people live far away from businesses they own. There's nothing unusual about that." But other Negroes probably came closest of all to the real reason for the riots, Said Hil- dred Wayne: "Physical idleness brings on narcotics, crime and prostitu- tion. Mental idleness brings on discontent. The two together-- which we have here in abun- dance--are behind the riots." ¥ l SAIGON (AP) -- A Vietna- mese government force killed 27 Viet Cong today in a clash 30 miles below the border with North Viet Nam, a U.S. mili- tary spokesman reported. The clash with an estimated company of guerrillas brought to 32 the total of Viet Cong killed since a search operation was launched four days ago in Ba Long valley, the spokesman said. Vietnamese casualties not reported. The ground drive began after B-52 bombers from Guam hit the area. The offensive was de- scribed as one of the largest government actions in months in the northernmost sector of South Viet Nam. i Monday night about 40 Viet Cong guerrillas, scream- ing "Yankee go home" and "You die," attacked a U.S. ma- rine tank unit with mortars, grenades and small arms fire three miles southwest of Da Nang. The marines flushed the guer- rillas out of tree cover with an were lartillery barrage, then killed an Viet Mopping-Up Pays Off As 27 Cong Die In Clash estimated 26 during a sharp firefight. The Viet Cong fled, leaving six bodies behind, a spokesman said, TOLL RISES . The death toll in. Monday's terrorist attack on the special branch police headquarters in Saigon rose to five, all of them policemen, qualified sources said, Four persons were killed in the attack, and a fifth man who had been machine-gunned died in a hospital, the sources said. Fifteen persons were reported wounded after the terrorists abandoned two explosive-laden vehicles in the police com- pound, U.S. war planes continued bombing attacks on suspected Communist installations in South Viet Nam and targets in North Viet Nam. The spokesman said U.S. Air Force and Vietnamese pilots flew, 185 sorties in the south dur- ing the 24-hour period ending at 6 a.m. The pilots reported they destroyed or damaged 250 build- ings. luded" there is now substantial agreement on normalization of the assembly's work He 'added, however, that the Soviet Union wanted firm guar- tees and not just a statement t the United States had de- cided not to invoke Article 19 of the UN charter. This article provides that a member coun try will lose its vote in the as- sembly if it falls two years be hind in paying assessments REFUSE TO PAY The Soviet Union, France and 11 other countries are in this) category because of refusal to pay for peacekeeping opera- tions in The Congo and the Middie East. The deficit is $108,000 000 Britain's Lord Caradon said Goldberg had delivered "a re- markable speech." It was the a first UN speech of the former), Supreme Court justice since he succeeded the late Adlai E h « v Stevenson last.month as chief/the Beatles' U5. delegate. Goldberg said that because of a port Monday, "We'll wait for a week if we ave to.' said Pamela ado, 14, of suburban Downs 1e°W She and her six friends were mong the hundreds of gers who gathered at the air 24 hours ahead of "scheduled arrival today police teen bout 2 om Rumors the were majority opinion in the world|sneaking the Beatles into Tor- tion the United Statesjonto Monday night prompted Mer-} Beatles - Adorers Take To Airport TORONTO (CP)--Seven dedi- "leated Beatle fans camped over/port earlier in the day. Most night at Toronto International/left Airport in hopes they will be/false first to greet their idols when they arrive this afternoon from ow Pork formed f |the fans to converge on the air- when the rumors proved The long-haired Beatles per- or 50,000 screaming fans in New York and also t&hed a television appearance for the Ed Sullivan Show before leaving for Canada In Toronto the only Canadian city included in the 18-day tour of North America, men have been specially called jout to keep order during the visit The Beatles will take home an estimated $190.900 for the two half-hour appearances they wil make here. 700 police- | BSS SSS NCEE ALSO BLESSE ~ D (?) ARE THEY WHO SIT AN We wal SNIPERS PROLONG RIOT 'IT'S FAR FROM OVER' Signs Of Peace Show Up Despite 'Diehard' Negroes By BOB BURNETT LOS ANGELES (AP)--Gun- fire crackled in the darkness Monday night and early today as die-hard Negroes. battled po- lice and the national guard in occupied Watts. No one was hit by sniper fire. Two national guardsmen were hurt, one critically, when a car crashed through a_ roadblock. Police said the motorist, who was jailed, was not a Negro. Despite continuing incidents of violence, signs of peace seized at gunpoint from lawless mobs have begun to appear in Watts, the encircled Negro dis- trict: Funerals rolled through streets. The death toll: 33. All but six were Negroes. Courts processed the first of more than 3,000 suspected riot- ers arrested, Food markets and Bail for the persons arrested on felony charges ran high--up to $3,000 higher than in normal times. The first 100 of the thousands arrested were arraigned Mon- day. Comparatively few were freed on bail. Posting $5,000 bail through a bondsman re- quires giving him $500 which is not refunded. Three of the first 100 prison- ers to be arraigned were charged with murder. Most of the others face charges of as- sault, burglary and arson. . Fire and looting damage is coe to exceed $200,000, In Washington, government officials and congressional lead- ers agreed with President John- son's statement that it was nec- essary "'to strike at the unjust conditions from which disorder largely flows." clerks, some wearing pistols, sold food as troops stood guard. City and county offices were opened, buses rolled again, mail delivery was resumed, and clean-up crews tackled wreck- age left by six days of turmoil. IECLARES ENDED D Governor Edmund G. Brown declared the riots ended. But 15,000 national guards- men still held the 46-square- mile heart of the Los Ne; district sealed pel nor Brown: "The national guard will re- main here until the streets are safe." Attacks by snipers and fire- bomb terrorists on white sec- tions of Los Angeles dwindled, although there were sporadic reports of firing. Brown said Monday: "'Guer- rilla fighting against gangsters continues." The governor also announced he would appoint a seven-member commission to investigate "underlying and im- mediate causes and means to prevent recurrence of the riots." An 8 p.m.-to-dawn curfew re- mained in effect during the night. Guardsmen and police kept people from the streets and halted cars at scores of roadblocks, HINTS MUSLIMS IN Police Chief William H. Parker hinted that the Black Muslims tried to take over what started as spontaneous rioting. Police noted 45 men believed to be Muslims were bailed out of jail by a bondsman who pre- viously represented arrested Muslims. Said Parker: "T will say that other ele- ments moved into it (the riots)."" a wt of guns. Said Gover- JFK Sensed Fate Before Dallas Trip NEW YORK (AP) -- Before the late president John F. Ken» nedy made his fateful trip to Texas, he remarked: "If are going to me, get me ean church mid His comment is cited by Ev. elyn Lincoln, his personal sec- retary for 12 years, including his nearly three years in the White House before he was as- ae in Dallas Nov. 22, In a copyrighted article in the Saturday Evening Post, she re- lates that the day before he made the trip, her husband, Abe, told her repeatedly he thought the president should not go to Texas. "He got me so worried, I even mentioned Abe's fear to the president," she writes. "He didn't seem alarmed; he merely said, 'If they are to get me, they will get me even in church',"' However, he was strangely tense just. before his departure, she says, and furious when he discovered that an aide's previ- ous report that it would be cool in Texas was mistaken and that the weather was actually warm there, "He really raved and ranted," sherecounts. ".., This was all very unusual-- first, his getting so angry, and second, bawling out this navy man."" NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Doctors Check Out U.S. Astronauts CAPE KENNEDY, Fila. (AP) The doctors take over to- day to check out the most important factors in Thursday's planned Gemini 5 space flight -- the human beings who will endure eight days in orbit. Leroy Gordon Cooper, a relaxed veteran of 34 hours in space, and Charles Conrad, an energetic newcomer, undergo their major physical exam- inations before blastoff. D OTTAWA (CP) iefenbaker Plans Tour Of Quebec Opposition Leader Diefenbaker is planning a late August tour of several areas of Quebec, the province where his political support has dropped most sharp- ly in recent years. Informants say his first major foray in the heartland of French Canada since the 1963 election is expected to last about five days and may take in Quebec City, and some of the Gaspe and Eastern Townships. Sukarno Outlines Anti-Imperialist Axis JAKARTA AP) -- President Sukarno said today an "anti-imperialism axis" is being formed composed of Com- munist China, North Korea, North Viet Nam,-Cambodia and Indonesia. Sukarno declared in a major speech marking Indonesia's 20th independence anniversary that "'the present era is the era of anti-imperialism. The present era is the era of the destruction of imperialism." Geels Win First Game of Semi- Ann Landers--12 City News--9 Classified--16, 17, 18 Comics--20 Editorial--4 Financial--19 .. .In THE TIMES today... Grade 13 Final Exem Results--P. 9 Brooklin Whips Erna; Takes Series 4 Streight--P, 5 Pra Finals--P, 6 Obits--19 Sports--6, 7 Theatre--12 Whitby News--5 Women's--10, 11, 12 Weather--2