p Weather Report j Sunny with cloudy periods today and : Friday. Snow possible. Cold tonight, 18 bi High Friday, 32. : TWENTY-SIX PAGES The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, Office Department Authorized as Second Class Ottawa 'ostage in Cash, ond for payment VOTING RIGHTS, OR 0.0.R.E. WILL MARCH | Consul Meets Students, Farmer Charges Johnson Agrees Sit-in 'Useful' "Wasn't Forceful Enough' normal Demonstrations at the federal building in Los Angeles resulted in 98 arrests, including 29 per- sons who were charged with obstruction of U.S. mail after they lay down in front of mail | trucks and had to be forcibly VOL. 94--No. 59 PPR Fh. Ang SOY OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1965 Mell Post (From AP-New York) + James Farmer, national di- rector of the Congress of Racial Equality, threatened a massive march on Washington. The march will be organized, the -consulate's busi- ness."' With Hemblen at the half- hour talk were Liora Procter and Judy Pocock, also U. of T. students. TORONTO (CP)--The United States consul-general in Toronto met today with representatives of university students protesting treatment of civil rights march- ers in Alabama and later was Words of advice from a hockey idol are a once-in-a- lifetime thrill for four-year- old Terry Gallagher. Terry, who plays in the Catholic . TYKE TALKS Youth Organization's tyke age-group, huddled with Oshawa Generals' all - star defenceman Bobby Orr at Civic Auditorium last night, quoted as saying that although SARNIAN ENTERS The interview with Mr. Arm- strong was arranged after so- ciology student Lynn Pollard of Sarnia, Ont., entered the consul- ate and told a security guard and students would like a meet- ing with the consul-general. Mr. Armstrong was in Ot- he sympathized with their dem- onstration he could not enter into a debate with them. "The consul-general said) he and his staff were appalled at what is going on in Alabama," said Dave Hemblen, one of three University of Toronto stu- TO "TIGER" where the tykes are winding up the season's ice: activity next week. Orr took time out from a rigid practice sched- ule as Generals prep for the dents who met with Consul-Gen- eral Park Armstrong. "He said that Washington had been notified of our sit-in," Hemblen told 70 shivering stu- dents huddled on the sidewalk in front of the consulate on Uni- versity Avenue, : "He -felt the demonstration was useful and that we could stay as long as we liked as tawa Wednesday when about 250 students, joined by religious leaders and some members of Toronto civil liberties groups, marched 10blocks from the varsity campus to the consul- ate. Most of the students at today's 'demonstration had long as we didn't interfere with (See Students, Page 2) SAIGON (CP) -- A United States Air Force B-57 jet upcoming Ontario Hockey jbomber crashed today on a Association Junior "'A" /mission against Viet Cong guer- playoffs. rillas in Binh Dinh province, 280 miles north of here. The plane was one of six B-57 --Oshawa Times Photo jets taking part in the raid, It Opposition Attacks Favreau Over Rivard Flight Retorts OTTAWA (CP)--Justice Min- ister Favreau was spattered with a fresh batch of Opposi- tion charges Wednesday over his answers to questions about former cabinet minister Yvon Dupuis and Lucien Rivard's flight from jail. The justice minister touched off a bitter, 40-minute wrangle when he objected to Opposition Leader Diefenbaker's state- ment that a reply as to when Prime Minister Pearson was informed about allegations against Dupuis was "not in ac- cordance with the facts." Mr. Favreau maintained his} reply--it said Mr. Pearson was informed "promptly"--was ac- curate and told Mr. Diefen- baker if he had a "minimum of decency" he would make a specific charge of lying. ae The Opposition leader said the question by Nicholas Mand- ziuk (PC -- Marquette), sought specific dates when a letter was received from Quebec Revenue Minister Eric Kierans about al-} legations against Dupuis and when the prime minister was told about the letter. AFFAIR FIZZLES Speaker successfully several times tojof the esca halt the angry .exchange andipleted. get both men to withdraw their words. The whole matter finally fizzled out without any- action|ity for ensuring that Lucien being taken. | Earlier, Gordon Fairweather (PC--Royal) accused Mr. Fay- reau of misleading the House and dancing a "constitutional --, in claiming the federal |government had no responsibil- |Rivard, escaped narcotics- |smuggling suspect, remained behind hars. Mr. Fairweather argued that Section 3 of the Prisons and Rivard Still Out Despite MONTREAL (CP) -- Police staged a number of fruitless|ure on raids in the Montreal area Wed-|with a series of raids. nesday for Lucien Rivard but! "We've just got to be patient most of the action appeared tojand keep working on it," Insp. be on the political front. Police hoped the $15,000 fed- to Rivard's capture, "IT consider the inquiry will be terminated when Rivard is| captured and we will be able|Opposition requests put to Mr to get his version on the cir- ;cumstances of escape," Quebec |Attorney - General Claude Wag- Alan Macnaughton,|ner told reporters who asked caught in the middle, tried un-|when a provincial investigation| Laporte Saying they were not|criminal charges in connection pe would be com- | of an urgent nature and shouldjwith an alleged $10,000 payoff] Reward Police continued their press- the Montreal underworld Herve Patenaude of the pro- |vincial police said. 'We've got eral reward for information| Planned pattern for our inves- leading announced in Ottawa Tuesday night, might be helpful. | no fly-by-night jaffair -- and we're following it |to the letter." SAID NOT URGENT In. the, Quebec legislature, |tigation -- it's Wagner for information about the escape received replies from Premier Lesage and gov- jernment House Leader Pierre 'be inscribed on the order paper dropped napalm bombs at 500 feet before the crash. A U.S. military spokesman said fescuers reaching the crash scene found no trace of the two pilots, who were re- ported to have ejected before Reformatories Act provided that Rivard could have been put in another prison because 'France And = of "the insecurity or unfitness" Russia For of the jail. | nvard whit ne wer'awaiees! Viet Talles disposition of extradition pro- ceedings to the *U.S., was a E 'i provincial responsibility. The! _PARIS (Reuters)--Russia and prisoner, wanted by U.S. France have agreed to seek a reconvening of the 1954 Geneva conference to settle the Viet Nam conflict, the retiring So- viet ambassador to Paris, Ser- gei Vinogradov, said today. authorities, escaped last week from Bordeaux Jail in Mont- real, a provincial institution. - **Mr. Speaker, the minister of -- ara misinformed this The 1954 conference set up Ouse and continues to miS-\the international supervisory jinform Parliament and thej,,q control commissions for jcountry" by failing to correct|yiet Nam, Cambodia and Laos. jhis 'misstatement' about fed-) y+ onded the seven-year war eral responsibility, Mr. Fair-|i, the then French Indochina weather said. states of Viet Nam, Cambodia Jet-Bomber Down In Attack-Mission the crash, The search for the two continued at nightfall. It was the first U.S. B-57 to crash since the planes were put into action against the Commu- nist guerrillas Jast month. The target area was north of Kannach, site of a Vietnamese special forces camp that Mon- day repulsed a suicidal Viet Cong attack. Result; of today's bomber strikes (were not immediately known. : In Quang Ngai province, 335 miles northeast of Saigon, Viet Cong guerrillas today killed 25 government militia and wounded nine in an assault on a hamlet. Three militiamen were reported missing. It was officially announced that 15 U.S. Air Force B-57s at- tacked Viet Cong ammunition dumps, gun emplacements and entrenchments along the coast of Phu Yen province, south of Binh Dinh province, late Wed- nesday. MARINES INJURED Today four U.S. marines were injured when their helicopter was forced down by Communist guerrilla fire 345 miles, north- east of Saigon. A ranking U.S, military spokesman said he feels the military situa tion throughout South Viet Nam has improved considerably in the last few weeks, particularly in moun- "Neither the minister nor the|and Laos. government has given the| tainous Binh Dinh province. House any evidence to think otherwise than that the minis- ter never once communicated with anyone in Quebec request- ing that extra _ precautions should be taken to ensire the custody of Rivard." Mr. Favreau made no reply to Mr. Fairweather's charge. Yvon Dupuis, former minis- without portfolio, now faces NDP Lacks Confidence, Say: Council Challenged To Do B Ann Landers -- 15 City News -- 13 Classified -- 22, 23, 24 Comics -- 21 District Reports -- 8 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 25 te to obtain a racetrack charter. THE TIMES today... s "Mike" Starr -- Page 13 etter Joh -- Page 5 Obits -- 25 Sports -- 10, 11, 12 Television -- 21 Theatre -- 25 Whitby News -- 5, 6 Women's -- 14, 15, 16, 17, 18 Weather -- 2 SHY SIT-IN An unidentified man runs up Toronto's University av- enue in his shorts after taking part in a demonstra- tion outside the United States consulate. The man stripped off his clothes for no apparent reason, picked up his briefcase and ran--- in chilly 29 degrees wea- ther. (CP Wirephoto) U.S. Hints New Role In Viet Nam WASHINGTON (AP)--A pres- idential policy conference indi- cates new decisions on the U.S. role in the Vietnamese war may be in the making. One question believed to be under top-level consideration is that U.S. air attacks on mili- tary bases in North Viet Nam should be carried deeper into that country. So far they have been restricted to the southern regions, well away from the capital, Hanoi. A Wednesday night confer- ence at Camp David, the presi-| dential retreat in the mountains of. western Maryland, brought together President John- son, State Secretany Dean Rusk, Defence Secretary Robert Mc- Namara, and McGeorge Bundy and Billy D. Moyers, White House aides, Topic for the meeting was not announced but it was under- stood that the iuajor subject was Viet Nam, It is more than a month since the air strikes were first under- taken and U.S, officials say that so far they have had no indication whatever that North Viet Nam is prepared to aban- don its effort at conquest. PARLAMENT ERUPTS IN VERBAL BATTLE Diefenbaker, Favreau Slug It OTTAWA (CP)--The House of Commons, for a brief spell si- lenced and apparently ashamed hy its own actions, erupted in another wild performance late Nednesday in the pension plan debate. The earlier crisis was as tense as any moment in the Com- mons since the rancorous and riotous pipeline debate of 1956, from which flowed the discred- iting of Touis-Rene Beaudoin as speaker of the Commons and, in the opinion of many political 7 observers, the defeat of the for- mer Liberal government under Luis St. Laurent. This time, it was Opposition Leader Diefenbaker and Jus- tice Minister Favreau who squared off against each other on the question of justice de- partment administration. While neither side withdrew an inch, they agreed the impasse had GUY FAVREAU become so vital to the existence of the parliamentary institution in Canada that they would call'mons it a draw, Mr. Dietenbaker that Mr. Favreau had _ not 'answered a_ written answers they get, a govern ment can give any information|the "which is obviously false."' Mr. Favreau objected, saying|disturbed at the extent to which this was a charge he had delib- erately given false information € and said it raised in his mind|been calling each other liars, complained|callenging the question} House properly. He asked whether the) A "government was going to use ajensued. rule saying opposition members| cannot complain about the/monton West), draw the implication the jus- ltice minister gave the Com- false information. Mr. Diefenbhaker refused, in effect government to jmeve for his expulsion from the tense. moment of silence Marcel Lambert (PC -- Ed- speaker of the House during the last session of former Coriservative gov- jernment, said he had become parliamentary language had deteriorated, Members had the question of whether the for-|words not admitted to parlia-4 mer prime minister had "'a}mentary usage a year ago, minimum vf decency left in| Prime Minister Pearson en- him." fered the debate to agree in principle with the former CHALLENGES HOUSE jspeaker. and say the House Speaker - Alan Macnaughtonjshould get on with its business asked Mr. Diefenbaker to with-|""with JOHN DIEFENBAKER less disputation.'"" Mr. ay és Diefenbaker noted he hadn't complained about Mr. -- Fav- reau's remark about "minimum of decency"? Mr. Favreau maintained what he had said had not been false. but, true. The Commons then went on in an atmosphere of sullen re- gret at its own performance. But before the short 34-hour Wednesday sitting was done, another melee .of shouted ex- changes occurred in the pension debate. The Conservatives supported an NDP amendment to permit a contributor to the universal retirement plan to drop off, in computing "his benefits, 20 per i cent of his 47 years as a full- term participant, years in which his income was at its lowest level. The original government proposal had been 10 per cent, raised in a government motion Wednesday to 15 per cent. When the vote was called, the 265-seat Commons was barely a quarter filled. Members streamed in from the lobbies on both sides and the NDP .motion was defeated 66 to 60. The hubbub then arose on the question of the rights of mem- bers to vote when they hadn't attended the debate. Donald Macinnis (PC--Cape Breton South) said that Fish- eries Minister Robichaud hadn't been in the house, but voted. Mr. Robichaud said he had been there all along, sitting. in a. back row seat. Mr. MacInnis charged Mr, Robichaud lied to the House. The charge went unchallenged except for Mr, Robichaud's per- sonal declaration he had. been present throughout, Farmer said, unless President ¢ Kansas City, Los Angeles, Cam- in front of the White House. + Churches called a meeting for : Friday in Washington. ' J. Oscar Lee, associate execu- Johnson endorses new voting- rights legislation and sends fed- eral officers into Alabama by Sunday to arrest "civil rights violators." Soon after returning from Selma, Farmer told a New York press conference: "I am certainly charging that Presi- dent Johnson has not been forceful enough." The latest demonstrations were held in San Francisco, bridge, Mass.; Madison, Wis.; Buffaio, N Y.; Joliet, Ill., and The National Council of "Now is the time for all re- igious leaders to come together to follow up on the upsurge of American conscience," said Dr. ive director of the Council of Commission on Religion and Race. : MONTGOMERY, Ala, (AP)-- A federal judge rejected today a motion Sheriff. James G. Clark of s County that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., leader of a massive Negro voter drive, be held in contempt for leading a street march at Selma, "Any contempt or order to show cause is a matter between this court and the alleged con- temptor," said the U.S, district judge, Frank M. Johnson, Jr. The motion by Clark's law- yers came at the outset of a hearing on a move by civil rights leaders and the justice department for an order. bar- ring interference with peaceful demonstrations. The motion for a contempt proceeding against King was based on his leading a Tuesday march of about 2,500 Negroes and white clergymen from a Selma church to a meeting with state troopers. King turned back when halted by the troopers, Johnson had ordered civil rights leaders to suspend their planned march from Selma to Montgomery. He gave no indi- cation today whether he con- sidered the attempted march a violation of his order. The meeting of King and. the troopers and the peaceful end- ing of the march were pre- arranged with the aid of fed- eral officials, A similar march Sunday was broken up. when troopers clubbed and tear-gas- sed the marchers. CALL AS WITNESSES King was called as a witness. So were Clark and Col. Albert J. Lingo, commander of state troopers. Other witnesses in the marble - walled courtroom in- cluded the mother and grand- father of Jimmie Lee Jackson, a Negro laborer shot to death Feb. 18 in racial violence. There were these other de- removed, Harry Bridges, West Coast longshoremen's union leader, told 1,500 persons at a San Francisco rally that his 65,000 union members would "refuse to handle any goods or merch- andise from Alabama , . . until the rights of all the people of Alabama are recognized and fully protected." Governor Nelson A. Rocke- feller of New York told a civil rights meeting in a Washington church that he deplored "the ruthless denial of the most fun- damental and precious right of every American, the right to vote." Governor John Volpe of Mass- achusetts sent a telegram to Alabama Governor George Wal- lace asking protection for civil rights marchers, Senator Edward M. Kennedy (Dem, Mass) said in a state- ment from Boston that federal intervention is needed, Judge Vetoes Clark Bid To Put King In Contempt --Selma's public saf rector, Wilson Baker, an- -mounced the arrest of three white men. on charges of beat- ing three white Unitarian ministers who came to Selma to participate in the civil vights drive. A warrant has been issued for a fourth man. --About 350 civil rights dem- onstrators slept in the streets of Selma in 40-degree weather in a vigil for one of the beaten ministers, Rev. James Reeb, 38, of Boston, who lay near death in a Birmingham hos- pital. It was the first night demonstration in Selma in the almost eight weeks since the right to vote campaign ber Republicans Seek Action WASHINGTON (AP) -- Re- publican party leaders have called for federal action to as- sure Negroes the right to reg- ister and vote. The new Republican co-ordin- ating committee in a state. ment Wednesday said it was "outraged" at the denial "by force and fraud" of Negro vot+ ing rights, It set a goal of as- suring every citizen his consti- tutional rights in this field be- fore the 1966 U.S. elections. The co - ordinating group is composed of congressional lead- ers, governors, former presi- dential candidates and national committee members. It. also announced its support for Democratic President Johnson's course in South Viet Nam. It denounced Democratic "disruptive voices of appease- ment . . . which undercut the velopments: president." _ LONG LAC, Ont, (CP) -- mins truck driver, was killed into a ditch. Lakehead. 'Sweden Hammers TAMPERE, Finland (AP) 10-0 in the world ice hockey six goals in the second period Long Lac is after delivering a speech in --_ said Wednesday he has n time. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Truck Driver Killed On Lonely Road Sam Silver, 43-year-old Tim- on Highway 11 east of here Wednesday night when his vehicle left the road and crashed 200 miles northeast of the Norway 10-0 -- Sweden hammered Norway championships today, scoring and three in the third. Four Swedes, Anders Andersson, Ronald Pettersson, Tor Lund- strom and Uno Ohrlund, scored two goals each, The Top- sided victory brought Sweden's record to three -vic- tories, a tie with Finland and a loss to Russia. Wilson Visits U.S., Not Ottawa LONDON (CP) -- Prime Minister Wilson plans to con- fer with President Johnson during a brief Washington visit New York April 14, but his 0 plans to visit Ottawa at that Pi aais a seas 3 qi Se ae