Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Mar 1965, p. 1

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The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres. VOL. 94--No, 61 We St Copy SOc Per 51 Moc re Delivered She OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1965 Oshawa Times Authorized os ta i pens Second Class Mall and for poyment Weather Report Sunny And Cool Today And Sunday. Light Winds. Low Tonight, row, 35. Poot Office Department of Postage in Cash, 25. High Tomor- TWENTY PAGES ade on Pennsylvania av- enue in front of the White House during the traffic Police whisk away a civil rights demonstrator as they break up a sit-down block- WALLACE FLIES TO LBJ ON SELMA LBJ Will Discuss Any 'Mutual Concern' Matter TO CONFER King Aide: We Will March Come Hell Or High Water "1 don't know how Judge rush late today In back- ground is the executive man- sion (AP Wirephoto) CANADIAN PRESS CORRECTIVE Rouleau-Underworld Link Does Not Exist OTTAWA (CP)--Lawyers forjence since Jan. 1, 1964, between Andre Letendre, executive as-|Mr. Letendre and Mr. Rouleau, sistant to Justice Minister Fav-jregarding Vincent .Cotroni, a reau, have complained that a|Montreal underworld personal- Canadian Press news storylity; and for tabling of any March 8 falsely connected Mr.|briefs from Mr. Rouleau or Letendre with the Montreal un-|others asking for a declaration derworld. clearing Cotroni's name of any Lawyers for Guy Rouleau;|comvictions for crimin al of- former parliamentary assistant|fences. to Prime Minister Pearson,, The -Canadian Press erron- have tk complained that the|eously said the motion "linked" story falsely connected their/Mr. Letendre and Mr. Rouleau client in the same way. with Cotroni. This was not in- The news story dealt: with ajtended to mean there was any its use of the word "linked" and apologizes for any embar- arssment or _ inconvenience caused either Mr. Letendre or ;Mr. Rouleau. (Mr. Favreau told. the Com- mons Wednesday, March 10, "there is no correspondence whatever between Andre Le- tendre, my executive - assistant, and Mr. Guy Rouleau, MP, re- garding Cotroni, notwithstanding the assertion made in the mo- tion that such correspondence) exists, nor is 'there any etter) to anyone from Mr. Rouleau on} SELMA, Ala, (AP)--An aide] to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. drew cheers from weary Selma demonstrators today when he told them',a proposed march} from Selma to Montgomery} would be held "come hell or|40 years," he said. 'We don't high water," no matter what alplan to spend that much time, federal judge rules in a court! And I tell you what, we are go- hearing. ling to march from Selma, Ala., The statement by Rev. Hosea|to Montgomery, Ala., come hell Williams boosted the spirits of march to Montgomery," liams said, "Tt took the children of Israel motion introduced in the Com-|direct relationship. a mons for copies of corr The C Press regrets'the subject.) jthe demonstrators who have maintained a prayer vigil in the streets of Selma since Wednes- day night, when police halted their attempted march on the Dallas County courthouse. The demonstrators grew im- patient after another civil rights leader, William S. Greer, told them earlier that King had for- bidden any further attempts to march to the courthouse until the federal hearing at Montgom- ery has ended. They have been trying to |keep up their spirits by singing jand dancing. | The demonstrators, who have | been joined by white priests and 'nuns, say they want to hold a memorial service at the court- |house for Rev. James Reeb, 38- year-old white Boston minister |who died Thursday night at a Birmingham hospital. Reeb was beaten Tuesday by a group of white men in Selma. KEEP VIGIL The demonstrators maintained their vigil near Browns Chapel centre of the current right-to-vote drive in Selma. City police and state troopers 'Pearson Tells Cabinet He May Call Election By MICHAEL GILLAN jister Martin; Transport Minis- OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min-|ter Pickersgill; and Labor Min- ister Pearson has informed|'ste! MacEachen. close cabinet colleagues he is} thinking of calling an early gen-| D . eral election, informed sources|decision to call an election. In say. |fact sources said many of his The informants said the|ministers, and probably a ma- prime ministei outlined his|iority of the party's parliament- views on a possible election atjary caucus, are opposed to one a war council with five key cab-|at this time. inet ministers Wednesday night! Those opposed to an election at his Sussex Drive residence. |now argue that Mr. Pearson's At the meeting were his Que-|motivation -- to deliver another tec leader, Justice Minister/blow to Opposition Leader Dief- Guy Favreau; Finance Ministerjenbaker and to win a majority Gordon; External Affairs Min-lto produce a better climate in THE TIMES today... One-Day Stoppage at Hillsdale Halted by Injunction--P 9 Apartment Boom Changing Whitby Skyline--P 5 Falls Fells Hapless Generals 5-0--P 6 Obits--18 Sports--6, 7, 8 Television--14 Theatre--19 Whitby News--5 Women's--10, 11 Weather--2 The prime. minister is under- stood to have made no definite Ann Landers--11 City News--9 Classified--16, 17, 18 Comics--14 District Reports--15, 19 Editorial--4 Financial--18 |have thrown a tight ring around |the church, preventing the dem- \onstrators from marching to the | courthouse. Williams, who returned to /Selma from the Montgomery |court hearing where he testified jasked the group to "be patient land tolerant" with Negro lead- ers. jor high water." Williams said Negro leaders may ask the demonstrators to wait. until Monday to see if Johnson will rule on that day. Johnson is hearing a plea by lawyers for the National Associ- ation for the Advancement of Colored People asking him to forbid state officials from inter- fering with the proposed march) to Montgomery. The hearing is continuing today. Church groups from through- out the country continue to ar- rive at the demonstration site. Red China Students Slammed By HENRY 5S. BRADSHER MOSCOW (AP)--The Soviet Union launched a press cam- paign today against Chinese students at Moscow universities after accusing them of plotting violence against Soviet militia- men guarding the~U.S. em- bassy. Pravda, the official Commu- nist Party organ, published a Soviet note to Peking protesting the students' attack on the em- bassy March 4 and also three letters from readers which called the action "outrageous."'| the Commons -- is not a suffi- jcient reason. REJECTED IDEA Until two weeks ago, Mr. Pearson, who dislikes cam-| paigning, had categorically re-| iected counsel from colleagues| and advisers that he should) call an election for this spring.| But it was learned last week/television advertising of cigar- that he left a cabinet meeting]... : . with the impression he was|°'t€ smoking may have fp be thinking about it. | considered if other anti-smoking Some sources say that at this|Campaigns do not prove effec- |moment he is inclined more|tive, Health Minister Judy La- favorably to calling a vote than| Marsh said Friday. he is towards postponing one} The minister, outlining and continuing to try to cope in| government's campaign against the Commons. jsmoking to a father, son and Long - time parliamentary|daughter banquet at Parkdale observers say the ill will be-| United Church, said her depart- tween the government and the} ment is financing studies aimed opposition parties is as bad now|at determining what influences as during the 1956 pipeline de-|young people to smoke or not |bate. to smoke. Much of the bitterness has re-| "What happens when young jsulted from the government's! people watch Bob Goulet or Juli- |handling of the Lucien Rivardiette advertise a particular affair and Rivard's escape|b rand of cigarettes?) What from jail last week. Thus, Mr.\about the TV _ interviews of Pearson faces the difficulty of/famous people, their faces al- jfinding an issue on which to \fight a campaign. OTTAWA (CP) -- A ban on smoke? Television Smoking Ads May Be Outlawed - Judy | jsaid she received by regular the! | "What happens if you are of- fered cigarette pack coupons to win a sports car or a holiday in the south or a date with a beatle (an unmarried one of course) or a mink jacket?" Much advertising in Canada appears on television programs and in publications that origin- late in the United States, Miss) |LaMarsh noted. "It would be very difficult for us to impose any controls on advertising in Canada that would not be applied at the same time in the United States. Nevertheless, if our health edu- cation efforts in this program do not prove as effective as we hope, we may in future have to give consideration to a_ policy similar to the one just adopted (Frank M.) Johnson will rule, § but I will tell you this, we will § Wil- & PRESIDENT JOHNSON « . » His troubles only begin at home... WASHINGTON (AP) -- Gov- ernor George C. Wallace of m™ Alabama came to Washington today to discuss his state's ra- cial problems with President Johnson. Wallace, who requested a White House appointment Fri- day night and was told by / Johnson to come at his conven- jence, flew into Washington at 11:05 a.m, An aide said he had a noon appointment with John- GOV. GEORGE WALLACE - . + Flying to confer with the president ... 'Something Stinks' On Rivard Letter MONTREAL (CP)--A dubious love letter and disclosure that he was a "trusty" prisoner have surrounded Lucien Ri- vard's escape with more notor- iety. "I love you, Forgive me," Ri- vard's wife Marie quoted a let- ter she said she received from the suspected narcotics smug- gler. Mrey Rivard said in a brief interview Friday the envelope was postmarked Vancouver and dated March 6, five days after her husband escaped from the provincial Bordeaux Jail in Montreal. "The whole matter is fishy," Claude Wagner, Quebec attor- ney-general, said in Quebec City. "It's a move to put police on the wrong track.' Sub-Insp. Jean Gagnon of the provincial police said investiga- tors believe Rivard wrote the letter but that if it was really mailed from Vancouver, this was done by somebody else. DESTROYS ENVELOPE Mrs. Rivard said she de- stroyed the envelope containing the four-page letter which she mail. Police declined to say whether they had previously in- tercepted the letter, a normal procedure in such a man-hunt. "We think the letter is a trick, and we're still convinced Rivard is in Montreal," Sub- tsp. Gagnon said. "Blood bomber' David Cowli- shaw said in Vancouver later Friday that a former jail-mate of Rivard told him the town in which the escapee is hiding. Cowlishaw said he refused to tell the name of the town to the RCMP. The RCMP refused to com- ment on his statement. He said the former convict, 'a man I have no reason to dis- trust and believe implicitly," approached him with a request in the United Kingdom --a ban jarette smoking." from Rivard to "get Ottawa off most hidden behind clouds of}on television advertising of cig-imy back'? while he tried to prove his innocence. Mr. Cowlishaw heads the Un- derdog organization and is best known for throwing a carton of cow's blood into the House of Commons to publicize the case of one "underdog." Toronto lawyer John Wein- gust said he had received a tel- egram from Mr. Cowlishaw on Rivard's behalf and had replied with the advice that the latest "underdog" would have to give himself up before anything could be done for him. In Quebec City, Mr. Wagner said 'Quebec police are not tak- ing the Vancouver report into account in their search. son. The governor arrived in a state-owned two-engined plane with a Confederate flag painted on its fuselage. He was met by his executive assistant, Hunter Phillips, who had arrived early today to make arrangements for the gov- ernor's visit, The governor' brushed aside reporters trying to question him, stepped directly from the plane into a waiting limousine, and sped off. Wallace left Montgomery, Ala., by plane for the meeting, but the White House said it had no information on when he would arrive or when he and Wallace suggested the meet- ing Friday night, and Johnson replied that he is ready to meet the governor on "any matter of mutual interest and concern." As civil rights demonstrations from the streets of Selma, Ala., gathered at the presidential doorstep in Washington, John- son said in a telegram to the segregationist governor Friday ight: "I will be available in my of- fice at any time that is con- venient to you." Asking for an appointment, Wallace had wired the presi- dent that his state ungently needs an end to racial demon- strations. He said they are a threat to lawful society, A White House source said Johnson is ready to talk teday if Wallace wants to come to Washington. In Montgomery, the Alabama governor said he would go to W to see Johnson, but mentioned no date, Meanwhile, officials in Wash- ington declined comment on Published reports that since Tuesday, on Johnson's order, 700 federal troops have been on Johnson might get together. alert for possible duty in Selma, Johnson Expected To Outline Right-To-Vote Legislation. After two> days ot stormy)4,000 churchmen who rallied civil rights demonstrations in|Capitol Hill, The ri) pemeperined Washington, Johnson was ex-|sored by the National Council of pected at a press conference/Churches' commission on re- broad outline of the rights legislation he will mend to Congress. Russia Sews Up Tourney TAMPERE, Finland (CP) -- Russia defeated Czechoslovakia 3-1 today in what may prove to be the decisive game of the world hockey tournament. The game broke a tie for the tournament leadership, leaving the Russians alone. at the top with six victories and no de- feats. Canada still has a chance for the title. But it will have to beat Sweden later today and the defending champion Russians Sunday. The Czechs, now in second place with five wins and one loss, were not in their best form. Their attack was generally ragged and they switched goalies in the first period, when the Russians jumped off to a 2-0 lead. Vyacheslav Starshinoy and rugged defenceman Viktor Kuz- kin scored for Russia in. the first period. Trailing the Russians 2-1 in the Jast minute of the game, the Czechs yanked Nadrchal and sent six men to the attack. The tactic backfired, as it so \often ' does. MOSCOW AND PEKING TRAINED Top Cong Leader Caught? By JOHN T. WHEELER six-month SAIGON (AP) -- A prisoner! Union. described as the highest-ranking) He claimed he infiltrated into North Vietnamese yet captured|South Viet Nam last Feb. 2 as in the war with the Commu-|Part of a group of 300 political nists was displayed' today by|COMmissars sent to oversee Viet Brig. Gen. Nguyen Chanh Thi,!Cong cadres. Ist Army Corps commander Phan said he' held the rank Identified as Nguyen Phan, an|9f sub-major and political com- alleged Peking and Moscow-/Missar. trained political commissar, the], . ' ene captive was shown to reporters| APTURE Doc UMENTS during an impromptu roadside Lidell ' said the PHsOner press conference near Da Nang| 488 captured Friday with many Air Force base documents near Hue, about 40 ' miles from the North Viet Nam The black - clad captive an-|porder. Thi said he would be swered questions freely, though taken to Saigon for further in garbled fashion through| questioning. French 'and English transla-| viet Cong forces unleashed to- tions. day a heavy mortar barrage on The slight, 38 - year - old}military installations at Duc prisoner said he joined the Com-| Hoa, a village west munist Viet Minh in 1953 dur-| Saigon, killing five persons and ing the war against the French.|wounding 33. The wounded in- He said he was sent to Peking! cluded seven civilians for a year's indoctrination and) Air support was called in and training in 1959 and later got.a|two U.S, Army helicopters, ar- tour of the Soviet |tilery and flare drops were,rines on Hill 327, overlooking jutilized until the Communists|Da Nang air base, blazed away ~ | withdrew, \Friday night at what they be- | | It was the second mortar at-|lieved was a Viet Cong patrol » jtack on Due Hoa in recent|sent to scout the marines' de- | weeks. | fences. | In Saigon, there were indica-| There was no return of fire |tions the United States is con-\and by daylight, no evidence \sidering bringing in- additional| was found that anyone had been |troops. hit by the marines in their first Behind these indicatow® was] action since they landed this this week's visit to Viet. Nam week. by the U.S. Army-chief of staff, ADD AN oy J 7 |Gen. Harold K. Johnson, and a A eee party of ranking military offi-| name of Capt. William C. Mat- cers. jtis of Iowa Park, Tex., to its |. Sources close to the mission) list of 'combat dead. Mattis was jsaid the mission explored in-|the pilot of a B-57 Canberra jet jueaers bombing of North Viet| bomber that crashed while |Nam and possible imposition of|dropping napalm bombs on a * The United States added the jmilitary censorship or other re-|Communist guerrilla target t |Viet Nam. |gon. Mattis' Johnson was en route to/missing Washington today after conclud-| A total of 303 Americans have jing his secret talks here. died in combat here since De- | Newly-arrived American ma-|cember, 1961. navigator is still of|strictions on correspondents in|zone 275 miles northeast of Sai- #- bet a | Charging in. readiness South Vietnamese alight from helicopter on Rangers mission to clear out Red Viet Cong from hamlet com- plex near Song Be in South Viet Nam. Helicopter gun- ner mans machine gun to cover the charging Rangers. Song Be, 80 miles north of The demonstrations in Selma are aimed at securing voting rights for Negroes. Another idea for bringing the problem of Negro voting rights to attention was ed in this afternoon to sketch thelligion and Trace... voting} But most of the, White House Tecom-/demonstrators, an around-the-clock, march, ° bore signs demanding that . Johnson take more direct action in Selma fy sending federal mar- shals or troops there. The churchmen sent a dele- gation to the White House, and New York Friday night. Negro leaders said a marathon relay run from New York to Washing- ton, some 230 miles, would be- gin Sunday night, Legislation that would insure southern Negroes equal rights to vote is one demand posted by pickets who paraded outside the White House and by some| Joh was quoting as telling them he will aoe be black- jacked by pickets into any hasty federal action in Alabama. Attorney - General Nicholas Katzenbach, who joined John- son at four hours of confer ences with civil rights leaders and clergymen, said the federal government already has more than 75 men in Selma, MONTREAL (CP)--Since the start of the current school year a young school teacher has been organizing his class along the lines of the Nazi army and has held up two "great leaders of men," Adolf Hitler and Jesus Christ, as models to emulate. Brother Rene Lahaie, 22, a Roman Catholic teacher in charge of a seventh-grade class of students at the French-lan- guage La Mennais elementary school in north - end Montreal aid in an interview with Mont- real La Presse Friday that "'Hit- ler and Jesus Christ had many common qualities." _ Both of them had large quan- tities of human courage, per- severence, tenacity and gener- osity and both had great effect on the world, he said. The classroom in which Brother Lahaie, a member of the Order of Christian School Teachers, conducted his classes bears mute witness to this dual philosophy. Above the blackboard which Hitler And Christ Linked As 'Great Leaders Of Men' ard crucifix, flanked by two pictures, both drawn by Brother Lahaie. On the right is that of Jesus Christ, on the left that of Hitler. Above the picture of Christ is a cross and that of Hitler is topped by a swastika. On the blackboard itself is located a chart showing how students rank according to their educational and _ disciplinary merit. The students are given mili- tary ranks such as "corporal," "lieutenant," or, for the top students, SS, after the schutz- Staffel or security echelon in the storm troops under Hitler. School director, Brother Hec- tor Asselin, said he did not un- derstand the sudden interest dis- played in the teacher's methods. He said there was no secret about the class, parents knew about it and "many" had visited the classroom in person. The room is also used for adult English - language night courses and "hundreds" of per- dominated the front of the classroom is located the stand- sons have seen the pictures and rating board, he said. tion scenes will be shot for sau, Bahamas, Thursday. SWIFT CURRENT, Sask. described by a doctor as " pital today after being rescued revived. Saigon. (AP Wirephoto) 'Dead' 15 Minutes, scientificall least 15 minutes, was reported in cri NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Der Beatles Fly To Austria LONDON (Reuters)--Britain' by air for Austria today to screams and squeals from more than 1,000 teen-agers at London airport. At Salzburg, loca- s mop-haired Beatles left here their as-yet-unnamed second movie. They returned from making earlier scenes in Nas- Condition Critical (CP)--George Rainforth, 46, y dead" Friday for at tical condition in hos- from an ice-clogged creek and

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