Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94--NO. 116 50c he Oshawa Cimes le Copy 10 Sing! Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1965 Ottawa and for payment Authorized os Second Class Mall Post Office Department Weather Report Cloudy with thundershowers tonight. Clearing tomorrow afternoon. Low tonight, 65, High Wednesday, 70. of Postage in TWENTY-FOUR PAGES Luebke, left, reviews West German army honor guard drawn up at Bonn-Wahn air- QUEEN ELIZABETH II of Britain, escorted by West German President Heinrich Guns Thunder To Queen In Germany By IAN MACDOWALL BONN (Reuters) -- Britain's) The queen and Philip, accom- Queen Elizabeth arrived heré| panied © by Foreign Picton today by air from London for an) Michael Stewart, will spend 11 ll-day state visit--the first such days in West Germany, return- visit by @ ruling British monarch|ing to Britain in the royal yacht in more'than 50 years. Britannia from Hamburg May A 721-gun salute thundered out/s. as the Queen and Prince Philip} The Queen was wearing an stepped from the plane into ajafternoon dress and coat in cloudy spring day, gold-colored silk shantung with Present at the airport to wel-|a feathered hat, and Prince come the royal couple were aj|Philip the uniform of a marshal host of West German dignitaries|of the RAF. headed by President Heinrich} The Queen, accompanied by Luebke and federal chancellor|President Luebke, reviewed a Professor Ludwig Erhard. German guard of honor. The Queen shook hands with then man band then played the Brit- ish national anthem. The Queen of the diplomatic corps. A Ger-iGerman government for the Cyclone Toll Hits 12,000; Homes 80-100% Destroyed From Reuters-AP 3 the inundated areas, where the KARACHI (CP)--Some 12,000\sea, whipped up by cyclonic persons were feared dead today|winds, engulfed thousands of in the East Pakistan cyclone) acres of crops. which struck a week RO. | There is fear that epidemics An estimated 7,000,000 inhabi-| of cholera and smallpox will tants of the devastated area are|.ween villages where the water homeless and damage is esti-|j, contaminated. mated at $200,000,000. The governor of East Pakis- tan, Abdul Monen Khan, told re- porters Monday night that the) cyclone had taken 5,531 lives But the Pakistan Press Asso- d ciation reported from Dacca to-|"°°®S: 5s day it was feared that at least. The storm was described by 12,000 had died as 100-mile-an-| residents of the area as the A representative of the League damage and report to the Inter- national Red Cross on relief --I!nomic co-operation despite the} of Red Cross Societies is visiting} |the disaster area to assess the} hour winds and tidal waves bat- tered eight regions in the south- ern part of East Pakistan. Radio Pakistan said that from 80 to 100 per cent of the flimsy bamboo houses in the disaster area had been destroyed. The agency said there was a Some Senators May Retire When Commons Passes Bill. By RONALD LEBEL OTTAWA (CP) -- A govern- ment spokesman suggested Monday that some senators soon will take the unprece- dented step of retiring Privy Council President Mc Jlraith, government leader in the Commons, told the House he "has reason to believe' that a ijority of the 36 senators aged 7) and over will retire volun ta once the new Senate .bill becomes law The measure was expected to get third reading today with lit tle or no debate and come up in the Senate af'8 p.m, EDT Senators 'have been appointed for life until now and few have retired The government proposes to amend the British North America Act to set 75 as the retirement age for all senators to be appointed in future. worst in many years. It was. the third such disaster) in five years to devastate tae rice paddies of the Ganges Delta, on the Bay of Bengal In May, 1963, an, estimated 12,- 000 persons died in a storm and tidal wave. Incumbent senators over the age limit are not required to give up their seats and their $15,000 salaries. However, the government willencourage them to retire on an $8,000 an nual pension Mr. MclUlraith told the House that he has not asked the older senators whether they are will- ing to retire Reports persist that Prime Minister Pearson hopes several new vacancies will be opened in the upper chamber which he could in a major cabine shuffle. There. now are seve vacancies in seven provinces all but Nova Scotia, Prince Ed- ward Island and Manitoba. Of the senators age 75 and over, 31, are Liberals and five are Conservatives Senate standings are Liberals 60, Coa- servatives 32, independents two Independent - Liberal one and en Tit ivacant seven for a total of 102.|Brazil and Argentina. | | * visit. Officer in centre is a member of the British party while officer at right rear is port today. Ceremony took place following the mon- arch's arrival for a state the commander of the West German honor guard. --AP Wirephoto Salute 'Valley Draped In Sorrow, | By GRANVILLE J. WATTSA drive down the autobahn to TONYPANDY, Wales (AP)-- "Buckingham Palace on the piinds were drawn today in the Rhine"'--the Petersberg Hotel, | terraced back - to - back houses ee beg Sage oysaic get ge marching up the grim Rhondda above the Rhine which will be'vailey hillside as the families the royal home during a two-/of Tonypandy mourned the a, Mas ey seit union! teat, of a pon) pele hes 8 t y Jacks lined the drive out of thel ground. giiiaed eid oeo'y airport. | , ' sas per -| An electric spark in a pocket The political implications 0: of gas was blamed tentatively the visit were seen by many as stretching eavona nc te ne for the blast Monday at the gov- tries, now NATO allies after ng ante Ne gsc pe |fighting each other in the 1914-18 oe eee een inte and 1939-45 wars. = o : public inquiry into | It was expected the Queen's| oe perabeaconyeah \trip could give new impetus to, Some 200 men were below | : : asl jtary alliance and European eco-|i, 4 narrow shaft, only two feet, eight inches high in places, 2% miles inside the mountain, The dead included mine man- . : : ager Ernest Breeze and his as- Erhard, writing in his London|_, tant. Leslie Willi ' jembassy's magazine, said the Pee eAUe Weems, They |Queen's visit was the "ultimate|/had gone down on a routine in- | reconciliation" and "an event of|spection. tremendous importance for the} There was no work at the future of our two countries." ; : ' : jmine today. M s § Miles of streets in Bonn were da} Miners stood in lined with the flags of Britain,|8toups in the misty rain out- |jnegativism of France under President de Gaulle. STRESS RECONCILIATION Mourning For 31 Miners side their homes as investiga- tors went underground. BODIES BURNED Police gathered fingerprints from the dead miners' homes in an effort to identify burned bodies. 'Down there... it's terrible I tell you," said a worker dur- ing rescue operations. One miner said the explosion "pulled all the air' from the pit. "They didn't suffer. They \died immediately from suffoca- |tion and the great heat." | A thunderous rumble from }deep below the ground was the |first hint of disaster to those entered alBritish and West German efforts|ground when the gas exploded.|working on. the surface. them as well as with members| Mercedes provided by the West/to strengthen the Atlantic mili-/Those who died were working! "It's a blowout," someone jshouted, The mine alarm siren jwailed. Women ran from their jhouses in their aprons and hair jcurlers then headed toward the mine. Some of the men tried to get jto the coal face. "But you couldn't put your nose in there," one said. "The air was so thick you couldn't |breathe."' | Rescue, crews went down with gas masks. West Germany and the state of| North Rhine Westphalia. * Store windows were decorated) with Union Jacks and' photo- graphs of the Queen and Prince} Philip, and the capital was pre-| pared for what promised to be the most spectacular state oc- casion in post-war German his- tory. Tonight, President and Mrs.) Luebke planned the most bril- liant social event staged in Ger- many since the war--an evening} reception for the Queen, Prince Philip and 2,500 other guests in the baroque Bruehl Castle near Bonn. The presidential guard. bat-, talion was set to give one of its | rare torchlight tattoos during the castle reception. Thousands of police stood by for special duty and intense se- curity prec ns were. ar- ranged--ineiing a total ban on low-level flights along the route of the royal party. Officials explained the meas ures were designed to shield th Queen from over-enthusiasti crowds or from accident, from a potential attacker. Ottawa Greets. Shah Of Iran OTTAWA (CP)--Official Ot- tawa is dusting off its red car- pets today in preparation for the second royal visit to Canada in eight months | Last October, the Royal visi jtor was the country's own Queen. Wednesday at noon overnor-General Vanier and iPrime Minister' Pearson will) greet his Imperial Majesty Mo- hammed Reza Pahlavi, Shahin- Shah of Iran The handsome Shah, his beautiful Empress by 45, and 26-year-old wife Farah, are to arrive plane from New York. They have just ended a holiday in HOLLYWOOD -- Actress Patricia Neal, accompanied by actor Cary Grant, leaves her rented home in Pacific Palisades, Calif., en route to Los Angeles International PAT NEAL - 'ALIVE AGAIN' airport and a flight to Lon- don. It was her first ap- pearance since she was par- tially paralyzed by three Strokes Feb. 17. (AP. Wirephoto) Miners Revolt, Bolivia Rocked LA PAZ (Reuters)--The Bo- livian military junta today ruled this landlocked South American country under a state iam of siege after armed miners took over several mines Mon- day. night in protest against the jexile of their leader. Mine administrators and en- gineers were taken hostage and all but two of the country's na- tionalized mines were said to JUNTA REJECTS COALITION TRY Caamano Likes The Idea, | But Imbert Won't Buy It From Reuters-AP tion, Imbert said the Bundy SANTO DOMINGO (CP)--A/mission had not approved of |new U.S. effort to promote a co-|him or other members of his alition government in the Do-|government on the subject. He jminican Republic appeared|added: "No government can im- stalled today. pose a solution, It must be | Diplomatic sources said that|made by the Dominicans them- a U.S. suggestion for a coali-|selves." tion headed by Antonio Guzman,,RUMORS CIRCULATE a former minister of agriculture) Imbert said he doubted under former president Juan|whether the U.S, would involve |Bosch, received an initial rejec-jitself in imposing a settlement tion Monday by the civilian-|on the Dominican Republic. military junta headed. by Brig.-/ When asked if the coalition idea Gen. Antonio Imbert Barreras,|had come from any other labelled the "national recon-|source, he said there were be paralyzed. It was not known their nationality. One person was killed and 19 were injured--some by bullets --when police clashed with 7,000 striking workers in La Paz pro- \testing the banishment to Para- |guay of Juan Lechin Oquendo, leader of the miners and a for- mer vice-president. A govern- ment spokesman said eight of the wounded were policemen. After the -bloody rioting and general strike at La Paz, the |junta declared the state of siege and ordered a general mobili- jzation of all males 19 to 50. The) jmove was evidently designed to) |put the men under military| jlaw, | |EMPTY POSTS | | The junta also declared all! labor union posts vacant and) said they would be filled by un- ion elections to be held within 40 days. Miners were reported to have taken over the mines at Catavi Siglo Veinte, Huanuni and Col- quirt in the eastern Cordillera region southeast of La Paz. Tin miners at Mina Violocco, 200 miles south of the capital, seized the mine's administra- tive and technical employees and held them hostage. It was at the Catavi Siglo how many. were being held or/ JUAN LECHIN A presidency spokesman said no one had been arrested but several arrest orders were out. USE TEAR GAS Police used tear gas to break up a demonstration outside the U.S. Embassy. A police jeep was thrown into a river and some of the demonstrators started batricading themselves near San Andreas University. "death to the military boot" and "'long live the worker-peas- ant government." The demonstrators were mostly factory workers who walked off their jobs at mid- night Sunday to protest the ex- ile of Lechin. The strike was called by the Bolivian Labor Federation which Lechin Veinte mine 18 months ago that miners held four Americans) hostage and later released them) unharmed. | Reports from Catavi said min- jers there called for a general strike and the withholding of tin intended for export. | Trade unionists gathered out-| side the labor confederation headquarters and shouted anti- government slogans. headed. About 25,000 tin miners in other parts of the country also walked off their jobs, ACCUSED LEADER Lechin, whom junta president 4t.-Gen. Rene Barrientos Or- uno early this year accused of being a Communist, arrived Sa- turday in Asuncion, Paraguay. He was deported for allegedly being involved in subversion. I t U.S. Resumes Air Strikes Aiter 5-Day ° Cease-Bomb' |U.S. effort to arrange a coali- Caamano Claims 375 Troops The demonstrators shouted) SAIGON (AP) -- The United|six days. There was no expla- |States resumed air strikesjnation here for their resump- against North Viet Nam today, | tion. a U.S, military spokesman said.) Twenty A-1E_propeller-driven The spokesman said 30 U.S. |Skyraiders and A-4 jet Sky- |Navy war planes from the U.S.| hawks, supported by:10 F-8 Cru- 7th Fleet carrier Coral Sea at-|/sader jets, hammered the target tacked a petroleum storage)with 25 tons of bombs, rockets area at Phu Qui, 125 miles south) and air-to-ground missiles in a | | struction" government, The sources said that the high-level mission sent here by President Johnson had won a favorable reception for the coa- lition idea from the "constitu- tional' regime headed by Col.) Francisco Caamano. The mission is led by Mc-| George Bundy, President John- son's special assistant for na- tional security. It also includes Thomas Mann, undersecretary of state for economic affairs, Cyrus Vance, deputy secretary of defence, and Jack Hood Vaughn, assistant secretary of state for inter - American af- fairs. Asked about the reports of a In First Two D Caamano said 375 junta troops died in the first two days of the battle that broke out Sa- turday after a two-week cease- fire in the revolt. Imbert, however, said there had been few casualties on his side and that his military forces had taken 600 prisoners since the battle began. A Western diplomatic source said that Caamano personally offered Guzman the presidency of the "constitutional govern- ment" two days ago. He said Guzman was believed to be in Washington. The rebels originally sought the return of Bosch and of the constitution which was junked when the military overthrew him, Caamano said he had no in- formation about reports that U.S. officials were trying to per- suade the Imbert junta to re- sign. The Associated Press said the coalition government plan. was reported to have been offered by McGeorge Bundy, the U.S. presidential assistant, and three other officials who formed a special White House mission that flew to the Dominican Re- public Sunday. The AP said the junta had re- jected the plan "offered by Washington" and poised the threat of an all-out drive against the rebels. As the junta sent tanks and of Hanoi, North Viet Nam's cap-/30-minute assault, the spokes- ital. Initial pilot reports said se-|man said. | jvere damage was inflicted on} The planes encountered light jartillery against rebel holdouts fresh troops with mortars and many "rumors" circulating in the country. Caamand's reaction when asked about the coalition Mon- day night was that this was a question which could not be an- swered because "it does not ex- ist." Both Imbert and Caamano de- nied they had met with Presi- dent Johnson's mission, but in- formed sources said there had been contact between the mis- sion and both the 'reconstruc- tion' and 'constitutional' re- gimes, Meanwhile, the two sides made conflicting claims about the heavy fighting that con- tinued in the northwestern sec- tion of Santo Domingo. ays Of Battle innorthern Santo Domingo, junta "Foreign Minister' Hora- cio Viciosa warned that all re- sistance would' be crushed un- less the insurgents drop their "absurd and unacceptable pre- tentions." General Antonio Imbert Bar- reras, head of the rival civil- ian-military junta -- "the gove ernment of national reconstruc- tion"--which has been fighting the insurgents, rejected the pro- posal, 'claiming it would lead to a Communist takeover." Imbert called Guzman a "Bosch puppet." He said he re- minded the U.S. mission that a prime U.S. aim was to prevent the Dominican Republic from falling under Communist dom- ination. But U.S, spokesmen have begun retreating from Washington's original conten- tion that Communists were dominating the rebel movement, Students Halted By East Germans BERLIN (CP-AP)--A group of about 150 Canadian students was delayed for five hours Mon- day at the Communist East Ger- man border checkpoint of Mar- ienborn before being allowed to continue by bus to West Berlin. West Berlin officials said the East German guards at the autobahn did not give an expla- eatin nasa vn ict nation for the long wait. SA) the target, which was reported burning. The strikes were jagainst the Cor Liberal Lips the first ist north in! OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- ment has decided it will make public no further information on recent espionage activities which resulted in two Russian embassy officials being sent out of the country, Acting Prime! Minister Martin said Monday. His statement in the Com- mons brought the charge from Opposition Leader Diefenbaker that "it looks like another case of covering up." Mr. Martin, replying to a de- mand by Mr. Diefenbaker for the names of two Canadians connected with the case, said the government's decision was taken so as not to disclose the nature of Canadian security measures and how much is known about spy activities. In security matters involving \foreign agents it is difficult to make information public without compromising arrange- jments to protect the security jand safety of Canada, he said. | Some aspects were still under jinvestigation and he appealed to the Commons to follow past No More On Spy Scandal |whether in jveal their names. ground fire and all returned; safely, the spokesman said. No| enemy aircraft were reported) seen, Stay Sealed; practice of permitting the gov- ernment to decide how much information can safely he re- vealed. ASKS PLANS | Mr. Diefenbaker asked! view of espionage activities involving two persons "and possibly others" the gov- ernment plans to press charges against "wrong-doers" and re- | | Why should they enjoy the! protection of anonymity having] reportedly received thousands! of dollars, he asked. | He also' asked government plans to name a royal commission on espionage and wrong-doing, some of it left over from 1946 when a "second spy ring" investigated. | He did not clarify this refer- ence to a second spy ring. It was in 1946 that a number of persons. were charged as a re- sult of disclosures of espionage activities made by former Rus- sian embassy cipher clerk Igor|= Gouzenko, whether the|- apparently went un-| NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Thant Appeals For Dominica Peace UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- United Nations Secretary General U Thant made a personal appeal today to the warring factions in the Dominican Republic for an imme- diate halt in hostilities. France-Russian Atom-Pact Signed MOSCOW (Reuters) France and Russia today signed a new agreement on co-operation in the peaceful uses of atomic energy. The agreement, signed by leading atomic officials of the two countries, continues one con- cluded in 1960. Barry Sees U.S.-Russia Vs. Peking PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -- Barry Goldwater says he ex- pects to see the day when Russia and the, United States will be allies in a war with Communist China. Speaking at a luncheon here Monday, the 1964 Republican presiden- tial candidate, said he thinks "Red China will eventually go through Asia, go through India and Pakistan." ST n THE TIMES today Subdividers To Pay For More Service--P. 13 Today's Topic: Parks--P. 5 Former Ao Gridder Sets Great Example--P, 12 Ann Londers---16 Sports--10, 11, 12 City News--13 Television--22 Classified--18, 19, 20 Theatre--9 Comics--22 Whitby News--5, 6 Editorial--4 Women's--14, 15, 16 Financiol--21 Weather--2 Obits--21 IW ait pai i eer eae e TT i * MMMM MT TT : |