MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Com- munist Party Chief Leonid Brezhnev sharply criticized the United States Saturday as te warned the world the Soviet Brezhnev Hits At The US. Warns Of Soviet Arsenal Union has enough missiles, in- tercontinental and orbital, to crush any enemy. The Soviet leader used as lharsh terms in his reference to the U.S. as any heard here re- cently, describing the U.S. as a "mainstay of reaction and ag- gression," in a speech to grad- uates of military academies. By WILLIAM NEVILLE Leader Diefenbaker says the Dorion report should end any idea the Liberal government might have of calling a fall election. At the same time, he suggests the report should force the other opposition parties to think hard about defeating the minor- ity administration in the Com- mons when Parliament re- sumes Sept. 27. Mr. Diefenbaker made both these points Saturday on ar- rival back from:a four - day western tour during which -he said he had a chance to sense public reaction to the Dorion report and subsequent events. He said his taking of the public pulse on the Prairies showed, first, that, "'if this gov- ernment has any idea that it has been able to paper over the cracks, it has a second guess coming." As well as dimming chances of an early election, Mr .Dief- enbaker said, the report by Chief Justice Frederic Dorion on charges of attempted brib- 'ery and coercion by federal ministerial aides should have its effect on the minority part- ies in the Commons. "T would think some,of the doddlers and doodlers in the third parties, which have al- ways found some reason to LUCI'S BAPTISM CRITICIZED baptized in the Episcopal Church as an infant and that the repetition of the ceremony was "'totally void of any sacramental effect." (AP Wirephoto) dral in San _ Grancisco against the Roman Catholic Church for the recent bap- tism of Luci Baines Johnson, Bishop Pike said the Presi- dent's daughter had been The Rt. Rev. James A. Pike, left, Bishop of the fornia, is surrounded by parishioners after his Sun- Hot, Dry Weather Blamed | Duty-free | For Fires In N.B. And B.C. Or Fires in N.D. AN wV. Sea Access By THE CANADIAN PRESS (Island. But forest service offi-| Hot, dry weather which has|cials are concerned about dry) support the government in the past, will have to re-orient their parts of Ontario, Quebec and the Maritimes has been blamed) vancouver Fire "Chief Ralph| weight of public opinion on this issue." wick and British Columbia. jin the city as a precaution| pifty.c4 ; ; Two fires were burning out of| acainst tos Mierediing fire haz-(euty-eight countries will adopt), +omised to introduce an early "jan agreement Tuesday that willl,gn . confidence motion based More than 150 troops from) Camp Gagetown and a Canso|HAS 870 FIRES jthe sea for the goods of land-|);, nent resumes. . J | s : "This will give everyone in rowed from the Quebec gov-|forest fires since the beginning) After adoption by the session,|the House a chance to stand ernment have been called out|of the forest fire season May 1,|the pact needs the signatures|and be counted on this issue,' burning for a week and has de-|same time last year. Cost of|to be finding. Mr. Diefenbaker said Prime stroyed more than 2,000 acresjfighting the fires -- $456,000 --| About 30 of the ference an|incorren Pearson knows it is Episcopal Diocese of Cali- day diatribe at Grace Cathe- 4] | brought a critifal drought tojconditions and have asked ex-) tra care from campers. | Proposed thinking when they feel the full for forest fires in New Bruns-|jacks has banned outside fires 17 . ; | 3s wecaution| poNtED NATIONS (AP)--| Mr. Diefenbaker already has "eontrol in New Brunswick.|arq guarantee duty-free access tO! on the Dorion report when Par- water - bombing' aircraft bor-| British Columbia has had 87.|!ocked nations. to fight one which has been|compared with 485 fires for thejof individual countries affected|he said. of slash and timberland nearjis more than 10 times the last/attending a UN conference onjincorrect to suggest, as he did Douglastown, a village about 90/year's cost. the convention on transit trade/last week, that the opposition OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition} Dief Says Dorion Report | Should End Fall Vote had a chance to move a non confidence motion on the Dorion report before the House recess- ed last Wednesday night. COULDN'T DO IT "The prime minister knows very well we couldn't do that. Non - confid d it The speech was symptomatic of the low ebb in Soviet-Amer- ican relations which has fol- lowed the escalation of the Vietnamese war. As if to stress this, top Rus- sian officials boycotted an in- dependence day reception in the residence of the U.S. ambassa- dor here. SAYS REPORTS WRONG Brezhnev said in his speech that Russia had more missiles than some Western intelligence reports Suggested. h 1 must be based on supply mo- iions and there was no such motion placed before the House after the report was tabled Tuesday." The Conservative leader re- newed his attack on Mr. Pear- son for contradicting one aspect of Chief Justice Dorion's re- port. The prime minister has said the chief justice was wrong in saying Mr. Pearson knew of the involvement of his parliamentary secretary, Guy Rouleau, in the Rivard affair as far back as last Sept. 2. "This is the most inexcusable intrusion against the indepen- dence of the bench that has had ug power to "finish once and for all any aggressor or group of aggressors," he said. Brezhnev replied to a recent U.S. article which estimated Russia had about 270 intercon- tinental missiles with nuclear warheads. The U.S. Air Force announced Wednesday it now 'has 800 nu- clear - tipped Minuteman mis- sles in firing position). Brezhnev did not mention the report but he said: 'We are satisfied with our rockets. Their high reliability and their high state of readiness for immedi- ate launching are the result of great technical perfection." ever taken place in this coun- iry," . Diefenbaker said. It was part of an over-all pattern, too. SEEKS CONTROL "First it was control of Par- liament -- the government doesn't want any criticism. Then it was thought control and control of the press through the newspaper legislation. Now it is control of the findings of a judge who was appointed by the government with appropri- ate eulogies for his ability and legal knowledge. "Having been weighed by the jscales of justice and found }wanting, the latest resort is to jattack a judge." | Mr. Diefenbaker said that, if jthe prime minister was so con- cerned over evidence of when jhe learned of Mr. Rouleau's in- |volvement,* he should have tes- \tified before the Dorion inquiry. | "Why didn't he give evi- denice? I say the prime minis- iter knew that if he did, he would be embarrassed by icross - examination by founsel \for other interested parties." miles northeast of Fredericton. The other fire, near the Tom- ogonops River, 100 miles north- east of Fredericton, has de- stroyed more than 3,000 acres In Quebec, spectafular forest|of Jandlocked countries have) fires which broke out in thelindicated they will sign the Gaspe region last week havejagreement Wednesday. The ac- been brought under control but|cord will remain open for signa- Y travel bans in the areas con-|tures until Jan. 1, and the other of slash and small timber. an c tinue and about 300 men are|participating nations are ex-| 8 In British Columbia three/being kept on alert until offi-|pected to sign before then. | Given To U S | fires were out of control in thejcjals feel the danger. has' The pact goes 'into effect! . tai Nelson py _ » the| passed. |when ratified by any two land-| WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. et, oe he ;<| A spokesman for the provin-|locked countries and two mari-|State Secretary Dean Rusk said Tr pine P "di a ¢. 150 mites| ia! forest protection service|time states through which the|Sunday night the United States psn va poi Jal 4 aca |said the forests are still dan-| goods will pass. has approached the Commu- : considered under ot : |gerously inflammable. _.| The accord permits a mari-|nists repeatedly about halting } Officials described the Brit-, Officials described Ontario's\time state to make a small,|the bombing of North Viet Nam ish Columbia fire situation :as|¢0'e*t fire danger as moder-\non-discriminatory charge to|aS part of a peace move, and explosive, and to immediate|{c; Twenty - one fires ate re-\cover the cost of administering|has been cold-shouldered. a ie ported burning in the province, the traffic through its territory.) 'We have asked the other side on more than one occasion relief is expected from the). under control weather. Temperatures in the The agreement calls for "free what else*'would stop if we Pine Pass have been in the 80s.| A fire is burning in an area\yninterrupted and continuous x \ remote ftom roads in Novaltraffic in transit" but says the|S!opped the bombing,' Rusk RAINFALL BEATS JUNE Scotia, but five other. sma ll conde may be ouicneel: Poker said, without disclosing the In the Ontario - Quebec); APSE Ottawa Valley, where drought! 7es were all but extinguished! gown into parcels, reloaded 'and ruined the first hay crop and|'uring the weekend by show-)warehoused along the way. ~| forced many farmers to sell sais It is to stay in force in war-| their stock at heavy losses,| Newfoundland had threejtime so far as "the rights and| weekend rainfall surpassed the small forest fires burning under|duties of belligerents and neu- June total. control. itrals" permit. An agricultural representa-|~ po] Pc the eee rae LI] d R t R t » ti 1,000, in, | Sur aided we 'need. ananer) OVS AEequUests Hestricuons t like it with few 4 : sta3 days" Normal sone vainall's| ON Immigration To Britain LONDON (Reuters) -- Selwyn|and housing being available. in the U.S. air raids--and that 3.02 inches but the valley this vee. Seniee oy 4.0 IDCHEE Hi aya. a leading Conservative! He said: 'To limit new en-\(he Communists pave _ "very first half of 1965 was the driest|PPOsition spokesman, urgeditrants is in the interests of the|harsh, very harsh"' replies be- channel used for these queries. He added: "And we have never had any reply ... as a matter of fact there have been public state- ments from Peking that if we _..|stopped bombing North Viet [tato negotiations for a peaceful! settlement." | Rusk said the Communists were given advance notice of last May's five-day trial pause . |munists have not indicated that |Nam they still would not enter) Cold-Shoulder Reply .-~- Rusk Agency television-radio _inter- view recorded June 24 for broadcast on overseas stations Sunday night, was asked in par- ing - pause recommendations made by Indian Prime Minister Shastri and Prime Minister Pearson. The state secretary ruled out "merely a gesture which will make no contribution to the |peace"--and he said the Com- ja bombing pause would make lany difference. Rusk refused to say just what |Communist reply--if one is re- jceived--would be considered a |good enough bargain by Wash- ington to call off the bombing. NEED A NEW FURNACE? Ne Down Peyment--First Payment December--Call PERRY In the Maritimes, where the F ; '|during the weekend that thelimmigrants already here, fore the bombing resumed. ant | " h wie a months in a century in manyiotal of immigrants to Britain Therefore, for at least a period) Rusk, in U.S. _ Information| Day or Night . . . 723-3443 parts, agriculture and forestry) officials say continued hot and|e restricted for some years to/more come in than leave." dry weather could cause severe the. total which leaves Britain.| 'This does not.mean shutting trouble to forests and field Lloyd, a former chancellor of|the door completely but seeing crops. the exchequer, is chairman of|that it does not open more often Some 50 fires were burning in the Conservative party's immi-jto let people in than it opens widely separated parts of New gration policy committee, butito allow them to get out. Brunswick. Winds up to 5o\the plan he outlined has not) 'This, I believe, is the best miles an hour during the week-|¥et been endorsed by the party. way to give us a chance of| end complicated the work of In a speech he also urged|dealing with the enormous prob- "firefighters [that future immigran' be sub-\lems of housing, education, In British Columbia: no seri-\J@cted to proper health tests!health and employment prac- ous fires were reported in/2%d to conditior about jobs|tices which exist. southern areas or on Vancouver sapceeimmnsee MONEY TO INVEST? Earn the highest rate -- Brief Asks -- More Safety OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson has received a brief endorsed by MPs from every party demanding that the federal government take steps to assure more stringent safety LEAN per annum TUESDAY AND ALL DAY WEDNESDAY |] SPECIALS RIB STEAKS u. §9° devices in automobiles. 'She brief was prepared by Meward Grafftey (PC--Brome- Mississquoi) with the help of two private citizens. Other MPs who endorsed it | for 5 years (and up to 10 years) CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST LEAN MEATY aN AT SUE IN were John Matheson (L -- | Leeds), Stanley Knowles (NDP GUARANTEED ] --Winnipeg North Centre), Guy ' INVESTMENT Marcoux (SC -- Quebec - Mont- BACK SPARE RIBS LB. 69 morency) and Charles-Eugene > Dionne (Creditiste -- Kamour- CERTIFICATES are HINDQUARTERS OF aska). , The brief said that in the last Guerenteed -- as to Principal and Interest BE decade some , 35.000 persons Flexible ----may be used os Collateral for loans have been killed intomobile ac- Redeemable -- upon death CUT AND WRAPPED FREE cidents and nearly 1,000,000 in- Authorized -- os Trustee Act $ : jured. If the trend continues, os Trustee Act Investments nearly 30,000 additional fatali- ties would occur by the end of SG 1970. HEA = The brief urged establishment | Baaae three agencies to combat the | a a ab aog 8 | SAVING HOURS: litem $<sncd Heed Office: A research and development | Mon.-Thurs. 906 Bz 19 Simcoe St. N. unit should be set up to develop | Friday 909 S= Oshawa a prototype safety car. This | Saturday 9toS FOUNTAINHEAD Tel, 723-5221 would not be a modification of existing car design but a prod- uct of research and scientific OF SERVICE CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION '12 KING ST, EAST j u. 59° LER'S FOR WHOM THE BELLS TOLL! PADULA, Italy (AP) -- Some of those for whom the bells tolled complained that they tolled too early. So Bishop Gerolamo . Bortignon of Padua ruled Saturday that the church bells will not ring in this north Italian city before 7 a.m. Even then, the bishop de- creed, they will ring more briefly than in the past, and loudspeaker systems in the work late at night, have complained about the bell ringing which heretofore had started at 5:30 a.m. for early religious services. TRACK FOUNDER DIES TUSTIN, Calif. (AP) -- Hugh Blue, one of the founders of jthe Santa Anita Race Track jand rated. among the world's jtop turf authorities, died Satur- day of cancer. He was 81. Blue, ja native of County Limerick, ,|unfairness to Rev. Rene Lahaie MONTREAL (CP) -- First ress reports last March of a young teaching brother's use of Nazi symbols in his classroom were "unnecessarily sensa- tional," a newspaper men's "court of honor," has found. However, said the court, the reports were provoked by the "cumulative shock" felt by the reporters who handled the story. L'Union Canadienne des Jour- nalistes de Langue Francaise (Canadian Union of . French- Language Journalists) set up the court after Francoise-Albert Press Reports Rapped | In Case Of Symbols Angers, a Montreal professor, accused the press of of Montreal's Roman Catholic de la Mennais School. In its report, issued Saturday, the three-man tribunal says Mr. Angers has 'added his bit to the inquisition various _politi- cians, and not the least inipor- tant ones, are carrying on against Quebec journalists." PRESS CRITICIZED Premier Jean Lesage and several members of his cabinet have criticized the press for the) prominence given Separatist and terrorist activities in the province. | The journalists' court was) made up of Rev. Michel Savard of the Federation of French-| Language Classical Colleges, Jean-Paul Robillard, assistant) news editor of the weekly Le) Petit Journal, and social | sci-| ence professor Gerard Bergeron of Laval University. They criti- cized the handling of the story by Montreal-Matin, the first to} publish the story, and by Mont-) real la Presse. | The court said the authors of} the story in Montreal-Matin de-| serve a reprimand, but that "'it) must be remembered they were pressed for time and didn't want to miss their 'scoop.' "We base this on their. care- lessness in writing the story after they had shown great pre- cautions in checking it before- oo bell towers will be |hand. | shut ott : : La Presse wa it: Residents, many of whom "triviatities," ay er " RECOMMENDS COUNCIL | The court recommended that) a Superior Council of the Press be set up, composed of pub-} lishers, journalists and mem-! bers of the public, to establish an ethical code for journalism. The judges' decision carries! no legal weight. Brother Lahaie and his prin-| cipal, Brother Hector Asselin,} were suspended in March, but were after their cases had been re- reinstated last month \Ireland, brought together movie producer Hal Roach and Dr. |Charles H. Strub of San Fran- |cisco to form the syndicate that was viewed. Antonio Girard, inspec- tor for the. area in which la Mennais school is located, also d and his sion has been maintained. THE OSHAWA TI MES, Monday, July 5, 1965 3 The reports of Brother La: haie's teaching methods told of the symbols used in his class. Above the blackboard and flanking a crucifix, standard in the Catholic school, the teacher affixed paintings of Jesus Christ and Hitler, both done by him- self. Above the portrait of Christ was a cross; above the Hitler painting a swastika, USED MILITARY TERMS The classroom also contained a chart ranking students ac- cording to educational and dis- ciplinary merit and in terms of military rankings. The top rank available was "SS" which first reports linked with the appela- tion given first-line members of Hitler's storm troopers. Brother Lahaie has since said the ini- tials stood for "'super-soldier." A committee which » recom- mended Brother Lahaie's rein- statement said he had acted with "great naivete" and "'ig-|j norance of the realities of the society in which he lives." CHANGE RULES LONDON (AP)--The English Football Association voted Sat- urday to allow substitutes in soccer matches for a trial pe- riod of 12 months. Previously, players injured in an English Soccer match were not replaced and the team had to carry on despite the handicap. Archdeacon, 102 Dies In West VICTORIA (CP) -- Anglican Archdeacon Frank Cornish, 102, who lived on a Blackfoot Indian reserve during the 1885 Sas- katchewan Riel rebellion, died Saturday. ° Born in Pembrokeshire, South Wales, he came to Canada in 1884. For a time he was a guest of Sir John A, Macdonald, a family acquaintance. Through Sir John he got a job as Indian agent and was sent from Regina to a Black- foot reserve in Saskatchewan before the rebellion broke out, In later years he recalled that ° he always slept with a his bed. He also lived among the Sar- cee and Stoney Indians later went to Fort Frances, Ont., as Indian agent. rifle by JURY AND LOVELI to Britain Only BOAC and Air No Waiting! Up to 5 flights daily this Fall Canada jet direct from Canada to Britain. This fall enjoy Europe at its uncrowded best. Take your choice of up to 5 transatlantic flights daily-- as many as 40 departures every week. And you can fly from Canada to all three major British centres--Glasgow, Manchester or London. 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