Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Jul 1965, p. 1

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Home Newspaper' -Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties. a. VOL. 94 -- NO. 161 10 Oc Per Py rt She Osa Bins Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department o livered . OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JULY 12, 1965 Ottawa and for payment Weather Report Not so cool clouds on Tuesday. night, 60. High tomorrow, 75. Postage in Cash. 4 ree Teer ee tonight. Some Low to- Col, Raymond K. Gal- lagher, U.S. Air Force Wing Commander holds model of Constellation radar LISBON (AP) -- Strange ob- jects moving through space were reported sighted in two widely-separated areas of Por- tugal during the weekend. The Azores weather bureau claimed interference from one stopped its electromagnetic clocks. Descriptions of the objects were strikingly similar to offi- cial Argentine and Chilean mili- tary reports of sightings in the Antarcite last week. The first reported mysterious % flying object appeared in Moto- shinhos, near the northern city Oporto, where Manuel Fernan- des and his wife at first saw "some sort of luminous flat- tened balloon." Fernandes said "'the strange object at first sight looked like a flattened balloon, but then as we both watched, it looked like a plate turned over. "The thing was very lumin- ous, and had orange coloring and was nearly red at times," the couple said, "and at times green rays shot out from a side. "The saucer stopped at rather high altitude, near the coast, for about three minutes. Then, with an incredible veloc- ity, it sped towards the north." INTERRUPTED RADIO Fernandesysaid his radio was playing ile the object cir- cled over a forest near the house, but that heavy interfer- ence interrupted the music. A similar type of. interfer- ence stopped the electromag- netic clocks of the Villa do Porto weather bureau in the Portuguese Azores archipelago, a spokesman said. He added a "cyclindrical white object" circled around in the sky. oe BUENOS AIRES (Reuters)-- New sightings of unidentified flying objects were reportéd in South America Saturday. A police corporal was re- STRANGE SPACE OBJECTS REPORTED ported as saying he and his whole family saw a flat, . colored object hovering over the northeastern Argen> tine province of Chaco. It was reported to have hung -- in the sky for several minutes before shooting off to the south- -west with a trail of flames. ~~ - In Montevideo, a local Uru-- guayan news agency oun fying. oVleck Naan ous fly: above a beach th toot tures Plate area. ' from this Cape Cod base under Gallagher's command. Names of crewmen are chalked on. blackboard. (AP Wirephoto) picket plane that crashed last night 140 miles east of Cape Cod with 19 men aboard. The plane operated US. Plane In Ocean 10 Safe, Eight Die FALMOUTH, Mass. (AP) -- Ten men were rescued and eight bodies recovered today from the 19-man crew of a U.S. Air Force plane that went down in the North Atlantic. The coast guard said one member of the crew was missing. The rescued men were taken aboard United States and Ger- man destroyers in the vicinity of the crash 145 miles east northeast of Nantucket. The four - engine propeller- driven plane ditched in the fog- shrouded sea late Sunday, It was on duty as an early warn- ing radar plane. bodies were taken aboard The the U.S. destroyer Barry. survivors also were aboard thé rry. Helicopters from the U.S. car- rier Wasp, on manoeuvres in the area along with the Ger- man navy vessels, picked up Three/d the midsection, dropped into the despite a fog that limited vi-|Atlantic Ocean Sunday night to sibility to from 50 to 100 yards.|the northeast of Nantucket Is- The seas were reported as mod-|land. erate, yet too rough for a sea; ENGINE AFLAME plane to land. | Moments before, one of the The coast guard said its re-| three pilots aboard radioed that ports indicate only 10 of the 19;one engine was aflame and they crew members have been|were forced to ditch. sighted. Spokesmen at Otis Air) A Pan American World Air- Force Base said some reports|ways jetliner en route to Eu- indicated 15 men had beenjrope from Kennedy Airport in sighted in the water. |New York, was diverted to the A search area of 80 square|scene and circled overhead, as miles has been blocked off, the|the full-scale military search coast guard said. and rescue mission was organ- Rescue planes and ships had) ized. searched in thick fog late Sun- day night and early this morn- ing, and more planes and ships were rushed to the scene at The rescues were undertaken the plane went down, one search plane picked up a signal be- lieved to be from a radio hom- oe device used on emergency rafts Sistas cas lawn. *-The coast. guard said debris, : But an Otis spokesman said: papers and an oil slick had also) cisions in areas of trade, fiscal and monetary affairs should be more fully recognized by the Canada-U.S, partnership made public today. President Johnson by 'Arnold Heeney of Canada and Livings- ton T. Merchant of the U.S., says that because of their dif- ferences in size and their trad- ing patterns, U.S. decisions can have a disproportionately heavy impact on Canada. the U.S. could work more closely together in developing a ket for their industrial potential lin ways similar to the recently- jeoncluded U.S.-Canadian auto- mobile agreement. | Anl the two veteran diplo- imats recommended that steps be taken to avoid recurring con- flicts arising out of the U.S. Trading with the Enemy Act, under which orders in the past |have been given to Canadian |subsidiaries of U.S. firms not Little more, than an hour after|t® trade with countries such as) Communist China, with which Canada does permit trade in non-strategic goods. Reducing trade barriers he- tween the two countries to a minimum is justified by the United States, says a report on But it also says Canada and} common North American mar- been spotted in the area where the plane went down. One of the 19 men aboard was a Canadian, identified as S.Sgt. most of the crew members and deposited them on board one of) the German ships. | At least two men were picked] up by small boats. | Francis J. Griffin of Toronto. | Otis Air Force Base said the four-engine EC-121 radar picket plane, equipped with the huge radar domes above and below "We received only the one sig-|economies that could be made nal and we lost it. A plane went|in production for the potentially down to search the area where/large combined market of the we thought it was, but found|two countries, the report says. nothing. : : "Each government should Seas at the time were light|continue to study for the longer to moderate but because of the|range future the economic, fi- fog, visibility was reported near) nancial and political practicabil- ayey- lity of further progressive re- RCMP Has No Comment CPA Bomb Allegation VANCOUVER (CP) -- Work- ing on. wreckage and bodies, in- vestigators are facing a mass- ive jigsaw puzzle in efforts to determine why an airliner crashed Thursday in central British Columbia, killing all 52 persons aboard. RCMP and department of transport--®fficials here would not comment on speculation and reports that the four-engine Ca- nadian Pacific Airlines DC-6B) was ripped apart in the air by an explosion--possibly a bomb --before it spun to the ground. However, an RCMP officer at 100 Mile House, 30 miles from the crash scene, said evidence pointed to an explosion in a toilet area 25 feet from the tail of the plane. The scene is 170 miles northeast of here. The tail was found more than three-quarters of a mile from the main; area of wreck- age. Both the wing and fusel- age and the tail fell to the ground virtually intact. duction in tariffs and other bar- The report, prepared for) Prime Minister Pearson and} maintain a conscious awareness of Canadian interests to ensure that they are not violated or prejudiced through inad- vertence or ignorance." ciprocal obligation on Canadian authorities to consider in ad- vance the potential impact. of any of their decisions on U.S. interests. 2 Canada and the U.S. are in- timately linked in financial af- fairs, and moves by one coun- try to correct an imbalance of trade are bound to affect the other. "Thus, the fact that two thirds or more of Canada's trade is with the U.S. and that Canada has a very large current ac- count deficit with the U.S. makes it measures Canada finds neces- sary to reduce its overall ¢cur- rent account deficit if it gets into exchange difficulties will bear particularly heavily on the US. "On the other hand, if the U.S. finds it necessary on. oc- casion to limit its exports of capital, or if it should ever find it necessary to curtail imports, the impact of such measures would, in the absence of some special alleviation, fall with particular severity on Canada, which is a large importer of capital from the U.S. and with which it does most of its trade." KEEP INFORMED The report says Canada and the U.S. should keep each other fully informed of developments in balance of payments and the underlying reasons for those de- velopments, '"'so as to provide opportunity for working out con- structive and imaginative solu-| RCMP Supt, William Dickjout by a tremendous _ force,| said in another interview from|there were black smudges| 100 Mile House: jaround the toilet, the lavatory "There is no concrete evi-|wall and fuselage were blown dence that a bomb caused the] out and rivets on the side of jexplosion."" the aircraft were sheared off. | He said investigators were} When all pieces of the wreck- checking a gas-powered heater|age are believed found in the used for de-icing in the rear of}swampy, wooded area, attempts early evidence it could have|plane. |caused an explosion. LOOKS FOR HANGAR | He said pieces of the wreck-| Dr. Thomas How, regional di- age are being tagged and left\rector of air services for the on the ground, then plotted on|transport department, said he is a scale map of the crash site.|looking for a suitable hangar {When officials believe every-| where the jigsaw work can be thing is plotted, the pieces will| done. be gathered for shipment to, pathologists completed autop- Vancouver. ae __ |sies on the 52 bodies late Sun- Other unidentified investiga-| gay, tors have said a preliminary! Gjen McDonald, Vancouver examination of the pieces indi-\coroner in charge of the med- cate an explosion ripped open)ica) investigation, said bodies the left side of the plane in the| are being x-rayed to determine toilet - baggage compartment whether any metal fragments area just below the last row Of|are present. He would not re- passenger seats. veal any results of the patho- They said the floor was blown! jooical work. Sanctuary Idea Rusk Tells North Viet Nam COULD BE IN GENERAL USE BY EARLY 1970's New GM Gas Truck Turbo-powered WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. State Secretary Dean Rusk said Sunday North Viet Nam's sup- porters "must take fully into account" that in the Vietna- mese war "the idea of sanctu- ary is dead." Other U.S. sources said that China has been told those who might join in an attack on South Viet Nam could not ex- pect immunity from. reprisal. Peking has made known that if understands this U.S. position, the sources stated. The American officials who disclosed this declined to say whether this exchange of views took place at the periodic U.S.- Chinese ambassadorial talks at Warsaw or elsewhere. / Rusk made -his public re- marks in a radio - television interview, ABC's Issues and Answers, while discussing the U.S. - South Vietnamese bomb-} ing of Communist North Viet) Nam. | jto send tens of thousands of lvictims 'had been_ positively jidentified because most of the \bodies were badly mutilated. | He said only about a dozen Now Dead the plane, but.there also was no|will be made to reconstruct the|trade, on exports is only four per cent/or other measures riers to trade between the. two countries, with a view to in- creasing the market for the pro- ducts of each." WORTH EXPLORING There should be frequent con-| sultations between the two gov-| ernments because "the possibil-| ities of working out special ar- rangements of 'mutual advan-| tage, as was done. by the twojapparent efforts, to extend its governments with respect to|domestic law into the territory automobiles and automotivejof the other," the report says. parts, might be worthy of ex-| 'In the case of the U.S. Trad- ploration."" ling with the Enemy Act, as it The report notes that 16 perjrelates to U.S.-owned branches cent of Canada's Gross National | and subsidiaries in Canada, the Product is dependent on export|report recommends consultation while U.S. dependence|on the issuance of U.S. licences "by which of total U.S. national product. |this irritant to our relationship tions to difficulties that may| from time to time arise." Each country should "respect scrupulously the other's exer- cise. of its sovereign authority in legislation and the function- ing of its judicial system," the report also says. | "Tt is important that each| country should avoid efforts, or EGET EC EMO Vulnerable@LOSER AMITY ASKED Role Seen OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's nomic interests, but it should |vulnerability to American de- BETWEEN CANADA-U.S. The report says there is a re- inevitable that any MR. HEENEY Canada Aske Open Split On Big Issues OTTAWA (CP)--A special re- port on Canada-United States relations suggests that Canada avoid public disagreement with the U.S. on critical world issues |, where this country has no spe- MR. MERCHANT 3,900 U.S. Infantrymen Start S. Viet Landings SAIGON (AP) -- The first large force of U.S. infantrymen, 3,900 men of the Ist Division, began landing in South Viet Nam today. The first 1,000 men landed at Cam Ranh Bay, 180 miles northeast of Saigon, and dug in on sand dunes. The remainder. of the divi- sion's 2nd Brigade will land elsewhere in Viet am Tues- day, a U.S. spokesman said. The landings will bring the total of U.S, troops in Viet Nam to 71,000, The United States has a bri- jgade of. paratroops and 24,000 marines in Viet'Nam, but this brigade is the first sizeable unit of infantrymen sent to Viet Nam. There has been little Viet Cong action in the area of Cam Ranh Bay in recent months, but a big guerrilla buildup has been reported in the hills and moun- tains inland from it. U.S. sources said Viet Cong strength may be as much as a regiment. BOMB DEPOTS "Obviously the United States;may be removed without en- cannot renounce concern for|couraging the evasion of U.S. the protection of its own eco-|law by citizens of the U.S." Viet Cong Guerrilla Chief Is Woman, Moscow Claims MOSCOW (AP)--The Soviet] A correspondent for the So- Communist partyl newspaper|viet party newspaper says he Pravda says the deputy com-|talked with military leaders at} mander of. South Viet Nam's|the headquarters of the Na- Viet Cong guerrillas is ajtional Liberation Front of South woman. Viei Nam, the. political organi- She has been a revolutionary|zation behind the Viet Cong. for 35 of her 45 years. She has| Among the military leaders, suffered torture and prison,Jhe lists 'the' deputy com- Pravda says, and lost her hus-|mander-in-chief"' and identifies Thirty U.S, Air Force planes |bombed ordnance depots north of Hanoi again today, military |spokesmen said. In other strikes today, pilots jreported inflicting heavy dam- jage on the radar installation on Hon Nieu Island, 11 miles off- shore northeast of Vinh, and damaging 12 barges in an es- ituary 10 miles north of Vinh. U.S. planes also dropped |1,250,000 propaganda leaflets. All planes were reported to have. returned safely. U.S. planes struck north of Hanoi Sunday and attacked sus- pected Viet Cong positions in South Viet Nam, China claimed four American planes violated its air space by band and her only son. ager as Nguyen Thi Dinh. flying over the town of Hok'ou (or Kokow), in Yunnan prov- ince, on the border with North Viet Nam. Peking radio said the planes turned back and bombed and strafed. Lao Cai on the North Vietnamese side of the border, Pentagon spokesmen in Wash- ington denied the Chinese charge. REPORT ENGAGEMENTS Military authoritities in Sai- gon said a small U.S. Marine patrol was engaged Sunday by an estimated 200 Viet Cong two miles southwest of Da Nang. The spokesman said the marines called in _ reinforce- ments and the Viet Cong were driven from a heavily defended village. U.S. officials 'claimed U.S. planes killed 350 Viet Cong guerrillas in an attack 60 miles north of Bien Hoa in South Viet Nam. The figure was based on esti- mates from forward air control- lers and there was no confir- mation from other sources. Such aerial estimates normally are high. Two U.S. marines were killed and-four wounded Saturday night on a patrol near the big air base at- Da Nang, 380 miles northeast of Saigon, military spokesmen reported. Gen. Anderson To Defence Post OTTAWA (CP) -- Maj.-Gn. w. A. B. Anderson, 50, of Ot- tawa has been appointed to the defence staff, Canadian Forces Headquarters, to head training and administration of all com- ponents of the reserve forces, military aid to the civil power and civil survival operations. Washington says Hanoi is the main source of the guerrilla war on the south. "It is important," Rusk said, "that they discover that they are not going to be permitted men into the south to attack South Viet Nam and still live in safety and comfort at home." "The idea of the sanctuary is dead in this situation,'"' he said, "and that's something' that all of the others who may be supporting Hanoi must take fully into account.' NOT INTERFERING On the question of the five missile sites now being built around Hanoi, Rusk said: "Those missile sites at the pres- ent timé are not interfering with the things that we feel are re- quired to be done at the present time," DETROIT (AP) -- Chevrolet motor division of General Mo- tors Corp. unveiled a new gas turbine - powered truck today with a prediction that the vehi- cle could be in:general use by the early 1970's. E. M. Estes, GM vice-presi- dent and new manager of its Chvrolet division, said at a press review of the new truck; "We feel that progress now be- ing made may well result in turbine power for large high- way tractors bv -the early 1970s."' Estes said that while General Motors has been experimenting with gas turbines for more than 15 years, "there are still many problems to be solved before the turbine will be economic- ally feasible." The Chevrolet executive said, "basically, with the gas turbine we now are at a stage where the diesel was 35 years ago and just as the diesel had to prove itself economically, so must the turbine." It was one of the stréngest endorsements ever given to the gas turbine engine. All the U.S. automakers have done some ex- perimenting with that type of power plant, but nohe has gone as far in setting a possible time- table for the unit to b avail- able to the public. Estes repeated GM's conten- t tion that the turbine unit is best suited to commercial vehicles, rather than to passenger cars. Chrysler Corp. has been the main advocate of potential use of the turbine in autos, and it ' currently has 50 experimental cars in the hands of the public on a loan basis. Chrysler offi- » cials said only a few weeks ago that they have made no deter- mination as to whether the tur- 'bine car will be added to its sales line. Ford Motor Co., like General Motors, has concentrated most of its turbine research work on its possible use in trucks. A Ford turbine truck recently completed a transcontinental trip and now is on display at the New York world's fair. The new GM turbine truck is called the Turbo Titan III. Its plush interior includes carpet- ing and air-conditioning. Estes said the GT-309 engine that powers the new truck is a fifth-generation gas turbine and represents more than 15 years of development. "An identical version of the turbine has been under test in a conventional Chevrolet truck for the past three years," he said. ' As the trend towards larger, more powerful trucks continued, the field for the turbine engine would grow, cial interests or obligations. The report was prepared for the two governments by Arnold Heney, Canadian ambassador in Washington from 1953 to 1957 and from 1959 to 1962, and Liv- ingston Merchant, U.S. ambas- sador to Ottawa in 1956-58 and 1961-62. It was made public to- day in the two capitals. The two diplomats say the 10,000-word report, ordered by Prime Minister Pearson and President Johnson after their Jan. 22, 1964, meeting, is mainly the result of "a dialogue tween two friends." Mr. Pearson said in a state- ment that recommendations in the report involving joint action by the two governments will be the subject of. consultation 'tin the near future." H said the report will con- tribute to better understanding) of the complex nature of rela- tions between the two coun- tries, The report suggests deeper consultation between the two governments, especially in the four fields of continental use of energy, particularly electrical energy; trade barriers; civil aviation; and balance of pay- ments problems. Th report says the U.S. has heavy responsibilities as leader d To Avoid . ua be debeawe of the free world. It adds: "It is_ important and reasoms able that Canadian authorities should have careful regard fof the U.S. government's position in this world context and, in absence af special Canadian terests or obligations, avoid s@ far as possible public disagre ment, especially upon criti issues." This didn't mean that Can+ ada should automatically and uniformly concur in U.S. fore eign policy decisions, 'Nither did it refer "to all those freedom to criticize official pol* icies at home and abroad is clear and equally cherished in | "in the abid be-|interest of both wherever possible, : views between the two if possible scone 'in pi diplomatic chai PLOMACY EFFECTIVE ware consultarions with. be ai ; have confidence that pracy tice of quiet diplomacy is not only neighborl; and convenient to the U.S. but that it is in fact more effective than the alterna> tive of raising a row and bee ne er. in oemgy ¢ ; "By the same token, the $ authorities must be that, in such consultations, Can> ada will. have sympathetic re gard for the world-wide preot- puoiong and responsibilities of the U.S." DI oes the must 7,000 left sar in southern Celebes duri reports reaching Indonesia's 'A AReuters) _ Faroufallas from the Greek cabinet is fully behind him king. detective agency, who says eight local conservationists" Constantine on a spot. A spokesman for P: of Garoufallas, who is reported to have been by the young NEWS HIGHLIGHTS ft Homeless In Fire Seven thousand people were glesé when fire swept through the city of Macas- | ng the weekend, according fe - capital today. Would Oust Defence Minister ATHENS (AP) -- Prime Minister Gegrge Papadreau formerly moved today to oust Defence Minister Peter cabinet. The action put King apedreau said his » in demanding the resignation. Anti-Semitism Seen On Increase STRASBOURG, France (Reuters) -- Delegates to the World Jewish Congress gathered here today for. their annual meeting in the wake of a warning that anti-semitism is re- | viving throughout the world. Nahum Goldmann, president of the congress, said in a speech Sunday that increasing hos-" tility from the Arabs is the strongest manifestation at present of renewed anti-semitism. : Red Jet Fighters Shot Down SAIGON (AP) -- Two Communist GiG jet fighters were © reported shot down today over North Viet Nam by U.S. Air Force planes. U.S. military spokesman said they heard the » report but could not confirm it immediately, : Urge Killer's Freedom At Meet SEATTLE (CP) -- A public rally on a harbor pier to-: night will urge freedom for the killer whale Namu. The rally's. sponsor is Jack Hazzard, 38, head of a Seattle - © ¥, he has arranged for 'about © to attend. " r C jal Pool C ign Del Ann Landers--11 City News--9? Classified -- 14, 15; 16 Comics -- 13 Editorial--4 Financial -- 17 ...In THE TIMES today... layed -- P. 9, Dunlop Settlement Reached -- P. 3, Obits -- 17 Sports -- 6, 7, 8 Theatre -- 12 Whitby News--5 Women's--10, 11 Weather--2

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