Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Jul 1965, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in One | tario and Durham Counties, VOL, 94 -- NO. 165 80¢ Per' West Tense Bollvered he Oshawa Simes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 16, 1965 Authorized as Second Class Ottowe ond for povment Weather Report | Sunny with cloudy periods, Hot and humid. Rain or thun- dershowers later today. Low tonight, 65. 80 Piel Post Op ice: Coperiees Postage in Cash, High Saturday, TWENTY-FOUR PAGES ' ? a IT 'HAS ITS UPS, AND MANY DOWNS, BUT IT'S FUN Eleven-year-old Ginette St. those spills which:are bound ducted by the Oshawa Rec- Kurelo, manager of the Osh- Pierre of Ontario st. took to occur withoit advance reation Department, The awa Civic Auditorium. Spills no chances yesterday when notice. Ginette belongs to girls range in age from like this one were frequent, she went roller skating for the Girls' Club, one of the eight to 15. They were in- but the girls bounced right the 'first time. She wore a many special.interest group vited for an afternoon of back for more. cushion to protect her from programs offered and con- roller skating by William Times Photo by Allan Bailey \Beatniks' Kidnap QPP Officer JAfter Melee Near Missile Site after the remaining four, but somehow was disarmed, Then LA MACAZA, Que. (CP)--| Residents in the area called] The police ordered the men Quebec Provincial Police today|police about midnight to report|to turn over their rifles, and d were searching the woods near|that s¢ven men armed with ri-/six did, But the seventh balked|he was taken into the woods here today for one of their fel-/fles were prowling in thejand told police to back away with the group. low-officers reported forded into| woods. /Then his rifle went off and the! The wounded man was taken the woods by a group of armed; Two QPP officers were or-|bullet struck one of the seven.|tg hospital in St. Jerome, 90 men, |dered to investigate and found) The six others started run-| miles away, where his condition Another man was injured in}the men, all apparently in their|ning in all directions and an of-|was reported satisfactory. the incident when a gun dis-|20s, engaged in what one report ficer collared two of them. The two captured men vere charged. jcalled target-practice, | The other policeman went said by police to have called Meantime, the RCAF in) es ~~. {them selves "bohemians' or Montreal said the incident, "beatniks' but not peace marchers, The Bomarc base near here has been the scene of a num- ber of demonstrations by paci- fist groups in recent years. But in a statement in Mont- |the new government struggling|real today, Air Vice-Marshal which began Thursday night, has nothing to do with the Bo- marc missile base, located about three miles from the scene of the shooting. QPP and volunteer searchers were combing the woods in Greece Gripped In Crisis; Worst Since '45 Civil War From AP-Reuters strength and stopping cars on) ATHENS (CP) -- Police|to be born. Murray D. Lister, air officer the roads near this community, clamped down on jittery Athens But Papandreou made no di-;commanding Air Defence Com- 10 miles northwest of Montreal.|toqay as the new prime minis-|"ect claim that he was stillmand, said 'there were no Early reports said some sort tey sought to mold a govern-| Prime minister, demonstration activities in the of peace marchers may have/ment to find a way out of; Sources said Papandreou wasjvicinity of the RCAF. base at ,been involved but later, work-/Greece's worst political crisis|ttying to block a drift of his\La Macaza last (Thursday) ing from still-sketchy reports,| since the civil war of 1945-47, |Patty members iy demanding/night." an oath of personal allegiance) BY saad from cabinet ministers. who had) RCAF NOT INVOLVED served-him. But more members| He continued: of the Centre Union were re-| 'There was no RCAF involve- ported willing to desert him if;ment in the incident, which oc asked by Athanasiades-Novas to|Curred in the woods about serve. - j\three miles from the base." If they did, it would mean aj A defence spokesman _ said split of the Centre Union, the QPP had not requested military the QPP gave this account; | Derailed Cars Block CN Line sa George SINUSTON (CP) -- A 15-car|Papandreou, fired by King Con- drainer lateteied two) stantine Thursday night in a freight trains a half mile east/Showdown fight over the armed of here early today blocked the forces, claimed he had been Canadian . National Railways) ousted in 'fa ridiculous coup main Toronto-Montreal line and/ d'etat. The crisis pointed toward a political realignment in this NATO country that could mean the breakup of the now domi- 'nant Centre Union party and a sibly moving toward the Na-|™orning. tional Radical Union, which was| Residents of the area were in power for nearly a decade|Said to have become nervous before Papandreou came to of-|Decause of the movements in caused extensive re-routing, He vowed to fight to return to!fice in 1963 the woods of the men. H. J. Fast, CNR area man-|power, and called: for demon-| The controversy surrounding) 4 helicopter and a police dog ager for the Rideau district, | strations against the new prime|Papandreou's down fall was|Were helping in the search. A said emergency crews from|minister, 72 - year - old George|sharpened.by the release of Jet-|thick fog in the area delayed Belleville were expected to re-|Athanasiades - Novas and any store single line traffic by noon.jother Centre Union members There were no injured, who join the new government. Following the 4 a.m. accident; But the interior ministry, un- ters from the king to the ousted|the start of the operation. prime minister, outlining the yi ys i eet Rie king's concern about reports of an army conspiracy. Paws Cut Off, involving' seven cars of a west-\der Athanasiades - Novas, or-'CLIMAXED CONFLICT called the 'parachuting' of a'be opposed by an "'official" Lib- bound train and eight of an/dered police to quash any dem-| The Greek press ministry re " Liberal candidate into the rid-|jeral if he runs in the next elec- eastbound freight, through traf-jonstrations while the new prime|leased the letters late Thursday Cat Left Alive ing by Prime Minister Pearson. | tion fic was. re routed through! minister looked for ministers to night within hours of Papan | .The statement said a resolu-| He retains his seat in the Smiths Falls and Napanee. |fill out his fledgling cabinet, dreou's resignation, climaxing tion was adopted Wednesday) House of Commons. Mr. Fast said railway inves-| So far, he had only two. But/the prime minister's conflict SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont.jnight by a Liberal meeting in) The Thursday statement, tigators had not yet established) it was reported that three more, with the king over the dismis--CP--The Sault Humane So-|the riding which demanded|signed by Georges-Etienne Bar- the. cause of the derailment,|all from the ousted cabinet, will/sal of Defence Minister Petros|ciety has offered a $50 reward)"the holding of a regular con-jriere and Robert Rainville of which occurred as. the two/be sworn in later today Garoufalias, * for information leading to the|vention to choose a candidate."'|St. Johns, principal community trains passed each other CALLS THEM 'TRAITORS' The 25-year-old king wrote/arrest and conviction of the per-|The statement was addressediof the riding, says "only the Thousands of bundles of} Papandreou denounced them them last week from the Ionian son responsible for cutting off}to the prime minister. courts have the competence packed cigarettes and cigarjas "traitors," This stand gave Island of Corfu, where he had/the paws of a 10-month-old cat The group said it was "'forjand the right to. render judg- cartons, contents of a tractor jthe confused effect of two gov-)awaited the birth of his daugh The cat was destroyed after;|the moment, satisfied with the|ment in the case of the Hon trailer spilled off a flatcar,jernments -- the ousted prime|ter. The Crown Princess. Alexiajit was found Wednesday near|services of its member of Par-/Yvon Dupuis, which they- are were scattered along the track.iminister refusing to bow and'was bora Saturday. a school here, 'tock "over peace talks on Viet more conservative factions pos-|#id in their search up to mid- VIET MAY American effort to break the Viet Nam deadlock appeared today to be under way here as \it was learned that U.S. Am- bassador Averell Harriman is mier Alexei Kosygin again next week. Harriman talked with Kosy- gin for three hours Thursday in the Kremlin. He told reporters jlater that he cabled to Presi- dent Johnson 'some significant information" about the talk. Both here and in Washington, American officials treated the mission of the U.S. ambassa- dor at large with the: greatest secrecy. The Russians also re- fused to give details. But there were indications that Harriman had said some- jthing to the Russians that re- iquired their consideration--or, possibly, even their consulta- Johnson Stu WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- bassador Averell Harriman on} Alexei Kosygin covering the latest Soviet views on Viet Nam| and other world problems. The report, cabled by the am- bassador, reached here at a moment of growing evidence that widespread efforts are un- der way to break the long dead- Nam. a U.S. government leaders are not optimistic about early peace prospects, officials said, but have some hope that after more hard fighting in Viet Nam, the North Vietnamese re- gime may be willing to enter into negotiations toward the end of the year. Harriman told reporters in DEADLOCK MOSCOW (AP) -- A major! lexpected to meet Soviet Pre-| Of Harriman-Russ Talks ident Johnson studies today al secret report from roving Am-| a three-hour talk with Premier) NAM SNAP tion with Hanoi--before another meeting with Kosygin. Reports from Washington spoke of growing evidence of | widespread efforts to.break the long deadlock over Viet Nam peace talks. The Soviet Union has refused to have anything to do publicly with such talks, saying they are up to Hanoi and - Washington. |At least part of the reason is believed to be pressure from China, which accuses the Krem-| lin of disregarding Viet Cong chances for victory in order to maintain relations with the United States. Informed observers here sug- gested this did not rule out se- cret Soviet activity, intended to reduce the danger of nuclear war, which Soviet leaders have repeatedly lavoid. dies Results bled his report to Washington, but he would not disclose any- thing about his talk with Kosy- gin until after he had discussed it with Johnson personally. IT'S 'SIGNIFICANT' He said the three-hour Krem- lin meeting had produced "sig- nificant information." "I always cable when I think something is significant," Har- riman said. "Today I think there was some significant in- formation to cable to Washing- ton." Meanwhile, great interest was aroused here and in Lon don by a report from official British sources that North Viet- namese Leader Ho Chi Minh has asked President Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana to visit Ha- noi, Nkrumah is a member of a British Commonwealth peace mission headed by Prime Min- ister Wilson of Britain. Moscow Thursday he had ca- From U.S. T SAIGON (AP) -- South Viet Nam's. military government asked U.S. Defence Secretary Robert McNamara today to in- crease American forces in the country. Assistant Defence Secretary Arthur Sylvester said the Sai- gon government's top leaders made a detailed request in a isession with McNamara that lasted 'more than two hours. Sylvester said Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu, Premier Nguyen Cao Ky and Defence Minister Nguyen Huu Co did not ask for a specific number of |troops. | McNamara and his fact-find- \ing party made no comment or jcommitment on the request, |Sylvester said. | McNamara arrived earlier to- \day with ambassador-designate \Henry Cabot Lodge and the {chairman of the U.S. joint chiefs lof staff Gen, Earle Wheeler, to jassess whether more U.S. sol- diers are needed for the war against the Viet Cong. Sylvester said an increase in American forces is being con- jsidered in terms of an over-all |buildup, which would include an jincrease. of 100,000 South Viet- jnamese troops. This would Saigon Seeks More Men o Enter War armed forces to well above 600,- 000 men, The secretary said he will spend four or five days review- ing field operations and deter- mining, in talks with South Vietnamese and American offi- cials, whether additional U.S. combat units are needed in Viet Nam. An appraisal of the use of American * fighting men is one of his "prime missions," McNamara said, He said he also will discuss the possibility of more U.S. aid to South Vietnamese govern- ment forces for the war against the Viet Cong. McNamara denied reports that the joint chiefs of staff have unanimously recom- mended an increase in Amer- ican combat troops, He did not mention other U.S. forces, But he said the United States will provide whatever is needed to defeat the Viet Cong and said, \"we propose to fulfil that com- |mitment." | A report from Washington \two days ago said the joint chiefs had unanimously recom- mended U.S. troep strength in jof an answer to whether the) | | | | | ea | VIEWED WITH the dark- ness of space at the top of the picture, the direction you are looking is toward the North Pole which is out of view beyond the horizon. By. RALPH DIGHTON PASADENA (AP) -- Man's first closeup picture of Mars shows a remarkably earth-like desert area, but gives no hint mysterious planet can harbor life, The poorly defined picture, snapped as Mariner . 4. flew within 10,500 miles of Mars Wednesday, was released Thursday night while the U.S. Spacecraft was relaying its sec- ond picture. across. 154,000,000 miles.of space, "Almost half the picture showed only the dark void of space, with but a small portion of the edge of Mars visible in the streaked and smudged frame. The portion of the planet out- lined in the picture, snapped at an extreme angle at the start of a north-to-south run, is ap- parently a bright desert with an even brighter area in the centre. Bordering the desert-like area are smudges, which could be low-lying hills, darker soil. or possibly vegetation. Scientists said the picture, streaked with lines represent- ing improper radio signals, is not clear enough to warrant speculation about the cause of differences in shadings. SCIENTISTS ELATED Despite lack of details, scien- tists at jet propulsion labora- tory were elated, calling the unprecedented electronic image of the other 20 pictures we may get from Mariner 4 to give a final answer to the controversy a tremendous technical) "It's on the agenda, you achievement. |know."" "T did not expect this or any| That was all Mr. Pearson The general area in view is slightly above the equator and shows the region around a bright area of the planet known as the Elysium. The ever seen," he told a press con- ference. He said the picture 'shows markings as small as_ three miles across, indicating it is some 50 times sharper than those made by telescopes. The success of the $200,000,- 000 Mars exploration program gave the United States a lead in this phase of 'spate, work, Soviet attempt to phafograph Mars failed in April when radio Signals stopped coming back from Zond ii, launched two days we Mariner 4 went aloft Nov. MIGHT LIFE Leighton predicted the best of Mariner 4's pictures being ra- dioed to earth slowly over a 10- day period could show surface markings as small as one and one-half miles in length or di- length of the limb (edge of Mars) shown in this photo- graph is approximately 200 miles. Mariner took the pic- ture at an altitude of about 10,500 miles. (Ap) "Mars Resembles Earth But Life Still Mystery ameter. If there are canals and great cities on Mars, as some scientists have speculated, the later - pictures might detect them, but the lack of sharpness in Thursday night's photograph makes this doubtful. Information about Mars' at- mosphere was expected today, when scientists were to' ans nounce the results of, an experi ment to it's »depths and denslfyii i 4 s)he" Earlier . Thursday, scientists reported instruments on. Mare iner 4 had failed to a magnetic field around or a concentration tion trapped by that field, - designing tvtare. Mare. teatet es! ure Mars craft, they probably won't have to include heavy shields against radiation. OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson was non-com- mittal today in his reaction to reports his government will ask the provinces next week to en- dorse a national compulsory medical care plan. "I'll have something to say about medicare at the confer- ence," the prime minister told newsmen as he entered a morn- ing cabinet meeting. would say on a Globe and Mail report that the federal govern- ment will seek the go-ahead for over whether there may be some form of life on Mars,"| said Robert Leighton, chief of| the team of:scientists who will) study the photographs during! the next- several weeks, | "However, I believe we have, seen a few markings, smaller) details than anyone else -has Ruto Profits Probe Asked Viet Nam be increased to 179,- 00 men by the end of the year. There now are somewhat less) bring the South Vietnamese than 75,000. | MONTREAL CP)--The_ pro- jvisional committee of the fed- jeral Liberal party for former lcabinet minister Yvon Dupuis' --~|riding of St. Jean « Iberville-|ary at the prime minister's re- Napierville issued a statement |Thursday denouncing what it liament." We'll Name Own Candidate Dupuis' Riding Grits Warn | | Mr, Dupuis is awaiting trial on a $10,000 influence-peddling jaccusation, He resigned as min- jister without portfolio in Janu- quest, and Mr. Pearson has |more, recently said that he will DETROIT (AP)--The presi- dent of the United Auto Work- ers, Walter Reuther, has called for a study of auto-industry profits. : In a letter Thursday to Presi- dent Johnson's council. of eco- nomic advisers, Reuther said that auto prices in the United States may go up as a result of the U.S. - Canadian auto agreement. | "The industry's inflated prof-| its clearly demonstrate it could and should cut prices," Reuther wrote. "Our, best protection against price increases is the compa- aroused public opinion. . . the announcement of a would inhibit increases on 1966 models," * Reuther said the auto indus- try is the one aboye all others in which prices 'could and should go down--apart from any effect on the (federal excise) nies' fear of an informed and|: even|e study|= a nationwide medical care pro- gram from the federal-provin- PM Hedges, Judy Denies Pushing Ottawa Medicare cial conference opening here Monday. Health Minister Judy La- Marsh who arrived at the East Block Privy Council chambers minutes behind the prime min- ister, was more definite in her reaction to the Toronto dis- patch. "I'd say they better guess again," she quipped to report- ers. Today's cabinet meeting, which began at 10 a.m. EDT, was called to wrap up details of the federal position on the various items to come before the conference. It was expected to last two hours. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Nazi Leader Renews Bid To Speak TORONTO CP -- William John Beattie, 23, self-styled leader of the Canadian Nazi party has applied to' City Hall for permission to speak in Allan Gardens here July 25. Beattie made the application in' person. Copies of \his re- quest handed to the press said that he intended to speak for 1% hours on freedom of speech in Canada. Robarts Not Told Medicare Bid TORONTO CP -- Premier Robarts said today his gov- ernment has received no proposals to date from the fed eral government regarding a national medical care plan. However, he told a press conference he feels national medical insurance is an inevitable social development. It would take a great deal of negotiation and discussion. No. More Viet Nam SAIGON AP -- No further Casualty: Lists . casualty reports will be an- nounced in connection with individual engagements in the Vietnamese war, U.S. authorities announced Thursday. Correspondents were also asked to withhold voluntarily any figures they get on their own, and not to identify units in battle or to disclose' troop movements. SCAR iN tax cut." The industry is earning. "far its,' Reuther contended. There was no immediate com-| lnow considering." higher than the average prof-| = Obits -- 23 Ann Landers --~ 16 £ Sports -- 8, 9 City News -- 13 = Theatre -- 6 Classified -- 20, 21, 22 5 Whitby News -- 5 Comics -- 19 Women's -- 14, 15, 16 Editorial -- 4 Weather --~« 2. Financial. -- 23 ment from industry spokesMeN. | i NNT rae .. In THE TIMES today... PUC-Electrical Workers Come to Terms --- P. 13 114. Cases Heard In Ajax Magistrate Court -- P, 5. Bruce Deviin Halfway Leader In Canadian Open -- P, 8, A

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