Home Newspaper "Ot Oshawa, Whitby, manville, Ajax, Pickering and tario and Durham Counties. VOL. 94--- NO. 205 Row. neighboring centres in On- = OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1965 2. SOS Siuiws Second Class Mail Post for payment of P. at Authorized os Ottawa ond Weather Report Mainly sunny and warmer Friday. Cool and clear toe night. Low tonight, 48. Higa ' tomorrow, 75. ' Office Department ostoge in Cath, THIRTY-TWO. PAGES GET OFF'N MAH LAND, PILGRIM! Woofy, a walrus at Marine- land of the Pacific near Los Angeles, appears to be 18 windows which allow vis- itors to photograph Woofy and his mate underwater. telling off his trainer, Eddy Asper, while trying out his new home. It's a pool with Wednesday Deadline For Election Decision By STEWART MacLEOD 'AWA (CP) -- Sometime between now and next Wednes- day, Canadians will know whe- ther they are to be engulfed in another general election cam- Quebec Gain For Pearson CALGARY (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson and the Liberals stand to make sharp gains in Quebec if an election is called, Robert Thompson, national So- cial Credit leader, said Wednes- day. prime minister) will sweep Quebec" in an election, Mr. Thompson said in an interview. The Liberals would make Jarge gains at the expense of Social Credit, Creditiste and Conservative members in the House of Commons in an elec- tion and thereby improve their minority position, Mr. Thomp-| son said. Where opposition members are elected, it would be on the basis of personal appeal. The Social Credit leader added that because of wide-| spread absenteeism among Con- servatives, Prime Minister Pearson need have little fear of being defeated on a confidence vote in the Commons. ROBERT THOMPSON nesday gave reporters an un-|minister appeared to make a dertaking to reveal his inten-/fall general election a virtual tions by Sept. 8. But for the sec-|certainty with repeated com- ond time since he returned from| ments on the subject. But since a western tour he declined towbe|returning to Ottawa he has drawn into the mea carefully avoided adding any about an e hb new fuel to the speculation. In While in the West, the prime) his only two meetings with re- porters since his return--at the airport Sunday night and then Wednesday--he made no com- ments that threw any new light _on his plans. Meanwhile, members of Par- lament representing all parties were coming. into. Ottawa. in growing numbers and the prime minister was believed to be re- ceiving a wide assortment of election views from his own party's membership. Feelings on an election, both in the party and within the cabinet, are known to be divided on the is- sue. Mr. Pearson himself ap- peared to make it clear in the West that he is in favor of an couver he expected to make @ statement one way or the other in two weeks. "That is next Wednesday," he said after Wednesday's cabinet meeting. 'I hope to be able to say before that. That was my | GEORGE HEES LAMBARENE, Gabon (Reuters) --Hospital staff and friends today kept-a hopeful vigil for 90-year-old doctor - philosopher Albert ~ Schweitzer who was re- ported recovering from ex-. treme fatigue. Fellow - physicians at the jungle hospital in this Equa- torial African town an- nounced Wednesday that pana was seriously ll. Apart from saying Dr. Schweitzer had been "very tired" in the last week, doc- tors gave few details of his condition. They repeated the hope that the strength which car- ried him through a half-cen- tury of ministering to lepers in the sweltering jungle would pull him through the present crisis. Mrs. Eckert Aurich, daughter of the Nobel Prize- winning physician, remained | at his bedside. Dr. Schweitzer celebrated his 90th birthday Jan. 14. WILL STAY HERE At the time, Schweitzer said he intended to spend the rest of his days in Lam- barene. "I feel at home here," he said, 'and I be- long to you until my dying breath." HOPEFUL VIGIL SURROUNDS DR. SCHWEITZER _ Schweitzer abandoned a promising academic career to study medicine and was once regarded as one of Europe's foremost _ inter- preters of the music of Bach before going to Africa as a medical missionary in 1913. He was born in Kayser- burg, Alsace -- now part of France -- the son of a" Lutheran minister. He won the Nobel! Prize in 1952. } More recently, however, he was criticized by some for showing a too paternal- istic condescension toward Africans and accused of resisting the progress of . modern medicine, DO al HAL BANKS' EXTRADITION? MONTREAL (CP) The RCMP is investigating an '"'al- leged disappearance of funds" from the Seafarers' Interna- tional Union of Canada (Ind.), an RCMP spokesman said Wed- nesday.' In . Toronto, The Telegram says the investigation could lead to the extradition from New York of Hal Banks, for- mer president of the SIU of Canada. Superintendent J. J. R. Car- riere of the Montreal RCMP de- tachment, heading the investi- gation, said: "All I can say is that we are carrying out an investigation Mounties Probe Lost SIU Funds "I can tell you nothing more} than that," | In Ottawa, RCMP headquar-| ters said an investigation into SIU finances is continuing. No- decision had been reached whether to press any charges. Banks fled Canada last year on $25,000 bail pending his ap- peal of a five-year sentence for conspiring to assault a union ri- val in Montreal. He was later located in New York City by a reporter but the nature of the charges against him made extradition from the U.S. impossible. Before he fled, he had been d as president of the SIU into the alleged disappeara of funds. it is a matter of public lof Canada by the federal gov- ernment - appointed board of record that we seized the SIU books last month. maritime trustees. MONTREAL (CP) -- Police have recovered between $1,000,000 and $2,000,000 worth of bonds stolen from a branch of the Royal Bank of Canada in the Van Horne shopping cen- tre here last April. Police said today the recov- ery was made late Wednesday following an anonymous tele- phone tip. Det. Insp. Roland Perron and Det. Set. Fernand Laroche went te.a field where they found the bonds packed in a suitcase and a cardboard box... Det. Lt. J.-P. Regimbald, in charge of a squad tabulating the bonds said today: "Most of them are from the commitment and I won't go be- yond that date." 'No Purpose Governor - General Vanier, Royal Bank robbery but there jare some which have never $1-To-2 Million Recovered From Royal Bank Robbery been listed with us as having \been stolen." The vault robbery was car- ried out during the weekend of April 10-11 by a well-organized team of burglars. They broke into a nearby store, got between its ceiling and roof, dragged heavy equip- ment along a crawlway, and bored down into the vault. When the robbery was dis- covered on the Monday morn- ing crowds of safety-devosit box holders stormed the bank, try- ing to determine whether their holdings had been taken. There was no official state- ment on loss but estimates at- tributed to police were as high as $3,000,000. KASHMIR: WHAT IT IS NEW DELHI (AP)--Kash- mir is a strategically situ- ated state nestled in the Him- alayas and bounded by Red China, the Soviet Union, Af- ghanistan, Pakistan and In- dia. Its status was left ill-de- fined when the British pulled out of the subcontinent in 1947 and quickly became a subject of a bloody. dispute between India and Pakistan. Pakistani raiders in 1948 reached all the way to Sringa- gar, Kashmir's summer capi- tal, before Indian forces pushed them back. A UN ceasefire line was es- tablished in 1949 and there have been skirmishes along it ever since. Large-scale guerrilla war- fare broke out deep inside Kashmir Aug. 5 and India said the raiders were equipped and sent by Pakis- tan. The situation deteriorated until Wednesday when it be- came a full - scale armored and aerial battle between the forces of both coun- es. Seventy-seven per cent of Kashmir's 3,500,000 people are Moslems contrasting with the over-all Hindu majority else- where in India, Kashmir covere 86,000 square miles. FIGHTING STEPPED UP 'NO ACTUAL WAR YET' Pakistani Troops, Tanks Plunge Into By CONRAD FINK NEW DELHI (AP)--A Pakis- tani attack spearheaded by tanks penetrated five miles in- side Indian positions in south- west Kashmir as fighting raged for a second consecutive day, India announced today. Defence Minister Y. B, Cha- van told Parliament a massive attack by at least 3,000 Pakis- tani troops and 70 tanks across the international frontier had "seriously escalated" the fight- ing, and that the situation was still "developing." Chavan claimed 13 tanks were destroyed. He acknowledged India lost four of its planes that attacked the tanks--two planes missing and two damaged. It appeared that despite an Indian counter-attack at dawn today, Pakistani, tanks were able to burst through the Indian lines and roam about in south- west Kashmirs' flatlands. No new major action was re- ported in three salients the In- dians pushed into Pa territory in recent attacks, there was ominous talk of a wider conflict. Speaker Hukam Singh of the lower house of Parliament re- fused to let members ask Cha- van questions, saying that it was not possible when there is "actual war between us Pakistan." PRE-NATAL CONTROVERSY Rad 1 OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com- pany of Young Canadians, al- ready caught in a controversy over a $4,000 grant to a student group, has run into a new one over remarks by one of its offi- Young Canadians: Radical-Oriented? whom the prime minister must} request to dissolve Parliament) In Election, Hees Feels MONTREAL (CP) -- George Hees, trade minister in the for- mer Progressive Conservative | government, said Wednesday he 'thinks there is no reason for a general election --should the Liberal government call one-- except a political reason. "TI think there is no justifica-| tion for it now," he said in an before any election can be an- nounced, is due to return to Ot- tawa from his Quebec cottage next Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. EDT. A usually well qualified source said Wednesday that he doubts whether a final decision has yet been reached. "The prime minister may have gone right to the brink of an an- nouncement, but he didn't go over--yet." WASHINGTON (AP)--Slight |progress was reported today in jemergency White House steel \negotiations, with President Johnson pushing the talks to- |ward a critical phase in an at- |tempt to head off a country- wide steel strike. Steel Industry Ups Offer. cials, , The comments, amounting to a promise that the still-unborn company will appeal to the country's more radical student But Union Sticks To Guns "If they have, they haven't told us about it." The talks resumed in the fourth day since Johnson called the negotiations here from Pittsburgh in an effort to avert a strike that would cripple about 80 per cent of U.S. steel elements, have raised a num- ber of eye-brows in top govern- ment circles and resulted in a reprimand to their author. He is Stewart Goodings, as- sistant director of the Peace Corps-style company's organiz- ing committee and a former president of the Canadian Union of Students. sponsible and conventional channels." CALLED ON CARPET Informed sources said that when the contents of the article became public knowledge, Mr. Goodings was called on the car- pet by his immediate superior, CYC Organizing Director Dun- ean Edmonds. As a result of the. talk, the sources added, Mr. Goodings is "not likely to write that kind of article again." Mr. Edmonds confirmed Wed- nesday that he discussed the ar- ticle with his subordinate, but declined to spell out details of the conversation. "T can say, however, that Mr. Goodings' article does not rep- resent my own views or those sponding to Pakistan's '"'escala- tion" with all necessary "coun- ter-measures"' have to take an over-all view of defence." ence to other sectors on India's long and tense frontier with Pakistan. reliably reported to have said in a, briefing for Indian polit- ical leaders that India expects "very big clashes," and that In- dia's strategy must be consid- re in a 'much wider con- ext," fantry, supported by up to 70 interview. "If Prime Minister a algeng calls an -- he} Election Would will, in my opinion, putting | 'Amaze Lesage welfare of the party ahead of that of the country. : "It has been my experience) QUEBEC. (CP)--Premier Le- that the best legislation is pro-| sage said Wednesday he will be duced when governments are in| surprised if a federal election a minority position because|is held this year. they have to pay attention at} He said at a press conference all times to the needs of the he expressed this view last Jan- people, luary' and that nothing has. oc- "A majority position is sim-|curred since then to make him ply a convenience to the party|change his mind. ' in power--not a necessity for| The premier said that since good legislation." |the federal- provincial confer- Mr. Hees, now president of|ence at the end of last July he the Montreal and Canadian|has had only one conversation production. HOPES FOR BREAK The White House appeared hoping for a major break in the talks well in advance of next Thursday's 12:01 a.m. strike deadline. Johnson won an eight- day strike postponement Mon- day night. The approximately 450,000 ba- sic steelworkers now earn $4.40 an hour in wages and fringe benefits. An informed source said the government estimated the two sides were 12 cents apart for a three - year contract when! Johnson called the talks to the) A source in the 'negotiations| lsaid the steel industry had) raised its money offer "a iit-| ltle," but that the AFL - CIO lunited Steelworkers Union re- jfused to budge from its last de- |mand, | The last reported industry of- jfer was a 40.6-cent hourly in- jerease in wages and fringe ben- jefits over three years. The last junion demand was reported as |49.8 cents. |' Johnson has said both sides must make concessions to |reach a settlement. Union President I. W. Abel stock exchanges, said le feels|with Prime Minister Pearson|did not deny the reported in- an election would be bad for/and this had nothing to do with|dustry offer to raise the ante in White House. | Each cent of added labor} of the company," Mr, Edmonds said, Mr. Goodings was out of town on CYC business and unavail- able for comment. His article added fuel to a controversy already burning over the company's decision to give $4,000 to the Student Union for Peace Action after its re- quest for a similar grant was rejected by the Centennial Com- mission. Mr. Goodings, in an article for a recent edition of the Stu- dent Union for Peace Action (SUPA) newsletter, said the CYC is determined to "reflect the aspirations and concerns of the most progressive elements of the Canadian youth commu- nity." He said students are wrong if they think the company will be "simply a device to divert radical energies into safe, re- An Uneventful Integration the country's economic pro-|the possibility of a federal elec-|the miutti-million dollar labor|costs is estimated to total some grams. ition this fall. 'bargaining, but said: {$10,000,000 a year. IT'S HEAT THAT'S HARMFUL; THEY REDUCED IT Researchers Claim A Safer Cigarette iSchool along with nearly 900 white pupils.. Police kept curi- TORONTO (CP)--Two pri- vate reseatchers claim to have developed a cigarette that is safer and healthier to smoke than conventional types. David Laing, senior techni- cian at the University of Tor- ento metallirgy department, and James A. E. Bell of the International Nickel Co. at Sudbury, Ont., have studied They claim to have been able to get the temperature of cigarette smoke down to they noted the United States surgeon - general's report on smoking and lung cancer said ° ering the combustion temper- ature was found to eliminate irritants in the smoke. Flavor BOGALUSA, La. (AP)--After a summer of violent racial tur- moil, public schools in_ this troubled southeast Louisiana milltown were integrated peacefully Wednesday. Two Negro boys and a girl, arriving alone on a school bus, entered Bogalusa Senior High ous whites two blocks away. For Schools In Bogalusa 12th grade classes was ordered earlier this month by a federal judge at New Orleans. This town's Roman. Catholic school, Annunciation, also de- segregated, enrolling five Ne- gro elementary students. The classroom mixing fol- lowed a pattern set over much of the deep South earlier this week as thousands of Negroes entered previously all white the level of pipes and cigars by altering the design of the cigarette and the way to- bacco is packed in the paper. The men said they got. the idea for their research when heat generated by burning cigarettes, cigars and pipes. Heat is the key to the harmful effects of cigarettes, they said. Pipes and cigars burn at lower heat. was unchanged and some- times improved. Both men said they are trying to patent their devel- | opment and the Reynolds | Tobacco Co. of Winston, N.C., is testing the design. pipe and cigar smokers .con- tract lung cancer less fre- quently than cigarette smok- ers. No- new chemicals were added to the newly designed cigarettes, they said, but low- No spectators and only a few police were at Columbia Street Elementary School when a Ne- gro boy and girl, clasping their mothers' hands, arrived by pri- vate car. schools for the first time. Desegregation came to Boga- lusa following a summer of vio- lence, daily civil rights demon- Indian Zone Chavan said India was re- and that "we SIR HARRY HYLTON-FOSTER Death Means Crisis That was an obvious refer- Prime' Minister Shastri was India claims at least 3,000 in- U.S. + made Patton medium tanks, atiacked in a two - LONDON pronged offensive in the Casters) =. OF sector .of soutwwest, Kastmir| ais, sayuse-rosee, after. a heavy artill Wednesday pertine 3 f " One Pakistani spearhead) constitutional crisis. flor tnd headed ta the direction| tested the last colar and the Mba Goad en arrival ot honpual ae cross the UN ceasefire farther] Collapsing on a London street, the| The prime minister immedi- dian planes in fighting Wednes-|in the 630-seat lower house. day. The margin was cut The fighting, which followed) three recently three earlier Indian attacks into|a Labor. MP, and Pakistani Kashmir, moved thejency is expected two countries. closer to the| other Labor candidate in a by- threat of an all-out war. They| election. fought such a war in 1948 over| There was immediate this same Himalayan state. The use of tanks and planes|settled only by calling represented a serious escala-jeral election earlier than ex- tion of the fighting. The two na-| pected. tions had never before used air) If the Labor party named a power or @imi0r on & large! zsw Speaker from , within scale against each other. own parliamentary ranks, and NO MAJOR ACTION lost the by-election, its major- An Indian spokesman said he ity: could he retuned (6 om, had no reports of major action| DEPENDS ON HEATH spreading to any other sector) With the death of Hylton- along the 470 - mile ceasefire] Foster, much will now depend line or the 1,000-mile-long inter-|on the stand taken by new Con- national frontier separating In-|servative Opposition Leader dia and Pakistan. Edward Heath. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Reds Say Sputnik Watched U.S. A-Test MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Russian scientists claimed Wednesday that Sputniks orbiting the earth detected valu- able data about United States' nuclear tests three years ago. The Bulletin of the Academy of Sciences said Soviet experts. obtained a detailed picture of an American atomic test July 9, 1962, from equipment aboard the Cos- mos 5 satellite launched six weeks earlier, : Gemini Twins Get Some Time At Home CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -- The Gemini 5 astro- nauts fly home to Houston, Tex., today for a brief re- union with their families. L. Gordon Cooper and Charles Conrad Jr. leave by plane this afternoon for the three- hour flight to Ellington Air. Force Base, near Houston. Their departure ends four days of intensive de-briefings here on their record eight-day orbital journey. British Speaker In Aden Assassinated ADEN (Reuters) -- A gunman Wednesday night shot and killed Sir Arthur Charles, British Speaker of Aden state legislative council, Charles was the second Briton to be shot and killed by~-gunmen in the- Crater district of Aden. British Police Superintendent Harry. F. Barrie, 54, was shot down Sunday. Seven bullets hit him in the chest, right hand and legs. & ..In THE TIMES today... Affleck Asks More Power To Police--P.. 9 Big Apartment Complex Underway In Ajax--P. 5 Geels Win Second Game Of Finals 15-8--P. 6 Ann Landers--13 Obits--23 City News--? Sports--6,7,8 Classified --20,21,22,23 Theatre--16 Comics--19 Whitby News--5 Editorial---4 Women's--10,11,12,13 Finoncial--23 "Weathem--2. . de strations and frequent Ky. Klux Desegtegdtion of »fitst and|Klan -untetihgs; «'--°- i } | '