Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Sep 1965, p. 1

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------------------ ic aggre Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, pA VOL. 94 -- NO. 210 10e Single Be Per Week ome "Belvered Oshawa Gimes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, SEPTEM BER. 10, 1965 . Weather Report Rain or thundershowers to- day. Turning cooler tonight. Saturday sunny. Low tonight, 52. High tomorrow, 68, Authorized as Second Class. Mall Post Office Ottewe ond for payment of nt 4 Postage in Cash, "TWENTY PAGES J ohnson Counters DeGaulle's Threat WASHINGTON (AP) -- Ina ¢lear policy ¢lash with French *resient e Gaulle, President Johnson is sending a new am- bassador to the NATO council in Paris. with instructions to strengthen and expand the poli- tical and nuclear roles of the) Atlantic Alliance. "A strong NATO remains es- ia 1,"' Johnson told departing dor Harland Cleveland, "if we are to reach a solid Policeman Beaten, Two Men Charged agreement with the Soviet Union that reflects the common inter- ests of each of the Allied na- tions in peace and security." The White House made pub- lic Johnson's statement a few hours after de Gaulle had de- clared at a press conference in Paris that France intends to end at least by 1969 the "'subordina- tion' of French defence forces by NATO. De Gaulle's words were read here and by Western observers in Paris as a definite statement of intention to remove France from the NATO military com- mand. This could mean re- Authorities here and in other Allied capitals have been con- ferring for several months on the possibility that de Gaulle, assuming he is re-elected in De- cember, may pull France out of the Atlantic Alliance when that becomes legally possible in 1969. The treaty was concluded in 1949 and contains a 20 - year withdrawal clause. Johrison said that each of the 15 countries in the NATO alli- ance sees it 'from its own per- spective." "But this alliance of the West is bigger than any of its mem- bers. We must maintain its strength and we must continu- HAMILTON (CP)--Two Ha-| moval of NATO headquarters milton men were charged with| {rom Paris. attempted murder Thursday| night in connection with the beating of Grimsby Police Cor-| poral John Dalgleish. | Larry Bloomfield, 22, and Grant Corbett, 26, were charged after police officers from Grimsby, Hamilton, and the RCMP raided a downtown hotel By PETER BUCKLEY room and a home in nearby Stoney Creek. i PARIS (CP)--There will ap- Mr. Dalgleish suffered head parently be no weakening of injuries and smashed fingers current French nationalism, no Monday when he was beaten by "abdication" of French sover- two men he surprised apparen- eignty, in the near future. tly breaking into a drug store| If anything, President de in Grimsby, 15 miles east of|Gaulle made plain Thursday, here. the West can expect to have to De Gaulle Talks Tougher On 'Post-War Alliances' ally update it to serve the com- mon aspirations of all of us.' De Gaulle's statements came at his semi-annual press confer- ence, with some 1,000 newspa- per men and diplomatic person- nel jammed into the ballroom of the Elysee Palance for the oc- casion. In a prolonged dissertation on domestic and foreign affairs, TWO YOUNGSTERS, refu- gees seeking shelter from Hurricane Betsy, compare their prize possessions as "IT WAS HELL," al the storm lashed New Orleans and the Mississippi coast. More than 100,000 persons have been driven SAYS SURVIVOR the French president returned Dr Siti ls edb ae: a Both suspects also face make still more of the tough time and again to the theme charges of breaking and enter- ing and Bloomfield has also been charged with illegal pos- session of narcotics. quired. reappraisals of post-war alli- ances and policies which recent French foreign policy has re- that France will not submit un- questioningly to direction from outside in matters which affect her own interests. Murder Suspects On Wanted List OTTAWA (CP)--Two murder, suspects and a jail escapee are named in a completely-revised list of the most wanted men in Canada, issued today by the ig Two of the fugitives are de- scribed as extremely dangerous and-all..three disappeared. this summer. The most wanted men are: wanted" Robert Desjarlais, 23, a na- tive of Lac la Biche, Alta., wanted by Edmonton police on a charge of murder. He was released from penitentiary June 1 after serving three years for rape and is termed 'a danger- ous sex offender" by the RCMP. Description: Five feet, three inches tall, weight 125 pounds, dark hair, brown eyes. Clovis Dufresne, 26, of Que- bee City, sought by provincial police after escaping from Que- bec prison while serving a nine- year sentence for armed rob- pery, "He is considered ex- tremely dangerous,"' the RCMP said in a statement. Descrip- hair, blue eyes. LIST DWINDLES the listed men. satellite. The RCMP charge. He escaped from Ver- dun Protestant Hospital while undergoing a mental examina- tion after his arrest. Descrip- tion: Five feet, seven inches}. tall, weight 151 pounds, brown The most notorious were nar- cotics suspect Lucien Rivard, nabbed at a cottage near Mont- real in July after being in the news for a year, and bank rob- bery suspect Georges Lemay, captured in Florida after the RCMP broadcast his picture to the world via a communications apparently has given up hope of catching Wil- liam Adams, 37, formerly of St. ON UN AND NATO His comment on alliances in general was typical. Speaking of those who would push France into "dissolving" itself in the United Nations or NATO or sim- ilar bodies, De Gaulle affirmed: "T do not believe that the vast majority of the French people thinks it conforms with their ideas of France's own value, or even with simple good sense. On cific issues, he warned that mce wants a reassess- ment of its participation in NATO by. 1969--particularly in The sag ony F mah ony on. cases where French officers are comprised 10 names but i dwindled to three or four in the yeats that followed. At least 10 fugitives have been captured as a result of publicity given to under the control of other na- tionals. He again dismissed--in terms that were no less pointed for having an almost old-fashioned courtliness--the idea of any united Europe within the near future in which French policy would be decided by majority votes of her Common Market partners. He himself nad long advanced the idea of a united Europe, he said, '"'but what we wanted and still want is a fair and reason- able community." By SID MOODY NEW GRIRANS (AP)--Hur- ricane Betsy flung spray and seas at the Gulf Coast and then stormed up the Mississippi River early today in probably its final black night of ruin. The storm. sank much of the bayou country to the south un- der muddy tides, clawed at this city of 1,000,000 people in the early morning. hours, then swirled inland passing 20 miles to the west or the state cupital of Baton Rouge. Leaving the sea, its once 150 mile-an-hour winds moderated, bringing a 15-day, 2,500-mile voyage of destruction that killed at least seven persons near to a close. The weather bureau said Betsy would weaken to heavy rains and winds in north- ern Louisiana and Mississippi. The almost 250,000 evacuees from Louisiana and Mississippi would begin to return to towns and cities left soggy junkyards by the hurricane. "It was hell," said Burt Lozes, a member of the civil 'was estimated at $10,000,000 by each other like huge bumper Big Betsy Batters Coast, New Orleans: defence forces of Harrison County, Miss., where 17 people had been rescued from roof- tops, submerged cars and floods where they were swim- ming for their lives. Damage to waterfront industries in the county, particularly in Gulfport, civil defence director Wade Guice. SHIPS HELPLESS The. wind..turnea the Missis- sippi waterfront into melee of helpless ships, blown loose from their moorings and battering cars in an amusement park. The New Orleans harbor pa- trol said six ocean-going ves- sels had broken free. Five had some crew aboard but were powerless and at the mercy of wind and current. One of them, the Wing Ar- row, was swept upstream, hit another freighter in the middle of the river, swerved into a cluster of tugs, then struck sev- eral moored vessels where her crew d to get a line ashore. Others hit wharves. At least one death was re- ported, a woman who died of a tion: Five feet, nine inches tall, weight 167 pounds, dark hair, brown eyes, bricklayer. by trade Edwin Yule, alias Dufresne, 37, of Montreal, wanted by pro- Catharines, and John Frederick Meagher, 32, formerly of Tor- onto, both listed since 1957. Adams is wanted for murder in the slaying of his father in 1949 and Meagher is wanted for) Suspected Stronghold Bombed By U.S. B-52s vincial polite on a murderiarmed robbery. SAIGON (AP) -- U.S. Air Force B-52s bombed a_sus- KOUFAX JOINS THE 'GODS pected Viet Cong stronghold in the central highlands of South Viet Nam today, a U.S. mili- tary spokesman announced.~_ The raid, 325 miles northeast of Saigon, was the 2ist re- ported for the Strategic Air Command jets in the Viet Nam war. Under security regula- tions, the spokesman did not give the number of planes tak- ing part or theamount of bombs dropped. A U.S. Marine spokesman said that 167 Viet Cong were killed in the big drive on the north of Saigon. Fifty-one Viet Cong and 168| suspected guerrill: were re- ported .captured. I U.S. military authorities said| they erred in reporting that four U.S. F-105 jets bombed a railway bridge in North Viet Nam within 17 miles of China Wednesday. A spokesman said a recheck lef the report showed that the planes made their strike north- west of Hanoi about 40 miles from. the frontier. A highly informed. military source indicated today that So- viet-built anti - aircraft missile sites circling Hanoi have more than doubled in recent weeks. The source refus d to disclose the exact number of sites be- lieved to be in the area of the \North Vietnamese capital, But Batangan Peninsula, 330 miles), said a report by John Scali of the American Broadcasting Company, quoting intelligence) sources in Washington as say-| ing there. were 17, gave a close) figure, heart attack in a Red Cross shelter. That brought the hur- ricane's victims to seven. Six persons had been killed earlier during Betsy's passage over Florida. It was too early to calculate the damage but it was heavy. Japan Killing 19 | TOKYO (Reuters) --The year's most powerful typhoon hammered western Japan to- day with 173-mile-an hour winds, leaving 19 persons killed and thousands homeless. Another 11 persons were re- ported missing and 140 injured after the screaming winds, christened typhoon Shirley, had passed. Early tonight Shirley swirled into the Sea of Japan but ap- peared to be losing its punch as it raged 100 miles offshore along the northeast coast. from their homes in the area. --AP Wirephoto MOSCOW (Reuters) Russian Communist Leader Leonid Brezhney today call- ed on and Pakistan to stop fi, g and withdraw their troops to their own sides of the border. He was speaking at a Rus- sian - Romanian friendship rally in the Kremlin. - Two Countries Clash Head-On As it had to Miami two days before, the hurricane struck New Orleans at midnight. At the height of th storm this city of jazz and mardi gras was a discord of violence. Church bells bonged wildly in the wind. Police sirens echoed. Burglar alarms set off by sun- dered windows shrilled like an- gry telephones. Sheets of tin as big as double beds. wrenched from skimmed before. the wind, ° "as they "went: And above it all rode the doom- like bass groan of the storm crying its frenzy. The storm's potential as a killer was blunted by wide- spread evacuation of coastal areas, More than 185,000 per- sons moved back from the ca- jun and delta, country and homes bordering the shores of Lake Ponchartrain north of the city. Another 40,000 abandoned their homes along Mississippi's vacation coast. The eye of the storm that had already hit Florida and the Ba- hamas skirted New Orleans to the west .fter feinting its ter- rifying puncir in several-direc- tions along the Gulf Coast. Then it steadied and moved inshore At Conference QUENCH WAR flames, to cease and to re- call the troops. of both sides to the territories where they were before the beginning of hostilities." Brezhnev said the war FLAMES would seriously damage In- dian and Pakistani interests and prestige. The Soviet leader echoed a Kremlin statement Tues- day which appealed for an | INDIAN ARMY PUSHED BACK Claiziis, Counter-Claims Cloak Undeclared War By CONRAD FINK tions into what now are Pakis- NEW DELHI (AP) -- Indian|tan and India, Defence Minister Y. B. Chavan By WILLIAM NEVILLE OTTAWA (CP)--Pakistan and India clashed head-on at the 54th Inter-parliamentary Union conference Thursday despite a plea from Canada for the meet- ing to put aside the world's quarrels and take a positive ap- proach. No sooner had Canadian dele- gate Marcel Lambert appealed to delegates to stop trying to "beat each other and make de- bating points" than representa- tives from the two warring Asian nations tore into each other with charges of aggres- sion and violation of interna- 'tional agreements. announced today that Indian troops had to withdraw under heavy Pakistani counter-attacks in the raging battle for the northwest plains across the bor- der of India and West Pakis- in, Chavan told parliament Pa- kistani shells were falling in the Indian city of Ferozepore, about 10 miles inside Indian territory. India attacked across the bor- der in this sector Monday, ap- parently heading for Lahore, Pakistan's second largest city. Pakistan's A. Jabbar Khan ritory argued that the Kashmir prob- lem remained unsolved for 18 years because "India réefused~to keep its commitment for a/® United Nations - supervised plebiscite. He said the present conflict was initiated by Indian border crossings and widened! because of Indian bombings of Pakistani territory. Back came Mrs. Renu Chak- ravarty, an Indian Communist MP, with a flat denial that In- dia had*violated the UN agree- ment. Several votes had been held in the Indian sector of Kashmir? what about the Pak- istan sector. Mr, Lambert, outgoing Con- servative MP for Edmonton West, said the conference of 600 delegates from 61 national par- liaments was not a forum for airing quarrels, but rather "a sub-continent remained c in a haze of claims and coun- ter-claims from both sides. Ni the true picture on various fronts. refused to reveal the size and type of forces committed and on conjecture, BITTER FIGHTING Latest official details given in Rawalpindi, the Pakistani cap- ital, after United Nations Sec- retary-General U Thant's first round of peace talks with Pres- Big tank battles were re ported under way in the area Thursday with jet fighters of both air forces striking at op- posing ground units. Heavy clashes were also re- ported 40 miles south of Lahore and 75 miles north northeast of Lahore. The Indians were re- ported to have suffered heavy losses in men, tanks and after sending in large reinforce- ments. upport. The undeclared war on the loaked real assessment was available from uncommitted oLservers. of tneeting of parliamentarians in at 20 knots just west of the Mis- sissippi's mouth. ident Mohammad Ayub Khan, drew a picture of bitter fight- ing east and north of the West the truest sense for the expres- sion of ideas and aspirations." Self-Styled God Dies; Typhoon Hammers Revered By Thousands PHILADELPHIA (AP) ther Divine, a five-foot-two cherubic - looking Negro who styled himself as God and was revered as such by thousands, died today. Divine never would say how old he was, but persons not af- filiated with his Worldwide Kingdom of Peace estimated he must be around 100 years old. Outsiders had not seen him for years, but reports from in- side his palatial suburban re- treat--the Mount of the House of the Lord--from time to time told of massive banquets at-! Pakistan capital of Lahore. forces also met with severe verses on their southern front ing an offensive with its Amer- ican-equipped armored units, Delhi any analysis here of success or|Many officials in New failure in the military struggle had to be based almost purely sig ag By pr Benson gad Indian attack was bogged down. The Indian government radie claimedsuccesses on the other two fighting fronts, NDP Fund Nears Million tended by his followers. The banquets featured 50 different items and thousands came to sit at his table. The story of Father Divine began, according to most non- believers in his movement, with the birth of George Baker on a Georgia rice plantation about 1860. Father Divine was heralded, among Negroes particularly, for his unflinching opposition to racial segregation. He tore at this barrier by taking, for his second wife in 1946, a 2l-year- old white Canadian stenogra- pher from Montreal. MAIN AIM-- BETTER, MORE BALANCED PROGRAMMING By BEN WARD OTTAWA (CP) -- Proposals for shaking up--violently--the entire Canadian radio and tele- vision industry were delivered to the government Thursday by the Fowler committee on broadcasting, The bluntly-stated aim: Bet- ter and more balanced pro- gramming, less American and more Canadian content, to be enforced by regulation if neces- sary. Chief proposal in the com- mittee's 140,000-word report is creation of an all - powerful Canadian, Broadcasting Author- ity. Board of Broadcast Governors, the present regulatory agency set up in is5$ by the Diefen- baker government, and the CBC board of directors. All their powers, and more, would go to the new authority. | Th report sizzles with crit- icism of private radio and TV stations, the management of the publicly - owned CBC anc the alleged failure of the BBG to make fuil use of its pare |/HAS NO COMMENT | 'There was no immediate! comment from the govern- ment, which said in appointing the committee 16 months ago that it would await the findings} before framing new broadcast- Lefthander Sandy Koufax The perfect game, only the prepares to flash another third in National League fast ball past a Chicago Cub history, was the fourth no- batter en route to a perfect hitter for Koufax, No other no-hit, no-run baseball major league pitcher had game. Los Angeles Dodgers achieved more than.three. _; | It would set the general pro-| gramming policies of the CBC directly and those of private stations indirectly by holding life-or-death control of ing legislation to place before Parliament. State Secretary Lamontagre,| 'Sithe minister who reports to their parliament on broadcasting,| The committee said a _ get- tough attitude is needed to im- prove private TV where, for the most part, "the systematic me- diocrity of programming is de- plorable," dominated by the worst of American fare. Before Noon TV Ban Suggested OTTAWA (CP)--The Fowler rcport recommends that tele- vision broadcasting before noon be prohibited except for school or religious programs. Broadcast of events of na- tional importance would be an- other exception. The accent in the: morning would be on edu- cational programming, how- ever. Also advocated was a change in the policy of not granting licences. beat the Cubs 1-0 last night. --PA Wirephoto It calls for abolition of the said the report will need de-/broadcasting licences to provin- Report Raps Radio, TV Industry The investigation had turned up a flood of criticism about the quality of TV produced by private 'stations. Private radio stations were criticized for becoming "a daily grind of news, weather, comedy and music, music, music-- nearly all recorded." Neither private radio nor. TV) was placing enough emphasis on Canadian talent. Figures for 1963 showed an average daily outlay for artistic talent of $22.29 by radio stations and $110 by TV stations, CALL 'A DISGRACE' These figures were described as "'deplorably low" and a "'dis- grace." "The meagreness of the tal- ent budget is, in large part, the reason for poor and mediocre programming on the private stations," the report com- mented, . Robert M. Fowler, 58, of Mont- real, president of the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association and the man who headed the 1956-57 royal commission on broadcast- ing; Marc Lalonde, 35, Mont- real lawyer, and Ernest Steele, 45, undersecretary in Mr, montagne's department. They were assigned to look at the whole field of broadcast- ing and suggest how it could be improved. The Fowler committee warned: "There is no point in asking where a national broadcast sys- tem is going. It will go only where it is pushed by conscious and articulate public pol- on rg Such a policy should be laid down by parliament, stating clearly what broadcasters in the public and private sectors are expected to do. Then power should be given to the new au- A military spokesman said) VANCOUVER (CP)--For the Pakistani forces launched a se- Radio Pakistan said Pakis- tani troops in the Lahore sec- tor--considered the most im- -- in the undeclared war '--had moved eastward to cap-| election th rt ture Indian border posts, bY eee The Pakistanis were main- taining Beat pressure on the enemy" after pushing them out/forecast his party's chances in of Pakistani territory, the! the election but said if the NDP broadcast said. This has been a traditional in- first time, the New Democratic ries of counter-attacks a few|Party hopes miles east of Lahore, and some] to poe on ts federal shastane 60 miles northeast, and then|campaign, NDP Leader T. C, moved forward to penetrate the} Douglas said Thursday. _ _-- territory of East Pun-| He said in an interview he jab. had asked at the recent NDP national convention for $1,000,- 000 and he would guess the amount will be collected. He said in the 1963 general tween $400,000 and $500;000 and ended $32,000 in the red. Mr. Douglas was hesitant to can harvest 25 per cent of the 37 per cent of the voters polls vasion route for centuries forjsay are undecided, it armies moving in both direc- 3 , it could form a government, opened. Teller Anne Powers, fetieral election, Mr. career. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS "Fill It Up," Bank Robber Demands WINDSOR (CP) -- A man escaped with about $2,000 today after holding up a teller at the Canadian Imperial of suburban Riverside, told police the man walked into the bank, threw a grocery bag to her, and said: "Fill it up". Liberal Moreau Will Not Run TORONTO (CP) -- Maurice Moreau, Liberal member of Parliament for York-Scarborough, Canada's largest con- stituency, said Thursday night he will not run in the Nov. 8 Moreau told a press conference La-| he decided not to run again when it became clear he couldn't handle both his consulting practice and a political Whitby Community Chest Sets Ann Landers--11 ...In THE TIMES today... Landscape Architect For Creek Valley--P. 9 $30,800 Gool--P, 5 Koufex Hurls Perfect Game, 4th No-Hitter--P. 7 City News--9 Classified--16, 17, 18 Comics--15 Editorial---4 Financial---19 Whitby News---5 Women's--10,.11 Weather--2 \tailed study. ~ cial governments. Authors of the report are thority to carry out the policy.

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