Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Mar 1966, p. 1

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Home Newspaper, Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax neighboring Pickering and centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO.54 10¢ Single "oe 50c Per Week Home "belivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, MARCH 21, Ghe Oshawa Cures . puthetned as Second Class Mail Post Office Peet 1966 Ottewa and for payment of Weather Report Littie warmer today and Tuesday. Scattered thunder- showers may hit. night, 37. High 52. Postage in C Low. to- tomorrow, TWENTY PAGES Philip Reaches oronto 'Early' Visit Opens - Before Time Of Schedule TORONTO (CP) Prince Philip began his visit to Toronto. § with an earlier-than scheduled visit to Queen's Park today where he was greeted by Licu- tenant - Governor Earl Rowe and met Premier Robarts and his cabinet. The limousine which brought Philip here from Port Hope, where he spent the night, ar- rived a few minutes before the scheduled time of 11:10 a.m. at the west door entrance to the lieutenant - governor's suite in the parliament buildings. "Hey Philip,"' 'Hi Philip," a student from the University of Toronto across the street 'called out as Philip started up the red- carpeted stairs. He turned and grinned. Several hundred per- sons, mostly students and civil servants, welcomed him. The prince, who has not met the Ontario executive council since 1959, looked over the ranks of the cabinet ministers and re- marked "'there's been a slight reshuffle." Reporters and photographers were admitted to the lieutenant- governor's suite but an army public relations man said '"'come on boys, it's supposed to be pri- vate," and ushered the press out after a minute or two. The royal party left at 11:27 a.m. for city hall. Astro Pair Homebound By HOWARD BENEDICT CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) With the cause of their wild ride traced to a short cir-| | cuit, the Gemini 8 astronauts completed a de-briefing period here today and flew home to a reunion with their families. A jet plane carrying Neil A. Armstrong and David R. Scott departed here at 9:23 a.m, EST. It was to land at Ellington Air Force Base near Houston's Manned Spacecraft Centre after a@ flight of two hours 50 min- utes. They flew to Cape Kennedy} Saturday from the Pacific, where they splashed down Wed- nesday night in the first emer- gency landing in the U.S. man- in-space program. While here, Scott huddled with experts, dis-| mpssing performance of space- ft systems during the flight} that came to a sudden end after the astronauts had executed man's first hookup with another satellite. AS : aeeetctontiee: PRINCE.PHILIP and Vin- cent Massey are seen at the front entrance of Batter- wood House, the home, near Port Hope, Ont., of the former governor - general, prior to the Prince's de- parture this morning for Armstrong and| | Shortly after the linkup with | an Agena, Gemini 8 began gy-| Yating crazily in the sky, rolling | and yawing. Command Pilot Armstrong fought a desperate! } 30-minute battle to regain con-| trol, separating from the Agena and finally using an emergency jet thruster system to stabilize the spacecraft. LOCATE TROUBLE The National Aeronautics and Space Administration announced| late Saturday that yey reed with the astronauts and a stud of radio and spacecraft tape ve corder data located the trouble/ in oné of Gemini 8's rgeuteni ing jets. The problem, a. st ment said, probably. was ram by a short circuit. 2 Startighters Are Destroyed BONN (AP) -- Two F-104G Starfighters, one from the) RCAF and the other of the West German air force, were de- stroyed in separate crashes in West Germany today, but. the pilots escaped sgrious injury military spokesmen said. The RCAF plane, based at! Zweibruecken, West Germany, crashed near Aschaffenburg in Bavaria, a Canadian spokesman said. The pilot, identified as Fit.-Lt. John Ayres of Montreal, | ejected safely. The RCAF spokesman said 'technical breakdown" pent the crash but he was unable to be more specific Another Canadian Starfighter also from Zweibruecken, crashed in Bavaria March 4, but the pilot was killed. The West German air force) Starfighter crashed earlier in the} day. For the Germans, it was the ninth crash this year of the American-designed plane A West German defence min istry spokesman said the Ger- man pilot, who bailed out, lost control of the plane while test- ing some equipment. | PRINCE PHILIP gestures as he talks with officers at RCAF station Trenton, Ont., Sunday on his arrival for Toronto. The Prince was an overnight guest at Batter- wood after arriving there Sunday afternoon. The Prince passed Oshawa via Highway 401 in the Royal cavalcade about 10 a.m. today. the start of a four-day Cana- dian tour. At left is Trenton commander, Group Captain E. M. Butcher. (CP Wirephoto) NEW EARTH SATELLITE LAUNCHED BY RUSSIANS | LA PRESSE SAYS: Gerda MONTREAL (CP)--La Presse says that a few months before |Gerda Munsinger left Montreal to return to Germany, John Diefenbaker asked Pierre Se- vigny, then associate defence minister, to 2nd his association with the woman. The newspaper says that the Siview of the friendly Pope Asks For Prayers Before Talk With Ramsey VATICAN CITY Pope Paul Sunday asked prayers to be said for his im portant talks this week with Mi- chael Rdmsey, Archbishop a Canterbury and leader of the| Anglican Church which split| from Rome 450 years ago, The pontiff called the talks a "beginning toward union."' He spoke of Ramsey's visit, ibe eginning Tuesday, when he \ gave his Sunday blessing from the window of his study to thou- sands of pilgrims gathered in St. Peter's Square An Archbishop of Canterubyr has paid a visit to the Vatican only once in the last six cen turies. This was a courtesy call by Archbishop Geoffrey Fisher} on the late Pope John XXIII in December 1960 Among Ramsey's party are two bishops--Canadian Bishop Ralph S. Dean of the Cariboo executive officer of the Angif-} an communion, and Bishop John Moorman of Ripon, E land, senior Anglican observer at the council Ramsey's aim is to launch a major dialogue between the Ro- man Catholic Church and the world's 40,000,000 Anglicans, in- formants said. Major differences between Rome and the Anglicans include such Roman. Catholic dogmas as the supremacy and infallibil- ity of the Pope. for ( Reute rs)--| | AIR FORCE "CRACK- DOWN" REPORTED IN SINGAPORE CIRCLES -- meeting between Mr. Diefen- |baker, then prime minister, and |Mr. Sevigny took place in great iseerecy and followed rumors icirculating in Parliament that 'certain ministers' were hav- ling relations with a woman of }doubtful past: At the same time, say' La | Presse, Mr. Diefenbaker had in |his possession certain confiden- ltial documents which had been 'sent to him by the RCMP. The newspaper says Mr. Dief- enbaker informed Mr. Sevigny that there was nothing in these documents to indicate that Mrs. Munsinger was a spy. Meanwhile, La Presse says, lthe RCMP began investigating |Mrs. Munsinger on the request lof certain influential members of Parliament who took a dim relations she had with certain cabinet ministers. There were, in fact, two meet: | ings between Mr. Diefenbaker | -- Mr. Sevigny, the newspaper Says. . in the first, it says, he simply No Pressure By Landreville ~ -- Councillors By JOHN LéBLANC SUDBURY, Ont. (CP) -- For- mer members of the Sudbury city council testified today that | Mr. Justice Leo Landreville did/| not attempt to apply pressure to} them at the time Northern On- lt 'tario Natural Gas Co, was ob-| taining a municipal gas fran- chise from the city in 1956. Mr. Justice Landreville was mayor of Sudbury at the time. | The former councillors ap- peared before the Rand judicial} inquiry as it opened its Sudbury | hearing in connection with its investigation into the fitness of | the former mayor -- now a jus-! tice of the Ontario Supreme} Court -- to continue in his ju- dicial office. 1 Opening witnesses were for- |mer controller Mrs. Grace Hart-| man and former alderman Ar- chibald MacDonald and, William: Edgar, all of whom voted in! favor of the franchise. Mr. Edgar, a school principal, said he was largely influenced | by an appearance before city) council of A. R. Crozier, chair-| man of the Ontario Fuel Board. Plea Made \Germany in February, 1961, jand penniless. jister in question helped her fi-| \nancially on several occasions| Seen Nearby Moscow jis installing a defence system|has Break asked the minister to consider | the consequences of his contin- | ued social relations with the woman, but in the second he told the associate defence min- ister that Mrs. Munsinger prob- ably had a criminal past, or, at least, knew intimately certain members of the underworld. At the second meeting, La Presse continues, Mr. Diefen- baker assured Mr. Sevigny that} Mrs. Munsinger did not have a| background in espionage. | The newspaper says that dur- ing this second meeting the Con- servative prime minister showed Mr. Sevigny the confi- dential file on Mrs. Munsinger he had received from the RCMP, and that he also told the associate defence minister} that the RCMP had a photo-| graph showing a cabinet minis-| ter dancing with the woman. Mr. Sevigny, the paper says, decided to end his association gradually with Mrs. Munsinger and told his chief this. At the| same time, it adds, he assured} his chief that his relationship | with Mrs, Munsinger was purely social. After he had ended his friend-| ship with her, the report says, another minister became associ- ated with her, but this relation- lship only lasted a short time before she left Montreal ye i SPRING'S HERE, FOLKS _ Just .one~ kiss, says -Pia in Franconia, N.H.. The two Valar as she submits to the | year olds from this White ; Mountains ski area were amorous attentions of Richy = celebrating the arrival of Sachse on the Nittersill spring. slopes of Cannon Mountain Anti-Missle Defences The paper says that the min-| during these last few _weeks. (AP' Wirephoto) By HENRY S. BRADSHER them, cannot be hidden under- ground,. They might be the mys- terious structures, with the in- terceptors below ground. Just how good a Russian anti- missile system might be is: un- known outside tight Soviet cir- cles. Khrushchev claimed sev- eral years ago he had an anti- missile- missile that could 'hit a fly in the sky." Western ex- jperts doubted the claim at the | time. But the claim has been re- peated since. Last year the Rus- sians displayed in Red Square rockets they said could inter- cept ballistic missiles hundreds of miles from their targets. In- formed observers here are cau- tious in trying to evaluate this. They say the Red Square dis- plays could be only test models. But they also say the fact of American ability to intercept missiles--proved in mid-Pacific tests--means the Russians might also be able to do so now. In other rocketry fields, the Rus- sians have been equal to -or ahead of U.S. technology. 5 |about the risks it would be rea- MOSCOW (AP)--Large, mys-|sonable to accept in any future terious structures in the coun-|confrontation such as the 1962 tryside near Moscow and Lenin-|Cuban crisis. grad indicate the Soviet Union| The present Soviet leadership appeared more cautious against than Premier Nikita S. Khrush- siles. |chev was and less likely to take This would be a significant de-jrisks, A decision to build an velopment in the "balance of|anti - missile defence could be terror" between this country|part of that caution rather than and the United States. Eachjindicating any intention of tak- jnow has the ability to destroyjing out insurance for future the other with nuclear missiles. |risks. 'Other countries, from West Eu-/ HAVE BEEN SIGNS jrope to China, are moving to-| Indications that the Soviet iward limited destructive capa-|Union. has decided on installa- |bilities with missiles, |tion of an anti-missile system Informed quarters here doubt| have appeared recently. The the Soviet Union is capable ofjlarge structures seem to be of [deploying an effective system | an electronic nature. They ap- of protection against missile at- |Parently are radar control and tack on its two main cities. The|guidance systems. Interceptor technical difficulties of coping| missiles themselves are not ap- simultaneously with multiple|parent. missiles is believed to be too| Sophisticated radar networks, great. needed to detect approaching But even a limited defence/missiles at long range and to could affect Kremlin thinking! guide anti-missile missiles to intercontinental m is- NE Indonesian Army Alerted From AP-Reuters (CP)--The cracked to pre- vent it making any attempt to new military re- it: was reported here to- SINGAPORE donesian army down on the air has force overthrow the gime, day Travellers from ported that the the former air force Friday. He Com@punist Army troops were have occupied all. air ing the weekend craft tires and parts from was plane day-old regime of Lt.-Gen. Suharto. Suryadarma was chief of the its organization revolu- Dutch when he was re- Marshal Sunyadarma was made telecommunications air force from during the tion against January, 1962, placed by Air Omar Dhani. Indonesian the Vice - Jakarta army arrested chief, Vice-Marshal Suryadarma, considered a said orts dur- slashing air- removing vital engines prevent their use against the 10- Army Chief ¢ minister in Pres cabinet. Dhani was im attempted coup In- preparation for re- tempt Air last The Suharto r Nationalist karno founded, to Dr. Ali Sastr party's leader, to restore law and amidjojo said ousted its secre former minister Surachman wa ordered under tody" 15 included mier Subandrio, foreign minister, until later and fled to Cambodia. Air force bases were used .as ba young Communists WINS SUPPORT full support from -the powerful party, the official Ra- a dio Jakarta reported. ance to Suharto's attempts folio Surachman. Communist cabinet members "protective by the army Friday. First ident Sukarno's But a report reaching Singa- pore said four former cabinet ministers, including Third Dep- uty Premier Chaerui Saleh, have eluded army efforts to ar- rest them in Jakarta. It was not known if they had left the coun- try. BRING BACK NASUTION The military regime an- nounced plans to bring Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution, a mili- tant 'anti-Communist, back' into public view when he addrésses meeting this week. Sukarno fired him as defence minister Feb. 21 for his crackdown on Communists. Diplomats in Singapore said Nasution's return indicates he is destined for a high post, per- days even the presidency, when Suharto announces his perma- nent cabinet within a week. So far Sukarno has continued as plicated in the last October s for traided--in the coup at- egime has won which Su- oamidjojo, the pledged assist- to Sastro- the party has tary - general, without port- order. s one of 15 pro- In Scientific nounced today the launching of an earth satellite but made no immediate comment on foreign reports that it might be at- tempting a space rendezvous. The announcement of the launching of Cosmos 113 was worded in the usual form for unmanned satellites. It was re- ported to be engaged in scien- tific research. The Bochum Observatory in West Germany said Cosmos 113 might be trying to rendezvous with Cosmos 112, launched last week. The Bochum Observatory sug- gested the new satellite's orbit was being synchronized with that of Cosmos 112. However, No. 112 was set up last Thursday at an angle of 72 degrees to the equator and No. 113 has an inclination of 65 de- grees, according to the an- nouncement distributed by Tass news agency. This indicated dif- ferent flight paths. They also differed consider- ably in altitudes. No. 112 had a high point of 353 miles and a low of 133 miles. No. 113 orbits from 203 miles to 130.5 miles. The announcement said Cos- mos 113 carries scientific ap- Cosmos 113 Engaged Research MOSCOW (AP) -- Russia an-|paratus, it's working normally and information is being ra- dioed back. The Cosmos label is believed by Western analysts to cover a variety of purposes. The recent 22-day flight of two Soviet dogs was in a Cosmos satellite and others might be used for recon- naissance, The United States is reported to have "spies in the sky" launched into polar orbits from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Various Soviet state- ments have indicated Russian equivalents. The satellite tracking station at the Wilhelm Foerster Ob- servatory in West Berlin said Sunday that Cosmos 112 is in a polar orbit, apparently indicat- ing a new launching point. The Cosmos 112 orbit carries from well above the Arctic Cir- cle to well below the Antarctic Circle, This eventually would bring all 'significant parts of the spin- ning earth under the satellite's gaze. The Foerster Observatory said Cosmos 112 apparently was launched from Novaya Zemlya Island in the Arctic, meaning a ane Soviet rocket launching site. 6 More SAIGON (AP)--Six more U.S. planes today were reported lost in the widening American air operations over North and South Viet Nam. A U.S. spokesman said two of the flyers were killed, two were captured and two are missing. The Strategic Air Command marked its 20th anniversary by sending its Guam-based B-52s over the Communist D - zone stronghold 35 miles north of Sai- gon to pound escape routes in the jungle leading toward Cam- bodia. While U.S. planes roared through the skies above and be- low the 17th parallel, South Viet- namese forces reported killing more than 225 Viet Cong in two actions, and more than 1,000 U.S. marines battled the Viet Cong 400 miles north of Saigon. The marines reported at least 34 Viet Cong killed in the early tages of the battle. Government troops killed 100 guerrillas in a stiff fight at Vo Xu, a rice-producing area 75 miles north of Saigon. KILL 129 CONGS ' other 129 Viet Cong in a battle U.S. Has Lost Craft in the Central "Highlands 150 miles northeast of Saigon, a spokesman said. The heavy fighting 30 miles east of Ban Me Thuot erupted Sunday onthe second day of an operation by South Vietnamese army units trying to cut up a large Viet Cong force reported in the jun- gled mountains. On a sweep 12 miles south of the central coastal town of Tuy Hoa, U.S. 101st Airborne troops ran into North Vietnamese reg- ulars, spokesmen said, and bat- tled them for seven hours. There was no assessment of Commu- nist casualties, but American losses were reported light. A battalion or more of Viet Cong drove off 100 government defenders from an outpost at An Hoa, on the approaches to Quang Ngai city, 330 miles northeast of Saigon, after in- flicting heavy casualties. The threat of political crisis for Premier Nguyen Cao Ky's military government eased dur- ing the weekend after a public declaration by a prominent ;Buddhist leader that the Budd- Government forces killed ol hists. were not tnying to oust the government. nsec setter brokén arm and lacerations. Toronto Saturday. Stirling is Belleville. landslides hampered ' rescue earthquake that killed more Uganda Sunday morning. Tre south of Lake Albert for five and stores were wrecked and Generals Oust St. Kitts; also Def Ajox to Proceed with Municipal Ann Landers -- 10 Classified City News -- 9 THE ANTI-COMMUNIST military leadership of Indo- nesia planned today to bring back Brig. Gen, Abdul Haris Nasution above, back into public view. figurehead president while the army, controls the country. Sukarno, meanwhile, was re- ported relaxing at his. summer palace at Bogor, 40 miles from Jakarta. cus- The Deputy Pre- the pro-Peking Classified -- 14, 15, 16 Comics -- 14 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 17 12-point scale at a Soviet sei sonra _ NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Bride Killed On Highway 14 STERLING, Ont. (CP) -- Jean Virginia Smith, 37, of Toronto, a bride of only one day, was killed early today when the car in which she was a passenger left the road on Highway 14, one mile south of here, and crashed into a tree. John Patrick Smith, 43, also of Toronto condition in hospital in Belleville with a fractured skull, , is in fair The couple was married in about 15 miles northwest of Rescue Work Slowed After Quake KAMPALA, Uganda (Reuters) -- Roads blocked by work today after a violent than 100 persons in western mors which reached 10 on a ismic station shook the area hours, causing many deaths" in the town of Bwamba, in the kingdom of Toro. Homes Many persons were injured. ...In THE TIMES today... Mill Rate To Be Set Tonight -- P. 9. eat Montreal -- P. 6 Complex -- P. 5 Obits -- 19 Sports --- 6, 7, 8 Theatre -- 15 Whitby News --~ 5 $ Women's -- 10, 11, 12 Weather -- 2

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