Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax Pickering and 'neighboring centres in Ont- crio and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 --- NO. 80 Woe Per Wesk Home Oshawa Simes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966 ARCHITECT'S DRAWING OF PROPOSED NEW OSHAWA CIVIC AUDITORIUM COMPLEX 4 TENDER ON OCA COMPLEX Four tenders -- all over $1,000,000 -- were opened !ast night by the board of directors of the Oshawa Civie Auditor- jum. The bids to win the contract of constructing the Centennial Swimming Pool and Recreation Complex at the auditorium were given to the architect, Peter All- ward of Allward and Gouinlock, Toronto, for reviewing. E. R. S. McLaughlin, chair- man of the board, said it will take at least a week for the architect to check the tenders. He said this must be done be- fore the board can recommend to council that a contract be awarded, STAI ARTE HCTF RE The lowest tender was sub- mitted by Konvey Construction, $1,045,000. Other tenders were Melia Construction, $1,070,408; Vanbots Builders, $1,080,000; and Mel-Ron Construction, $1,124,000. WITHIN YEAR Frank Markson, treasurer of the board of directors, said the swimming pool and recreational complex is expected to be com- pleted within a year after a contract is awarded. The amount of the tenders did not surprise members of the board. In fact, Mr. McLaughlin said "this was the approximate price expected". Terence V. Kelly, . financial chairman, reiterated that if the average Oshawa citizen pays $25 over the one year the cam- paign will run through payroll deduction at a rate of 50 cents a week, "the campaign will be as successful as the one to build the Civic Auditorium", He said the pool would be a Canadian Standard Swimming and Diving Pool equipped with one- and three-meter diving boards and a spectator gallery; also a beginners' and training pool,, The pools would be fully equipped for checking, changing and washroom and shower facil- ities. The recreational complex, to replace facilities that were de- stroyed by fire last year at the Oshawa Recreation Committee building on Gibb st., will in- elude a squash court, exercise rooms complete with condition- ing equipment and sauna baths; a judo area; weightlifting area; two areas for arts and crafts; general purpose rooms for var- jety programming; a hall and stage for concerts, demonstra- tions and exhibitions; a billiard room; lounge and _ waiting room; canteen; board room; lobby with reception and in- formation booth and an admin- istrative area for the city's rec- reation department. pir ETNA IS Iveanue IE sneer Ottewa and for night, 38. High 65. in Cosh. Class n Authorized @s Second Mal ea Weather Report Saturday sunny with a few cloudy periods and season- able temperatures. Low to- tomorrow, Newspaper White Ready To Talk LONDON (AP)--For the first time since the great train rob- bery nearly three years ago, a member of the gang today was reported ready to talk. A Scotland Yard detective said James Edward White, captured Thursday, told de- tectives: "I am only too pleased to tell you all about it.' Other captured gang mem- bers all have maintained si- lence. White, 46, a former British Army paratrooper, was ar- rested in the smali resort of Littleton-on-Sea, 70 miles from London, where he had lived for 18 months with his wife and four-year-old son under an as- sumed name. A phone call from an unknown woman led detect- ives to him. His seizure came two years and eight months after a gang of armed and masked men robbed a mail train 14 miles from London and made the big- gest cash haul in crime history --£2,600,000 ($7,800,000). White was brought under heavy police guard today to a court at Linslade in Bedford- shire, about three miles from the scene of the robbery. Detective Chief Supt. 'Thomas Butler, head of Scotland Yard's flying squad, testified White told him he was "getting to the end of his tether" and tired of being on the run. Defence lawyer Maurice Lesser said White had intended to surrender to police this weekend. JAMES EDWARD WHITE suspected mastermind of Britain's great train rob- bery of 1963, was seized Thursday by Scotland Yard detectives at Littlestone-on- Sea, a little seaside resort 70 miles from London. Ursulines Get NEGRO HONORED POSTHUMOUSLY WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Johnson pre- sented the highest U.S. mil- itary award Thursday to the father of 'a 19-year-old Chi- cago Negro pho gave his life in Viet Nam to protect his fellow paratroopers. At a solemn ceremony in the sun-dappled rose garden of the White House, Johnson said Pte. Milton Lee Olive Il "taught those of us who remain how we ought to live." Johnson presented . the TORONTO (CP) -- Attorney- General Arthur Wishart today '| announced the establishment of a consumer protection bureau and his intention to give it broad powers by legislation to wipe out consumer frauds, especially by doot-to-door salesmen. The attorney - general said the house will debate at this ses- sion a bill to force full disclos- ure of the cost of borrowing, both in terms of dollars and per- centages, but the bili will be put off for enactment until the 1967 session. : This legislation also proposes the registration of door-to-door sales firms and the establish- ment of a two-day "cooling-off"' period during which household- ers could renounce a contract signed with a door-to-door sales- man. Mr. Wishart said that while the government plans to set up the consumer protection bureau immediately, the legislation to be administered by the bureau contains new principles that business people will want to study and for this reason it will not be enacted at the present session. Opposition members raised the question of what the con- sumer protection. bureau is go- ing to occupy itself with in the meantime. FRAUD SALESMEN BUREAU TARGET Protection For Consumer Aim Of Wishart's Plan The attorney-general said it will receive submissions from the business community and may even start accepting com- plaints from consumers so it will be ready to do the job when the act comes into effect. Banks, finance companies and other firms making loans or of- fering merchandise on credit will be forced by the proposed legislation to state their per- centage interest rates and how much this will amount to in dollars, Fines of up to $25,000 for cor- porations and $2,000 for individ. uals are set out in the legisla- tion for anyone who contra- venes it. Door-to-door salesmen will be made answerable to the regis« trar of the consumer protection bureau when complaints are re. ceived about the tactics of "itinerant salesmen," as they are referred to in the act. Salesmen may have their lls censes cancelled by the regise trar but will have recourse to the director of the bureau and to the court of appeal. A householder who signs @ contract with a door - to - door salesman will be permitted to renege on it within two days simply by sending a notice in writing to the seller, Any goods received must be returned. -- cover of darkness today and Cong Destroys 9 US. Planes SAIGON (Reuters) -- Viet Cong guerrillas crept to the edge of a U.S. air base in Pleiku in the central highlands of South Viet Nam under the week. Two days ago a guerrilla squad sneaked into An Khe air ist tr Cavalry, end' damagad s valry, and two transport planes. United States marines Heart Man 'Satisfactory -MD DeRudder, a former coal Medal of Honor to Olive's father, Milton L. Olive Jr. The medal was awarded posthumously for "extra- ordinary heroism and in- trepedity" after Olive threw himself on. a hand grenade burned out five aircraft in a|South Vietnamese rapid 20-minute mortar attack./claimed they routed a One South Vietnamese soldier] Cong regiment in a 10-hour bat- and a child were killed in the/tle around Quang Ngai in the raid, Saigon radio reported. central lowlands Thursday. Fifteen other planes were| The joint force of 3,300-troops damaged, and two U.S. serv-| reported Killing 302 guerrillas New Attire CHATHAN, Ont. (CP) -- The Ursuline order of nuns here has received Vatican approval for a new habit which features a sep- HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)--A 65-jof Westville, Tll., had not re-jextent of the brain damage De- I l year-old patient with a partial) gained consciousness. Rudder may have suffered. miner with a 25-year history o artificial heart may have suf-; A team of noted specialists} The advisory noted that the heart ailments, entered hos- fered some brain damage after}from Baylorand Rice universi-|heart "device was functioning! pital April 14 suffering from a a dramatic operation to savelties healed by Dr. Michael E.|/normally as expected. jdamaged valve between the 'Pledged Aid -- Witness icemen were wounded. his life, doctors said today. However, S after the device -- no larger|day at Methodist Hospital. than a grapefruit -- was im- planted inside the man's chest his condition vas generally re- ported as satisfactory. Physicians feared there mayjother heart patients be brain that DeBakey performed a six-hour t ) > almost 24 hoursjoperation on DeRudder Thurs-|sible brain damage, it was sim- could help damage because the! The latest medical advisory| considered critical. patient, Marcel L. DeRudder,! said it was too early to tell the) g jis doing its job. |well. within a week or 10 davs the heart. Other than the report of Pos-| upper and lower chambers of | "He certainly would not have ilar to an earlier advisory that) They hope it will prolong his)said DeRudder was "exhibiting | survived without surgery," said life and usher in a new era in|no evidence of heart failure and|peBakey. "And his chances of the treatment of heart disease|e verything was progressing| survival with surgery were low. of} most satisfactorily." |The pump is doing two-thirds The next 12 to 24 hours arejof the heart's normal work load." DeBakey said in an interview] couLp BE PERMANENT that the pump, as he called it,! "he surgeon told a press con- 1 deaes> : \ference the success of the de- | "It is maintaining his blood jvice indicates it could do the | pressure and keeping him out of|work of the left ventrical per- jheart failure. If he progresses | manently, with further improve- lmoante Others on the team shared |DeBakey's view that the arti- lficial heart can eventually add : 4; years of life to about one-half sao gong ore dl the 900,000 persons who die of Seaiba' Ghat had hare a 4g. | heart disease annually in the die ; "| United States. -- ee | Controls and electrodes in the tor 44 he aly Bia plastic pump monitor the pres- oe sey anid cbereng sure inside the heart and in Bo pump, ay by aN| veins, so that it can be adjusted outside power supply, was in-|to pump at the necessary rate stalled on the left side of acca volun to help DeRudder's Rudder's heart to give his own)/own damaged heart, DeBake damaged organ a partial rest| said, Y and a chance to sigs : Zhe small pump, Spey out- It was designed to do the|side the chest. can be re- work of the left ventricle, the|moved without major surgery lower chamber, which pumps|after the heart chamber heals, blood through the body and is|the tubes remaining in place a common source of heart/with a flap of skin being sewn trouble. lover their openings. Ontario Seen As Agreeable To National Medical Plan TORONTO (CP) -- The Star|yet been placed before Parlia says it has learned the Ontario} ment. arg a is 2 ag cd eit The Ontario Medical Services icipate in a national medica : ne ; aa medical insurance plan on oo treba a at _ federal government's terms, |2°°0Mes operative July 1, is on : : ja voluntary basis and makes The newspaper adds: juse of private insurers. The "Qualified sources emphasize|federal plan would be all-gov- Premier Robarts is unwilling to|ernment. commit Ontario publicly to par-}| --_____ me ticipation in the federal plan un-| til he has bargained for the best! N.Y. Mayor Ready jdeal possible. | "But regardless of the out- s come of the federal - seovinclall To Act In Dispute talks, he is said to be ready to} Nesta NE Bs 8 accept Ottawa's present terms) NEW YORK (AP) -- Mayor we can let his heart take over." TWO OTHERS .FAILED The new device "is much CHESTER, England (Reut- ers) -- The chief prosecution witness in a triple murder trial admitted today he expected money from a newspaper if his sister-in-law and her lover were found guilty. David Smith, 17, agreed with defence counsel that a British paper promised him a large sum for help pvith articles on arate fitted cap and black wool- len serge dress falling to below the knees, a spokesman for the order said Thursday. A press release said the or- der is giving up its present tra- ditional habit, which has a 105- year history, in favor of a straight - hanging gown falling from the neck to about mid-calf, gathered at the waist with a belt. the case. But he refused eight times to name the paper, de-| spite a warning from the judge. Mr. Justice Fenton Atkinson| ivid Smith he was grossly inter- fering with the course of jus- tice, then ordered a full investi- gation. Smith's sister - in - law, Myra Hindléy, 23, and her lover Ian Brady, 28, are charged with triple murder in the sensational "bodies on the moor" case, Brady is alleged to have hacked and strangied to death 17 - year - old Edward Evans. Smith gave evidence Thursday that he watched the killing. The prosecution also claims the two lovers smothered two children, Lesley Anne Downey, 10, and John Kilbride, 12, after luring them from the streets for Members of the order will be- gin wearing the new Habit by mid-summer, the press rélease The new outfit features a V-shaped dickie with a turned- down collar. last Oct, 22 and shielded four other soldiers. No Directorate For C-E Employees TORONTO (CP) -- Employ- ees of credit unions will be bar- red from being directors of these organizations under legis- lation introduced by Attorney- General Wishart Thursday. There have been cases where general managers sat on boards where they could pass judgment on their own activities, Mr. Wishart said in the legislature. orgies of sexual perversion, | Rotation Seen As Unlikely OTTAWA (CP) -- External Affairs Minister Martin said to- day it is 'extremely unlikely" |that families of Canadian ser- jvicemen in Europe will be brought home and the troops there rotated every few months. However, he said in the Com- mons, this was one of many possibilities which would re- ceive the government's atten- tion. Mr. Martin was replying to Opposition Leader Diefenbaker who said Mr. Martin's state- |ment Thursday in the Commons jexternal affairs committee had jraised 'great fear and conster- and capturing 113. weapons, in- The defenders launched aj cluding 14 heavy recoilless can- counter-attack but the Vietinons, anti-aircraft guns and Cong fled. No guerrilla bodies| mortars. Allied casualties were were found. described as: light. It was the third attack on an| Meanwhile, buildings shook American air base in ninelin the heart of Saigon today as days. Eight persons were killed| aircraft and mortars unleashed and 128 were wounded in a 20-|a preliminary barrage for a minute mortar barrage at Sai-| South Vietnamese operation six gon's Tan Son Nhut airfield last! miles apvay. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS RCMP Charged In Bank Robbery STELLARTON, N.W. (CP) -- Cpl. Harry Sutherland, $2, of the RCMP Halifax headquarters staff was charged today with armed robbery in the holdup Monday on the Bank of Nova Scotia in nearby Trenton. Cpl. Sutherland, an ROMP officer for 13 years, pas remanded in custody without plea until next Monday. The bank was robbed near closing time Monday by an armed bandit who got away with $8,900, Canada To Ask For Clarification OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Minister Pearson said today Canada is making representations to the . United States concerning the possibility of some Canadians being ar- rested in the U.S. as alleged draft dodgers. He said in the Commons the government is giving the matter serious consideration and, hopes to make a statement on it Mon- day or Tuesday. Brokerage Firm Suspended TORONTO (CP) -- The brokerage firm of Waite, Reid and Co. Ltd. has been suspended from trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange for two weeks and fined $5,000, the exchange announced today. The suspension is effective immediately. A similar suspension was announced by the Vancouver and Montreal Stock Exchanges. ...In THE TIMES today... June Start For Downtown Complex -- P 11 63 Receive Citizenship Papers -- P 5 Sherbrooke Wins First Game of Cup Finals -- P 9 Obits--21 Sports--8, 9, 10 Ann Landers--12 City News--11 in order to take advantage of| John V. Lindsay said today he federal grants." |will enter newspaper contract The federal government has] poontint ' offered to pay half.the cost of Secure hea erase head/ Martin said in the com- of West- ja national plan for' universal that Canadian forces lcare administered through the| Paper strike in less than four/shouldn't remain in Europe "for years. lall time," Theatre--17 Whitby News--5 Women's--12, 13,14 Weather--2 Classifed--18, 19, 20 Comics----16 Editorial--4 Financial--21 nation" among Canada's NATO allies. off the city's third major News-| mittee AT THE BULLFIGHTS John F. Kennedy, on left, registered this re- action as she watched the pbullfight in Seville, Spain, PERCHED ABOVE tlhe by Dr. Michael DeBakeey, operating. table at Metho- left foreground, and _ his dist Hospital, Houston, Tex., associate surgeons on Mar- camera equipment records cel L. DeRudder the delicate artificial heart ville, Il., Thursday. implant surgery performed {AP Wirephoto) |provinces. Its legislation has not ' } yesterday. Mrs. Kennedy's hostess, the Duchess of Alba is also shown. AP Wirephoto Mrs.