Ontario Community Newspapers

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

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Home Newspaper Of Oshowa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- crio ond Durhom Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO. 130 sic vor Won Yonce She Oshawa Zimes Ca vere OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1966 ia Authorized at Second Class Wall Ottawa ond tor payment of Weather Report Sunny and warm weather ahead. Light winds and no rain. Low tonight, 62; high Wednesday, 85, dome w tome TWO KILLED IN DOWNTOWN CRASH pecan . a French Head® In Red Talks both took back seats to Brezh- ney The party leader took com- plete charge a6 soon as he strode in at the head of the So- jet delegation to greet the French leader in the Kremlin's Catherine Hall De Gaulle's theme of one Kurope from Atlantic to the Urals was echoed today by Mos- cow radio, A French-language broadcast said 'NEED NO BLOCS' 'There is only one Europe in the world, Vor centuries in the history of mankind its lands have been ravaged and devas tated, Latins, Scandinavians, Germans, Slavs have no need of military blocs, They need As they broke up, both deineace to work, to help each Gaulle and Brezhnev stressed' other and live in friendship." the considerable importance of [n talk with his Russian close consultation hetween hosis de Gaulle was expected to France and Russia, the spokes eynound his theories on how man said, France and the Soviet Union The spokesman said de Gaulle| could work together for Euro told the Russians that his jour- pean unity and security ney to Moscow, his first for 22, In a Kremlin banquet speec h yaars, was in itself a tangible Monday night, de Gaulle set the = manifestation of France's de- tone for his talks sire for Hast - West consulta Russia to join France in break tions, ing the "harmful spell' of con frontation between East and SET EXAMPLE West De Gaulle was quoted as say) "without ignoring the essen- ing that negotiations between tin) role that the United States countries of West and Hastings io play" in the were a good thing and that the 1. said, France thinks that example should be followed byline first condition for world other European nations, namely progress "is the re-establish that West Germany should have) jont jn Europe of fertile unity such talks with the Soviet Un-|jnstead of having Europe para fon lysed by sterile division," Russia's leaders were re-| jt is up to France and the ported to have stressed the de / MOSCOW (Reuters) --- Presi dent Charlies de Gaulle dis cussed Wuropean security and the German problem for three hours today at the start of talks in the Kremlin, Leonid Brezhnev, general sec retary of the Soviet Communist party, swept diplomatic protocol aside to talk to the general face totace. Normally, as party leader, he does not take part in detailed negotiations with West ern visitors, A French spokesman said the first negotiating session since de Gaulle arrived Monday for an il-day visit began with an opening statement by Brezhnev followed by a statement from the French leader, Soviet Union to start trying to sirability of contacts between) solve European problems, par-| Huropean nations and France. |ticularly the problem of Ger- Few details of the discussions|many, he eaid, : were released, but the French) Podgorny, also speaking at) delegation, vaid the entire snora-|the banquet, said he is con ing was taken up by European|vinced France and the Soviet security and the German prob-|Union can agree on the situa:| lem. jtlon in Europe and other areas) Normally talke with Western|'especially those where the) visitors are conducted by Pre-|flames of war are raging to-| mier Alexei Kosygin or Presi-|day." He obviously meant Viet dent Nikolai Podgorny, Today! Nam, Wheat Sale News sai by calling on| hoe world, @ POLICE OFFICERS PICK their wreckage of aceldent through the the two-car at the corner of way Park and Bond streets last night, An Mr. and "Mrs. Herman Government . ~'Hold Buddhist Leader SAIGON (AP)----Premier Ngu-| Oshawa, couple, yen Cao Ky's South Vietnamese Blackout In U:S.S.R. MOSCOW (CP) -- The mam-; The government newspaper| moth sale of $800,000,000 worth|Izvestia also reported the trade of Cariadian wheat and flour to|pact extension briefly the Soviet Union has gone un) The agreement provides most reported in the Soviet press. favored + nation treatment in A news blackout is standard/trade between the U.S.S.R, and practice in such cases, The So-|Canada, It and the wheat deal viet people have never been told|were concluded in concurrent officially of the series of biginegotiations that went on last purchases of Canadian wheat! week that began three years ago : However, renewal of the gen- STARTED BY CROP LOSS eral Canadian + Soviet trade; The contract announced here agreement was reported briefly by Canadian officials will raise in Pravda, the Communist/t0 about 1,188,000,000 bushels party newspaper. It sald nego the total amount of wheat pur tiations leading to the agree- chased by the Kremlin since ment, signed here Monday,|!963, A crop failure that year were conducted "in an atmos. turned the Soviet Union from m ita traditional role of wheat ex » of mutual understanding goodwill," porter into an importer depend ent largely upon Canada The l Aussie Labor Leader Shot SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters), Arthur Calwell, Australian op- position Labor leader, was wounded in the face outside a suburban town hall tonight after speaking at an antl:Viet Nam meeting big Com- munist power, China, also de-| pends upon foreign wheat to} help feed its burgeoning popu-| lation, Both Moscow and Peking buy mostly' from Canada Thi probabiy world's other observers here said, is the reason the Soviet purchases almost a month ear- \lier this year than jn past years. | soldiers Buddhist Quang in his hospital room in | Hue today, The slight, robed|a military victory for the allies monk.walked out of the building| within 12. months on the 14th day of his hunger strike With the four-month Buddhist) anniversary of his rule Sunday, | uprising military Ie Quang's chief rival, the moder-| peaceful democracy here for a/ think his ultimate objective is|..; ate Thich Tam Chau, appealed) very long time Indeed,"' to Ky liberty of the Venerable Triibombing 'will slowly fade| With the Communists and expel Quang and all other monks who! away" and the number of ter ed A ' SEAMEN'S STRIKE BECOMES... extremist Thich Tri seized the leader the Tri crumbling under junta's firmness to "assure the life and the struggle' against the regime police officer in Hue said that Tri Quang, 42, had been) not win a military victory but| only put in protective custody government's action had all. but it hundred bottled several their followers up they faced epidemic and Calwell was believed to be in satisfactory condition in a hos pital Peter Westaway, a television) station official who arrived on} the acene seconds after the cident "Mr. Calwell, holding a blood-| stained handkerchief to his face,| called I've been id Westaway supporters who meetin hased young The car was said ; Westawa e } Said a gt that a blast ym a l-af 0 shotgun was f 1 into the v i ad put shield few" exec WASN'T SERIOUS ior Westaway said Caly lidn't ab appear t injured "Mast of persed from t i ' 6 eculi were ( the incident occurred e i , but that a Commun Police who were at the group was meeting regula tng had also left, LONDON (CP)--Prime M in ister Wilson rocked Partiame said | } Monday with the Britain's shipping t, I've ine prolonged ho want to damage the natic He didn't use the word "Co munist" but there could. be mistake about the meaning the arefully-chosen words statement to Parliament Hipping s now in charge th out been she by shot' W said Labor party attended = the and caught ma windshield of ell's nis shatt rine ly-knit gro ivated pressure on "a of the 48-member natior ulive of the seamen's 1 who "in turn have be e to dom the major a at other me ate to have that t HeHEVE emn turdy union ins ent and the striking seamen's union Nat strike is be» Communist 8 n, m: no af n on its up n'? select nal n+ en itv 4 he ne i t rly and dictating atrike policy to the executive with the any show of Wilson told Partia group holds views to secure any repre this House at the | but their backstage had effect PLANS AIRLIFT He al made for a Royal. A t te deliver impor and carry' backed Northern Ireland Navy would be usec plies to outlying islands, The prime minist been rebuffed by th *my ed his personal 3 ig Hogarth is .be moderate, and Wils have urged him a. weakness mean defeat in union elections, so said plans were being ieved to be a injuring its driver, Hun- dreds of spectators swarm. ed around the accident scene as police, tire and ambulance authorities work- of .to elear the street Robinson, of Fairleigh ave, were killed instantly in the crash, The front end of their car was completely torn away. The convertible in the background caught fire after the crmih," seriously Soldiers | After four days of talks with| after a battle with U.S. Coast Ky and other government lead-| Guard cutters, planes and hell- ers, Lord Walston, Britain's un-| copters, dersecretary for foreign affairs,|. _. eee told newspaper men he foresaw| LED REBELLION Tri Quang had led the Bud- dhist rebellion in the northern Lord Walston's prediction ech provinces and was a leader in oed one made by Ky on the first| @sitation against previous gov ernments, including the regime but Walston added: 'I cannot|0f the late president Ngo Dinh see a real building up of a|Diem, Some American officials establishment of a He said the shooting and| State that could make a deal the Americans, rorist incidents gradually de He began the hunger strike cline, He sald North Viet Nam June 8, when the rebellion be- had become convinced it could} gan faltering, vowing to take liquids until the. United to/he saw no immediate prospect| States withdrew its support of|jow' The majority of the peo- shield him from the Viet Cong,| that Hanoi would sue for peace.| Ky and Roman Catholic Chief of ple in the area were at home, The against the chief of the Buddhist) Mekong Delta south of Saigon,| oth resigned, He has lost 24 struggle movement showed its|U.§. seamen unloaded 250 tons| Pounds confidence that smashed the militant Buddhist) munition from a gun minority's campaign for an im» trawler intercepted Monday as| Buddhist Institute, has tried to| velopment near Buckroe Beach, > vega restoration of civilian Viet Cong sampans were about! cool off Tri Quang and his ex-|a Chesapeake Bay resort town, rule, | In Saigon, troops and police) tary kept and inside the Buddhist Institute for the fourth day despite their plea: markings, was believed to have) ernment Union has made its Canadian| to the International Red Cross}come from the North Vietna-|tactics as Buddhist family al-|feet that | starvation, On a strip of beach along the| State Nguyen Van Thieu and of Chinese-made arms and am-| Thich Tam Chau, the rela- « running} tively moderate chairman of the | tremist followers, He fled the in- | stitute compound on the out- to pick up the cargo, U.S, mili- authorities said it was monks} probably the biggest arms prize! skirts of Saigon last week when|development from the south at of the war The trawler the monks there rejected his ap no| peals for a truce with the gov and an end to such which bore mese port of Haiphong, The/tars in the streets to obstruct 'crew fled with the guerrillas! traffic, Buddhist | 4" Flaming Fuel Burns Driver An Oshawa man and his wife|were found by police 250 feet were killed instantly Jast night|away from the scene, in a fiery car crash so severe, that pieces from one of the wrecked vehicles 250 feet away. J. Robinson and his 40-year-old wife Edna June Robinson. The at junction of Park Rd. bad came to rest, This morn. ing police said that charges accident was the worst in the city for many years, Oshawa Times Photo by Bruce Jones from one of the wrecked cars were hurled 250 feet away from. the scene, The cars demolished a hydro pole and a traffic light atandard boforé. they Pieces 2 Killed, Homes Wrecked 'In Virginia Plane Crash | | HAMPTON (Va, (CP)--Res-|and landed near the second| jcue and salvage workers dug bomber in Chesapeake Bay off| jthrough a deyastated suburban|Norfolk, Three were picked up| |neighborhood today for possible|by a U.S, Coast Guard helicop- jadditional victims from the |ter, the fourth by a private boat, \flaming crash of a U.S, Marine| The 'crash occurred not far Corps attack bomber that/from the big Fordham shopping hurtled into the area after anjcentre and the homes of many| in-flight collision Monday night.\air force and army men from Police said two persons--alnearby Langley Air Force Base| mother and her infant son--died|and Fort Monroe, | and 40 were injured, Eleven re-| Witnesses said the aircraft mained in hospital today. came down at a 45-degree angle | Police Chief L H Nicholson |just off Sergeant Street, where| "We have gone through its engine buried itself in a deep| all the destroyed and damaged crater, } houses with a fine tooth comb The wings and portions of the} and found no additional bodies. | gaming fuselage continued on--| I don't believe we will find any with parts of the fuel tanks--| more We have no reports Of|for two blocks, mowing ra missing persins homes as they went and setting! Nicholson said "'it is a mit-\some of them on fire. Bits of| jacle that the death toll was 60\tn» plane were found 15 blocks away at the shopping centre, where a wheel plunged through} the roof of a bowling alley and injured three persons, The marine bombers, out of Cherry Point, N.C., were en| route to Patuxent River, Md.,| jand had left their Cherry Point base at 6:30 p.m, The Fleet Ma- |rine Force Atlantic said it had} no immediate explanation for! the collision and that the planes | were on a routine weather mis- sion, Uganda Claims jhe added Ten of the modest, two - bed- room homes were demolished and 17 others' damaged to some degree in the housing de- The two-seater A-6 Intruder jattack bomber plowed Into the 8:57 p.m. Seconds earlier, it had collided at 400 miles an hour with another Intruder at 2,000 All of the four marines aboard the two aircraft ejected safely A POLITICAL STRUGGLE' | WILSON CHARGES REDS BEHIND TIE-UP that would threat stronger ecutive, Hogarth's only comment on the meeting and Wilson's state- ment was that it indicated a toughening attitude by the La- bor government Militants among the seamen quickly rejected the charges and said it was the prime min- ister who was turning a strike over economic issues into a po- litical struggle John Gollan, general secre tary of the British Communist party, accused Wilson of 'Mc- Carthyite smears and innuen- dos" against leaders of the sea- men's union lead in the union ex- tary TN ment: 'This jon which failed 'sentation in ast election, views have ont But in maj ecul . \ ir Force airs sear lant exports up mail The, Royal 1 to get sup- to Mar 000 they Th his after Wilson cizir Commons sp h, Gol- i the 26,000 aber unist party the j rnment's wage aint policy as "a barefaced fraud™ and blames Britain's economic difficulties en "crippling mili- er, who has @ seamen in 'ts to win a In a statement William Ho- made his eta af ihe a s d al Vf the opposes crat "no on is said to to take a are abroad." with the government in calling Slight after votes Monday at six Wilson said it would be difficult, ships that won't be laid up until said they had for vears made compar of militancy, to pressures which King Criminal | | King inal | KAMPALA (Reuters) -- The Uganda government plans i} inform the Burundi authorities that the kabaka (king) of Bu:| ganda, Sir Edward Frederick} | Mutesa, committed criminal of-/ jfences before he escaped from | Uganda | nda's President Milton | Obote said this today in a state-/ ment commenting on reports) that the kabaka has asked for| |political asylum in Burundi, a or ports supported the ex- j}former Belgian colony in Cent ive jral Africa, He gave no details secret ballot among the of the alleged offences men has been suggested, but The kabaka had been missing isince May 24, when Uganda} | government troops occupied his palace on the outskirts of Kam- }pala. He arrived in Bujumbura, | ithe Burundi capital, Sunday by jear from The Congo, after hid-} jing in the bush for more than} three weeks rhe troops moved on the ka- baka's palace after the Bugunda kingdom government ordered | Uganda's central government! to leave its territory, which sur- jrounds the national capital, iKampala. ' expenditures at home and ie rest of Britain's trade un- movement has largely sided he seamen for a settlement, chances of a serious split the sailors' ranks seemed ® than half the union's 63,- members are still at sea in y reach British ports re prime minister softened harsh charge a bit by criti- ne the shipowners too, He of the the '"'demo- in the union was in the name a creature ies" but ie revolt" w giving way, anything but democratic," both Mr. and Mrs, Robinson were hurled out of their wrecks ed car, before coming to rest the two cars. demolished a hydro pole and a traffic light stand- ard ' BURST INTO FLAMES The Whyte car, a 1957 Buick convertible, caught fire after the crash, Oshawa fire department rush- ed to the scene and extinguish- ed the Bulck's flaming fuel tanks, It was the burning fuel from his own car that burnt Whyte and sent him to hospital with first and second degree burns to his body, FATHER'S FUNERAL This morning Mrs, Robinson was to have attended the funer- al of her father, George Gray, who died on June 18 after a short sickness. . Mr. and Mrs. Robinson were son's 1956 Volkswagen was cOMm-| returning from the funeral home pletely torn away from thé car,|to their home when the accident tools from the VW's trunk'took place, Robinson's 19th Wedding Anniversary Within Days This Sunday the couple would, Police described the accident have celebrated thelr 19th wed-|this morning as one of the ding anniversary, iworst in the city in several Police said this morning that|years, the Robinson car was travel-} A son of Mr, and Mrs, Wil- ling north on Park Rd, The|iam H, Robinson, of Oshawa, Whyte car was travelling west|Mr. Robinson was born in Osh- on Bond St, jawa, May 18, 1023, and was Charges, said police, are be-| married June 26, 1947, ing considered, A clerk in the Customs and One of the first on the scene | Excise Department here, after the crash was Larry| wes a member of Albert Street Lempcke of 32 Park Rd, N. {Zvnited Church and of Cedar He told the Oshawa Times|Lodge, No. 270, AF and A aye that he was upstairs reading a|During the Second World War book when he heard a "hor-jhe served with the Royal Cana- rible crash," ' Idian Ordnance Corps, were hurled Dead are 43-year-old Herman couple, who had one child, lived 427 Fairleigh ave In Oshawa General Hospital with first and second degree burns is the driver of the other vehicle involved, Burgess Whyte, 25, of 137 Rosehill Blvd He was described this morn ing as in "fair" condition The accident occurred at the N,, and Bond St, W. HUNDREDS CROWD SCENE Several hundred spectators crowded the accident scene as police, fire and ambulance au- thorities worked to clear the road, The crash-impact was so tre- mendous that: --the front end of the Robin- 'SHOOK WHOLE HOUSE' | "It shook the whole house," he said, 'I pulled on my trous-; ers and ran downstairs, When| I came out of the house all J} Besides his parents and his daughter, Mr, Robinson is sur- vived by two brothers, Gordon (Ted) and Dale, both of Oshawa, Mrs, Robinson was a daugh- could see was flames, ter of Mrs, Jeannie Gray and "A fellow (Whyte) was lying|the late George Gray, ot Cae on the strect hollering and/awa, She was born here Oct, 30, moaning in pain." 11994. r Mrs. Joanne Bably, of Bond| Besides her mother and her St, W., said she heard a crash|daughter, she is survived by and ran into the kitchen of her|two sisters, Mrs, Gerald Hickey |(Dorothy) and Mrs, James "T could see the reflection of|Claus (Gloria), both of Oshawa, the fire on the kitchen walls," . she said, "I thought the house | PEEING pan neg h next door had caught fire, | were aohinane can a "When I looked down the/of the office staff of United street I saw the crash. I was|Tayi-and a member of Albert so stunned I didn't know what|Street United Church and the to think. It was the first time/ladies' auxiliary of Local 222 I have ever seen an accident') yaw, z like this, ' A private funeral service will Daniel Williamson, of 337 \be held at the Armstrong Funers Buena Vista, was talking with\a) Home at 3.30 p.m,, June 22, his brother at home when helyey, 4H, Dyck, minister of heard the crash. iAlbert Street United Church, My sister came running| wil) conduct the service, Inter. downstairs saying there was an/ment will be in Oshawa Union accident. She was very excited! Cemetery, and we could hardly make out ' 7 -- | The family of the late Mr. whet she wes. saying. jand Mrs, Robinson will be at 'THEY WERE DEAD' jthe funeral home to receive "T guess we were one of the/friends from 2 to 4 p.m, and 7 first on the scene," he added,|to 9 p.m, Wednesday, "There was a woman lying on; Friends are requested to the road and a man. Their hair/omit flowers, Donations to Vari+ singed and they werejety Village in their memory dead," 'would be appreciated, ul ANAC EO inane NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Farmers Talk Prices With Minister TORONTO (CP) -- An Ontario Farmers' Union dele- gation met today with Agriculture Minister William Stewart to discuss provincial stabilization of prices for farm products, especially milk. HH; HANAN Bilingualism Secretariat Head Picked OTTAWA (CP) -- Dr. John S, Hodgson, 49, principal secretary to Prime Minister Pearson, has been appoint- ed director of the newly + constituted special secretariat on bilingualism, it was announced today, uuu AY STAAL ANT AAA ... In THE TIMES today... Provincial Grants Aid Crippled Children's School -- P, 18 Council To Restore Lot Standards -- P. $ 5s Thompson Stors In Green Gaels Win -- P. 8 ® Ann Landers --~ 16 City News -- 15 Classified --- 17 to 21 Editorial = 4 Financial -- Comics --- 13 Obits, -- 21 Sports --- 8, 9 Theatre ------ 6 Weother ------ 2 Whitby, Ajax News -- 8 Women's --- 16 VW eee en

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