Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Jun 1966, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO, 137 10¢ Single C 8 5Se Per Week Home Belivered -- She Osharwn OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1966 Authorizes ex secona Cider aii: Ottawa and and for payment of Frost Uirive '\ : Weather R eport Fine weather continues with no change foreseen. Low to- night, 65; high Thursday, 85. ' : Ss a chgbeag| teem se ee mt ee ITMNTT-OIA rere 7-10ths OF SECOND... .. AND DRIVER 4/10TH Car's front pletely demolishe Before starting on your Dominion Day "holiday travels tomorrow a report on research into automotive accidents could be life-saving reading for you and your families. Out of automotive crash research has m, tome the terrifying picture of what happens to steel and glass, flesh and blood, in the split second a human being is hurled to eternity. This is the slow-motion reconstruction of what happens when a cor traveliing 55 m.p:h. hits © tree. p.h. The half-ton the tree. Rear of the rises high enoug! branches. steering column position, 1/10TH OF A SECOND Force of gr Front bumper and chrome frosting of the grille collapses. Slivers of steel penetrate the tree 112 inches or more. 2/19THS OF A SECOND Hood crumples as it rises, smashing into windshield. Spinning rear wheels leave the ground. Grill disintegrates Fenders come in contact with the tree forcing rear parts to splay out over the front doors. Heavy structural members of the car begin to act gs a brake on the terrific forward momentum of the 212-ton body. But the driver's body continues to move forward at the vehicle's original speed, a force of 20 times gravity, his body weighing 3,200 pounds. His legs, romrod straight, snap at knee joints. Jagged steel costal arteries. Blood spurts So great is t the driver's feet laced shoes. The brake p boards body bolts. spinning wheels d 7/10TH Hinges tear, Doors spring In one last forward, pinning steel of the steer Blood leaps frozen his heart. HE IS NOW ELAPSED TI. SECOND, 3/10THS OF A SECOND Driver's body is now off the sect, torso upright, broken knees pressing against the dashboard. Plastic and steel frame of the steering wheel begins to bend under his terrible death grip. His head is now near the sun visor, his ehest obove the steering column, Oil Dump Air Strikes Ordered By President WASHINGTON (AP) -- De ; Robert 8. Mc-|civilians and to prevent de- Said today U.S. planes|struction of non - military travelling ot an estimated 35 m.p.h. Driver's body is still travelling at 55 h steering wheel shoft. 6/10THS OF A SECOND Chassis bends in the middle, shearing Driver's head smashes into the windshield. Rear of the car begins its downward fall, The entire writhing body of the car is forced out of shape. was made to prevent harm to) has convert operation'. DIES S OF A SECOND 24 inches have been com- d but the rear end is still motor block crunches inte cor, like a bucking horse, h to scrape bark off low NE TO U.K. SEAMEN STRIKE RAT 5/10THS OF A SECOND Driver's fear-frozen hands bend the into on almost vertical 'avity impales him on the punctures lung and inter- into his lungs. he force of the impact that oe Chee fret his Morte OTTAWA (CP)--Exteriial Af- fairs Minister Martin and Dmi- tri Polyansky of the Soviet Un- ion's hierarchy clashed at a gov- ernment dinner Tuesday night when the Soviet official launched a bitter attack against United States actions in Viet Nam. Mr. Polyansky, first deputy chairman of the Soviet council of ministers, said in his attack that Canada and other nations should halt U.S. "interference" in the Southeast Asian country, Mr. Martin, who earlier paid compliments to Mr. Polyansky and the Soviet Union, was an- gered by the speech which con- trasted sharply with the general atmosphere of goodwill marking the dinner till then. Mr. Polyansky, head of an 11- man delegation touring agricul- tural and other establishments here, said the U.S. had entered a "house that did not belong to it' thousands of miles from Washington and is destroying Vietnamese towns and villages, roads and bridges and industrial projects, poisoning the crops and burning forests. . . ." | Not a single Vietnamese bomb has fallen on U.S, territory or killed or maimed an American "old man, woman or child," he said. CHARGE AGGRESSION edal shears off at the floor igging into the ground. S OF A SECOND open. convulsion the seat rams the driver against the cruel ing shoft, from his mouth, shock hes DEAD ! ME: SEVEN TENTHS OF A . ed the fighting there into' a "'quasi-conventional war. Martin, Russian Leader Clash Over Viet Conflict ES FORCE END PM Charges Red Pressure, LONDON (AP) -- Britain's 45- day seamen's strike was settled today. The executive of the National Seamen's Union voted 29 to 16 to call off the strike after meet- ing all morning at their south London headquarters. The decision followed by less than 24 hours a charge in the House of Commons by Prime Minister Wilson that Commu- nists were pressuring the sea- men to prolong the dispute for political motives. The vote of the union leader- ship indicated that a hard core of militants were still holding out for better terras but had been beaten down by the mod» erate element. When the end of the strike was announced, there were an- gry demonstrations outside un- ion headquarters. "The initial reaction in ship- ping circles is one of relief," said a spokesman for the ship- ping federation. The seamen went on strike for a 40-hour week. ACCEPT FINAL OFFER The shipowners' final offer of a cut in the working week to 48 hours--with 40. hours"promised Executive Calls Off Strike with 48 days annual vacation, four fewer days than the sea- men now receive. A spokesman for the union said the executive did not dis- cuss Wilson's charges, although it must have been in the back- ground. "The whole discussion has been based on the present situa- tion and the industrial dispute, together with the final offer," the union spokesman said. The strike - ending resolution contained a formula to "ade journ strike action" for a year pending the report of a govern- ment court of inquiry into work- ing conditions at sea. The union, in calling the strike, had demanded an imme- diate 40-hour week. Working 56 hours, seamen average $42 a week, The strike has tied up nearly 900 ships in British ports and 27,000 men have been idle, The resolution said the execue tive had decided to accept the ship owners' latest offer "being aware of the great hardship caused to the citizens of the United Kingdom." Wilson's charges in the House of Commons captured the atten- tion of his parliamentary col- next. year--was accepted along leagues, the press and public. Commie Industrial Organizer ts any other proof needed shat the Vietnamese are the victims * | Named As Key Man By Wilson g oil depots facilities." That "buildup, Hanoi-Haiphon today to make North Viet Nam's| infiltration south "more He "portrayed the raids as) highly successful. | McNamara said "every effort De Gaulle Ends Tour MOSCOW (AP) -- President Charles de Gaulle returned here today for a final round of for-) mal talks with Kremlin leaders expected to centre on Euro- pean questions, especially Ger- many. De Gaulle returned from Vol- He told a broadcast and tele- vised press conference the de- cision to strike the petroleum facilities was made by Presi- dent Johnson on his recommen- dation and that of 'State Secre- tary Dean Rusk. | MeNamara said "the decision! to strike these targets was made to restrict and make more costly the enemy's infil- tration" of South Viet Nam. was to "save the lives" of the! South Vietnamese, Americans,| Australians and South Koreans jfighting in South Viet Nam. The action, McNamara said, was a response to a swift and rising North Vietnamese build- up in South Viet Nam which | nema, has made the North Vietnamese forces and their Viet Cong al- lies increasingly dependent on truck movement of heavy sup- plies, increasing the strategic importance of fuel. McNamara said more than 60 per cent of North Viet Nam oil storage facilities were in the three target areas hit. One American aircraft, an Another objective, he said,|F-105, was lost in the attack,| he reported. Other defence department sources said that prior to to- day's devastating strikes only 15 per cent of North Viet Nam's petroleum facilities had been knocked out in. recently in- recently intensified raids. grad and a week's sightsee-; ig tour of four Soviet Cities} and an unprecedented stop at a Soviet space launching. He was accompanied on the flight from Volgograd by Soviet Premier) Alexei N. Kosygin. French sources indicated de Gaulle's informal talks on the road, first with President Nik- olai V. Podgorny and later with) Kosygin, did not break the early impasse over Germany. @ sources have said the Soviets responded coolly to de Britain Score s Bombing Ot North Viet Centers LONDON (AP)--Prime Minis-) ter Wilson expressed regret over! today's U.S. bombing of oil depots near Hanoi and said Brit- ain is unable to support the ac- tion. An announcement of the Viet Nam, to assess the impor- tance of any particular action which the U.S. government re-|. gards as militarily necessary in this conflict. "Nevertheless, we have made jit clear on many occasions that gressors,-he asked. "It-48 the duty of all govern- ments, parliamentarians and public figures to see to it that foreign interference in Viet Nam be halted, and that the Vietnam- ese people, like any other peo- ple, be given an opportunity to | decide their domestic affairs by themselves." SEAT Gives Warning | CANBERRA (Reuters) -- The | Southeast Asia Treaty Organi- zation 'council, describing the situation in the treaty area as "the most dangerous in the world,"' tonight said efforts to jmeet the Communist challenge must not fail. The declaration was contained in a communique issued at the end of the ministerial council's annual. three-day meeting here. In another development, U.S. Gaulle's proposal for Sovict- prime minister's view on the .¢.,U:S. bombing of fuel targets a pig! vend agp | three miles from Hanoi and two They said that when de' Gaulle miles from the Port of Haiphong] we cannot support an extension |State Secretary Dean Rusk was of the bombing in such areas,|Teported to have said Cambodia etn --_---- |has asked Britain and Russia |for support in strengthening the International Control Commis- e arge jsion's work on the South Viet Nam-Cambodia border. " A ression the counci] he had learned that Cambodian's head of state, Prince Norodom Sihanouk, dio called the U.S. air raids Russia as co-chairmen of the near Hanoi and Haiphong today,Geneva conference on Indo- a '"'new dangerous step by the china, a SEATO spokesman aggression against the Viet-/ He said Cambodia wanted namese people." ICC responsibilities to be par- "Contrary to all the lessons of ticularly carried out on the service, "the U.S. governmentider because of constant allega- is resorting to banditry andjtions that Viet Cong guerrillas force in blind rage at the knowl- were escaping into Cambodia Rusk told a closed session of MOSCOW (AP)--Moseow ra-jwrote letters to Britain and U.S. ruling circles in expanding | said. history,"' it said on its domestic South Viet Nam-Cambodia bor- not involved in the fighting in LEAVES AUTO SAFETY... edge of its own helplessness, when pursued by Allied forces. and the United States the ag- | DMITRI POLYSANSKY (left), first deputy chair- man of the Soviet Union's council of ministers, and Canada's External Affairs Minister Martin (right) ex- change pointed remarks at Ottawa's posh Rideau Club Tuesday night where Mr. Polyanski took the occasion of a Canadian Government dinner to attack the United States for its actions in Viet Nam. Man in the mid- die is an interpreter who is busy trying to keep up with the angry politicians. (CP Wirephoto) Anti-Peronist General Takes Over Argentina BUENOS AIRES (Reuters)-- Lt.-Gen. Juan Carlos Ongania is to be sworn in today as presi- dent of Argentina with sweep- ing powers to govern the coun- try as he-and his military col- leagues see fit. His inauguration follows Tues- day's operthrow by a bloodless military coup' of elected Presi- dent Arturo Illia's 32-month-old administration. After taking the oath of of- fice at Government House in central Buenos Aires, the 52- year-old Ongania--a tough anti- Communist and anti-Peronist-- was expected to proclaim a "revolutionary statute' grant- ing him and his new regime full government powers. He was expected to replace the constitution used by Illia. Observers believed Ongania also would adopt a tough stand against the rise of support for ousted dictator Juan Peron. The coup leaders headed by Gen. Pascual Pistarini, com-| mander-in-chief of the army, stripped the Supreme Court judges of their authority, dis- banded political partie§ and dis- solved congress Tuesday. This opened the way to a situation) that could be similar to that in| Brazil where President Hum- berto Castelo Branco gave him- self sweeping powers. Ongania, who in the past said he did not want to be president, stayed behind the scenes Tues- day as his friend and successor at the top army job, Pistarini, smoothly toppléd Illia's regime. In the capital, life continued normally with all stores, of- fices and banks doing business as usual. In cafes, the talk was of the coup. There were no re- ports of any arrests. So far the only overt opposi- tion to the new regime has been from Buenos Aires University, alleged by the military to be a leading Communist centre. Tilco Sentences Appeal Launched With OFL Cash TORONTO (CP) -- Appeals;bail following their sentencing against jail terms imposed on| Monday by Chief Justice G. A. 26 trade unionists for contempt/Gale of the Ontario Supreme of court by defying a court in-| Court. . junction will be financed by the) They picketed the strike- Ontario Federation of Labor, al bound Tilco Plastics Ltd. plant union leader said today. jat Peterborough Feb. 23 and 24 Donald Montgomery, presi-| in the face of an injunction lim- dent of the Toronto and pis-| iting the number of pickets to trict Labor Council, said the)". a | Chi i federation has decided to pay! tive ™ Pet pat page the costs .of the case so far and | months each and 20 other pick- will ask affiliated unions for do-| ets to 15 days apiece. One man nations to an appeal fund. |had his sentence suspended. Wilson named Ukrainian-born, Canadian-educated Bert Ramel- son, national industrial organ- izer of the Communist party, as the key man in the Communist pressure operation on the union executive, The only mildly surprising names were those of two mem- bers of the seamen's union exec- utive, who Wilson said were not Communists but were influenced by Communists and dominated the executive. They are Joe Kenny, 35, of Liverpool and Jim Slater, 46, of South Shore. John Gollan, Communist party secretary, called the prime min- ister's charges Red - baiting propaganda of the most shoddy kind. ADMITS MEETING Ramelson admitted in a BBC television interview that he had met with Kenny during the strike, but would not say how often, He said he would not pre- sume to advise the seamen on how to conduct their strike. He said his role as Commu- nist industrial organizer was to work for labor solidarity and to try to convince public opinion that the government's policy of trying to hold back wage in- Kenny said it was "an imper- tinence" to suggest he was in- fluenced by Comnzunists. Wilson made his statement during Commons debate on exe tending the government's emer- gency powers, He said Communists he named had met during the strike to decide policy and seek * to influence the union executive, Despite the fact there were few Communists in the union and none on the executive they had succeeded in getting Com- munists elected as chairmen of the strike committees in Lon- don and Liverpool, the country's two largest ports. STAYED WITH COWARD Kenny and Slater stayed, when they. came to London, at the flat of Jack Coward, Come munist chairman of the Londog strike committee. There they met Ramelson and Gordon Nor« ris, a Communist seaman. "I need no evidence, other than my eyes and ears, to rec- ognize that these have domi- nated the executive council throughout the negotiations," said the prime minister, who has met with the seamen to creases was "a disaster." urge them to settle the strike, BRAZZAVILLE (Reuters) TORONTO (CP) -- Plans River, 45 miles northwest of NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Cubans Guard African Government -- Cuban soldiers of the presifential guard stood by today to protect the Congo- Brazzaville government against a renewed army revolt. $26 Million Hydro Plant Announced for a 130,000-kilowatt project costing $26,000,000 near Aubrey Falls on the Mississagi Elliot Lake, were announced today by George Gathercole, chairman of Ontario Hydro. The trade unionists are out on} Ralph Nader Warns Of C WASHINGTON (AP) -- Auto *ritic Ralph Nader has set out on a new crusade: To call at- tention to the "hazard" | claims is over pipeline safety "is shock- ingly small," he added, "Population e x pansion in- he) creases risk exposure in what|the average of every five days! jnatural gas industry itself, t author said, there has been one natural gas pipeline failure on | qncenied Hazards ...FOR UNDERGROUND PIPES | ner of what may be expected ifjas 1-10th of an inch, poor weld- rigorous corrective action and/ing, insufficient depth of 'instal- upgrading of existing -standgrds| lation and inadequate inspection. are not undertaken." "Pipeline deterioration, partic- LEADERS ANGRY The convictions and sentences have touched off a violent re- action from labor leaders who currently are fighting against! the granting of injunctions in labor disputes. Today top labor men gath- ered Here to plan strategy with David Archer, president of the OFL. Decisions from the meet- ing will be taken to the Cana- dian Labor Congress executive| = Mayors, Reeves Want Salary For Aged SARNIA (CP) -- The Ontario Association of Mayors | and Reeves will ask the federal government to provide an | annual salary for the elderly | ,and $2,220 for couples, of $1,260 for single persons ... In THE TIMES today... Police Plan Traffic Crackdown--P, 17 Prizes Presented To Top Pupils--P. 5 This was the explosion Marchjularly through the inroads of 4, 1965, in Natchitoches, La., of] corrosion, is alarming experts in a gas pipeline owned by Ten-| this field,' he added. nessee Gas Transmission Co.,| Nader quoted from a report since renamed Tenneco Inc. The| by the U.S. Federal Power Com- |fact that the pipeline ruptured) mission last April. that "the al learly in the morning, he said,|maximum credible single -acci-|#f they eventually go to jail. Brooklin Deflates General Tire--P. 10 |meeting in Ottawa July 5. ; Mr. Montgomery said today) that the OFL has also com- mitted-itself to maintaining the families of the convicted men | Obits--34 Sports--10, 11, 12, 13 Theatre--24 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax News--5 Women's--18, 19, 20, 21 Ann Londers--18 City News--17 Classified--30 to 34 Comics--35 Editorial---4 Finantial--28 The White House in Washing- End Wildcat said their jobs, a union spokesman the British government, which is with federal mediator Bruce concession to the workers' de- harbor commission, agreed to too often a zero sum game be-| Nader's persistent criticism of|regulations in mandatory lan- urged an easing of tensions in| ¥@5 Made after Wilson had re-| Europe the Russians spoke) quested u rgen t clarification about East Bloc security. |from Washington of reasons for elisa nin adsenece | CHE PAIS, ton declined comment on Wil- ers son's statement. . "We have made it clear on many occasions that we cannot support an extension of the bombing to such areas,"' Wilson TORONTO (CP)--A_ wildcat Her Majesty's government walkout by cargo checkers and! have noted with regret that U.S stevedores, which has tied up|aircraft have attacked North the port of Toronto since last! Vietnamese targets touching on Friday, ended this morning the populated areas of Hanoi when all workers returned to and Haiphong. It is difficult for said. The 600 members of the In- ternational Longshoremen's As- sociation (CLC) were urged back to work by union leaders Tuesday night after a meeting McRae. The walkout by the longshore- men started Jast Friday in pro- test of liquor charges against two union members. Tuesday's agreement made no mand that a harbor policeman, posed by the 360,000)were formerly rural areas with! since 1950, whom they accused of manhan-| miles of gasoline, oil and natural| the lowest pipeline safety stan-| And yet 24 states have no dling the men charged, be sus-! gas pipelines in the U.S. dards," he told the Washington| safety codes for natural gas pended, but E. B. Griffith, gen-) 'The construction, inspection) chapter of the American Society] pipelines and of the 26 that do, eral manager of the Toronto| and maintenance of pipelines is|of Safety Engineers. only California "has drafted take appropriate action against tween costs and safety," Nader|auto safety standards was in-| guage." anyone found guilty by the said Tuesday as he accused the|strumental in congressional in-| The 25 others, he said '"'are|"'prevented a larger disaster] dent possibility" for a failure of} Following toda y's meeting | = courts. soi industry of taking inadequate| vestigation of the industry and/ faithful" to the industry 'format| than the 17 people who were in-|an interstate natural gas pipe-|OFL officials planned a meet- He said he would consider any| measures to guard against ex- proposed legislation to set fed-| of recommending, not mandat-}cinerated in their homes." jline 4'is high, possibly higher| ing with Premier Robarts at the}= grievances from the longshore- plosions eral standards : <)anger, Nader said, is posed|than that for railroad, motor) legislative buildings at Queen's| men once they returned to work. And government watchfulness| By 'the admission" y excessively thin pipe, as lowicar or air transportation." Park to discuss the sent | ing."' of the! Nader cited 'a tragic forer

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