Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario. and Durham Counties. _ Weather Report Southwest winds. bring warmer weather, Low to- night 45; high Saturday 65, 5 Authorized os Second Class Mall Post Office Grave ond tor payment of Postage In Cann ¢ Os OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1964 TWENTY-SIX PAGES S5¢ Per Weak Vere Gevered. VOL. 95 -- NO. 231 .% PETER SHOWS OFF THE CREST UPIL AIDS SCHOOL Donating to the 21 agen- cies in the Greater Oshawa Community Chest is not done exclusively -by adults. Children -- in this case a ----, at the Crippled Chil- Young Peter Boyko idly displays the crest ged signed last year for the school. With Peter is Mrs, William Smith, one of three qualified teachers at the school. The crest, which has been officially adopted, is worn by children, on sweat- érs. and » jackets. It took Peter one week to design the crest. The school is one of 21 agencies which share in the annual chest cam- pagin which this year has a record high $345,875 objec- tive. More than $91,000 has been raised in the first five days of the campaign. The crippled children's school, operated by the Women's ) Welfaxe .League. of Simcoe, , Hall, will, receive $17,500. A new 'School and treats ment centre is under construction on the Bloor Street site of the old school. ~Oshawa Times Photo Laotian City Bombed As Armed Forces Feud VIENTIANE, Laos (AP)-- Laotian Air Force planes bombed military installations around Vientiane for 30 minutes today in what appeared to be the culmination of a feud be- tween the air force commander, Brig.-Gen. Thao Ma, and the army high command in the capital. At least 11 persons were re- ported killed and three injured. Well-informed sources said Gen. Thao sent his planes against his rivals in the capital after arresting Gen. Ouane Rathikoun, the army's comman- der-in-chief; Gen. Boun Oum, the inspector-general of the army, and the king's brother, Gen. Sayavong, at air force headquarters in Savannakhet, in Southern Laos. The sources reported later, however, that Gen. Quane, Prince Boun Oum, and Prince Sayavong, who commands the armored divisions, had escaped and were heading south .for Pakse in a jeep. PC Claims Diefenbaker T-28 fighter-bombers supplied the air force by the United States flew over Vientiane be- tween 8 and 8:30 a.m. and dropped bombs on the army headquarters at Phone :Khene, the city's northeastern suburb. The Vientiane airport also was bombed, but damage there ABERFAN, Wales (Reuters) At least 21 persons were killed and police reported 130 missing when a collapsing colliery waste - heap plowed into this Welsh mining village today, burying a school and smashing 15 houses. ~ Fourteen of the dead and 100 of the missing were young chil- dren from the nursery school. Police said it was impossible to think of any further survivors from under the mountain of wa- terlogged coal dust, slime and shale. After the collapse of the heap dirt - grimed miners, some of who had children at the school, downed tools at a nearby mine and hurried to the scene, claw- ing with shovels or bare hands Bulldozers rumbled toward the school. Troops were ordered to stand by. Three hours after the huge rubbish "tip'"' collapsed, the ava- lance was still moving slowly through the village of Aberfan had just started morning classes when the avalanche struck, Suddenly, the great mountain of mining waste started to move. It gathered speed and swept down the side of the valley and letelv covered the nursery wockaas: A state of emergency was de- clared in the little mining vil- lage. Torrents of flood - water oozed through the mass of deb- ris, keening it an the move It was the rain water, which became dammied up behind the tip, that was believed 'to have caused the landslide. Afterwards the water poured through the streets, often knee- high, and hampered rescue operations. anhanl «wae situated wee school building, also smashing into a line of houses clustered at the bottom of the slope. Five persons died in the en- gulfed houses in the. village. Bulldozers later moved into the streets and pushed into the leading mass of debris, trying to hold it back. "Tt is a fight against time," said a local civil defence spokes- man. "The mountain at the back of the school is still moving, It Typical of the many hillside mining communities in the val- leys of south Wales, Aberfan is overshadowed by giant coal eon left by a century of min- ng. Miner George Thomas, 46, nn nn an earthquake," burying the school in a matter of minutes. He hurried to the school and found three little children dead | andar tancled -hriekwark Sncer can Sse ee near te ae eee A small boy alongside them was crying because his leg was caught. 5 "Several classrooms of the school collapsed, and I only saw one room which had not been too severely damaged,"' he said.' Another eyewitness said he SLAG SLIDE CRUSHES VILLAGE derneath the rubble where one of the collapsed houses once stood, and dug out one of the occupants still alive. Doctors went to the scene with blood plasma and transfusion equipment. Mothers wakked un to thoir waists in the swamp-like ruins of the school, seeking their chil- dren. : Men and women wept as coal- blackened children, swathed in Diankets, were lifted head- on stretchers over the c' into waiting ambulances. John F. Bradley a borough en- gineer, said; "It slid, just like a glacier, and it is still moving, four hours after it started. We don't know where it is going to end. Once the pressure starts it at the mass of debris. World War Ruled Out PEKING (CP) Premier Chou En-lai has stated that ¢ third world war "is probably not for tomorrow," but that China should prepare for any eventuality, according to Red Guard posters put up Thursday. He remarked that despite its fihal victory over the German Nazis, the Soviet Union suffered heavy losses because of "insuf- ficient preparation," the post- ers said. The premier said that both the United States and the So- viet Union consider China to be their main enemy because they fear the immensity of the Chi- nese population and the influ- ence of her current 'cultural revolution."" The posters said Premier Chou was speaking before 1,000 Red Guard delegates Oct. 3. CAPE KENNEDY (AP)--The U.S. space agency today an- nounced plans to launch an At- las-Centaur space rocket next Tuesday to fully qualify it for lunar and planetary flights. The launching is one of two space missions scheduled from Cape Kennedy next week. Ear- lier, the Communications Satel- lite Corp. announced plans to launch a satellite Wednesday to extend commercial space com- munications _coverage to the Far East. An attempt will be made to place the Centaur second stage in orbit and then re-start its hydrogen - powered engines. If successful, the rocket will hurl a dummy model of a Project Sur- veyor spacecraft toward an imaginary moon -- a spot in space 236,000 miles away from the earth. was not immediately reported. The Laotian high command and cabinet met in ee | . ti session, and Acting Premier| = Leuam Insisienmay was re-| e examina 10n ported in telephone contact with} TORONTO (CP)--All Ontario Gen. Thao. | drivers will face compulsory li- The Laotian government ra-|cence re-examination by 1968, dio later announced the govern-|Transport Minister Irwin Has- ment was in control and ap-|kett said Thursday as he intro- Drivers Face speaks on the short-wave radio inside his bubbletop limousine today as its roof and the secret service men PRESIDENT JOHNSON - fiding on it (foreground) are splattered with paint during the President's motorcade through down- is a question of trying to hold More than 200 young children it." heard a faint knocking from un- keeps on moving." town Melbourne, Australia. No one inside the vehicle was harmed, (AP Wirephoto) UNITED NATIONS (AP)-- Fifty - four Afro-Asian nations held up action today on a res- oluticz calling for the United Nations to take over South Af- rica's mandate over South-West Africa at once, The General Assembly was to have voted today on the resolu- tion, but the sponsors asked for a delay because the United States objected to the strong wording of the proposal. The resolution would have the United Nations take over the old League of Nations mandate immediately and set up a UN- Bars Leadership Tests PEMBROKE (CP) -- Con-| But he said he was embarked servative MP Gordon Aiken|on what he called his own cen- save John Diefenbaker abso-|tennial project, describing it as lutely refuses to have demands /an effort to make party politics for. a reappraisal of his leader-|"'less of an occult science in the of a dramatic exercise in the|spirit of (former prime minis- publicly and is not prepared to test his standing in the party. Addressing the annual meet- ing of the party's Renfrew North constituency association,} the MP for Parry Sound-Mus-| interest of a free society. ter) Mackenzie King and more) | BREACH OF PRIVILEGE CHARGED administered authority to pre- jpare the territory for independ- pealed to the people to remain| duced a "modern-driving" Te-|ences calm. In a 'communique broadcast at bombed and machine | fresher course. The course is being promoted] 11 a.m., the radio said six T-28s| by the government,the Ontario) of the Laotian Air Force had|™Motor League and the Ontario) z ° - gunned | Safety League in every commu-|atory sanctions if necessary. It also would call on the Se- curity Council to enforce the assembly's decisions by mand- the Phone Khene and Chinaimo | nity with a population of 5,000 or) U.S. Ambassador Arthur Gold- Mulltary camps ana Vientiane's Wattay Airport. The communique all officials, including report to their posts. HOTS: Mr. Haskett said those with) requested|records of driving offences and|consulting with Ambassador F. 4 armed/junstable driving histories will S. of a dramatic exericse in the|forces and police personnel, to/be first for the retesting, which|senting the sponsors, in an at- jis to begin next year. koka said Wednesday night the reappraisal demand _ spear- headed by Conservative Presi-| dent Dalton Camp of Toronto is} not a revolt. | "It is nothing of the sort. Neither are the participants} rebels, It is merely the natural) OTTAWA (CP)--A hot debate desire of others in the party to| was expected today on a Con- see some new approaches to|servative motfon to sum- our national problems and mon a parliamenfpry correspon- party affairs." dent before the War of the Com- The move was "an inevitable| mons to answer for an article result of 10 years of leadership! printed a week ago. | the House they will fight the motion if it is ruled in order by , Speaker Lucien Lamoureux. They said freedom of the press is involved. Authorities on parliamentary procedure said the last time a by one strong-willed person who has control of the operating pro-| cesses of the parliamentary group and the national head-| quarters."" TORONTO (CP)--A_ political) leader should never be his party's slave "nor should he ever be its master," Dalton Camp, national president of the} Progressive Conservative Asso-| ciation, said Thursday. | More than 400 at an Empire! g Club luncheon applauded as Mr.| pr Camp continued a campaign for| years, should be expelled from | the principle that a leader must be accountable to the party. Terry Nugent (PC--Edmonton Straticona) moved Thursday that Marcel Pepin of Ottawa Le Droit be called to be "dealt with" for allegedly breaching @ 4 Nugent's privileges as an I : The lawyer-MP said the editor of Le Droit also should appear at the Commons' brass bar, be- cause he was "guilty of allowing » such a scurrilous article to be published." ess gallery for more than two that his formant 'should, perhaps, also the gallery and in- Neyer once did he mention|be brought before this House." Conservative Leader Diefen-| baker by name. Liberal MPs and members of lother parties said later entside He suggested that Mr, Pepin, i member of the parliamentary # reporter was called before the Commons bar was 60 years ago. ' TO DECIDE TODAY Speaker Lamoureux said the matter was serious and re- served his decision. He was ex- pected to rule today whether Mr, Nugent's motion should be accepted and debated. Mr. Pepin's article quoted "an English-speaking military man" as.saying that several re- tired admirals in Halifax aré co- operating with Conservative MPs in opposing the unification 'of the armed forces. The story said retired rear- afmirals . William Landymore aid Jeffry Brock are behind foneatirs attacks on De- fe-.ce Minister Hellyer. The ad- i MARCEL PEPIN + « « Wrote article herg.and Hans Tabor, chief del- egate of Denmark, 'have been Arkhurst of Ghana, repre- tempt to modify the resolution. There were reports that the Africans have agreed to drop the idea of an immediate take- over but that the final wording is still under discussion, The sponsors are believed to have the support to secure adop- tion of their resolution in its toughly - worded form. But Afro-Asian Nation Delay Action On Mandate Vote It is felt that if the resolution is adopted and the big Western powers abstain on the vote, South Africa will ignore it al- together. As it is, the South Africans have warned that they will not accept a UN-administered au- thority and will "use whatever means necessary" to resist they are anxious to have the takeover of the territory. Viet Cong Terrorist Blast Rips Through Market Place LBJ's Auto Splattered With MELBOURNE, Australia (AP)--President Johnson's bub- bletop limousine was bom- barded with red and green paint today during a tumultuous mo- torcade through Melbourne. No one in the car. was harmed, but the car was smeared with paint from one end to the other. Bill Moyers, White House press secretary, said two youngsters about 14 threw two plastic balloons filled with paint at the car. Another report said one individual was Paint Otherwise the drive throu the city was a triumph for president. He and Mrs. John- son came from Canberra to spend four hours in Melbourne, A small crowd of about 200 waved U.S. flags and cheered as the president walked to his car to start a 10-mile drive through the wide streets and blossom- ing parks of Melbourne, where crowds had been assembling for hours, A group of boy scouts who 'were supposed to open. the doors of the president's. limou- sine were elbowed aside at the last minute 'by U.S. ser: ousine caught the full force of | flags a4 paint. and. were bathed in ~ The incident occurred as the Johnsons were nearing Govérn- ment House for a reception. They stepped from their car waving and smiling as though nothing had happened. The president on his arrival in Australia's second largest city was greeted by friendly thousands who jammed the side- walks for blocks, cheering and waving U.S. flags. Police esti- mated the crowd at 500,000. RAN INTO TROUBLE Trouble started after the mo- torcade left the downtown sec- tion and passed the campus of Melbourne University. Stu- dents waving anti - Viet Nam placards broke through stout police barricades and dashed to- ward the centre of the street in an attempt to disrupt the mo- torcade. Secret service agents ordered the cars to speed up and the president in effect ran a two- block gauntlet while booing, cheering youths shook their fists at him and threw objects at his car. placards ; On one building was a banner six storeys high reading "Welcome to Mel- bourne, 'Australia, President LB Johnson." TOLD TO GET OUT "Get out of Viet Nam" were the words scrawled in paint on a wall of another building along the route. In the heart of the city the president left his car again while the crowd crushed around him. Ticker tape' fell slowly from the tall buildings, and po- lice kept guard from the roof- tops. Johnson returned to his car, and the crowd opened a way, but in a hundred yards or so he stopped again, stood up in the car, and waved as the crowd closed in, cheering, waving U.S. flags, balloons, and everything else they held, and yelling "hooray!"' The president stopped outside the city hall to say hello to Mayor Ian Beaurepaire, and the mayor was just able to get through the crowd to the big car. SAIGON (CP)--Viet Cong ter- rorists exploded a claymore mine in the crowded market place of a small Mekong Delta village today, killing nine per- sons and wounding 48 others, a military spokesman reported here. dren, the spokesmen said. The mine ripped through the market square of Tra On while more than 1,000 persons were do- 'SCURRILOUS ARTICLE' Bar Reporter From House' Says MP ing their early morning shop- ping. The attack came on an other- wise quiet day on the war front with only small patrol skirm- ishes reported as_ President Chung Hee Park of South Korea arrived in South Viet Nam for Four ofthe -dead--werechil-ls 'one-day visit to Korea's 45, 000-man force here. Park is on his way to Manila to attend the seven-nation sum- mit conference on Viet Nam opening Monday. South Viet Nam's premier, Nguyen Cao Ky, having quieted the storm within his own cab- inet, took time off to fly to Da Nang to welcome Park. In the air war over North Viet Nam, U.S. pilots flew 80 mis- sions Thursday and an Ameri- mirals saw the navy as a WASP |can spokesman said two planes (White Anglo-Saxon Protestant) |were lost. preserve and objected to the appointment of Gen. Jean V, Al- lard as chief of the integrated | defence staff because he is French - Canadian and Roman Catholic. The article added that Ad- miral Brock 'directed'? Mr. Nu- gent's. attack against Mr. Hell- yer from the Commons galler- ies Oct. 12. Mr. Nugent said then he had an affidavit from Admiral Landymore accusing the minister's office of tamper- | ing with a brief Admiral Landy- more submitted to the Commons defence committee in June. Mr. Pepin wrote that several witnesses saw Admiral Brock! make signs to Mr. Nugent, send him messages and shake his head when Mr. Hellyer chal- & lenged the Conservative to stake TERRY - NUGENT «+» irate MP his seat on his allegation. Both Mr. Nugent and the ad- miral denied this Thursday. Church Union Hopes Lessen prospects of union between the United and Anglican churches. |. Doctrinal differences, basic to crux of the problem, Thursday in. an address to the synod of Rupert's Land. In an interview, |bishop said the United ,Church \is having difficulty in accepting |the idea of bishops and the con- cept of the three-fold veto, with) © |bishops, clergy and laity each}; voting separately on matters of] doctrine. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Flood Sweeps Away Mexican Village MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Some 150 inhabitants of a small village on the Gulf of Mexico, 120 miles north of Tampico, have disappeared in a flood of the Soto la Marina River, it was learned here today. Helicopters have been sent to the scene of the disaster. Man Charged With Murder Of Parents TIMMINS (CP) -- Donald Mousseau, 31, today was charged with non-capital murder in the shooting Thursday of his parents, Dan Mousseau, 70, and Anne Mousseau, 69. Overwork Exhausts Ont. Liberal Leader TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario Liberal Leader Andrew Thompson is "exhausted from overwork" and is resting at his farm near Fens an aide said today. In THE TIMES WINNIPEG (CP) -- The An-|= glican Primate of Canada,|- Archbishop H. H. Clark, says he|= is no longer optimistic about the} = leach of the churches, are the| - he said|: the arch-|= Water Study Sterting--P. 13 '67 Apethy irks Unit--P, 5 Wirkowski At Kinsmen--P. 8 Ann Landers--14 City Nsw--13 Classified --20 to 24 Comics--25 Editorial---4 Financial--7 Obits--24 Sports--8, 9, 10 Theatre--18 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax--5 Women's--14, 15, 16 Yt 40S UNRAVEL Now in its fifth day the Greater Oshawa Com- munity Chest has raised $92,530 of the $345,875 ob- jective. IY QRYRL UNL EE REL EAR A