Home. Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowmane ville, Ajax, neighboring ario VOL. 96 -- NO. 45 Pickering and centres in Onte end Durham Counties. 10¢ Single Copy S5¢ Per Week Home Delivered Weather Report Cold temperatures settling into Ontario. Ligh snow expected. Low tonight 10; high Friday 15, slow i : slow 7 2 . L: Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash WENTY-TWO PAGES CAR, TRUCK HIT "One Killed . (Staff) An Oshawa woman was killed and two others critically injured this morning in an accident on the Macdonald Cartier Freeway about one-half mile east of Ajax Dead is Mrs. Fernando Sousa of 220 Gliddon Avenue--mother of three. She was pronounced dead on arrival at the Ajax hospital. Mrs. Francisco Borrego and Mrs. Beatrice Subotich are re- ported in critical condition with multiple fractures and possible head and chest injuries and have. been transferred to the Toronto General Hospital. AJAX OTTAWA (CP)--The parlia- mentary committee study- ing the conduct of Mr. Justice Leo Landreville voted unani- mously today to reject the judge's legal objections to the inquiry. The Commons - Senate com- mittee accepted a legal opinion | by Committee Counsel Yves Fortier that it has full powers) to recommend for or against North Said Nearer Truce Talk WASHINGTON (AP) -- Am- bassador-at-Large Averell Harri-| man of the United States says| there are signs that North Viet-| namese leaders are coming around to the point where they may be willing to talk about a settlement of the war in Viet- nam, Harriman suggested in an in- Viets | Landreville's The accident occurred 'about when a station wagon containing. the three women crossed the highway median into the eastbound lane. The vehicle collided with a gasoline tanker and was thrown into a 30-foot ditch on the southside of the highway. Upon impact with the station |wagon, the tanker jack-knifed land sheared off the rear side of a panel truck that was pass- ing. Mr. Robert Platt, driver of the tanker, has been admitted jto the Ajax hospital with mult- |ple injuries. / am | the impeachment of the On Itario Supreme Court judge. | On a motion by Richard Bell (PC--Carleton), the committee decided to proceed with its in- |quiry at 3:30 p.m. EST today. Mr. Justice Landreville, 57, today, made a surprise appear- ance before the committee and asked for an adjournment until Monday to consider his posi- tion. He was criticized by mem- bers for walking in and out of the inquiry and for exchanging roles with his counsel; David Humphrey of Toronto. The committee adjourned at 10:30 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. to igive the judge time to study |Mr, Fortier's rebuttal and con- | sider his next move. When the meeting opened at 9:30 a.m., the judge was absent and represented by two Tor- onto lawyers, Mr. Humphrey and Terrence Donnelly, Mr. Humphrey told the com- mittee he was acting as the judge's counsel and that his cli- ent would not appear since he challenged the committee's jur- isdiction to. review..his. case, THEN JUDGE ENTERED terview on a television program Wednesday night that the anti-Communist forces might find an opening by exploring potential differences between Hanoi and the Viet Cong. Another ambassador, Arthur J. Goldberg, the chief U.S, dele-| gate to the United Nations, said in New York that "the door is still open" to negotiations, Apparently setting the tone for a 12-day trip to Saigon and four other Asian capitals, Goldberg said: 'We do not ask our ad- versary to accept, as a pre-con- dition to discussions for negotia- tions, any point of ours to which they may have objections." | Goldberg addressed 1,200 com-/ munity leaders at a conference) on world problems held Wednes- day night on the New York Uni-| versity campus. | He told a press conference} that he was not carrying any) new peace proposals in_ his) pocket. Instead, he said, he was} going as the "eyes and ears" of | the U.S. government and natu-| rally would be discussing Viet-| nam. Goldberg was scheduled to leave Washington today. In addi- tion to Saigon, he will visit Tokyo, Seoul, Taipei and Manila at the request of President John-} son. | Que. Teachers May Walk Out Minutes later, Mr. Justice Landreville strode into the room and announced that he was act- ing as his own, counsel. Mr, Humphrey left the hearing, say- ing he had to plead a case be- fore the Supreme Court of Can- ada. The judge repeated his plea for a reference of his case to the Supreme Court of Canada. He said he had not changed his position since Monday night, when he listed seven "prelimi- nary objections' and walked out of the committee sitting dramatically. After apologizing for being 40 minutes late at today's meet- ing, he said he was not boycot- ting the parliamentary inquiry. "TI want to know the rulings of this committee . . . I deem it only fair to allow me until Monday to consider my posi- tion." Committee members mur- mured in protest and R. G. L. Fairweather (PC--Royal) pro- posed a 15-minute adjournment. After a brief discussion, he amended his motion to an ad- journment until 3:30 p.m. "I do not want it inferred that I boycott this committee,"' said the judge, who stomped out Monday night with three law- yers in tow. Robert McCleave (PC--Hali- "theatrics and dramatics."" "the strongest possible objec-| tion'? to the judge's comments S Eee a) ee es : * # \ OSHAWA WOMAN DIES, TWO CRITICALLY INJURED-IN HIGHWAY CRASH . . . Station Wagon Ripped Apart In Collision Near Ajax te 'In Heavy Seas HALIFAX (CP)--The 79-foot | coastal schooner "Matireen and! Michael sank in heavy seas south of Newfoundjand today,| but all eight crew members| escaped safely to an American] coast guard cutter standing by. The air - sea rescue centre jsaid it was believed all eight 'are in good condition and said! they would be landed by the cutter Castile Rock in St John's, Nfld., about 8 p.m. NST. The Maureen and Michael} surrounded the schooner over-| night, but five of them returned to. port. Meanwhile, a rising tide and line from shore freed the CNR freight ferry Patrick Mor-| ris from a harbor shoal in Port} aux Basques, Nfld. Gales up to| 110 miles an hour snapped the |freighter's moorings Wednesday | 'driving her into the passenger ferry William Carson and then| aground. A CNR spokesman said there were no injuries and damage was superficial. later |For Downtown | TORONTO (CP)--Private All) |tomobiles should be banned) ifrom downtown Toronto during |Communist coup. PANEL TRUCK SMASHED IN MACDONALD-CARTIER. FATALITY -«» Oil Tanker Jack-knifes,. Hits Pan Schooner Sinks Indonesian Chiefs Named /vs. anTHEM: ; 'PART IRISH? InWeaths Of 500,000 JAKARTA (Reuters) -- A,the coup attempt, faced an al- former aay Indonesian army of- most-certaitt fleath sentence if i al to President Sukarno|found guilty; * jtoday aceused Indonesian gen- ficer } His accusation against the gen erals of killing 500,000 innocent jerals echoed a Communist claim people after the 1965 attempted|that the Indonesian Communist Brig.-Gen, Mustafa Sharif Su day for treason, told a specia military tribunal: |party only moved Oct. 1, 1965, -|to forestall a power grab by jpardjo, 44, who went on trial to- | right-wing generals. The army I}denied this Many thousands of men, "Who should be responsible for] Wonten and children died in the} people." sent a distress signal Wednes-|the death of 500,000 innocent vic-|anti-Communist round-up follow- | |day that she was taking water|tims? The council of. generals|ing the coup attempt. jin heavy seas. Six other vessels|have taken the lives of these |INCRIMINATE SUKARNO | The trial was expected. to pro- Supardjo, accused of being the duce evidence incriminating Su- military mastermined be hin Loses Death Fear VICTORIA (CP)--A Victoria | "There would have been no up- whojrising if there had been no coun- hallucinatory {cil of generals. urged further} Church minister the has United has taken drug LSD investigation and controlled use of the drug. "We should look at, analyze} | Car Ban Asked lit, examine it, and under cer-| tain circumstances, use_ it, Rev. L. S. Wallwork meeting of University foria students. Mr. Wallwork, first "trip' who took d)karno, who Wednesday night ~ handed Minister Took LSD told a of Vic- over power after 21| yeats to army strongman Gen.| Suharto. Referring to the killing of six] generals during the coup at-! tempt, Supardjo said: | The coup plot ters did not fight against noth-| ing." | India's Congress | Party Defeated NEW DELHI (CP)--Many of} his |the leaders of India's once all Pamala fey / 4 ' at the University| powerful Congress party were |fax) criticized the judge for his| the day to relieve traffic tie-jof Saskatchewan under direc-|defeated today as results poured | : jups, Hans Blumenfeld, a city|tion of a LSD pioneer, Dr. Ed-jin from India's week-long elec- Mr, Fairweather said he took|planning consultant said Wed-|win Hoffer, said the drug has' tions. nesday. Speaking to a meeting of the MONTREAL (CP) -- Roman|at a press conference Monday|Community Planning Associa- Catholic teachers in Montreal, who ended a five-week strike Monday. after the government brought in legislation making) their walkout illegal, are talk- ing about a new walkout Fri- day if they don't get a satis- factory back-to-work agreement from the Montreal Catholic school commission. A spokesman for the French- speaking, 7,500 - member Alli- ance des professeurs catho- liques de Montreal said Wed- nesday that unless agreement Is reached with the commission by noon today a general meeting will be called for tonight to de cide whether -to stage a strike Friday morning. He said a guarantee proposal by the commission makes no mention of such things as pos sible overtime pay for teachers to help students catch up with their studies. The alliance teachers, with 1,500 English - speaking col- leagues, were the major group among 12,000 striking Roman Catholic teachers in the prov ince ordered back to work last week under government legis- lation. night that he was being singled out because he is a French-Ca- nadian and a former Liberal politician, tion, Mr. Blumenfeld said a potential "for good. and fo evil." He warned his audience set against indiscriminate use o r The party's president, secre-| tary and treasurer all were up- in major prestige races. | {'Three cabinet members lost| el Trucky Driver In Hospital \ A short-lived lavoff possibly| signs of being a long one untillstrike could end today, | Short Layoff GM Forecast supplies | three or four davs appears to/last night when the union leader! of body material are low enough | be in store for about 9,000 Osh-|of, more than 2,600 striking) now that it is too late to call off awa, auto workers who will be Mansfield workers dropped his | shutdow announced yesterday jout of work by tonight as a re-jadamant stand on the wildcat Ste. Therese. Que. |sult of a wildcat strike by work-'on orders from Walter Reuther,/and Windsor plants of the cor: ers in Mansfield, Ohio. jpresident of the United Auto por General Motors in Oshawa an-| Workers union, 1s oT nounced the layoff yesterday! Prior to noontime, EST 1 ae ses {} when it said passenger car pro-;a Mansfield membership meet Fe ; es ape down/ing of Local 549 was expected auto workers in Oshawa a shortage call an end to the rf the last the Strike, a GM spokesman affected by the Fisher body plant in Mansfield.;Oshawa. said he wei wae ae for Oshawa ion wher duction lines would 'shut today as a resu of body Lall be on lavoff with being omet t of eight-da material from ned hope d the finish ythe car- Therese, down with 1,800 hourly-rated workers out of jobs and the Windsor trim plant will a layoff involve- 900 other em- norte nicht yrrow night, plant at Ste il be be closed wit! ers are idle the United and GM sources outside they will get fac- of| production as will States, Oshawa say tories back in The spokesman said corpora tion officials met this morning to make a total appraisal of the impact of the Mansfield strike on Oshawa, At least 3,000 hourly - rated) ment of some | w War Drive | about 3,500 salaried employees SAIGON (AP) -- U.S. troops BENEFITS deployed in the jungled Zone C; Alebrt Taylorf, president | : <4 today in the biggest offensive of|Local 222, UAW, said laid feed we elie the Vietnam war off workers would he getting rhe company is saying that Spearheaded by para-Supplementary unemployment everything 'depends on the flow |Wednesday at the Viet Cong's| Workers do get back on the job/ Mansfield Local 549, has prom- jlong-time main operating base next week, they will be paid ajised to follow orders from UAW Inear the Cambodian border certain amount of SUB depend-/president Reuther and his 26- The drive covered a Tay Ninh oe ve -- any ur they spe ee pete dindl eine that | 4 a RR GING fe actually put in at work met last night and made an Province area ranging from 50 Another official source saysjexpress demand that Hall call |said initial resistance was light, | unemployment insurance. But|the meeting is almost a foregone jwith U.S. forces encountering] they will get enough SUB money|conclusion in that the men will only enemy sniper fire anditg make up at least 62 per cent|vote to return to the job. booby traps ' lof their regular week's pay! GM in Oshawa said earlier The new drive was announced | cheques, this week that a lavoff was by Gen. William Westmore For tomorrow, they are ex-|pending because a week's sup- eration Junction City. | _l|was a scheduled work week with Apparently, four days of that The operation was pr ceded | G4, supply have gone down and by four softening up bY| The GM spokesman in Osh-|possibly it will have to be built tl vets We tan incang| a2 'said as far as he can see jup before things start rolling } ' oY paratroops| despite the fact the Mansfieldlagain in Oshawa. {jumped into blocking positions | ---- ' sabaaraee aaa: de See. ube | years WASHINGTON (AP)--In a George Washington Birthday revelation, the Library of Con- gress said Thursday the Star Spangled Banner may be part Trish. Experts in the depository of learning on Cap- | itol Hill cautioned Britons to | -- be careful about boasting that the thusie for the American anthem is that of an old Eng- lish drinking song, They were reacting to a London dispatch saying that the tune was composed by John Stafford Smith in 1758 in a now - demolished London pub, the Crown and Anchor in the Strand. Said William Lichtenwann- ger, head of the reference sec- tion of the library's music di- | vision "My predecessor in post, Richard §, Hill, spent 20 working out a theory the song was of Irish probably brought to that origin, this country by an Irish regi- | ment in the British army." Hill died in 1961 before he could publicly prove his thesis. There is no doubt that Francis. Scott Key, lawyer and amateur versifier, was responsible for the words. He composed a poem after watch- ing the British fleet bombard Fort McHenry in Baltimore Harbor in 1814. It is indisputable that the music also was used in John Stafford Smith's drinking song, To Anacreon in Heaven, But it is not certain whether he was the composer or only [daytime downtown ban on pri-\the drug but also denounced|their seats in Parliament and] the arranger, said Lichten- |i vate cars has worked in some|"paranoid" fears which might! thrée-other ministers were trail-| W@"nger. | cities, | lead to a complete ban enormous | this | next week 'Launch Peak | we ' affected in the layoff, nor ants Across jsome 45,000 Americans stru k|does not last too long and} Robert Hall, president of Reports from the battle arealthen they will not be entitled to| Mr. Taylor says the result of and given the code name Op-|qay's pay because this week left The big Stratoforts returned The layoff in the city showed| Workers would be back business as soon. as US. Troops workers in the truck and parts ployees, 'a6 Anh production divisions will not be APO Wats troops making the first. U.s.|benefits of' "some description." |° P@T! from Mansfield lcombat jump of the conflict,| . It is expected that if the layoff/BACK ON JOB |to 75 miles northwest of Sai- ' ; gon a ita single man earns $41 and althe noontime membership meet- é married man $54 next week/ing in Mansfield today. ee oe It was le-i nected by union officials to re-|ply of Mansfield body stock scribed as of multi-division size| ceive 75 per cent of a normal|kept on hand was all that was behind enemy lines and barely} ithree miles from Cambodia, | Senator Fails In Bid | today for.a fifth raid. é ri meuer porens | . paar f , ee y divisions sey- us; mans avcions «¢ =| For Vote Of Confidence | into the new drive, the. troop |strength well exceeds the 30,000} MONTREAL (CP) -- Senatorjregard the situation as a firing }men deployed in Operation Ce-|Keith Davey failed today in his|but as one of resignation. \car Falls, a clearing operation|demand for a vote of confi-| 'There is no alimony clause lin January in the Iron Triangleldence from team owners andjon a resignation. As I undere 30 miles north of Saigon that/resigned as commissioner of the|stand his contract, there is no had been the largest operation! Canadian Football League. payment required on a resigna- jof the war. "Commissioner Davey stated|tion. He was not asked to re- ere jhe was resigning and will write!sign." to the league. There was a} The senator was hired as unanimous vote--including Tor-|commissioner Jan. 1 under a onto -- to accept the resigna- ee-year contract calling for tion." 000 a year but containing a bed ' | } Indian 5 Death Allan McEachern of British|clause stating that either side OPP Investigate jing. | ON KENNEDY ASSASSINATION INFORMATION SAID VITAL | OWEN SOUND (CP) -- Pro-|Columbia Lions, incoming CFL|could terminate the contract Lavalley, 35, whose body was nor has it been decided how ajwould have carried a payment west of here. "No club had enough confi-/- WAS GOOD BET land throat and a small rifle|confidence," he said i41, would either resign or be | an unoccupied house aj ann jholding two persons for ~~ | Robarts Scheduled To Leave Hospital noon, ending his stay of 10 days for tests to determine hospital "with a clean bill of health'. troops were killed in battle in South Vietnam last. week today. U.S. headquarters said 172 Americans were killed Peterborough Given Racing Rights Minister Spooner and unanimously approved a bill giving lvincial police today are inves-|president, said no thought has/after six months |tigating the death of Walter been given yet to a replacement! In the event of a firing this found Wednesday on the Sau-|replacement will be chosen, jof $12,500, half the commis. jgeen Indian reserve 20 miles| HAD NO CONFIDENCE jsioner's first year's salary. | | ; ; : : | Police said Lavalley had suf-\dence in the commissioner to|, The betting in the corridors fered severe wounds to his face}second the motion for a vote of|had been that Senator Davey, was found beside his body. McEachern said he did not!fired. | The body was discovered F i A mnie m | mile from Lavelley's| Police said they were | ques- | tioning. | LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Premier Robarts was sched- uled to be released from St. Joseph's Hospital this after- the cause of internal bleeding. William Kinmond, the pre- mier's press secretary, said today Mr. Robarts is leaving . . U.S. War Casualties Higher SAIGON (AP) More American and Communist than in any week since the bloody battle of the Ia Drang Valley in November, 1965, the U.S. command disclosed and 802 were wounded, compared with 107 killed and 1,015 wounded the weex before. TORONTO (CP) -- Bie legislature's private bills com- mittee today over-rode objections by Municipal Affairs Peterborough Driving Club pari-mutuel privileges at its harness race meéts, DA Says 'Secrets' Died With Ferrie NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- Dis- {ric - Attorney Jim Garrison hinted today that free - lance pilot David W. Ferrie carried to his grave some secrets about President Kennedy's assassina- tion Ferrie, 48, who described himself as a psychologist and private detective as well as a flyer, was found dead in his bed Wednesday. Garrison, the six-foot-six gun- 'toting prosecutor, called the death "apparent suicide." The coroner, Dr. Nicholas Chetta, said tests were not complete but death seemed due to a massive brain hemorrhage, with no sign of suicide except a curious, unsigned, undated note saying death was a '"'sweet prospect." Ferrie was on the brink of producing information that could | have been important, said Garrison, whose assassina- tion investigation--started long after the Warren commission finished its work--has created an international sensation, "We felt that he was really now ready to talk candidly, to contribute to this important in- yestigation," Garrison said. "Now he's gone and it will be much harder to make the connections between certain people. But I'm sure we'll make them anyway "I'm just as optimistic today as. I was two days ago." Two days ago, Garrison was insisting that his effort to prove a conspiracy in the assassina- tion of President John F. Ken- nedy will result in arrests and convictions. The president was shot in Dallas, Tex., Nov. 22, 1963, Garrison insists that a conspir- acy to murder him was con- ceived in New Orleans. No "credible evidence" of a conspiracy was found by the Warren commission, which said Kennedy was killed by Lee Har- yey Oswald -- a former New Orleans resident--acting alone, Asked if he believed Oswald alone killed Kennedy, Garrison said "I have no reason to believe that Lee Harvey Oswald killed anyone in Dallas. . . . This is my personal feeling." Ferrie had termed Garrison's investigation "a big joke." He said Garrison had him "pegged as the get - away pilot in an elaborate plot to kill Kennedy." Garrison said his office had planned to take Ferrie into cus- tody early next week. Because Ferrie had expressed fears for. his life, Garrison said he pro- vided him a temporary hideout at a motor hotel here. "Evidence developed by our office had long since confirmed that he was involved in events culminating in the assassination of President Kennedy," Garri- son said. lll, le DAVID LEWIS, a New | Orleans baggage clerk, who said Monday he feared for his life because of his con- nection with a probe of the assassination of President Kennedy, has left town for an un location. Lewis was. report- ed out of town Wednesday when he was sought for comment on the death of David Ferrie, another fig- ure in the' New Orleans dis- trict attorney's assassina- tion probe who was fou dead yesterday. (AP Wirephoto) .. In THE TIMES Today .. Board Of Control Bans Budget Report--P, 11 Dr. Butts Whitby Rink Wins Bonspiel--P. 8 20 cue 9,10 6 oo Whitby News--5, 6 Women's--12, 13, 14 Ann Londers--12 Ajax News--6 City News--11 Classified --1 8, Comics--16 Editorial --4 Financial--17 19, 20