> re Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, ville, Ajax, neighboring os. VOL. 96--NO. 133 Whitby, Bowman- Pickering and centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. 10¢ Single €: nl = Fhe Oshawa Times opy 55c¢ Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1967 Authorized es Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash J Weather Report Disturbance across -- upper lakes brings humid weather. High tomorrow 88; low to- night 62, TWENTY-SIX ISRAELI SOLDIERS ap- proach the town of Hebron, in Jordan south of Jeru- ae Nd salem, according to infor- mation supplied with this Israeli army photo. Israel's forces today were reported in command of the section of Jordan that lies west of US. Navy Pilots Hit Secret Missile Base SAIGON (AP)--U.S. Navy pi- lots thrust deep into North Viet- nam Wednesday, damaging a MiG airfield and leaving a se- cret missile base in flames and uncontrollable rockets snaking skyward and across the ground. The U.S. command also re- ported increased ground action after a four-day lull in the war in the South. There were two sharp fights near the demilita- rized zone, another near Saigon and a handful of guerrilla raids including the destruction of a 200-foot bridge 10 miles from Saigon. The weekly casualty report Traitor Gets Thirty Years ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -- Herbert W. Broeckenhaupt, 24, a German-born U.S. Air Force staff sergeant, was sentenced Wednesday to 30 years in pri- son on charges of conspiring to provide U.S. defence secrets to the Sovietes. The maximum sen- tence could have been death. Broeckenhaupt was sentenced to 20 years on a charge of con spiring to transmit defence sec- rets--a charge that could have meant the death penalty -- and 10 years for conspiring to obtain national defence information il- legally. The terms are to run consecutively. Broeckenhaupt was accused of communicating three times with Aleksey R. Malinin, a one- time Soviet embassy aide in Washington. He was arrested last October at March Air Base, Cailif., where he worked on electronic code devices used by the Stra- tegic Air Command. 'Inquiry Called Into Expo Fire MONTREAL (CP)--A public inquiry will be held into the three - alarm fire which badly damaged the Nationalist China pavilion at Expo 67 May 30. John McDougall, head of the :Montreal fire commissioner's ,court, said Wednesday no date for the hearing has been set but it will take place "probably within the next two weeks." Both Mr. McDougall and Fire Captain Jean - Paul Whissel, heading the team of-investigat- ors, said they are sure no sabo- tage or arson was involved in) the fire. But no official cause| of the fire has been given, The blaze started in the area of a stage used to display cloth- ing and dry goods, located al- most in the middle of the pavil- ion. HEIR TO THRONE COULD GO BALD LONDON (CP) -- Prince Charles, heir to the throne, could go bald if he doesn't change his hairstyle. The warning came from_hair- dresser Morris Fenton who has studied photographs and film of the prince's hairdo. Charles parts his hair on the left, which is all wrong, says 57 - year - old Fenton. 'Many men suffer prema- ture hair loss by parting on the left because they think it is the @rrect side for a man. That is all wrong, the hair must be combed whichever way it falls." from the U.S. command hit a six - week low for American losses but both South Vietna- mese and Communist losses in- creased compared with the previous week. The command said 214 Americans and 2,420 Communists were killed in ac- tion last week, while the South Vietnamese reported 235 of their troops killed. SEARCH-AND-FIND The big raid on the secret site housing Soviet-built missiles was made by pilots from the carrier Enterprise after aerial photos disclosed the highly- camouflaged base 50 mites southwest of Hanoi. Waves of Phantoms, Skyhawk and Intruder jets flashed into the area' with bombs, rockets and cannon fire. Pilots reported the. site erupted in explosions of white, orange and black smoke towering 5,000 feet up. Narrow 40 - foot missiles, which pilots call "flying tele- phone poles," sometimes went slithering off violent w.hen blown fron. their transport ve- hicles. The other big raid of the day was against the Kep MiG air- field, 37 miles northeast of Ha- noi on the main rail line to China. Although the field had been hit six times previously, the North Vietnamese Air Force is still using it. The navy pi- lots said they caught seven MiGs on the ground, destroyed one and damaged at least four more. The heaviest ground fighting, below the western flank of the demilitarized zone dividing Vietnam, saw a patrolling force of about 150 U.S. marines clash with about 300 North Vietna- mese regulars in a running five - hour battle five miles northwest of Khe Sanh. The marines drove the Communists from the field just before sun- down. The casualties: 63 North Vietnamese dead, 18 marines killed and 27 wounded. By THE CANADIAN PRESS A wild forest fire, one of the worst in Nova Scotia in 50 years, was brought under con- trol early today after overnight rains fell in the province's Pic- tou County. The fire, which witnesses said sounded "'like a freight train coming right at you" at its height, destroyed 5,000 acres of woods. No injuries were reported. The blaze broke out near the small community of Meiklefield. It destroyed at least two homes, a number of barns and _ out- houses and killed scores of cat- tle and sheep. FLEE HOMES More than 20 families were forced to flee their homes in the communities of Telford and Piedmont in the fire area. uation was summed up this way: Ontario--Almost all residents had returned to the Northern Ontario railway communities of Sioux Lookout and Chapleau after near-complete evacuations when fires threatened during the weekend. Restrictions on bush travel were lifted as rain fell and winds changed. Quebec--The extent of forest fire danger in Quebec was de- scribed as low. All burning fires were reported under control, after rain in all areas except Sherbrooke and the Lower St. Lawrence. . Forestry officials said there might be tricky days ahead, with a hot spell forecast. New Brunswick--About 25 for- est fires were reported burning and forestry officials warned of a possible closing of the woods to travel. A cabinet minister said "extremely high fire haz- ards exist." HOPE FOR RAIN Manitoba -- Seven fires were still burning but no new ones were reported. Six were under control. The hazarl remained in a low to "high-extreme" class and a forestry spokesman said: "We'd love to get three days of rain." Alberta--Small fires in the provinces are under control. Saskatchewan -- There were tough fights under way in some areas of the province but there were no progress reports. avai- lable Wednesday. At last report, there were twice as many fires | as last year and one fire out of , control east of Prince Albert had jumped the Saskatchewan! River Wednesday. British Columbia--One 'minor fire in the Smithers area had been contained, as were four others in the same area. The danger was still moderate to high throughout B.C. Newfoundland--The situation eased Wednesday with falling temperatures. The province was probably the only one with un- fightable fires--in uninhabitated areas where ski planes can't land on ice that is too soft and ice that is too hard for float planes--around the Quebec-Lab- rador area. Elsewhere, the forest fire sit- i tl THIS 11-DAY-OLD fawn was found inside fireline of 8,000-acre forest fire in Sioux Lookout area Tues- day. Officials believe little | Jordan Offers Ce the Jordan River. (AP Wirephoto by radio from Tel Aviv) WED 50 YEARS -- FACE DIVORCE KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Today was supposed to be Mr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Stair's 50th wedding anni- versary. | But Tuesday Mrs. Stair | sued for divorce. Since her husband retired from farm- ing, 'she contended, he has been "wasting his time | drinking and attending |. chicken fights." He is 73 and she is 67. Sixth Fleet Shadowed' nesday. viet vessels roamed near U.S. ships off Crete at times Wed- Egypt, Syria Vow To Fight, | From AP-Reuters Egyptian forces threw up stiff resistance to Israeli troops in the western Sinai Desert to- day, but a ceasefire prevailed on the Jordanian front. The Israelis claimed they had seized all of Palestine west of the Jordan River and the Dead Sea, extending their bound- jary to that of pre-1948 Pales- jtine. Although the cepted Jordan's offer of a ceasefire, Egypt and Syria et to fight on despite a sec- Israelis ac- ond truce call from the UN Se- {curity Council. An Israeli Army spokesman said Egyptian and Israeli in- fantry units were still fighting at Bir Gafafa, about 50 miles least of the Suez Canal on the central highway through Sina. He reported the Israelis were so meeting tough resistance at lthe Mitla Pass, just east of the city of Suez and the southern fend of the canal. | The Israeli government an- nounced its forces had taken jover Jordan's Hebron Hills south of Jerusalem and reached |the Dead Sea. Earlier they had reported capture of the Jordan- lian bulge north of Jerusalem land west. of the Jordan River. But Old Jerusalem, despite its capture Wednesday, was still|said the Israelis were within BRIG. GEN. Hain Herzog was named today by the Israeli government as com- mander of troops in areas taken from Jordan. The Israeli army is reported in control of section of Jordan west of the Jordan River. (AP Wirephoto) out of bounds to all civilians be-| seven miies of Ismailia. ABOARD AIRCRAFT CAR-/cause some isolated pockets of RIER AMERICA (AP)--Six So-|snipers remained, and someiFevptian offensive was a des-\ern Israel and were driving to- © \perate attempt to escape across|ward Safad, about 10 miles in- the road from Jerusalem 10/the canal and seemed aimed at|side the Israel - Syrian border, sniping also was reported Bethlehem. The commander of the 6th|ACCEPT CEASEFIRE Fleet warned one to clear out of| the way and "discontinue your|nounced today over Amman ra- dio that Jordan had accepted UN Security - 'General U Thant had| been informed of the decision.) ToCheck interference and unsafe prac- tices. Vice-Admiral William Martin jdirected the message by flash- jing light and a voice radio Overnight Rains Give Help vii: tessa ite sian after a Soviet guided mis- lsile destroyer No. 381 ap- N.S. Forest Fire Controlled' proached within 150 yards of a destroyer, serving as a buffer for this 77,000-ton aircraft car- rier. At times four Soviet ships were visible fram the America, the heart of a 6th Fleet group which has steamed off Crete while awaiting possible duty in the Middle East situation. | These include a second guided missile destroyer, a pa- trol 'craft escort and trawler GS43. Two other Russian destroyers were detected, but 'passed from the immediate area. Officers said apparently only guided missile destroyer No. 381 was continuing close shadowing of the America's task group. A Jordanian spokesman an the seasefire and that King Hussein told a press conference today that there had been only minor incidents since the ceasefire deadline, and that to fire only in self-defence. Israeli forces held key points in vast stretches of Egypt's Sinai Desert, including eastern approaches to the Suez Canai and Israel's main objective: Sharm el Sheikh overlooking the entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba. But an Israeli spokes- man in Tel Aviv categorically ldenied that any Israeli troops |were on the banks of the ca- inal Maj.-Gen. Moshe Dayan, the | lIsraeli defence minister, told jreporters Wednesday: "It is not jand 'was not our aim to get to the Suez Canal. Why go there and get involved in something that is not our business?" Reuters correspondent Ayr else survived outbreak that required evacuation of community. Fifteen - year - old Susan Bower and fa- ther, area tourist outfitter The spokesman said asefire Touttq at the southern end of the cahal. The Egyptian high command said Egyptian planes wiped out Israeli armored units advanc- ing on the coastal road behind El Arish in Sinai and resist- ance inside El Arish itself was continuing. Nine Israeli planes were shot down during raids on Cairo and the canal zone, the high com- mand announced. Damascus radio said that Algerian troops had gone into action for the first time on the Egyptian front in support of Egyptian President Nasser's forces. Indications were that they were deployed east of , Suez, A squadron of Algerian MiG- 21 jets took off for the Middle East Wednesday night: The first batch of Sudanese troops left Wednesday to join Egypt ian forces. JUST STARTING | The Syrian defence ministry jaaid the war was just beginning and its forces would go on fight- ling. Damascus radio charged \Israel's blitzkrieg "to impose a truce" would not succeed. | The: first communique from jthe Syrian defence ministry to- Wallenstein reported from Tel|@@y said its anti-aircraft bat- Aviv that a military spokesman teries shot down five Israeli jPlanes over its frontline this \morning. | Wednesday Syria said its the|tanks were breaking into north- pushing aside Israeli forces tojafter"over - riding the Israeli clear a path of retreat to Portiplain of Hulen. Security UNITED NATIONS Council awaited a summons back into session today to check on Arab and Israeli compliance with its ceasefire resolutions and onsider further steps to East. Diplomats said a morning meeting was likely. At the insistence of Soviet Ambassador Nikolai Fedorenko, | the council unanimously backed jup its original ceasefire appeal of Tuesday night with a demand that the warring governments cease all military activities at 4 p.m. EDT Wednesday. Both the Soviet resolution and the appeal Tuesday night re- ceived the unanimous support of the council. Israel informed the UN Wed- nesday night that a ceasefire with Jordan had gone into ef- fect at the specified deadline. Unbelievable In Egypt CAIRO (AP) -- Cairo buzzed buzzed with rumors as radios Lawrence Bower, have been given temporary cus- tody of the newborn fe- male, 4{CP Wirephoto) | News Of Arabian Defeats blaring throughout the tense city alternated between news of a headlong Israeli advance and defiant calls to Egyptians to fight on. "Impossible," said an English- speaking office worker as the radio announced Egyptian forces had given up Sharm El Sheikh, the vital Red Sea post controlling the entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba. "The Israelis : cannot get that far that fast." People listened sullenly to the reports sets. "I do not worry," said one Arab who had recently arrived from Yemen, another scene of Middle East fighting. "I am sure that there is some smart strategy behind all this letting the Israelis come into Egyot. Once all the Jews are in, maybe our men. will suddenly strike. They will cut them off and that will be the end." The atmosphere of gloom deepend Wednesday night as arrivals from Suez told of a steady stream of Egyptian army trucks heading westward away from the battlefront. They saw none going the other way. But although the drastic set- back for the Egyptian military became more apparent with (CP)-- Jordanian forces had been told) Members of the UN Security| spokesman stop the fighting in the Middle} over their transistor) Council Ceasefire' | But an Egyptian government| apie. asked de- in Cairo, abut the new truce call, clared: 'Egypt will fight on. Syria said today the war is only beginning and its armed forces will go on fighting. The council also had on to-) |day's agenda a Canadian pro- |posal that the council ask its president, Ambassador Hans Tabor of Denmark, "with the assistance of the UN secretary- general, to take the necessary measures to bring about full and effective compliance with these resolutions." t Some diplomats considered the resolution an attempt to re- | duce the role of Secretary-Gen- eral U Thant in the crisis. But Canadian Ambassador George Ignatieff said it was designed solely to give someone the au- » {dle East simmers down problems she has won along with STIFFER RESISTANCE MET BY ISRAEL FORCE -- Raila ISRAEL Mediterranega Red Sea a sistance at Mitla Pass (3). Egyptians report their troops organizing along the eastern Nile Valley (4), 40 miles west of the Suez Canal. Israeli forces were spread through Jordan west of the Jordan River (5) after a 60-hour battle with Jordanian Arab Legion- naires. of major activity on fourth day of Arab - Israli war. Arab High Command said its planes wiped out an Israeli armored unit on a coastal road at El Arish (1) and resistance there continued. Israeli's said their infantry was still fighting at Bir Gif Gafa (2) and meeting tough re- (AP Wirephoto) Complex Problems'): 'Follow Conquest By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS|not only be able to control Israel's lightning conquest in| these people, gut feed them and the Middle Fast raises new|!00k out for their welfare as and complex problems. Some| Well. . probably will be dumped once| The question of Jerusalem is again in the lap of the United| likely to be a thorny one all Nations. over again. The United Nations 20 years ago insisted that Jeru- As of this moment, many i hacen vexing questions are unanswer- salem, revered by: three great religions, should be interna- tionalized. In the first war, Is- What happens when the Mid-/rae] captured the New City }area and made it her capital. What is the future of the/In the new war; she has cap- Arabs' great riches of oil re-|tyred the other half, the Old serves City, The chances are she will What happens now to the end-/not want to give it up. less problem of the refugees| who fled Palestine in the first} MANIPULATE STOCKS war what happens to. the Arabs in| cated the Israelis will strive to new territory conquered by Is-|hang on to some, at least, of rael two decades ago, and| Israel's leaders have indi- what they have conquered. Israel is aware of the new, In the case of territory in | Sinai, Israel may want to re- victory. She has cap-|tain areas commanding the ente ured territory in Arab Jordan,|rance to the Gulf of Aqaba, whose Palestinians seethe with| one of the lifelines of her trade. hatred for her. She has 'overrun| Egypt blockaded it as the cur- a large area of the Sinai Pen-|rent crisis 'build up, and that insula in Egypt. If Israel retains | was any of this territory, she must! causes of the war. one of the immediate thority to take steps to imple- ment the ceasefire resolutions, which he said those resolutions failed to do. | each broadcast report, the popu- \larity of President Nasser re-| jmained high. Truckloads of} |youths rolled through the city | chanting Nasser's name and |proclaiming him the "hero in the struggle against Israel and imperialism." In between communiques tell- ing of Egyptian military re- groupings and fighting deep in- side the Sinai peninsula came a flood of anti-American investive. "Ghadad, Ghadad, Ghadad,"' the radio announcer shouted. FEAR MOUNTS "Ghadad" means anger, {wrath or fury. There was mounting fear among Western- ers of mob action. More than 85 American in- ternees were being held under guard at a downtown hotel wait- ing for a train to take them to/2 Alexandria, Egypt's port on the Mediterranean. They included |= oil men, teachers, some tourists, | 2 and 24 correspondents. Egyptian authorities gave!s some Americans permission to |= stay on in Cairo, at least tem-|= porarily. "Fighting continues," ran the red bannerline of El Misa, the Cairo evening paper. Its size|= had shrunk to one single sheet. |Two days ago, it had six pages and the headline was "Arabs on Their Way to Tel Aviv." ? Som tnctt tener Manner NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Israelis Attack U.S. Navy Ship WASHINGTON (AP) Israeli torpedo boats and planes attacked a U.S. Navy ship 15 miles north of the Sinai Peninsula in the Mediterranen Sea, the defence de- partment announced today. Initial reports listed four Amer- icans dead and 53 wounded. Firing First Shot Report Denied .™ LONDON (Reuters) -- The Israeli embassy today described as a "complete distortion'? reports Israeli Am- bassador Aharen Remez had told British members of Par- liament that Israel fired the first shots in the war in the Middle East. Remez was reported as. having said this at a meeting of British MPs here Wednesday night. Capital Murder Charge In Windsor | WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) Warner Alfred Talbot, 21, of Windsor today was charged with capital murder in the stabbing death of Harold Scott, 19. Scott died in hospital early today five hours after he was admitted with chest wounds. He responded to open-heart surgery but died later. yung 0. nnn err ..In THE TIMES Today .. Garry Young: Named Boston's Chief Scout--P. 10 Building To Start Soon On City Hall Complex--P. 13 Dymond Says Ideas Important--P. 5 2 -18 Theatres--24, 25 Weather--2 Whitby News-----5, 6 Women"s--14, 15, 16 Ann Landers--14 Spo City News--13 Classified--20 to 23 Comics--18 Editorial--4 Financial---19 Obituaries---23 rts-- 10, Talavicton UN ty , < x