VOL. The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres. 94 -- NO. 107 1¢ Single Copy Oshawa Cimes 0c Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1965 Authorized os Second Cless Moll Post for eR Ottewe and peyment Weather Report Sunny with cloudy intervals and warm, today, tonight, and tomorrow. Low to- night, 52. High Saturday, 75. Department in Cath, ffice o 'age TWENTY-FOUR PAGES w MINNEAPOLIS (AP) A string of tornadoes spewed death and destruction over this heavily populated area of Min- nesota Thursday night, killing at least 10 persons, injuring more than 300 and causing mil- lions of dollars in property dam- age. Heavy rain and two-inch hail- stones preceded the twisters that struck during supper time. Utility lines' were flattened, in many sections dangerously crossing highways lined with homeward bound workers. Doz- ens of accidents.were reported on the highways. Hundreds of homes were damaged and many were de- stroyed, CALLS OUT GUARD Governor Karl Rolvaag called out National Guard units to help local police and civil defence volunteers to maintain order, Tornado sightings were re- ported over at least 25 small towns, The heaviest damage was re- ported to communities around Lake Minnetonka, some 15 miles west of Minneapolis, and Spring Lake Park and. Mounds View, 15 miles north of the cily. Four persons died at Mound, a residential community on Lake Minnetonka's west shore. Dozens of homes were hard hit. Island Park and Navarre also on the lake's west side, re- ceived heavy property damage and reported many injured, Four persons died at Spring Lake Park, one at Mounds View and one at Norwood, The injured in twisters that hit Fridley, Spring Lake Park and Mounds View were brought to Mercy Hospital at Coon Ra- pids in a contiguous stream. After two hours, the hospital's administrator, Robert van Hau- ser, pleaded with ambulance drivers and motorists to take their injured to other nearby hospitals. Van Hauser estimated upwards. of 100 persons that had Province May | Take Part In Medical Care TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario government was reported today to be considering a major tem of subsidization of aioe liums. It said the province should pay the full cost of premiums change in its medical care in-\for pensioners 70 and over re-| surance legislation that mayjceiving old age security, and give the province a measure of for pensioners between 65 and publicly-operated medical care.|70 who receive old age assis-| Up to now the government's policy has supported the prin- tance. The full premium cost would ciple of keeping medical care also be paid for persons receiv-|; ing welfare payments under any): insurance in the hands of the insurance companies and other private carriers. It has pro- posed only to exert control over premiums and benefits. But now, it was learned, the government is considering the} establishment of a commission similar to the Ontario. Hospital Services Commission to operate) a medical care plan for all per-| sons receiving government sub- sidies towards their premium payments. The Hagey committee on mrdical services insurance, which endorsed the principle of |for subsidized groups of these acts: Blind Persons Al- lowances Act, Disabled Persons)' Allowance Act, Mother ances Act, General Welfare As- Allow-|/ sistance Act, and Rehabilitation) | Services Act. \F An obvious criticism is that): the government premium subsi-| dies would be paid to private) insurance companies, contribut- ing to their profit at public ex-| 7 pense, The establishment of a com-|/ mission similar to the OHSC to operate the medical care plan would privately-operated health insur-jtake some of the steam out of| ance as first proposed by thejthe charge that the government, government in 1963, mended earlier this year a sys- revom-|was selling out to the insurance! companies, Four More Marines Slain After "Wrong-Way Drive SANTO DOMINGO (AP) -- Another wrong turn into rebel territory was blamed today for the deaths of four marines, bringing the U.S. death toll in the Dominican fighting to at! least 13. U.S. sources said three ma, rines were killed Thursday after a patrol wandered into the in- surgent-held sector of downtown Santo Domingo. Two others were wounded and one died af- ter he was taken to the aircraft carrier Boxer. A rebel spokesman said one) insurgent was killed and two wounded in the encounter. The rebels at first accused the United States of violating the ceasefire arranged Wednesday by a peace commission of the denied a charge by a U.S Offi-| miles south of the big Da N Organization of Americanicial that he had agreed to Bive) air States. Later they said they be lieved the marine patrol had taken a wrong turn. Two U.S. newspaper men who had been observing the clash from a taxi were caught in the|claim that Fidelio Despradel, | Viet Cong during the | crossfire and wounded slightly. RELEASE PRISONERS Another marine patrol took a ' AB Ads llie wrong turn Wednesday into pradel is," Caamano declared, | i a eens etaperena | es Tory Papers rebel territory. After sharp fir- ing, the rebels captured two of the marines but released them Thursday to the OAS peace -om-} mission. The commission re- turned them to U.S. authorities In other incidents Thursday, '-- snipers wounded two U.S, para-| troopers and hit a helicopter,} wounding the pilot in the legs.| A flurry of sniping activity) broke out near the U.S. Em-| bassy during the afternoon, but! it died down quickly, | Otherwise Santo Domingo was quiet Thursday, and more stores reopened for the first time ince the revolution broke out April 24, Col, Francisco Caamano Den the rebel provisional president, Communists posts in his rebel! government, "It's a lie,"' Caamano told re porters, Caamano also denied a U.S. identified as a prominent Com-| munist, was one of his aides,| "I don't even know who Des- Holler Farce As Wilson Wins Steel Vote LONDON (CP)--Tory news- papers today came out with charges of farce and play-act- ing following the Labor govern- ment's victory in a rough-and-! tumble clash over stee! na-' tionalization Thursday night The big battle, however, still lay ahead and observers fore- cast months of bitter political clashes--and possibly a general, election--before. the plan can go into effect The last-minute . 'conversion' of two Labor rebels gave the government a four-vote major-|s of Commons cent of Britain's steel capacity, ity in the House on a policy white paper laying down a basis of legislation for state control of steel | Billed as the biggest test forjcentral Conservative spokesmen bit- terly charged in the Commons that Wilson arranged the tim- ing of the steel showdown de- liberately to come before a vic- tor was declared in Birming- ham Hall Green constituency, a Tory stronghold. Some sources described as outright stage - managing the dramatic last - minute conver- sion of Labor rebels Woodrow Wyatt and Desmont Donnelly to the white paper, which envi ages nationalization of 90 per fifth largest in the world In any event, Economics Min-| ister George Brown became the figure of the strange} Wilson since he came to power | fight when he.offered to "'listen"| seven months ago, the debate) built up a fantastic climax of fury and comedy in a packed chamber Allowing for. "'pairs" and au thorized absentees, the vote of 310 to 306 corresponded exactly to any suggestions about an ownership takeover of less than jam-'100 per cent. As debate neared the 10 p.m cutoff, Brown announced "I am prepared to say that if jthe industry and its friends -in with the strengths of Labor and|the Tory (Conservative) party the combined Tory and Liberal!will come to us and say that opposition at the time of the ballot. But today the government's|which over-all majority has been cut to three because a Birmingham byelection Thursday returned a Tory member, as expected. |to say." they are prepared for the gov- ernment to assume the contro! my honorable friends and Donnelly) and | agree is essential. w will i(wyatt of ourse listen to what they have ngs fii ASR been treated at Mercy Hospital. Nearly. 30 of those treated were in serious condition, The Minneapolis weather bur- eau had alerted Twin Cities res- idents around 6:30 p,m, CST. Mnutes later, a heavy rain and hail hit the cities, and civil de- fence sirens blared warnings as thousands of persons took to shelter. It was Minnesota's second night of tornadoes. A series of twisters hit the northwestern portion of the state Wednesday, and another series struck the southeastern portion of the state. About 20 persons were in- jured, but property damage was heavy. SO LONG, OLD PAL -- GET WELL SOON James Lambert, 4, (right) of Barbados, recovered from a recent open-heart opera- tion at the Montreal Chil- dren's Hospital, says good- bye to fellow patient Rickie Square. Three - year - old Rickie is TWISTERS RIP ACROSS MIDWEST No 'Threats', But B.C. Is Unhappy VICTORIA (CP) |W. A, C. Bennett said Thursday jhe is making no threats to se- jcede from Canada, but the gulf jbetween British |Ottawa is growing larger and the federal government is do- g everything it can to widen has been badly dealt with by the national govern- 4 \ment. I call upon them to cor- jrect this mier said Asked to comment on a re- mark Wednesday by Ralph Loffmark, merce forthwith," the pre- minister, that "separation," Mr. Bennett plied gulf and how to bridge it. I as prime minister want to see it bridged "I make no threats, I'm a great Canadian, I'm a Queen's man, first, last and always, We are trying hard to close gulf, but Ottawa does every- thing it can to widen it." The premier was speaking to lreporters at the opening of a jcentennial museum here, DIFFERENCES GROW Mr, Loffmark said in jterview in Vancouver Wedne: Columbia and @ an in-| ~ Premier |Gordon Plan ' Government By JAMES NELSON | OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's| eight privately - owned char-| tered banks will be free to jmove gradually into the lucra-| |tive mortgage-lending business| BANKS MAY MOVE INTO MORTGAGES Would Slash Bank-Shares central bank will have to bow to federal government direction in any conflict between the two on Bank of Canada activity. These were the principal pro- visions of three pieces of bank- 'jand seek wider ownership ofjing legislation introduced in the '|shareholder stock among Cana-|Commons by Mr. Gordon--bills jdians under. proposals to the! iCommons Thursday by Finance |Minister Gordon, | But a tight rein is to be ap- jplied on foreign or provincial) to revise the Bank Act and the Quebec Savings Banks Act, and to amend the Bank of Canada Act. Mr, Gordon told reporters at /\government ownership, and the|a press conference after the the trade and com- ; the pro- § vincial cabinet was thinking of ; re- 4 4 "We are thinking about this | | RALPH LOFFMARK the! jweren't thinking of separatism. | Attorney-General Robert Bon- jner; "It's a question of being abandoned more than of separ- ation," Health Minister Eric Martin: B.C, has been thinking of se- | eding ever since they got into iday a growing list of differ-|Canada." fences between the provincial and federal governments is |making B.C. impatient with its role in Confederation, He was jquoted as saying he was re- flecting 'cabinet. However, he has since \been wnavailable for comment. Many of Mr. Loffmark's fel- low cabinet ministers said in interviews, however, that they | Agriculture Minister Frank |Richter: "1, don't know what he |bases his statement on. It's one man's opinion," "There is no thought of seces- thinking of the B.C.jsion, I'm stre -- certainly not said Municipal on my part," |Affairs Minister Dan Campbell. "In a pig's eye!" was the comment of Highways Minister Philip Gaglardi. | Dnieper Must Be Ousted recovering from burns suffered in a fire at his home in St. Regis, Que : --CP Wirephoto Savage Cong Attack = Razes Catholic Town SAIGON (AP)---A_ flotilla of landing craft brought 3,000 U.S.|number. of U.S. 3,000 Chu and today marines ashore at Lai, 452 base. The marines bat will construct There was no contact with the but far to the south the Cong guerrillas staged a sav-} age attack on a Roman Catho-| town, including 150 casual-| U.S. officials in Saigon re-| ported three raids by 10 U.S.| Navy planes over North Viet! Nam Thursday. The sorties! were aimed at railway traffic, ferry boats, bridges and trucks but specific details were given. All planes returned their carriers, officials said not to The landing brings the total| servicemen in\t, Seabees South Viet Nam to about 45,000. Six hattalions of South Viet-| anginamese soldiers had been op- days. will| erating in the Chu Lai area for guard a South Vietnamese com-|the last two days, clearing out|Cong Thursday airfield which the Seabees'the Viet Cong. Eight guerrillas| town were killed and 13 while tions. two captured, | largely South Vietnamese} refugees from North Viet Nam, anding, troops were killed and six were| was the heaviest in the south- Viet| wounded in the clearing opera-|ern Landing of all night Hai Yan, with Roman of Mekong Delta in months, Harness Horse Hacked To Save Plane Crewmen SAN FRANCISCO (AP-AP)--|New Zealand horses en routejhis criminal record, Elmer So- Pilots reported good results,4 flight engineer said "hurs-\@board a Pacific Western Air-|pha (L--Sudbury), also a law- day he killed a Toronto-owned, harness racing horse with a fire|{nternational Stables the marine nks and other equipment was|cign, expected to take another three|them from office. The attack by about 1,000 Viet on populated Catholic the many 'For Justice's TORONTO (CP) Vernon Singer (L--Downsview), the Op- position's critic of the attorney- general's department, told the legislature Thursday that justice will not be properly administered in Ontario as long as magistrates Robert Dnieper of Toronto and O. C. McClevis of Walkerton are on the bench. He said the government should ask for their resigna- tions and, if they will not re- take action to remove Mr. Singer, himself a lawyer, 'stated his case against Magis- trate Dnieper in a speech that |began Wednesday and ended |Thursday. | He said Magistrate Dnieper jhad refused remands to youths lInot represented by counsel, once conducted court at 4 a.m, _jin a police cruiser on a high- The marines and Seabees--jaxe to save the crew of a cargolonto, a horse-racing syndicate. U.S. Navy's engineering at Chu Lai in perfect weather, and the Seabees went to work at once 4,000-foot airstrip to be used for) the and landed it nine The six - was of us year - construction| plane 8,000 feet above the Pa- specialists--|cifie Ocean Wednesday night. either on him board," building alGeorge Ropcean of Edmonton.!cockpit door. old champion! In a 30 - minute or drama, the horse's flailing hoofs the forced Ropcean and Don Me-\cence in court and later lifting said|Nutt, the trainer, against the!the suspension outside court. Ropcean said there was nojhad no right |way, criticized a working man |for the clothes he wore in court, and told a defendant "You're jlucky you're not looking at a rope." |TELLS OF CASE | He also said Magistrate Dnie- per had told a witness to revea lines, flight to Montreal, They|yer, said this was clearly illegal had been purchased by United jand contrary to the Canada of Tor-|Evidence Act. | Thursday, Mr. Singer criti- airborne|cized Magistrate McClevis for suspending a man's driving li- He said Magistrate McClevis to change his operations in central Viet Nam./pacer from New Zealand, gun available so he bagged alruling after having delivered it Intelligence sources have said anamed Vanderford, had broken|nearby fire axe | North Vietnamese operating in mountains to the west Lai regiment of Chu pit Vanderford was one of six'be destroyed isjout of his stall and kicked his the foothills and)way almost to the plane's cock-/The plane's captain, Art Bell, gave the order for the horse to jin court since he was no longer "LT hated to do it,"' he said.'concerned with the case. which indicated that Magistrate | Correspondence was read McClevis felt he was_ still Sake: MLA charged with the matter and decided to alter his ruling after hearing "a most impassioned plea" from the accused 'in his office. Mr. Singer asked the attor- ney - general's department to yagaee an inquiry into the mat- er. He said the cases of the two magistrates show that "some- thing far less than should be desired has gone on in magis- trates' courts in this province." | Attorney - General Arthur Wishart said later his own in- vestigation concerning' Magis- trate Dnieper is still going on. He said he agreed there have jbeen instances of discourtesy in \Mr. Dnieper's court, | As for Magistrate McClevis, Mr. Wishart said he does not regard the matter as serious enough to ask for Mr. McClevis' resignation, He said Mr, McClevis made a mistake in not changing his ruling in open court, Steel Takeover May Be Partial LONDON (AP) -- Hints that \the Labor government may modify plans for outright na- tionalization of major British steel plants knocked millions of |pounds off the value of shares jon the London stock exchange) \today. | Many investors suspected the final formula may prove to be that the government will buy 51 per cent--instead of all--of the shares of the selected plants, leaving the remainder in pri- vate hands. These investors rushed to unload their holdings. SAME PAY, LONGER HOURS, LATER RETIREMENT Mailers Ink Contract: Paper The three TORONTO Globe and Mail sa (CP) the wspapers Tor onto daily. ne have reached agreement with the striking Toronto Mailers Union (CLC) The 225 mailers at the Globe and Mail, The Star and The Telegram walked off their jobs last July 9 in) sympath with striking members of Local Union (CLC), mailers are pers 'have continued 'to publish, with affiliated which the! The mailers were not pa- ally on strike, but were under a The clause in their offici acting con- Officials of the mailers union|tracts with the papers that per could not be reached for com-|mitted them to honor printers' ment on the story, A membership meeting of the Union .was to be heldjfor outcome of| 'blacklist' Mailers' today talks ind representatives of the pub-| will begin |May 25. Within a month, all thejunion members may work in to hear between the union 191, International Typographicalllishers of the three papers. picket lines. The paper says 20 mailers for their strike, the returning that on a officials|during the lo except unton work jmailers would be back except the 20 ACCEPT CONTRACT The Globe and Mail adds that mailers' officials have accepted a contract fixing wages at $146 a week for the next five years-- the same rate they, received when they walked off their conduct! jobs, mailers The closed shop section of their contract, which said only jthe mailing room, has been jabandoned, and a longer shift for night workers at the same rate of pay has been accepted, the newspaper says. The work week for night shift workers will be 35 hours in- stead of the old 334% hours, Pay will remain at: $153. Retirement age was |from 60 to 65. Pensions were jincreased to $40 a week from $38, raised |banks must cut back severely| |their ownership of trust com-| |panies, | It maybe easier for new |banks to obtain federal char- ters, but all will continue to be} limited to six-per-cent interest) charges on bank loans. The banks will have to adjust |gradually to a new requirement) |that they keep cash, day-to-day loans and treasury bill holdings) as a reserve against their total] deposit liabilities. But the Bank of Canada will) still be able to temper inflation- ary and deflationary pressures by influencing the bank's re- serves. And the state - owned Charters May The charters of the banks now expire July 1 unless for any reason Parliament doesn't sit 20 days during June, In that case the charters would auto- matically be extended into the autumn, but it may be neces- sary to give them another full year's extension if debate bogs down. THERE ARE PROBLEMS The finance minister said there are legal conundrums in sweeping the so + called near banks under the federal bank- ing umbrella, Many of them operate under provincial gov- ernment charters. This ques- tion will continue to be under study -- perhaps for a long time. : The day's discussion in the House was on resolution stages of the Bank Act and Quebec Savings bills. Opposition Finance Critic George Nowlan (PC -- Digby- Annapolis - Kings), finance minister in the former Conserv- ative government when it went out of power, said his detailed analysis of the banking legisla- tion would be reserved for sec- ond - reading debate, possibly opening late next week, But New Democratic Party, Social Credit and Creditiste end of the day-long banking de- bate that he adopted some rec- ommendations of the 1061-64 royal commission on banking and finance because he thought they were good, but rejected others. Many of the recom- mendations are still under |study and may be incorporated in other legislation. The banking legislation will go to'. a Commons committee after it is given second read- ing -- approval in principle, It must then come back to the House for further debate and third reading before g through three readings an committee study in the Senate, Be Extended For Year If Debate Slowed Creditiste members flayed the present banking . system. They said the banks should be required to hold cash. reserves against the total amount of their lending activity. Under the present system, the banks can in effect create money by lending out $12.50 for every doljar they have in cash reserves. The Creditistes said they should only lend out dol- lar-for-dollar. Any new money created should be debt-free. At the end of the day Mr. Gordon fired back at what he called the peculiarities of Social Credit and Creditiste moneatry theory. If they ever got their hands on the banking system they would create the greatest jpanic in the history of banking. When a Creditiste shouted at him to 'Remember 1929""--the stock market crash and bang run--Mr, Gordon said the sta- bility of the Canadian banking system saved Canada, and he now wanted to look forward to 1969 and 1989, J. J, Greene (L -- Renfrew Gouth) suggested Mr. Gordon "set an example" by requiring in the Bank Act that chartered banks provide borrowers with a "simple annual interest rate' on all types of loans, This might lead the way to similar spokesmen strongly criticized the provision restricting provin- cial government ownership of bank stock, SSE Ss ss NEWS BOSTON (AP) -- Counsel nounced in court today . the nouncement at the opening of Dist. Atty, Garrett H, Byrne to bar the fight. MACKINAW CITY, Mich. west of the huge Mackinaw B U.S. Coast Guard report said two of them unconscious and from the water, SEA NSN ATA Whitby Population 33,000 | _..In THE TIMES UAW Treasury Critics Answered by McNeil--P, 13 action by "more usurious insti- tutions," some of whom charged interest rates as high as 154 per cent a year, HIGHLIGHTS Clay-Liston Bout Called Off Again for promoters of the Cassius Clay - Sonny Liston heavyweight championship fight an- fight will not be held in Boston as scheduled May 25, Attorney Paul T. Smith, coun- sel for Inter-Continental Promotions, Inc., made the an- a hearing on Suffolk County 's request for an injunction Carrier Sinks After Lake Collision (AP) -- The limestone car- rier Cedarville and the Norwegian freighter Topdalsfjord collided in the Straits of Mackinac today about two miles ridge, which links Michigan's two peninsulas, The Cedarville sank in a short time. One 14 survivérs were picked up, two seriously injured. Twenty other men were reported missing by the coast guard, Radio reports from the area told of cries for help coming SAS SAN today... n 1985 Forecast--P. 5 Flyers Win 5-1; Toke 2-0 Series Lead----P. 10 3 Ann Landers--16 } City News--13 Classified--18, 19, 20, 21 Comics--22 Editorial--4 Financiol--21 | saa Obits--21 Sports--10, 11, 12 Television-----22 Theatre----6 Whitby News--5 Womén's--14, 15, 16 Weather--2