Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 May 1965, p. 1

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Weather Report Sunny and warmer today. Showers and thundershowers tonight and Sunday. Continu- ing warm. Low tonight, 55. High Sunday, 72. 'Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, She Oshawa Cines Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Ottewa ond for payment of Postage in VOL. 94---NO. 114 steve ton OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, MAY 15, 1965 Cann. TWENTY-FOUR PAGES livered UTA nL aoe Ti fOneOpeee/ nena EeenE cE TSE HOTA SE a 20 MILLION LEFT HOMELESS BY WINDS Cyclone Slaughters 5,000 ng EA From AP-Reuters KARACHI (CP) -- A cyclone that ripped through densely- populated East Pakistan Tues- day killed up to 5,000 persons and left about 20,000,000 home- less, reports reaching here said total may well rise as reports trickle in from outlying areas devastated by 100-mile - hour winds and tidal waves. Thousands of flimsy homes were destroyed as violent winds ane capital. --more than 780--was reported in the Barisal region, 70 miles south of Dacca, the provincial Tidal waves which followed the storm took a heavy toll of life and livestock. Red Cross delegate, is expected to leave for Pakistan during the weekend to survey the needs of the stricken populace, (Batten will fly from Toronto to Karachi on his way to Dacca. The league also has notified its 104 member societies of the re- whipped through the densely populated area in the southern part of East Pakistan. The highest number of deaths today. The unofficial figures put the death toll at 1,435. But a Radio Pakistan broadcast said this gunn qin i ney rst tran lief needs of the Pakistan Red Cross before launching an inter- national appeal.) In Geneva, the League of Red Cross Societies announced that Albert Batten, a Canadian Tuc PL CRE aR LL A A UN SENDS TRUCE TEAM © TO AVERT NEW BATTLE Peace May Disintegrate Into A New. Bloody War From AP-Reuters 1. Imbert said the rebels would SANTO DOMINGO (CP) --|be bombed again, "if the situ- The United Nations is setting|ation warrants it. WA \up a watchdog post in the! U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Dominican Republic as the in-|Bunker told a special confet- creasingly uneasy two - weekjence of the OAS in Washington truce threatens to disintegrate|Friday that there have been 187 into bloody new fighting in this|violations of the ceasefire divided city. Pegese et ge we . = an Organization o merica! An advance party of four ong ome peace pay SR, secretariat members was flying here from New York today un-| Seventeen American. service der orders from the Security;men have been killed and 86 Council to report on "the pres-| wounded, largely by rebel ent situation." \sniper fire, EEL RES a Cuba: 18 Years To Missionaries 5 Ma: , HAVANA (AP) -- A Cubanjexchanges at the rate of five -- jprosecutor has asked prison|pesos to one dollar. The official jterms of 10 and 18 years forjrate is one to one. two American Baptist mission-' Caudill, who is superintendent). aries accused of spying for the of missions in Cuba for the United States Southern Baptist Home Mis- Rey. Herbert Caudill, 61, andjsion Board, said he exchanged Rev. David Fite, 31, are ex-jabout $300,000 for pesos after jpected to be sentenced nextithe United States took meas- -- |week. Their trial and that of 32\ures to stop the flow of dollars Cuban Baptists ended Fridayjinto Cuba. .) ' ~ CLOWN EXPLAINS 'FEATS' TO KIDS AT OSHAWA GENERAL terday to the children's wards of the hospital. The circus is being sponsored by the Oshawa Shrine Club. George Charlton, chairman of the Shrine Circus Com- mittee can't bear to look while Eddy measures Tor- nillo's foot --Oshawa Times Photo "My foot is 12 inches long, but I generally don't use it as a rule," said Tornillo the clown to five-year-old Eddy Jemakowicz, a patient at the Oshawa Genera! Hospi- tal. The clowns, Tornillo and his little sidekick, Toto, are part of the Clyde Bros. Circus, and paid a visit yes- bd 3 ba night He said he was unable to re- 1r t One of the Cuban defendants,|ceive church funds from the ni Luis Manuel Aguero Serrano,/home mission board for several |40, testified that Caudill headed|months but that about the end an organization within thejof 1963 a system was worked church whose object was tojout to get funds through Mont- |real and London. He has been But Only To Retaliate: By JOHN RODERICK TOKYO (AP) -- China today|livery capability. In announcing|ported intense excitement andjmarily of political importance called its second atomic explo-/the Oct. 16, 1964, explosion, the|jubilation--said there was sion "'a great victory" but tried/Chinese did not use the word|strong possibility the bomb was|threats of bombing the Chinese|SPYing to cushion the shock among its| Ver." released from a plane. dismayed neighbors by promis-| Japanese correspondents in ing it will never be the first to) use nuclear weapons. The United States, at the same time, said that President Johnson's statement following! the first Chinese. explosion) ere ents aot | Mf Unskilled N-Community nations against Chinese atomic! blackmail. "China is developing nuclear weapons solely for defensive purposes,"' the' official People's Daily said By ARCH MacKENZIE Canadian Press Staff Writer Peking, underscores a growth toward! ers "It is the/nuclear 'capacity among coun- ple that there will never be ajtive control machinery. nuclear war." n the next authorizes only three years, cal. The government said it! countries will have the savvy to|Utcast at the United would make a strong protest)/pecin producing cheap nuclear and leftist organizations, norm-| hompbs. ally friendly to Peking, de-| 'These include India, Pakistan, plored what they called a men-| Indonesia, Israel, Egypt, Japan. ace to peace Sweden and presumably Can- CALLS IT 'TIME BOMB' a The Kyodo news agency, The f | technical Chinese prog-| called it a time bomb blown up|ress shown in the second test ently Just how long it will and the machinery to deliver remains conjectural |nese have at least limited de-|the Chinese capital--who re-jregarded the explosion as pri- Western diplomats in. Peking Viet Nam War. take Dr. Harold Peking | ajand as an answer to U.S }mainland if China enters Some Western observers garded the explosion as clum- re- China Bomb Shows Growth ® tims, te com Algiers. The Chinese were brought under fire by neutralist nations following the first test. In Ottawa, External Affairs Minister Paul Martin said the} nuclear proliferation is acutely | second test was no surprise, but! jrecognized by the U.S., Britain,|Canada received it with 'regret China's second nuclear blast|the Soviet Union and other pow-|and concern." But how to ban the bomb? The U.S., Britain and the So- fu sincere hope*of the Chinese peo-|tries in a world lacking effec-| Viet Union continue to adhere tol, the limited test-ban treaty which I underground! In Japan, the reaction to the) American authority reported in| 'sting. France continues to go explosion was sharp and criti-\London Thursday, 20 more|"¢? Own way and China--as an Nations and most other East-West points of contact--proceeds independ-|UTsency. t the need fr a uni-lforce of the Afro-Asian countries police the ceasefire line | China turned. down the Indian China to develop the bomb itself/OUler space and under water, yronosal after denouncing it as '*"preposterous,"' India's delegate to the United|States has said it was giving C. Urey, nuclear chemist. who|Nations, Vishnu C. Trivedi, de-|careful study to the Indian for- in Japan's back yard, Japan is! announced Friday will be meas-|W" a Nobel Prize, suggested|nounced the explosion and ex-| mula. 'We in Canada deplore this rther contamination of the earth's atmosphere, which has taken place in the face of op position from, public opinion and jgovernments in all parts of the world." : The second test adds greater versal tests in treaty the danning nuclear atmosphere, in it}/he said. fight communism. it gathered military' 2nd eco-'in Cuba 35 years. nomic smuggle n country, Aguero testified. pesos information and helped| The Cubans out of but admitted illegally; Caudill denied making a gain." He said he made some tails. Hanoi Rejects India Move To End Fight In Viet Nam/' SAIGON (AP) -- North Viet, It was reported by the Wash-| in the plot' two missionaries were thelarrested April 8 in a roundup of 40 Baptist preachers and 13 h Americans have denied|laymen in western Cuba. The prosecutor said those on the|trading U.S. dollars for Vay Fg were "only part of those | and that others profit but Fite said he madejhave been detained in eastern some transactions "'for personal|Cuba. He gave no further de Nam rejected today an Indianjington Viet Nam namese people. a of Nam and that a peace) The The United survey Post that last announced the United! proposal for ending the war in|States has stopped aerial strikes} It called the: offerlagainst North Viet Nam pend-| "an offence'? against the Viet-jing an intensive reconnaissance of damage done and India proposed April 24 that|jfurther top - level policy deci- ceasefire be observed in alllsions. | Viet strikes) north of the 17th parallel were jon Wednesday. In Saigon, a crowd estimated jat 3,000 persons gathered at the Buddhist Institute in commem- oration of the 2,509th birth an- niversary of Buddha. The crowd NO!' Blind, bearded Moondog, modern Viking, holds his spear steady as he begs in the canyons of New York's midtown Manhattan. Beg- ging is '"'not degrading .. . Homer begged and so did Jesus Christ', says Moon- dog, 48, whose real name is Louis Thomas Hardin. Moon- dog says his dress is "my way of saying 'no'. I am an observer of life, a nonpar- ticipant who takes no sides. I am in regimented society but not of it.' And his gods are '"'of the Viking Pantheon, ®orce planes. Maj.-Gen. Indar Jit Rikhye of India, military adviser to UN Secretary -General U Thant, heads the team. e The rebel radio and television station in Santo Domingo was blasted off the air Friday night for the second time in 24 hours as an announcer was reading telegrams of support. The station supports the "con- stitutional" government of Pro- visional President Col, Fran- cisco Caamano Deno, leader of the revolt which sought to un- seat a military junta, now headed by "reconstructionist'"' Brig.-Gen. Antonio Imbert Her- reras. A rebel spokesman said a truckload of Dominican. troops drove past the station, hitting an antenna and transmitting equipment with automatic weapons and possibly a ba-| z00ka. The station had returned to the air earlier Friday after be- ing knocked out Thursday in an air attack by Dominican Air) The rebel station has been delivering a harangue against the 22,000 U.S. marines and paratroopers here, as well as against the forces of the mili- tary junta. No injuries were' reported at the station Thursday, but a teen-age boy was killed when a shell fell in a patio where Informed sources said special U.S. emissary John Bartlow Martin has withdrawn, at least temporarily after failing to achieve progress toward nego- tiations. Stevenson's Varsity LLD As Intended TORONTO (CP) -- Members of the University of Toronte senate Friday night overwhelm- ingly rejected petitions from faculty and student representa- tives asking the senate not to confer an honorary doctor of jlaws degree on Adlai Stevenson at a convocation May 28. Senators voted 149-1 to honor the United States ambassador to the United Nations as planned. Dr. Claude Bissell, university president, who received letters from a group of eight senior faculty members and the stue dent union for peace action, said after the senate decision; "The senate offers its honor- ary degrees to individuals for their general intellectual qual- ities and their achievements like Thor and Odin," says over & period of years. Moondog. (AP Wirephoto) Winter Grips lfive persons were seated, NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 600 N.Y. Police Injured On Duty NEW YORK (AP) -- Police Commissioner Michael J. Murphy announced Friday that nearly 600 policemen have been hurt in the line of duty since Jan. 1, an increase of 19 per cent over the corresponding period last year. So far, there have been no deaths this year, he said, but seven policemen were killed last year, 4 Paper Says CBC's Quimet Will Go OTTAWA (CP) -- The Citizen says today CBC Pres!- dent Alphonse Ouimet, 57, may not be reappointed when his term of office expires in September. The newspaper says the cabinet is said to be dissatisfied with the ad- ministration of the publicly-owned corporation and a num- ber of ministers want younger, more aggressive men in the higher echelons. German Avalanche Kills At Least 20 GARMISCH -- PARTENKIRCHEN, West Germany (AP) -- A giant avalanche roared down today from Mount Zugspitz near here and police reported at least 50 persons buried. They were unable to say how many, if any, had perished. that Kennedy should be remem- bered here, where the. Magna Carta, charter of western dem- ocratic liberty, was signed 750 years ago almost to the month in a Thames-side meadow Several times during the mov- pres- inz eulogies to her hushand Mrs. Kennedy pressed her lips firmly together as if keeping back tears. At one point swallowed hard and gazed straight ahead as former prime minister Harold Macmillan land stone as a gift from the British people to the man many of them regarded as the em- bodiement, in the words of Har- old Macmillan,. of "all the hopes and aspirations of this new world that is struggling to emerge phoenix - like from the white compexion contrasting to ashes of the old." Jackie's suntan. Mrs. Kennedy The inscription on the seven- is a few inches taller than the ton stone, taken from the Jate Queen president's 1961 inaugural ad- The Kennedy children,. Caro- dress, reads: line, 7, and John Jr., 4, were It was the first joint ceremony by the Queen and Mrs. Kennedy. Standing to- gether on the dais as the band played the U.S. national an- them, they made a_ striking pair -- the Queen's pink-and- bing from side to side as he shuffled in his gilt chair. The shy handshake of faur-* year-old John with the Queen dominated newspaper coverage of the occasion today. Most of the national British newspapers turned over their front pages to the story of the ceremony. , public nic lunches, made a mulli- colored tapestry on the lush green meadow sloping south to the river from the wooded me- morial hill. The band of the Irish Guards in scarlet and gold played merrily, adding to the garden-party atmosphere. Mrs. Kennedy held Caroline in one hand, John in the other. The children sat behind their mother and the Queen, flanked un tgneet | ...In THE TIMES today... Times Looks At Whitby Ontorio Hospitel -- P. 11 Speaker Says Oil Production Has Reacher Cycle -- P. $ Flyers Swamp Kings; Win Memorial Cup -- P, 9. Ann Landers -- P. 13 Obits -- P. 21 utara angst 3rit- the only country to suffer nu-|j iro : , dave byirecently that China's first nu-)pressed shock "'at the great and ---- --____--|heard speeches in honor of sol- clear bombing, twice by A tart gipibhoe th ig te days by clear test showed a lot more|serrous damage done to peace a diers who have died for: Viet U.S. near the end of the Second! states espionage activity. _ progress than was expected.- |and security." Strike Clos s Nam and in praise of Buddha, World War. | More significant will be the| ©n that basis, he said, China| 'Trivedi told the 114 - nation e and then peacefully dispersed. The newspaper Mainichi said:|oxtra pressure it creates in|Might have a missile system|UN disarmament commission Officials had feared that the "However little radioactivelingia where, for example, | Within five years in New York the explosion rep- Tractor Plant |Viet Cong might seek to take dust falls over Japan, we are|prime Minister Shastri faces) WILL BE CAUTIOUS lresents a health danger to advantage of the day-long festi- . fed up with it. What the Japan-| »icing demands to start building) But there are authorities who/present and future generations.| HAMILTON, Ont. (CP) -- AjVities to spark anti - American Nova Scotia ese people really seck is an im-'an independent nuclear muscle.|a!S0 Suggest that China with aj North Viet Nam welcomed wildcat strike by 1,500 workers|street marches. mediate halt to all nuclear tests deliverable bomb is not going to\the bomb as. "a. great encour-|Friday shut down. the Interna-; Superior Monk Thich Tinh| SYDNEY, N.S. (CP)--Winter for the sake of mankind UNDER U.S. UMBRELLA be any more or less aggressive|agement to the people of social- tional Harvester Co. of Canada|Khiet called for a 24-hour cease-| is keeping its grip on Nova Sco-| The Chinese did not say India was believed the mainjthan at present. They suggestiist (Communist) countries Ltd. plant fire in observance of the holi-|tia's Cape Breton Island. whether the second bomb was target Jast October when Presi-\that China will continue io be! The official newspaper Nhan The strike, which will close|day. There was no indication,) More than 5% inches of snow dropped from a plane or was dent Johnson stressed after cautious about encountering any|Dan said "it is imperative to the farm machinery and im-|however, of a lull in fighting. |was recorded at Sydney Airport touched off from a tower on the China's first test that the U.S./control, and argue that China)strengthen the national defence plement plant at 'least until) In Moscow, Soviet Premierjearly today. , i ground, Use of the words "over would extend its nuclear um-jin the Viet Nam situation has|forces of the socialist camp in Monday, came while United|Kosygin publicly appealed to| Snow blanketed most of Cape the western areas" was seen by) brella to Asia as a result been careful in the extreme every aspect, and the forces of Steelworkers of America (CLC) India and other nonaligned na-|Breton and part of the eastern the Japanese as an indication it) That point has been repeated despite the discomfort of.being|the front against war-secking and company bargaining teamsjtions to condemn American ac-|coast of the mainland during had come from a plane. If so,\quickly by Washington now shown as a paper tiger before|imperialists headed by the were at their 28rd meeting onitions in Viet Nam and thelthe night, but changed to rain this would mean that the Chi-! The prospect of what is called; American air and sea power Unnied States." a mew contract. Dominican Républic. later today, | QUEEN UNVEILS MEMORIAL TO 'MAN WHO CHAMPIONED LIBERTY' rs. Kennedy Nearly in lears At Vedication By CAROL KENNEDY RUNNYMEDE, England (CP) -- Jacqueline Ken- nedy came close to tears: Fri- day as she watched the Queen dedicate an acre of England's most historic land-to the mem- ory of her late. husband ident John F. Kennedy The Queen, inaugurating ain's national memorial to the slain president, called Kennedy a "man who championed lib- erty in an age when its very she It was a classic English sum- mer day, with the trees in fresh "Let every foundation was threatened on a universal scale."' "With all our hearts my peo- ple shared his' triumphs, grieved at his reverses and wept at his death." It was fitting, the Queen said, Spoke of Britain's shock and angry grief at Kennedy's death and his personal. mournin "a good friend, a wonderf friend The Queen dedicated a simple rectangular memorial of* Port- : ¢ nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support an friend, oppose an oe, in order to in- the survival and successes of liberty," sure dressed in identical cream double - breasted coats with white socks and red strapped shoes. They looked solemn throughout the ceremony, though at one point. in -the Queen's speech young John's blond head could be seen bob- green finery, the scent of grass rising in the hot sunshine and gleaming. in the distance be- yond Runnymeade meadow, the stripling silver Thames abob with pleasure boats Some 10,000 spectators, in holiday mood, many with pic- by U.S. senators Robert and Edward Kennedy, brothers of the slain president. Prime Minister Wilson spoke of an "'act of national homage to ; a man who in his life brought new hope 'and vitality to a tired world." City News -- P. 11 Classified -- P. 18, 19, 20: Comics -- P. 17 Editorial -- P. 4 Financial -- P. 21 Sports -- P. 8, 9 Television -- P. 17 Theatre -- P. 21 Whitby News -- P. 5 Women's -- P. 12, 13. Weather -- . 2.

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