Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Nov 1965, p. 1

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Weather Report Cloudy and cool today. Clear- ing Wednesday. Warmer. Low tonight, 38. High tomor- row, 55. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, Ihe Oshawa Cine Authorized es Second Closs Mall Ottawa and for in BIG CROWDS Office Department Cosh. TWENTY PAGES VOL. 94 -- NO. 255 "poe Per! Wask Tome "Bolivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1965 'Favor Held § ~ Radioactive Water Study TORONTO (CP)--An Ontario government report on radio- active contamination of drink- ing water in parts of the prov; ince has been withheld because "we didn't think it would be the gentlemanly thing to do to make this public before Nov. 8," J. K. Reynolds, chief executive of- ficer of the premier's office, said Monday. However, The Globe and Mail says the report on water sup- plies in the Elliot Lake area of Northern Ontario and Bancroft, 70 miles northeast of Peterbor- ough, was ready in June. "The report was earlier de- layed as a favor to the tourist industry in the Bancroft and Elliot Lake areas,"' the news- paper says. The report, says the newspa- per, "suggests the federal gov- ernment has been delinquent by not combating radioactive pol- lution" in the two uranium mining areas. A study was ordered last year by Premier John Robarts after reports were made of increased levels of radioactivity in water supplies used by residents of Elliot Lake, midway betgveen Sudbury and Sault Ste. Marie. Release of the report was firs! delayed because "'it was feared resort operators in the Bancroft area, where slight pollution had been discovered, might suffer economically from a reopening of the subject during the tourist season," the newspaper says. Prime Minister Pearson an- nounced the Nov. 8 genera! election Sept. 7, about the time the tourist season ended in On- tario. | "It was decided not to publish |the report until after Nov. 8 be- cause of the repercussions it could have in the . . . election campaign," the newspaper says. Elliot Lake is in Mr. Pear- son's riding of Algoma East. The newspaper also says the jreport contains '"recommenda- tions arrived at by the provin- jclal health department on ac-| jceptable standards of radio-) jactive matter in drinking wa-) lter" and says the responsibility] lfor setting standards "should) jrest with the Atomic Energy |Control Board, a federal body." Peasants Entombed Alive, Wouldn't Tunnel For Cong, SAIGON (CP) -- South Viet- namese authorities claimed to- day Viet Cong guerrillas buried alive two peasants who refused te dig tunnels for them. They said the bodies of the men were dug up with their/fore the guerrillas were routed hands tied at a village nearjlast week. The airborne troops Quang Ngai, some 340 miles northeast. of Saigon. Villagers showed security forces where the bodies lay un- der two feet of soil. Continuing a mopup around the bloody Plei Me battle- cavalrymen US. air led 99- Viet Cong soldiers| Monday and captured 44 others, a U.S. military spokesman an- nounced. Reports indicated the action was the first real success for the ist Air Cavalry Division, which arrived in South Viet Nam Sept. 12. It is back to the flapper era for Independent candi- date Dr. Rundle, That's him on the left, dressed in fur coat and KEEP COOL WITH COOLIDGE? top hat, touring the riding this morning in a yellow, 1920 Packard roadster, He's not packing a flask, but a James Edward message -- why voters should back him in the up- coming federal election Nov. 8. His chauffeur here is Ron -- NOPE, RUNDLE Fawcett restored the car,, Fawcett restored the car, has been offered $12,000 for it. --Oshawa Times Photo FOR LEADERS, APATHY GONE POLICE CHIEF APPOINTED Oshawa's new Police Chief is W. F. Johnston, an inspec- tor with the Toronto Metro Police Department. The announcement of his selection was made today by the chairman of the city Police Commission, Judge Alex C. Hall. Mr. Johnston, who has had 27 years' experience with the Metro police force, takes up his duties as from December 1 Retiring Police Chief Her- bert Flintoff will stay on for several months im an advisory capacity. Mr. Johnston was chosen from 47 applicants for the t position. He is 49 years separate engagements near the| U.S. special forces camp at Plei| Me, 210 miles north of Saigon.) |The camp, in South Viet Nam's lrugged central highlands, un- derwent a wpeek-long siege be- have been mopping up since. | Elsewhere, the spokesman re-| |ported, Viet Cong mortar crews fired several rounds at the U.S. |marine helicopter base near Marble Mountain, in the Da Nang area 380 miles northeast of Saigon, but none of rounds hit the base and no ualties were reported. U.S. B-52s from Guam bombed an important Viet Cong stronghold in the Boi Loi forest 35 miles northwest of Saigon. The Communists are solidly en- trenched in the forest and have withstood all efforts so far to The cavalrymen fought three knock them out. VARSITY GETS A SLICE Marathon Will Case Ends, Psychiatrist LONDON (CP)--The Univer- sity of Toronto is likely to get substantial benefits from the $18,000,000 estate of the late! Peter Fuld, his friend and ad- viser said today. A Montreal man named Wal- Loses Claim jan honors degree in law jacquired Canadian citizenship. |He returned to England in 1946 and resided in London. From his father, who died be- fore the Second World War, Fuld inherited a communica- Canadian Sought NEW YORK (AP)--In swift developments, the Federal Bu- reau of Investigation has ar- rested an American in the $400,- 000 Brink's robbery in Syracuse, N.Y¥.,.charged a Canadian still oi | at Jarge and recovered the can- non used to blast open the vault 10 days ago. N.Y., taken into custody by fed- eral agents Monday night, gras due to be arraigned today be- fore a U.S, commissioner in Brooklyn. His fugitive nephew, Joel Sin- ger, 22, of Chomedy, a Montreal suburb, also was charged by the FBI and is being sought in the robbery. They were charged in Albany, N.Y., with conspiracy to vio- late the statute of interstate jtransportation of stolen prop- jerty. The FBI also charged Sin- \ger with a violation of the fed- | | millimetre anti-tank gun from |Quebec to Syracuse. | The FBI said that it had re-| covered, with the aid of the U.S.) ter Kent also will benefit, added|tions empire based in. Frank-|Navy.and.coast-guard,.the-anti- ~ Philip Hartiey, a" London' solic- furt, Germany, which grew tank gun used in the burglary) itor who successfully defendedjeven bigger in the post-warifrom waters near the Meadow- Fuld's original will in Britain's High Court. Fuld, a native of Germany who became a Canadian citizen in 1946, died in Frankfurt three years ago at the age of 41. His death from a malignant brain tumor set off an involved quar- rel over his estate. After 91 days of hearings, the longest and most expensive cas in a British probate court, Sir Leslie Scarman, High Court jus- tice, Monday accepted the le- gality of Fuld's original will and rejected three later codicils which had been supported by Dr. Herman Tarnesby, a psy- chiatrist. Sir Leslie said he could not rely on Tarnesby's evidence, He praised Hartley as being Fuld's "true and loyal friend and ad- viser."' Fuld, son of a wealthy Ger- man-Jewish businessman and a non-Jewish mother, left Nazi Germany in 1939 to avoid racial persecution and came to Brit- ain. He was at first interned but later went to Canada, where he spent what he described as the happiest period of his life There he fell in love, obtained Train Tears Bus; 28 Die MEXICO CITY (AP)--A train sliced a bus in two at a cxos ing near the. Teotihuacan pyra- mids 20 miles northeast of here Monday, killing 28 persons and injuring 16 others, officials re- ported. The train was en route to Mexico City from Veracruz. Teotihuacan is the site of the famous Pyramid of the Sun and the ruins of the ancient Toltec and Aztecs. } years, He died in Frankfurt 'in |March, 1962, at 41, but . left £1,000,000 ($3,000,000) of his es- tate in Britain, giving the Eng- jlish High Court jurisdiction in jthe dispute which later arose lover his complex will. ' ELECTION | REPORT Pearson -- P. 2 Thompson and Douglas -- P. 3 am o = '254 in cheques, FIERCE WINDS, 40-FOOT WAVES... brook Parkway bridge to Jones |Beach on Long Island. | |HOOVER GIVES WORD | The developments were an-| /nounced Monday night in Wash- jington, D.C., by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, who said la- boratory experts positively jidentified the cannon as the one 'used in the robbery. Police said the Brink's build-| Jack Frank, 33, of Freeport, 7 JOEL SINGER andjeral Firearms Act in connection) Frank, a bachelor ahd a me- |with the transportation of a a+ ae In Brinks Heist for finger-printing and other processing. He was lodged in the federal house of detention. Details of the arrest were not revealed by the FBI. Federal agents said . Singer, who had been. employed as a salesman, had been convicted in ® Canada in 1961 for shopbreak- ® ing and given a suspended sen- tence. He was described as six feet tall, 192 pounds, gvith brown hair and blue eyes. The thieves who robbed the Brink's office in Syracuse are believed by police to be the same persons who attempted to rob a Quebec bank with a can- non last Feb, 26. They were frightened off. Investigators believe that the thieves purchased two anti-tank guns from an arms supplier in Alexandria, Va., had them shipped to a fictitious address in Plattsburgh, N.Y., then broke jinto the Plattsburgh express of- \fice at night and stole the guns. Police believe the cannons was arrested Monday) were taken to Canada first for night in Garden City, then taken) the attempted robbery in Que- to the FBI office in Manhattan/bec. Quebec Students Vote Aid For Draft-Dodgers In U.S. QUEBEC (CP) -- L'Union|not follow that of the United General des Etudiants du Que-|States, bec (the Quebec general dents union) Monday voted stu- In connection with the first injresolution, the students union favor of taking steps to helpjdecided the first step was to United States students whojget in touch with students in want to dodge the draft and/the U.S. interested in coming to avoid the war in Viet Nam. Delegates to the annual meet-|taken |Canada. to Steps would then be help these students ing in Syracuse was broken intoling of the union, which repre-jgain entrance to suitable edu- lthe weekend of Oct. 23-24 and thieves fired at least 30 rounds| from a 20-millimetre cannon to} {blast open the vault. The sents 75,000 Quebec students, voted Monday to ado this resolution The students also voted asking the Can to make i and another province|cational institutions, pt| The union is to get in touch with government and other tojagencies which would be_ in- ladopt a resolution advocating! volved in such a move, with the thieves made off withjan end to the Viet Nam warjaim of finding out how much + /$416,028 from the vault, includ- ing $160,774 in cash and #255,-idian government a-jit can do to help students who ts'would wish to take advantage own policy on this subject andiof the offer. old, and has children of school age. Kremlin Spy Who Solved Cuban Crisis NEW YORK (AP) -- News- week magazine Monday gave credit to a Russian spy with having assured President John 'F. Kennedy during the 1962 Cu- ban missile crisis that Soviet nuclear forces were not in a state of war readiness. The report cites the activities of Soviet Col. Oleg Penkovsky, executed by the Russians in 1963. Penkovsky's memoirs, be- ing edited for publication, are said to reveal that he passed Britain and the United States some 5,000 items of military, po- litical and economic intell- igence. Newsweek says in its current issue: "Penkovsky knew full well that eventually the Soviet se- curity apparatus would find him. But if the story that has been accepted in intelligence circles over the past few years is correct, he may at least have had the satisfaction of knowing that it was his greatest contri- bution to the West that led to his final downfall. | "Three days before John F. |Kennedy delivered his dramaic jultimatum to Khrushchev at the height of the Cuban missile cri- sis, the story goes, the late pre- sident asked his advisers how he could be sure he was not Bomb Threat False QUEBEC (CP)--Police car- ried out a two-hour search at the residence of Quebec's lieu- tenant-governor Monday follow- ing an anonymous phone call which said a bomb was set to go off there. The call said the bomb "will explode in an hour."' The search turned nothing up, but the pro- vincial police left men on guard at the residence. Meanwhile, Quebec City po- lice said they believe three bombs found near public build- ings during the weekend were either placed by pranksters or by terrorists looking for pub- licity. "Each of the bombs found was made with four sticks of dynamite, clockwork and a dry cell, but none had a detonator," a police spokesman said. 'In a bomb of the type found a deton- ator is all-important. Without a detonator it would not explode." Saturday, police found one bomb in front of an armory fol- lowing an.anonymous_phone-call from a man who said he was a member of Le Front de Lib- eration Quebecois, a_ terrorist touching off a nuclear war, |CHECK NEEDED "He was told that the only way to find out was to check with 'our most secret source in Moscow.' | "Do it,' said the president-- jand 32 hours later the answer jcame back: 'Soviet nuclear for- ces not in a state of war readi- ness.' "The 'secret source,' of course, was Penkovsky, and the message he sent probably cost him his life. Since there had been no time to follow the usual security procedures, he had ir- retrieveably betrayed himself to the secret police. He was ar- rested immediately,:and in May 1963, Penkovsky was cut down movement in favor of Quebec's secession from Canada through violence. Tales Of Faked Nazi Abduction TORONTO (CP)--Arthur Ber- linquette, 21, testified Monday he mussed Charles P. Thomp- son's clothes last June 19 to help convince police the 28- year-old man had been kid- napped by anti-Nazis. Thompson, self-styled minis- ter and Christian adviser to William Beattie, Canadian Nazi leader, has pleaded not guilty by a Soviet firing squad." to a charge of public mischief. LONDON (Reuters) today to let 40-foot it struggled toward coast The time gales Britain and dramas enacted as eral days of havoc. In the y ... CAPTAIN'S GAMBIT PAYS OFF Drama And Death In Face Of Gale 6,900-ton British freighter New- foundland, its cargo of vegeta- ble oil ablaze, changed course Atlantic waves wash over its hot deck as the Irish manoeuvre worked and the Newfoundland's captain cancelled his request for other ships to stand by for assis'sace. An RAF plane continued to cir- cle overhead to keep an eye on the vessel's progress, however. This was one of many mari- whipping the coasts of Northern Europe slackened gradually after sev- jaltic Sea, gales with 67-mile-an-hour gusts forced 10 Poles to abandon their 20-ton yacht southeast of Oelund Island when it was blown far off course, The British cargo ship Sun- jarv rescued 'them after pick- ing up a distress call. EMPRESS DELAYED The 25,585-ton Canadian Pa- cific liner Empress of England was still docked at Liverpool, 24 hours behind schedule. Passengers who would have joined the liner today at the Scottish port of Greenock were being transported to Liverpool from Glasgow by special train. A Canadian Pacific spokes- man said it was hoped the liner, with between 450 and 500 passengers aboard, would sail tonight for Montreal. On the Isle of Sylt, off the German North Sea coast, rag- ing seas broke through barriers and several houses were cut off. In southern Sweden two per- sons were killed south of Bo- raas when their car veered off the road in a storm and hit a tree. In West Germany there was a flood threat to towns and vil- lages along the north coast. The storm appeared to be creep- ing up the mouth of the Elbe River towards Hamburg-- where a 1962 flood took more than 300 lives, Monday night 45-foot waves pounded the North Sea report island of Heligoland, Islanders were kept indoors by 70-mile- an-hour winds. Along 'the Ger- man coast during the night the storm uprooted trees, smashed windows and blew off rooftiles. Winds were expected to whip up the next ebb tide to almost nine' -feet above normal along the Schleswig - Holstein coast, northeast of Hamburg. SEAMEN LOST No trace has been found of five seamen swept off the deck of the Norwegian frigate Ber- gen near the Irish coast by gale-force winds Monday as the ship struggled toward London- derry. The frigate, a sister ship and a submarine were taking part in anti-submarine exer- cises when the storm hit. Two persons were killed in Britain in accidents caused by high winds. In France, a 62- year-old man cycling near Dun- kerque was killed when he was blown into the path of a truck. Cross-channel ferries between France and England had to plow through heavy seas, but no cancellations were reported. rain flooded sections of south- western Sweden and brought a flood threat to low-lying areas of Denmark's west coast. In Belfast, Northern Ireland, the 34,000-ton liner Caronia was torn from forced into the harbor, where it damaged wharves and gang- y' In London, 10 persons waiting for a bus outside Victoria Sta- tion were injured by sheets of corrugated iron blown off the roof of a nearby hotel. Scandinavia, wind-driven its moorings and Diefenbaker By THE CANADIAN PRESS There has been a lot of talk about voter. apathy but you couldn't prove it by the capa- city crowds that turned out Monday night at the major po- litical rallies. Prime Minister Pearson drew 5,000 to Winnipeg Auditorium, Conservative Leader Diefenba- ker spoke to 2,000 in a Hamilton theatre and NDP Leader Doug- las had an audience of 2,300 in Regina Auditorium, Social Credit Leader Thomp- son spent Monday in his Red Deer, Alta., riding and will spend the rest of the week in Alberta and British Columbia ridings where he thinks his party has a chance of wifning in the Nov. 8 election. Both Mr. Pearson and Mr. Diefenbaker ran into heavy heckling but both gave back as good as they got and it didn't get out of hand. The Conservative chief was the only one of the night's speakers to produce a new promise. He said a government under him would start a par- liamentary investigation of re- ports about Communist intimi- dation of European immigrants living in Canada. "We will take a strong stand against Communism within or without this nation," he said, aiming his remarks at the steel city's large immigrant popula- tion. The prime minister pounded on his theme of majority gov- ernment, declaring that a mi- And Pearson Best Hecklers With Ease Mr. Diefenbaker told a capac» ity crowd in the 2,000-seat Pal- ace Theatre: "We will take a strong stand against commu- a or without this na- ion." He said' the time has come to set up a joint committee of the Senate and the House of Commons to ascertain if there is any subversion or infiltration of European immig: rants, A Diefenbaker aide said the call for a parliamentary investi- gation was prompted by reports that Croatians, Hungarians and other groups are getting propa- ganda in the mail oe port for Communist policies. Those with relatives in Europe have become concerned. In his address, Mr. Diefen- baker said that if elected, a Conservative government "will appoint a joint committee of the Senate and the House of Come mons to fully examine the rami- fications of communism within our midst." He added that a government formed by his party would con- tinue to press at the United Nae tions for self-determination for 100,000,000 people behind the Tron Curtain, The Conservative leader, be- ginning a final election foray into southwestern Ontario, was heckled almost from the mo ment he started to speak. Economy Keeps nority situation meant a_ veto for the Opposition and "I don't believe in the veto in the United Nations or in Canada." Mr. Pearson said a minority government had no. assurance of lasting more than a week or to insecurity, parliamen- tary confusion and more elec- tions. Mr. Douglas, meanwhile, was stressing his party's opposition to proposed new railway legis- lation that would lead to whole- sale abandonments of branch lines on the Prairies. HAMILTON (CP) John Diefenbaker promised Monday night that if the Conservatives are elected Nov. 8 he will set up a parliamentary 'investiga- tion of reports of Communist in- timidation of European immi- grants living in Canada. two. This situation would lead|t Its Rosy Color OTTAWA (CP) -- Continued buoyancy in the economy, at least in the near future, was indicated in two reports issued Monday by the bureau of statise ics, They said: : --Retail sales, up 5.4 per cent in the first half of this year over last, climbed seven 'per cent above year-earlier fig- ures in August. --Credit outstanding in nine lines of consumer and com. mercial financing at the end of July amounted to $6,181,- 000,000, up 18 per cent from a year earlier. These indicated that the con- sumer is spending more and. is willing to commit himself to pay in the future for even heav- ier expenditures, mainly on dure able goods. UNITED NATIONS (CP) program. Ambassador Paul $2,200,000 $7,300,000. Showbiz Gets Into over Canada's agreement and threatened to Chorale, which was proposed :Uevntangarnceyi guetta tte Ann Landers -- 11 City News -- 9 > Classified -- 14, 15, 16 Comics -- 18 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 17 Obits -- 17 Sports -- 6, 7, 8 Theatre -- 12 Whitby News -- 5 Women's -- 10, 11 Weother -- 2 Greater Oshawa Community Chest drive for funds has reached the $162,73$1-mark of its $306,300-target. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Canada Pledges $9.5 Million To UN --- Canada told the United Nations today that she will contribute a total of $9,500,000 for distribution in 1966 as part of a new UN development Tremblay, Canada's perma- nent representative to the UN, said the contribution, sub- ject to Parliamentary approval, represents an increase of 1965 total contribution of The Cold-War Act MOSCOW (AP) -- The United States today accused the Soviet. Union of breaking the U.S. - Soviet cultural retaliate. Soviet authorities turned down the American musical Hello, Dolly Sept. 2 and now have done the same with the Roger Wagner as a substitute. neice sata In THE TIMES Creek-Valley Pitch -- P. 9 Dog-Pound Controversy -- P. 5 Crushmen Win 3-0 -- P. 6 Now in its 17th day, the

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