Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Dec 1965, p. 1

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-Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, 'Sivilie, A; a. pager pe. Wee ayy MCRL t=-- Te. JRRb 2 ace ee "Whitby, Bow. Samanta and twee Claw lS in Ome tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94 -- NO, 297 10¢ Single S0e Per Week Home livered iG OSHAWA, ONTARI 0, , TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1965 Authorized as Second Class Mail Ottewa and for payment of Postage in Weather Report Sunny and seasonable. Wed- nesday- cloudy -with little tontoh Pre Change. wW High Wednesday, $5. Post Office rtment THIRTY PAGES MACHINE-GUNNED IN BACK Canadian Shot Dead By Cong SAIGON (Reuters)--A Dutch- born Canadian citizen was shot and killed by his Viet Cong kid- nappers e¢arly today during a gun battle in which U.S. infan- trymen rescued two American civilians and their South Vietna- mese driver. The dead man was Otto Schol- ten, 58, of Burnaby, B.C., a sub- urb of Vancouver. He was a member of a four-man survey party captured by Viet Cong guerrillas while working at 2 quarry 10 miles no theast of Saigon Monday. All worked for the RMK Corp., a U.S. construction com- pany. The two Americans rescued when a U.S. patrol stumbled on the Viet Cong kidnappers were identified as Henry M. Hudson, 52, of Menlo Park, Calif., and E. D. (Speed) Jones, 48, of FE] Centro, Calif. The fourth man was a 30-year-old South Vietna- mese driver. On their return to Saigon this morning, their clothes still spat- tered with mud and blood, Hud- son and Jones said they were captured just off the main high- way leading from Saigon to Bien Hoa air base. Their hands were bound with parachute cord and they were marched off into the jungle. The first they knew U.S. North Viet Rockets Russ, | Kremlin At Last Reveals MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Russia today admitted for the first time that it has supplied North Viet Nam with rockets, The defence ministry news- paper Red Star said "rockets and fighters made by Soviet people are guarding the skies of the Democratic Republic of Viet Nam." In an editorial calling for world support for the North Vietnamese against the United States, it said North Vietna- se troops had shot down Bhondreas of American vul- tures with Soviet-made anti-air- craft weapons." troops were about was when ar-| tillery and mortars opened up| in an ambush of the Viet Cong force. Both the guerrillas and their captives, their hands still tied, dived into ditches. At some time near the begin- ning of the action, one of the guerrillas turned a sub-ma- chine-gun on Scholton and. shot him in the back, Hudson said. He said he and Jones yelled} to the U.S. troops from the ditches: "'Cut down on the mor- tar fire. There are Americans out here." "An infantry lieutenant shouted out 'Are you kidding?'| and we yelled back 'Hell, no,'" he said. They had lain in the ditch) 7 with the guards om top of them} as the Americans and Viet Cong exchanged small arms fire and grenades. Then the Viet Cong pulled out as the Amer- icans started up with a bazocka. Scholton's body was found! | riddled. He had been the quarry manager. Neither Hudson nor Jones saw him shot but' said they were convinced his guard opened up with a "grease" gun, a type-ef sub-machine-gun, as soon as' the Americans be- |gan firing. | | Many bloody trails were found) lin the area but no Viet Cong |bodies. details of what weapons the So- viet Union has supplied to North Viet Nam. | | Soviet leaders have reiterated | from time to time that the Kremlin was supplying and would continue to supply North Viet Nam with necessary assist- ance. Tass, the Soviet news agency, said that Russia signed agree- ments with agg oe nor " day un losed ad- Duenal total assisiunce and credits to the Hanoi govern- ment as well as an exchange of commodities between the two The editorial gave no other US. Pilots Dodge Missiles To Hit Near SAIGON (AP) -- U.S. planes brought the air war on North Viet Nam closer to Haiphong in the last 24 hours. A spokesman said they dropped bombs and fired rock- eis only i2 miles from the coun- try's major port and paid a-re- turn call-on the Uong Bi power station, which supplies electric- ity to Haiphong and Hanoi. The North Vietnamese sent up several missiles against the U.S. Air Force and navy planes but they missed their mark, the countries. To Haiphong spokesman said. The American SHORTEST DAY Shortest Day greets short- est day -- a cute reminder from pretty two-year-old Barbara Day that this is the first day of winter. Today, with fewer daylight hours than any other day of the year, it'll be dark before you know it. Little Miss pilots spotted some MiG-17s over North Viet Nam, but the communist jets did not attack the U.S, planes. } Air force pilots made 52 as-| saults over the North, dropping 115 tons of 750-pound bombs and firing rockets and cannon as} |well. Three fighter ~ bombers | were shot down by ground fire, U.S. spokesmen reported. One 'of the pilots was rescued. Guerrillas skirmished with three different government mil- itia units four to six miles from south of Da Nang, using mortars and small arms. A U.S. military spokesman} said South Vietnamese troops | killed 27 Viet Cong in a search-| and - destroy operation nine | fimiles east of Quang Tri, 425 ; closed that the U.S. miles northeast of Saigon. In Washington, it was dis- command f in Viet Nam had been author- ized to allow. troops operating near the Cambodian and Lao-! tian borders to return fire from Communists across the ill-de- , fined frontiers. Although U.S. military offici + als have repeatedly contended y the Communists use Cambodia 4 as a sanctuary to launch at-| tacks on South Viet Nam, the ~ 'state department and the Pen- 4-TO-5 YEARS Miss Mary Ray French, 19, was-sentenced to.prisoii -for four to five years Monday for her part in the murder of .Alleen. Rowe, 15, Tuc- son. Miss Rowe's body still has not been found. Another teen-ager, John Saunders, will be-sentenced Thursdsy See story page 2. (AP). tagon have refused to say whether American forces had been given broader: latitude in fights along the borders. $18,500,000 Dope Cache | COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP)--U.S government officers seized a record 200 pounds of uncut} jheroin here Monday, an illicit {narcotics cache valued at an jestimated $18,500,000. | -Officers moved . quickly into this military base city and ar- jrested Herman Conder, a 35- year----old-warrant_officer, as they grabbed the drug, which jhad been smuggled into the |country in a home freezer. An official said it was the largest single seizure of heroin ever made in the United States. Five other persons, govern- inent officials announced in |New York, had been arrested , SHORTEST DAY Day took the opportunity of helping her mother out by changing the wall calendar. Needless to say, it was a long reach. Barbara is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Day, of 721 Stone st, w. --Oshawa Times Photo Varsity Lowers Entrance Needs s\real and provincial 'Song Becomes Dirge > In Fiery Death Of 12 YONKERS, N.Y. (AP) -- A music classroom, gay with hol- iday song, became. a death trap for nine children and three jish community centre in this |New York suburb. | The children ranged in age |trom seven to 11 and included MONTREAL (CP) -- Mont- police seized an estimated total of 5,000,000 Irish Sweepstakes 'tick- éts--valued at $17,000,000 -- in two raids on suburban Montreal homes Monday night. A man and a woman were arrested and were to be charged in court here today. - Also seized was $100,000 in cash and cheques. Police said the money was to have been sent to sweepstake operators in Ireland by the Montreal distrib- utors. ' Provincial police officials de- scribed the operation as "def- initely the largest lottery raid in the province of Quebec at least--and perhaps in all of Canada." "T think we have cracked the ring now. I doubt we will have any more trouble for a while," an investigating officer added. FOLLOWS STAKEOUT The arrests fpllowed @ month of investigations. The two homes raided were re- ported to have been watched for several days. The first raid was at Dollard des Ormeaux, near Montreal in- ternational airport, where police jarrested one man and seized several cartons of tickets. The five-man combined force then moved on to Lasalle, a mile south of Dollard des Or- meaux. They arrested a woman and seized thousands more tick- ets and the cheques and cash. Police said the 5,000,000 tick- mares runnings of the Irish Sweepstakes. One officer reported the tick- ets had recently arrived in Can- jada from "somewhere in Eu- rope--most probably Ireland." Also seized were lists of per- |sons suspécted of handling the | distribution and sale of the tick- jets. They said the man and woman will be charged with in- fringing Article 179 of the Crim- deals with lotteries. Monday night's raid was called "the largest ever' by police. 'FIX 0 CANADA? TOO BUSY' -- PM OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Minister Pearson says he has no intention of sitting down to rewrite the words of O Canada. At a press conference Monday, a reporter said he recalled that the prime minister had suggested the words of O Canada could be improved. 'T've been singing them for a long time,"' said Mr. Pearson, although he agreed the words were repetitious. "But I think I have enough on my hands with- out rewriting O Canada." inal Code of Canada. The artice| japparently fell dead faom |smoke and fumes. | At least nine persons were 'h| |jured, but only two were still in | |adults Monday night as.a sud-|three sets of brothers and sis-|hospita] today. | i\den flash of fire struck a Jew-iters. Firemen said the victims| One of the adult victims was| $17,000,000 WORTH 5 Million Sweeps Ducats ~ Result Of Montreal Raids |Lucille Sacks, who had come to |pick up her daughter, Sandra, after her music lessons. | Witnesses told police that |Mrs. Sacks brought her child to \safety but died after she re-en- jtered the building, apparently ltrying tosave her neghbors' |children. MAKES PREDICTION | "Whenever they find Mrs. Sacks, they find my _ chil- dren,"' said Mrs. Isaku Kono- shime, a neighbor and close friend of Mrs, Sacks in a nearby co-operative apartment house |known as Sunset Green, Later, police said the bodies of Mrs. Sacks, Richard Kono- shima, 10 and his sister Ki- miko, 7, were found huddled to- gether in the classroom on the top floor of the four-storey brick structure. At Sunset Green, tearful neighbors ripped a Santa Clause figure from the front of the building. From the lobby, they removed a menorah, the can- delbrum symbolic of Chanukah, the Jewish festival of lights. It was the third night of Cha- nukah when the fire broke out in the building which serves both Jewish and non-Jewish citizens as a social and cultural centre. STARTS IN AUDITORIUM Fire Chief Andrew Gerloch said it started in an auditoriam on the second floor. The audi- torium was being renovated and workmen had left about an hour before the fire broke out. "We haven't any idea what caused it,' he said. 'We are in- vestigating."" Many of the trapped children huddled coatless on top - floor ledges in 30-degree weather and waited for. firemen to rescue them. A witness said: "Some of them came out of a window and walked mour feet along a ledge to where the ae- rial ladder was." ets were for the February and lin Manhattan in connection with |the illicit drug. i TORONTO (CP) -- University; sA. R. Kilgour, University. of| ; of Toronto entrance ments for grade 13 students will] said te thought the changes) be reduced effective in Septem-| would mean Grade 13 '"'will be ber, 1967, the university an-| more contemplative, with more| nounced today. study in depth rather than me-' Claude T. Bissell, president of| Morizing a lot of information for. The University of Toronto sen-} ate said in approving the en-| trance requirement change that "the required general program the university, said that under} Use in answering the exam pa- the new rules, students will re-| Pers. | quire only four subjects and! Toronto school trustee Barry | seven credits instead of the pre-| Coutts, a professor of business | 'its Sibi tcl te cb cre-| administration, said the change | Other universities will prob-| 'S not a lowering of entrance ably make similar changes. requirements but a step to en-} Trent University in Peterbor-| able students to study their spe-|f ough today announced its en-| cjalty in depth, Z trance requirements would be -------- ~ changed to seven credits in four subjects effective in 1967, and| . * | Dr. Murray G, Ross of ver Kosygin Willi University in. Toronto said "our! | admission requirements are be- ing changed. es 8 "Most Ontario universities are ta e isits planning changes,"' he said. | , A spokesman for Queen's Uni- j versity in Kingston said the mat-| = a ter of changes is still under | it ] son study at Queen's. Any announce-! | The changes are in line with | ee of Britain and the So-| recommendations made by the Atexel Kobbiie te Wilson and Grade 13 study committee which vorted to mae i td oy died recommended that Grade 13 stu- i visit bs apie sock dents take four subjects--two at} " Be Sve 7 OBS year. | a general;level and two in| Qualified diplomats reported greater depth at an advanced|@trangements have been made level. jfor Wilson to travel to Mostow Feb. 21 for a stay of at least REQUIRE BROAD FIELD four days. However, the entrance re- Kosygin, without committing quirements call fora broad field) himself to a precise date, wad _ be covered in Grades 11 and! said to have undertaken in prin- 12 ciple to come to Britain some time next fall. Ever since assuming the pre-|§ miership in October, 1964, Wil- in Grades 11 and 12 will be met|*0™ has-been trying to arrange by a program of English, for- this exchange of visits. eign languages, social studies) AN agreement in principle to and mathematics or science." |d0-s0 was reache-dwith Kosy- However, for admission in/8in early this year. 1967-68 and 1968-69, the univer-| However, Kosygin later sity will make allowance for stu-|dropped the idea of coming to dents who do not have the Grade| Britain during the spring be 11-12 requirements because of}cause of acute differences with the programs they pursued in| the British over the Viet ne 2904-00 auu avev-v. ae require-| Toronto director of admissions,| Za # and standing on a tilted lad- der, was intended to satir- ize people who string lights around their homes without imagination. A passerby, however, thought it was someone who had been elec- Harry Weston of Toronto's suburban Scarborough looks up at a dummy in front of his home that brought more response than he had intend- ed. The dummy, holding a string of Christmas lights YEH, THAT'S SOME JOKE, HARRY trocuted and before soon Harny's home. was besieged by police, firemen, an am- bulance and a hydro emer- gency crew. Harry decided to take his dummy down. ~CP Wirephoto OIL BOOTLEGGERS BEWARE -- WILSON Wilson Won Strong Allies In International Embargo LONDON (AP)--Although a|"seepage and leakage." Asked powerful international embargo! whether a naval blockade would is building up against rebel|be clamped on the ports Rhodesia, Prime Minister Wil-|of Portuguese Mozambique, json has warned that Britain|through which Rhodesia norm- will move swiftly to plug "any/ally gets its oil supplies, the seepage or leakage" through|prime minister said there were oil bootleggers. |many other measures which Wilson told the House of Com-/ could be tried first, He did not jmons Monday after his return | |from talks with President John-} son in Washington and Prime | Minister Pearson in Ottawa that he had. been assured of full United States backing for the oil embargo and France and Italy "are co-operating fully" in halting the flow of oil to Rhodesia. Wilson said it had been ur- gent to impose the oil ban be- cause of "the immeasurable dangers of outside interven- tion," and because of "the al- most irresistible pressures which are building up for still | gtaver and more far-reaching measures in the United Na-| tions." Inatelevision interview later, Wilson said one of the dangers of foreign intervention was that "there are some Afri- can countries who would like to bring in the red army without blue (United Nations) berets." He said British "determina- tion and resolution" in dealing with the Rhodesian issue was preventing this. HE'S OPTIMISTIC In the Commons debate, Wil- son said he believes the em- bargo will prove effective in. bringing Prime Minister Ian Smith's white-minority govern- ment to its knees because of the assurances so far received. But he added '"'there are still: im- portant oil supplying countries from whom we have not had a final answer--and The Nether- lands is obviously very import- ant here." Earlier government sources Said assurances of support for) the oil embargo also have been received from Belgium, Japan and The Netherlands in addition to those from the United States) France and Italy. Wilson apparently announced in the House only those coun- tries which have given a for- mal commitment to support the embargo. Wilson said Britain will move jin swiftly if there is any "'seep- jage or leakage bye ane ar twa |spivs (gangsters)--and I gather it is possible for spivs to in- vade the oil trade--for the pur- : |pose of defeating laws that have been made." Wilson refused to reveal what define them. AIRLIFT STARTS Wilson said that an oil airlift had begun Sunday to land- locked Zambia as soon as neighboring Rhodesia cut off the flow. But he said the bottle- neck was the capacity of air- fields in Zambia, not the num- ber of planes available. The defence ministry an- nounced that a special airlift headquarters -- including air traffic control personnel, signal men and plane servicing staffs --is being flown out to. Zambia today by the RAF to speed the. turn-around of the fleet of trans- port planes. Canada Aids Zambia 'Lift' OTTAWA (CP) -- Four Cana- dian planes will join the airlift that will pour supplies into Zambia to offset her broken supply lines from ef Prime Minister Pearson an- nounced Monday that the four- engine Hercules transport planes will join the airlift now being organized by Britain and the United States to help re lease the economic squeeze be ing felt by Zambia, a next-door neighbor to Rhodesia. Zambia got most of her ol) supplies from Rhodesia, before Ian Smith's government cut-off the shipments, Britain has al- ready begun flying in diese] fuel to keep the Zambian mines operating. Mr. Pearson said the Cana- dian planes would be ready te go in three or four days, and the initial arrangements are be ing made for a one-month par- ticipation. He hoped it would not be necessary to extend this, Meanwhile, Canada _ has placed an embargo on the ship ment of Canadian oil to Rhode- sia--none has ever been shipped --as economic sanctions against the country's break - away re gime continue te tighten..Mr, Pearson told a post - cabinet press conference that the move will prevent any trans - ship- || |. In THE TIMES today... ments of oil through Canada to Rhodesia. measures the government was prepared to take to halt the yuan rumarenrein Mcrae NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 22 Killed As Freight, Passenger Crash ALGUERIRAO, Portugal (AP) An express train carrying Christmas shoppers and a freight train crashed head-on near this Lisbon suburb Monday night and at least 22 persons were killed. More than 30 persons were injured. Government authorities said the freight was on the wrong track. Moors-Murders Soceeal Go To Trial HYDE, England (AP) -- A 27-year-old man and his girl friend were committed Monday to stand trial charged with Britain's gruesome Moorlands murders. Ian Brady and Myra Hindley, 23, were committed to appear at Cardiff, Wales, at the next sessions opening Jan. 11. Mother, 3 Sons Trapped, Die In Flames LOWELL, Mass. (AP) A mother and her three sons trapped by flames, died in a general alarm fire that raged through two tenement houses Monday night. Firemen said 50. to 60 others fled the blaze safely into 15-degree temperature. About six persons were rescued from ladders and others led from the buildings by fire- men. enn Ton Council Learns Of 'High Building Cost -- P. 13 High School Addition Approval Delayed -- P. 5 Canada Finally Tops Russia 6-1 -- P. 8 Obits -- 27 Sports -- 8, 9, 10,11 Theatre -- 22 Whitby News -- 5, 6 Womens -- 14, 15, 16 Weather -- 2 SANNA Ann Landers -- 14 City News -- T3- Classified -- 24, 25, 26 Comics -- 28 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 27 ~~~

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