2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, August 6, 1964 my AB BN FSi ice Bikey, Mi PRG INTERPRETING THE NEWS Vietnamese Crisis Biggest Since Cuba By .CARMAN CUMMING gy cacallydp 1962 _ crisis, Why The question is made up of} The question is all the more many smaller questions andipuzzling since Communists none of them is answerable, For example: new Vietnamese crisis) Assuming the truth of U.S. has brought the world closer to|charges of unprovoked attacks the brink of major East-West)in international waters, why did war. than it has been since the|the little North Vietnamese navy decide to take on the U.S. 7th Fleet. PM, Dief Defend Action Against NDP Criticism OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- ister Pearson, External Afafirs Minister Martin and Opposition Leader Diefenbaker defendec the United States' action in North Viet Nam against criti- cism in the Commons Wednes- day by NDP Leader Douglas. Mr. Douglas said U.S. action against naval installations on shore was tantamount to a dec- Jaration of war. He said Can- ada should not support any ac- tion buttressing what he termed the discredited regime in South Viet Nam. Mr. Diefenbaker, opening the question period, said he realized the responsibility for preserving peace rests with the United States and referred to North Viet Nam's "apparently unpro- voked attack" as completely in- excusable. Mr. Martin said State Secre- tary Dean Rusk of the United States informed Prime Minister Pearson Tuesday night of the; | I North Vietnamese attack onjregime in South Viet Nam un-|wanting to keep tended to take action to deter further attacks. Mr. Douglas asked 'whether the U.S. had made clear in its consultations with Canada that there is a distinction between U.S. responding to gunboat at- tacks, and U.S. attacks on shore naval installations, "which seem tantamount to a declara- tion of war." USED GENERAL TERMS Mr, Pearson said there had been no consultation, but the U.S. had merely informed Can- ada as a member of the inter- national] truce commission in In- dochina. "The action taken by the United States was a reaction to an attack made on the high seas against U.S,' ships," Mr. Pearson added, Mr. Douglas said Canada should make it clear "we are not prepared to support" action by the U.S. on bases designed to support the perpetuation of a} in their strike-and-run ground attacks in the South Vietnamese civil war. military logic, the Communists would be expected to keep on with their winning formula while the U.S. might be ex- pected to try new tactics to get the South Vietnamese govern- ment forces back on the offen- sive, In short, does either side really want to escalate the Viet- namese war? The U.S. insists it does not, although it acted even before the present crisis to add 5,000 men to the 16,000 Americans already "advising" South Viet- namese government troops. The North Vietnamese also have no apparent reason for wanting to broaden the crisis into a Korean-type war. The biggest question of all, of course, is whether Communist China is prepared to back up its threats and batter its way into another Korea. As usual Peking's thinking is better equipped now to take on that kind of a war than it was 14 years ago. It has often de- rided the U.S. as a "paper tiger." This could be the time when it will decide to try to prove its point. Also looming in the back- ground is the question of whether or not the Soviet Union will involve itself in the crisis. Lately it has shown signs of itself aloof US. ships and that the U.S. in-jrepresentative of the people. |from the Southeast Asian en- 16 Million People Ruled By Ruthless Red Leader By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS North Viet Nam is a Commu- nist-ruled land of mountains, deltas and sandstone plateaus covering more than 55,000 square miles in the northeast portion of the Indochinese pen- insul a. Its 16,000,000 people are ruled by Ho Chi Minh, one of the most skilled and ruthless of the world's Communist leaders. He led the successful fight to end French rule over Indochina. From forested, 10,000 - foot mountain ranges, the Red River emerges to water the northern rice paddies. Blessed with still- underdeveloped mineral re- sources, the country has a rich potential for industrialization. But North Viet Nam is re- ported caught in the grip of an economic depression with black marketing, corruption, food shortages, unemployment and low wages. Rice is rationed and the rice crop -- heavily damaged by drought and storms--is said to have dropped in 1963 to less than 4,000,000 tons compared to 4,700,000 in 1962. Even under| the French, North Viet Nam--} known then as Tonkin--could| not grow enough rice for its) people. |ENDS FRENCH RULE | North Viet Nam and its pro-| Western southern counterpart were born in 1954 after Ho's forces crushed the Fench co- lonial armies at Dien Bien Phu, ending a seven-year war. There is no accurate informa- tion available on the size of North Viet Nam's military. South Vietnamese sources say there may be as many as 500,- 000 men in the army, but U.S. intelligence sources place the total at around 250,000. North Viet Nam's tiny navy includes 16 motor torpedo boats, all designed and most of them built in the Soviet Union. North Viet Nam also received from the Soviets in 1961, a dozen 50-ton, 42-knot aluminum hulled boats, all constructed and equipped in Russia. tanglements. é In the fina] analysis, it prob- ably will be Communist China that decides whether the crisis} will lapse back into a muddy war of attrition or blaze into a spreading and disastrous con- flict. Three Powers Support Peace WASHINGTON (AP) -- The United States, Britain and the Soviet Union jointly declared Wednesday their. intent to do everything possible to solve re- maining international problems through negotiations. The unusual three ~ power statement was issued as an an- niversary declaration on the limited nuclear test ban treaty. The three countries were the original signers a year ago. Hailing the treaty as strength ening peace and restricting the arms race, the three nations noted that more than 100 coun- tries have since signed the pact. And further limited steps to re- duce atomic hazards, such as the United Nations space weap- ons ban and the big power uranium cut-back, have been have been so.clearly successful From the point of view of | THINKING AN ENIGMA an enigma. But it certainly is) en ti Bs A Me This seagull, an archer's ar- row piercing the lower part of its body, was seen on a WOUNDED SEAGULL Vancouver beach, Apparently not seriously injured, the bird flew off when rescuers at- tempted to extract the arrow. --(CP Wirephoto) Coroner Says Woman Killed By Head Blow ANSONVILLE, Ont. (CP)--A 74-year-old woman, whose body was found early Wednesday out- side the burned ruins of her home near here, was killed by a blow that fractured her skull, Iroquois FallsCoroner Chester Pollock said Wednesday night. The body of Alexandra Na- choneshnuk was found by fire- men in the yard outside her) home. The body of her husband] Paul, 73, was found in the de- stroyed home. The couple's daughter, Anne, 23, escaped uninjured, The coroner said Mrs. Na- choneshnuk had received sev- eral blows on her head and} body, including one that frac- tured her skull, She also had burns to her legs and body. He said an inquest will be held. The couple's daughter told po- lice she woke about 5:30 a.m.|, and found the house full of smoke. She said she heard her mother and father arguing in their nearby bedroom. and she shouted to them before running outside. Crown attorney S, A. Cald- bick of Timmins, 42 miles west of here, said Wednesday night "we may never know exactly what happened. The daughter left home to go and get help after the fire broke out. PROSTITUTE, 73 SENT TO JAIL VANCOUVER (CP)--Vio- lent Metcalfe, 73, a house- wife, today was given-a six- month jail term for being a common prostitute. she pleaded guilty. "There seems no hope of rehabilitating you," said magistrate James Bartman. taken. ARCTIC ACTIVITY -- PART 3 Physicist Studies Glaciers By ALLEN SACKMANN MOULD BAY, N.W.T. (CP)-- Camping outdoors may appeal) to some people but it's hard) work for a Scottish-born physi-| cist on a wind-swept glacier in| the heart of the Arctic. Dr. W. S. B. Paterson is studying ice formations on a mountain about 2,000 miles north of Edmonton in hopes of learning something of the physi- jment's Polar Continental Shelf |cal properties of the region 200! The glacier is on Meighen Is- to 300 years ago, His camp is about 144 miles from the site selected for the research being carried out as part of the federal govern- | Project. Each day Dr. Paterson and |his three assistants don skis and climb the glacier, hauling their equipment by hand. edt may. help us determine SCIENTIST TAKES SOUNDINGS e land and is about seven miles long, three miles wide and 450 feet thick. : Using a new thermal electric dril which melts its way through the ice, Dr. Paterson removes an intact core from the hollow bit. The core of ice, in five-foot sections, is shipped to Ottawa for study during the winter months, "Most measurements in the past have been done on the sur- face but more can be learned going down into the glacier itgelf,"" he says. the age of the ice cap, when it was most active and part of the history of the island itself." Other scientists, American and Russian, have drilled through ice caps in Greenland and the Antarctic but this is the first project in the Canadian north. In the hole through the cap, Dr. Paterson takes temperature checks which, he says, may tell how the climate has varied in the region over the last 200 years. | He is also checking whether glaciers on Meighen Island are building up or melting. This is done by driving stakes into the ice and putting a mark 'at the surface, then checking the marks the following year. In four of the five years the Meighen ice cap has been tested, it has been found to have diminished. Dr. Paterson works with other Canadian and American scien- tists doing aerial photography of the many ice caps in the Arctic. Pictures will be com- pared with those taken five to 10 years from now to determine changes in the glaciers. DRIFTED IN OCEAN On Brock Island, another part of the Polar Continental Shelf Project is being carried on by Dr. Hans Weber and his associ- ates, They are doing gravity and hydrological surveys that may give a clue to when and | jis Tony Overton, He was. asleep jin his sleeping bag when a spring months. Dr. Weber and his crew were just getting settled in their ocean camp this year when the ice began break- ing up. They drifted more than three miles before an aircraft plucked them from their frozerf raft. One reason the Arctic was chosen for the gravity test is "the unique possibility of doing readings from the ice which provides a reasonably stable platform." With sensitive instruments, the gravitational pull is meas- ured, It varies, depending on the thickness of the earth's crust and its components, The study also. gives some indica- tion of minerals that may be under the ocean, In the hydrologica) research, Ross Douglas uses a small in- strument that sends a sound wave through the ice to the ocean floor. The length of time it takes the echo to bounce back, combined with knowledge of the speed of sound in water, tells him how deep the ocean is: in a specific place. On the edge of the polar shelf --the land stretching out under the ocean for as much as 100 miles--the water is about 1,500 feet deep, it has been found. Beyond the shelf it drops to 13,- 000 feet. Findings of these two studies are correlated with the results of seismic studies made across the Arctic ice. Crews set off sub- surface blasts of dynamite which are recorded as listening posts located on various islands, The seismic crews move con- satntly and have been known to sleep under the Arctic sky with- out a tent. But one man who sets up his tent regularly now polar bear grabbed him by the arm and began dragging him away. A companion awoke in time and shot it. The experience led Mr. Over- ton to. design an Early Bear Warning System -- a battery- how oceans were formed. Their work takes them out on the ocean ice where conditions @an be hazardous during the charged wire that extends jaround his tent. A slight pres- sure against it sets off a Pro - Western quarters throughout the world have praised the United States for its stand in the Viet Nam crisis, but some expressed ap- prehension. Communist China, declaring that the U.S. attack on North Viet Nam coastal bases went "over the brink of war," said in an official statement broad- cast by Peking radio that the Chinese "will absolutely not sit idly by without lending a help- ing hand' to their North Viet Nam ally. Pro-West Nations Praise U. S. Stand nist aggression here and any- where else in the world." The Manila Bulletin said the United States "deserves recog- nition for showing firmness tempered by restraint in the face of provocaitve action." Australian External Affairs Minister Paul Hasluck said his government believes the Amer- ican action was completely jus- tified. Australian newspapers also supported the move and hailed President Johnson for his stand. But the Jakarta newspaper d i Observer said the The strong ¢ tion from Peking added to the ten- sion, concern and alarm that had mounted around the world in the wake of the attack that the United States said was in retaliation for attacks on two different days by North Viet Nam PT boats on U.S. destroy- rs. Red China said armed provo- cations against North Viet Nam must stop. "Otherwise the U.S. govern- ment must be held responsible for all grave consequences aris- ing therefrom," it added. Red China thus added its con- demnation to earlier warnings from the Soviet Union. But there also was praise for the U.S. move. Prime Mintster Douglas- Home of Britain, returning from a vacation in Scotland, told reporters that the U.S. "has the perfect right to retal- iate' against "unprovoked ag- gression" in international wa- ters. The Malaysian government condemned North Vietnamese naval attacks on U.S. warships as "deliberate . provoca- tion." It noted, however, that U.S. retaliation carried the "risk of escalation of the pres- ent conflict into full-scale war." South Korean _ President Chung Hee Park sent a mes- sage to the White House that he and the South Korean people "welcome and support" Presi- dent Johnson's "resolute reac- tion' to the North Vietnamese attacks. PRAISES STAND Philippine Vice - President Emmanuel Pelaez said the U.S. action in Tonkin Gulf repre- sented "the kind of firmness that can rally the people of Southeast Asia against Commu- United States should stop send- ing warships into Tonkin Gulf. "In time of high tension inci- dents can be lightly touched off for the slightest reason," it said. Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri called an emergency meeting of India's cabinet Wed- nesday after receiving a mes- sage from Johnson about the bombing. DISTURBS INDIA } A spokesman for the external affairs ministry said India is "deeply disturbed" by events. Indian newspapers took vary- ing views of the situation. The Statesman said ""Commu- nist forces are out to provoke the United States into rashness. "Thene could be mo surer way of precipitating the carrying of war into North Viet Nam than attacks on American navel ves- sels in the open sea." But the Times of India said the Tonkin Gulf incidents could not have occurred except for the presence of U.S. warships. "The first fruits of the pres- ence of the U.S. 7th Fleet in Southeast Asia are a rapid and dangerous increase of tension," it said. In Moscow, the Russian gov- ernment warned that United States attacks on North Viet Nam could lead to a wide- spread armed conflict with "dangerous consequences." The Soviet comment came in an "authorized" statement from the official news agency Tass, broadcast on Moscow radio after a day of official silence on the crisis. West German officials ex- pressed support for the U.S. moves, but expressed hope that Ah eh i enn en Publish TORONTO (CP) -- Printers from the International Typogra- phical Union (CLC) were in- vited back to work individually Wednesday by publishers of Toronto's three daily newyspa- pers. Don Purdy, a spokesman for the publishers, said letters from the publishers to the print- erg mailed Wednesday "contain no threats and no promises." Basically, he said, the letters are an inviattion for the idle ITU members, who stopped working July 9, to return to ers Brooke, said the crossing of the lawful ITU 'picket line is dis- tasteful and often leads to last- ing bitterness. In an open letter: to the publishers, the pressmen released a -motion passed at a special meeting July 31 which said it was becoming "increas- ingly difficult' to persuade the membership to continue to cross picket lines. In another development Wed- nesday, New Democratic Party members of the ITU demanded the resignation of Douglas Fisher as deputy leader of the party in the Commons. Invite -- Printers To Work _In the fourth issue of the ITU's tabloid newspaper, the NDP members criticized Mr. Fisher for crossing the union's picket line at The Telegram,. where he writes a column of political comment. ; Mr. Fisher is a member of: the newspaper guild. The guild' contract with The Telegram al- lows its members to respect' ITU picket lines and 14 mem- bers at that paper have taken advantage of, the clause. Guild' members at the other two pa- pers are required to report for work. work. Mr. 'Purdy is also industiral relations direttor for The Star, one of the newspapers affected by the walkout which the union claims is a lockout. The papers --The Star and The Telegram, evening papers, and The Globe and Mail, a morning paper-- have continued to publish with non-union personnel doing com- posing room work. Negotaitions between the ITU and the publishers collapsed Tuesday. | Meanwhile, the Toronto branch of the American News- paper Guilq (CLC) and Local of the International Printing Pressmen's Union (CLC) issue statements expressing concern at the present state of negotia- tions, The guild executive com- mittee voted Wednesday night to call a membership meeting Tuesday to ratify a motion which asks the guild to initiate further mediation efforts. SEND OPEN LETTER The pressmen's statement, from local President Ernest Home Backs U.S. Attack LONDON (CP) -- British Prime Minister Douglas-Home today called the North Vietna- mese assault on American war- ships unprovoked aggression an saiq the United States was right to retaliate. The prime minister cut short a Scottish vacation to return to London for talks on the crisis. He told reporters at Euston station: 'This was an unprovoked ag- gression on United States war- ships in international waters. Therefore the United States has the perfect right to retaliate, and it is for the United Staes o decide what form the retali- CHATHAM (CP)--A motion to drop eight counts of contribut- ing to juvenile delinquency against Rev. R. D. Horsburgh, 45, of Chatham, was denied Wednesday by juvenile court Judge W. H. Fox of London, Ont. Judge Fox, in dismissing the, four-part motion by defence lawyer C. E. Perkins, con- tended that information on the charges was valid. He said it was. not necessary for Crown Attorney S. A. Blake Ward -to provide the defence with any further particulars than are set out in the information. The information, placed 10 days ago, replaced earlier Charges against the Chatham United Church minister which were dismissed by Judge Fox July 21. The judge had said the earlier information was not ex- pressed in terms sufficient to give Mr. Horsburgh notice of the offences, or to allow him to prepare a defence. Mr. Perkins contended in his application for dismissal Wed- nesday that the charges are not specific enough as to dates, and that as a result the defence could not be adequately pre- pared, Mr. Ward said he could not see how the dates could be of any help to the defence. SEVENTH APPEARANCE Wednesday's court appear- ance was the seventh for Mr. Horsburgh since his arrest June The information alleges that Mr. Horsburgh contributed to juvenile delinquency between July, 1963, and June, 1964, by ation takes." providing a place for, permit- WEATHER FORECAST Warmer May Be TORONTO (CP) Marine forecasts issued by the Toronto weather office at 8:30 a.m., valid until 11 a.m. Friday: Lake Superior: Winds south to southeast 15 to 25 knots, shifting this afternoon and this evening to southwesterly 15 to 25 knots and to north to north- west 10 to 20 knots tonight, scat- tered thundersqualls ending overnight, partly cloudy Friday. Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: Winds light easterly, becoming south to southeast 15 to 25 knots this afternoon, fair today; scat- tered thundersqualls over north- the Viet Nam situation could be 'normalized' and peace quickly restored. | H. W. Foster, HALIFAX (CP) -- Maj.-Gen. H. W. Foster, 62, commander of the 4th Canadian Division in the Second World War, died in hospital here early today. He had a brilliant career in the Canadian Army. His decor- ations included the CBE, DSO, American Legion of Merit, United States Silver Star, Of- ficier de la Legion d'Honneur and Croix de Guerre avec Palme. He was appointed brigade major at the beginning of the CBC Costs Increase OTTAWA (CP) -- Grave con- cern was expressed Wednesday by the Commons public ac- counts committee over the cost of proposed expenditures on new CBC facilities in Toronto and Montreal, The committee, in its fifth re- port to the Commons, said that the publicly-owned corporation estimated in March, 1963, that the cost of the Montreal and Toronto facilities would be $83,- 000,000. : 'However, CBC President J. Alphonse _ Ouimet told the committee early last month that this figure had been increased to $105,000,000. Since that time the corporation in its annual re- port for 1963-64 had boosted its estimate of the future cost of consolidation of facilities in the buzzer. two cities to $128,000,000, Division Commander Dies 4th Canadian Second World War and went overseas with the first contin- gent. In 1941 he was promoted lieutenant-colonel in command ern portions tonight and over whole lake on Friday. Lake Erie: Winds light east- erly, becoming south to south- east 10 to 20 knots this evening, fair. Lake Ontario: Winds light northeasterly, becoming south night, fair. Official: forecasts issued by the Toronto weather office at 5:30' a.m.: Synopsis: Considerable cloudi- ness accompanied by scattered to southeast 10 to 20 knots to- E Friday Showers warmer today with scattered showers and _ thundershowers. Friday sunny with cloudy pe- riods and cooler. Winds south- erly 10 to 20 today, westerly 15 to 25 Friday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Friday Windsor ..00000008 St. Thomas London ..... Kitchener .... Mount Forest..... Wingham Hamilton St. Catharines. TOTOTLG. 'cresseceee Peterborough ... Kingston ...+sse00 Trenton .scccceeee Killaloe ..sss00+ Muskoka .. North Bay. Sudbury .scoccesss ATItON secsseeese Sault Ste. Marie.. seeevece Motion To Drop Charges Against Minister, Denied ting or encouraging sexual re- lations between juveniles and other persons. The juveniles were members of a youth group formed by Mr. Horsburgh following his arrival here from Waterloo four years ago. The group, Youth Anony- mous, was dedicated to helping young persons who came into conflict with the law. No plea was entered at the termination of Wednes day's court session and Mr. Hors- burgh was remanded to Aug. 12 with personal bond bail of $1,- 000. to continue. U.K. Papers - Apologize To Boothby LONDON (CP)--The owners of the daily and Sunday Mirror. said Wednesday night they have paid £40,000 ($120,000) and. made a public apology to Lord, Boothby, who last week wrote. to the London Times accusing the two newspapers of being the source of "sinister rumors" that he had a homosexual relation-. ship with an underworld thug. ° "T am satisfied that any im-. putation of improper nature against Lord Boothby is com-, pletely unjustified," a statement from International Publishing. Corporation, owners of they newspapers said. It was signed. by Cecil King, IPC's chairman, The apology was in the form of a main front-page story in today's Daily Mirror under the headline: Lord by--an un- qualified apolugy. The statement said Lord' Boothby would be patd £40,000 compensation and IPC would Pay any of his legal costs. The 64-year-old peer earlier in» the evening announced "a set-: tlement" had been reached be- tween him and the publishers, Boothby is a widely-known television performer and. com-: mentator. His letter and Wednesday; night's settlement followed pub-- lication of stories in the Sunday: Mirror of July 12 and 19, about: The Peer and the Gangster, the Picture We Must Not Publish, and alleging the police had or-: |dered an investigation into; hori of extortion and black: mail. . MANY MISTLETOES There are some 1,300 differ- ent species of mistletoes found" throughout the world; all are parasitic and eventually destroy their adopted tree. ' Pay No More Than 4% -- When -- Selling Your Property Real Estate 4 Broker '0, 'Y, Sales M Day or Night--728-4285 | Kapuskasing ...... showers will cover Northern On- tario most of today. It will spread into central Ontario later in the day and into south- ern Ontario Friday. Today will be warmer through the north- ern and central portions of the province, Southern Ontario will of a mechanized cavalry regi- ment and later assumed com- mand of the 7th Infantry Bri- gae with the rank of brigadier. The 7th was the first Alied formation to reach its objective after the Normandy landing. COSENS & MARTIN Insurance 67 King St. E., Oshawa 728.7515: ti Ee Insurance i Res: 725-2802 of 725-7413 | PAUL RISTOW LTD. 3 REALTOR 728-9474 187 King St. Eost LEADS IN KISKA In the spring of 1943 he was recalled to Canada to lead the Canadians in the Kiska cam- paign. As a result of his serv- ices in this operation he re- ceive the American Legion of Merit from the U.S. govern- ment. He later returned to Brit- ain to command the 7th Bri- gade and in 1944 was appointed commander of the 4th Armored Division in France as major- general. Later that year he assumed command of the 1st Canadian Infantry Division in Italy, Gen. Foster was president of the military court in 1945-46 which tried Canada's only war criminal, the late German SS Maj.-Gen, Kurt Meyer. He sentenced Meyer to death, but a review coudt reduced it to life imprisonment. Meyer served time at the Dorchester, N.B., penitentiary and a Ger- likely have to wait until Friday for any significant warming. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, southern Georgian Bay, Niagara, Lake Ontario, Haliburton regions, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto, Kil- Jaloe: Sunny and cool today. Friday variable cloudiness 'and warmer with a few scattered showers. and thundershowers. Winds light today, westerly 15 to 25. Friday. Southern White River, Timag- ami, Algoma, northern Geor- gian Bay regions, North Bay, Sudbury: Sunny and a little warmer, becoming cloudy this afternoon. Scattered thunder- showers late today, tonight and early Friday. Variable cloudi- ness and a little cooler Friday. Winds light, becoming southerly 15 to 25 this afternoon and west- erly 15 to 25 Friday. OSHAWA SHO OPEN EVE Northern White River, Coch- rane, western James Bay re- gions: Variable cloudiness and man prison, from which he was freed. COMMANDED IN EAST Gen. Foster became com- maning officer of the army's Eastern Command headquar-| NEED A NEW... OIL FURNACE? Call PERRY ters in Halifax in 1946 and held) the post until 1950. | FLOWERS | Day or night 723-3443 ' --_ PPING CENTRE FARMERS MARKET RY FRIDAY NOON UNTIL 9 P.M. FRUIT -- VEGETABLES -- PLANTS FRESH EGGS CENTRE