The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres. VOL. 94--No. 56 We vee SOc Per i Rite ° Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, MARGH-8,-1965-- he Oshawa Sines Weather Report ~ Some light snow, snowflurries tonight , and Tuesday. Low Tuesday 35. Guthorteed os Second Sou M Malt. Fost Office pepcriment Postage tonight 28. High EIGHTEEN PAGES 4] Weekend Raids Fail Nab Rivard MONTREAL (CP)--A power- ful combined police squad seized marijuana, liquor, lottery tickets and a radio transmitter in 41 weekend raids aimed at finding Lucien Rivard. The leaders of the 100-man RCMP, provincial and Mont- real police squad did not dis- close whether they found even a trace of the suspected nar- cotics racketeer. The raids which started early Saturday and lasted through much of the day. con- centrated on the Montreal area and the Laurentians north of the city. The combined squad was not in operation Sunday. "By Monday, -we'll have hit known criminal haunts so hard he'll have to come out," one in- vestigating officer said before raids, Quebec government vard is still here. LIFE IN DANGER? Quebec authorities have also considered whether he is a suf- sources | in Montreal are convinced Ri-| ficiently important figure to be} er of his life from ele-| ts 'of the underworld, to} prevent him from answering] questions if recaptured. Rivard, a 49-year-old resort| operator, and Andre Durocher, 28, escaped last Tuesday night} from the Bordeaux jail. in The police squad raide dl cafes, nightclubs, motels and private homes vard's modest two-storey brick| residence in north-end ogg real. Mrs. Rivard was alone in| the house when police it for possible evidence. Police arrested six persons; including a friend of Rivard's, Willy Lamy, who put up $17,000 Pe Rivard's unsuccessful bid for ail. A radio receiver and trans-/ mitter, believed to be tuned in to police frequencies, was also| seized. A quantity of marijuana was found in a northeast Mont- real apartment and two persons were arrested. Police also searched Rivard's Plage Ideale resort just north of Montreal in their most mas- sive raid. The 30 policemen in 10 cars uncovered no trace of a A quantity of Ontario liquor! brought into the province dur- ing the recent 1l-week Quebec Liquor Board strike was seized in a raid on a suburban Auteuil restaurant. Inspector Paul Gagnon of pro- vincial police is convinced Ri- vard and Durocher will soon be found.. "We'll get them. We're going to root him out of his hole wherever he is,' Insp. Gagnon said 4 Kings Due At Funeral STOCKHOLM (AP) -- reigning kings are expected to attend the state funeral here Saturday of Queen Louise of Sweden, great - granddaughter of Britain's Queen Victoria. Together with the 75-year-old Queen's husband, King: Gustaf VI, 82, King Frederik IX of Denmark, Olav VI of Norway and Constantine II of Greece will walk in the funeral proces- sion. There has been no word of who will represent Britain's Royal Family. But Prince Philip, husband of Queen Eliza- beth II, will probably attend| since he is a nephew of the de-| ceased Queen. Queen Louise died in a Stock-| holm hospital Sunday, four| days after emergency surgery for removal of a blood clot in her right Jeg. My Fair Lady Best Movie HOLLYWOOD (AP) My Fair Lady won the Screen Pro- ducers Guild award Sunday night as the year's best movie, thus making it the odds-on Os- ear favorite. The victory came before more than 1,000 of Hollywood's big-| gest names at a Beverly Hilton banquet. In the past, Academy Award voters have traditionally followed the SPG in the choice! of best picture. Slattery' s People was named the year's best television show. It has been dropped for next year. including Ri-/ wi ane Four) Bi ibis, 9 the key Da: 'Nang. Air Base against possible Communist Viet Cong attack Brig. Gen. Frederick Joseph Karch of Carmi, ill. said he imagined Men of the U.S, Marine Expeditionary Force scram- ble ashore at Da Nang, South Viet Nam today. They will beef eef up t the defe defense of Guns, Tear Ga blood, it is going to be estab- lished that Negroes have the right to walk on the highways said Rev. James | SELMA, Ala. (AP)--An at- |jtempted march to the state Capitol at Montgomery by Ne-| groes pleading for civil rights|of Alabama," erupted into bloody racial vio-|Bevel, a lieutenant in King's lence in a clash with state po-|Southern Chritian Leadership lice Sunday. Conference. King was expected le © fused to comment on the. inci- dent. King said a motion will be} junction to prevent Wallace and Dr. Martin Laie xine on in Selma tonight. says. he will 'h another at- tempted March Tueday. ROAD CLUTTERED King decided to remain in At-| The highway was cluttered lanta and did not, as planned,| With packs, bed rolls and other lead Ssnday's march attempt}camping equipment when the by about 450 Negroes, which|melee ended. They had been was broken up by helmetedileft behind by Negroes fleecing state troopers wielding nigh t|the tear gas and the club-swing- sticks, shotguns, tear gas gre-jing state troopers. nades and wearing gas masks.| The troopers later were About 40 Negroes were in- |joined by about 60 members of jured in the violent confronta-| |Sheriff James G. Clark's Dal- tion about a mile after the} las County posse, some of them march began. jon horseback, who prodded and "Tf it has to be a path of|beat the Negroes all the way !back to the church from which \the march started. The posse- PROPANE TRUC {men shouted "Get the niggers joff the streets!" as they |charged. GETS NO HELP The jusfice department an- = . jnounced fAn\ Washington that sett cca hevaniar }FBI agers in 'Selma have been when a propane truck ordered {o make a complete. in- stalled at a street intersec- |Vestigation to determine| tion in nearby Delhi. 'wheth unnecessary force Pedestrians hastily left |S nai by law officer and the area until after a gar- jothers'"' in halting the march, age man had arrived and Attorney-General Nicholas Kat- got the truck moving again. jzenbach said he is keeping in A similar truck spurted {touch with the situation. flames while being pushed a few days ago in Aylmer and | touched off a $1,000,000 blaze. . Police Guard | Russ Embassy WASHINGTON A --Extra/ police have been stationed jaround the Soviet Embassy after five anti-Castro Cubans splattered black liquid on it |Sunday in a surprise bottle- hurling protest. | The Cubans were promptly arrested, charged with inter- fering with the property of a! | forvign government and jailed) } overnight. They said they were protest- jing last\ (week's violent student |demonstration against the U.S. |Embassy in Moscow and also the continued presence of Soviet| itroops in Cuba. 5 The state department reported a telephone call of protest had been received from the Soviets. {The official who received the calf expressed the department's lregret at the incident. | It was understood that the} subject of compensatiof was not| discussed in this initial ex- |change, said to be at a relative! ly 'low diplomatic level THE TIMES today... 2 Workers Injured At Uxbridge Plant -- Page 9 LASCO Adds New Furnace Ann Landers -- 11 City News -- 9 Classified -- 14, 15, Comics --~ 12 District Reports -- 13 Editorial' 4 Financial -- 17 16 -- Page 5 Obits -- 17 Sports -- 6, 7, 8 Television -- 12 Theatre -- 13 Whitby News -- Women's -- 10, Weather -- 2 Mrs. 8. W aided by- Negroes after she was injured when _ state police broke up a~ demon- stration march in Selma, Boynton is 5 11 state Tuesday's march to emphasize the Negroes' to vote in this rigid strongliold of southern tradition. including a militant tionist King, were: arrested Sunday on charges of a an FBI agent. estimated $50,000,000 }000,000 during years installing anti-air pollu- tion devices. nounced Friday. are the United States Steel Cor poration, pany, tion, ter's. steel works. James. V filed in federal court at Mont- \Chicago's air pollution control gomery today seeking an in- department. "the troops are exhilarated. There's a sense of relief at the prospect of getting some action." S. Used In Selma Violence troopers from halting plea for the right three white men, segrega- who recently. attacked Meanwhile, New Pact this To Curb Smog CHICAGO (AP)---Grimy Chi- cago, who has 7,300 industries and--like most big cities--an air pollution problem, has signed a novel agreement with four ma- jor steel producers to help} whisk its smog away. The firms agreed to' spend an to $100,-| the next five The pact: was an- The participating companies Republic ity's steel production. The firms also produce up to} Governor George Wallace re¢| /40 per cent of the 420 tons of| idust that annually falls on each) mile of the city, says | square Fitzpatrick, head of jnewspaper comments in West- jern Europe today but failed to MARINES LAND IN S. VIET NAM No Dutery - Noticeable In Moscow LONDON: (AP)--The landing A U.S. Marine stands guard as fellow Leather- necks came ashore at Da Nang. Bay in South Viet Nam today. The Marines are members of the 9th Expeditionary Force sent to IE OP i ee Bolstered DA NANG, Viet Nam (AP)-- U.S. marines landed by sea and air in South Viet Nam today to strengthen the defence of the key Da Nang air base against attack by the Communist Viet Cong. One battalion of 1,400 ma- rines came ashore from four 7th Fleet transpore ships stand- ing off the coast 380 miles -north of Saigon. the key Da Nang Air Base to beef up its defences against possible Communist Viet Cong attack. --(AP Wirephoto by radio from Saigon.) of US. Marines in South Viet Nam brought a few nervous rouse the wrath of Moscow-ori- ented Communists to any great) pitch One of the strongest attacks} came from left-wing leaders of| Britain's Labor party, The story of the landing was published in Moscow, but only briefly and without immediate comment. The. MWungarian newspaper Hetfoi Hirek called the landing "a long stride ahead in the di- rection of extending the war The Italian Communist. party newspaper L'Unita said the landing "exasperates the Indo- chinese crisis to the breaking PEKING (Reuters)--The po- litical arm of the Communist Viet Cong flatly rejected today a negotiated settlement in South Viet Nam while U.S. forces re- main there. Nguyen Minh Phuong, deputy chief of the South Vietnamese National Front permanent mis- sion here, told a press confer- ence: "So jong.as there is one single shadow of U.S. imperial- | | r-|ian suggested that the landing Steel Com-/Will provide propaganda for the Interlake Steel Corpora-|Communist and International Harves-|the These firms|Staph supported the move, but account for 90 per cent of the| with caution. | |IS CAUTIOUS ism in Viet Nam, the Vietna- mese people will hold tight to their weapons and fight to the end for their aims... . "We welcome the good inten- tions of those seeking a peace- ful settlement, but no matter what are the circumstances, we must achieve our aims," Phu- ong said. Asked about Prime Minister Pearson's reported proposal to point " Most. non - Communist news- [papers gave the story big play, but only a few carried imme- diate comment: In France, the Gaullist news- paper Nation said the landing means a new step in the "'policy of escalation." In Britain, the Liberal Guard- station an on Reject Plea To Negotiate international force the Vietnamese borders, Phuong said: "We oppose any plans to" in- ternationalize the war in South Viet Nam and maintain that all attempts to send international forces to Indochina are a se- vere violation of the sovereignty of the Indochinese countries." Asked about Soviet and French moves to get negotia- tions going, Phuong said: "The propaganda machine of the Western wor!d is spreading an atmosphere for some kind of settlement in South Viet Nam by means of negotiations, all just-minded circles will see that while the Western propa- ganda machine is pushing this but atmosphere, the White House and the Pentagon are giving or- ders to intensify the fighting." Viet Conservative Cong, while Daily Tele- Canada Says P OTTAWA (CP) .-- Canada in effect accused India and Poland today of trying to hide the facts of Communist terrorism OMITS CREED IN NEW MASS oles, India 'Try To Hide "Terrorism" These two countries were not dealing with the situation as Canada believed the commis- sion was obliged to do. TORONTO (CP) -- The use of the vernacular in- stead of Latin in the mass for the first time Sunday caused confusion for 'some of Toronto's Roman Cath- olics. Catholics were a_ little dazed by the change, said Rev, Frank Stone, director of the Catholic Information Centre Rev. Robert Moran} who conducted amass at St. Peter's Church here, ' left out the Creed. "TI forgot it,' he said. was as simple as that.' and sabotage in South Viet Nam. Neutralist India and Commu- nist Poland are Canada's part- ners on the 11-year-old interna- tional truce supervisory com- mission in Viet Nam. Canada issued a minority re- port to the India-Foland major- ity one of Feb. 13 which took note only of United States re- taliatory bombing raids on Communist North Viet Nam. In Canada's view, India and Poland had _ tried simplify the situation--and dan- igerously so--by dealing with the "It ~\into official Sunday.. Mrs. Boynton, wife of a real estate and insur- ance man. has been a leader in civil rights efforts. --(AP. Wirephoto) | | *\Saints Church, |U.S. air strikes only. Popes Mass n Italian ROME (AP)--Pope Paul, set- i an example for Roman Catholics everywnere on the first flay of major changes in the 'fnass, offered mass in Ital- jian Sunday in a Rome church. The pontiff bent low at a simple altar facing: a packed congregation of 1,500 at' All with the. main altar to his back, -He began mass in the 1 participants instead o Latin. The liturgy (worship) change set up in December, 1963, by the ecumenical. council, went use Sunday. Throughout the Roman 'Catho- lic world such prayers were re- eiled by priests and congrega- tions in their own native tongues in a mass newly simp- lified, Pope Paul spoke in his ser- mon of the new liturgy of 'the Mass as "an extra ordinary event in the dialogue between man and God." Before the afternoon mass, he spoke from -his apartment window overlooking St. Peter's Square in Vatican City. There he 'said the -use of modern languages in. the: mass. will ante spiritual. renewal for Ro- man Catholics. He called the change from Latin a sacrifice by the church in. the interests of reaching all its memebrs. Pope Paul said the culture of people today demanded liturgy changes to facilitate the active participation of the, faithful in their church, to over-|, A second battalion began ar- riving aboard air force trans- ports from Okinawa. About 3,500 in all are ex- pected by Tuesday night, in- cluding a helicopter squadron. A detachment of 1,200 ma- rines is already at Da Nang, manning Hawk anti - aircraft missile batteries, The Viet Cong made no at- tempt to interfere with the ma- rines landing to strengthen this base from which major. air strikes have been launched against North Viet Nam, Two Vietnamese battalions were de- ployed in the area to meet any Red attack. The Communists overran a regional forces platoon Satur- day night three miles south of the Da Nang runway, Four gov- ernment soldiers were killed. Brig. Frederick Karch, com- mander of the 9th Marine Ex- peditionary Force, said: The two marine battalions have their own heavy equip. ment including tanks, anti-tank vehicles, 105-mm. artillery and mortars. Karch said- the outfit has a radar computer system to track incoming mortar shells and di- rect counter-fire. In Washington, State Secre- tary Dean Rusk said the ma» rines'? mission is to guard the base, but that if they are shot at,"'they will shoot back." "It is not their mission to en- gage jin the pacification opera- tions," Rusk said. The deployment brought blasts from China. Peking's official New China News Agency said a few thou- sand marines "'can-in no way retrieve the United States from its desperate predicament on the South Viet Nam battle. field." Hanoi radio said the North Vietnamese government has filed a "strong" protest with the International Control] Com- mission in Viet Nam. In other developments, the Viet Cong launched a mortar attack early today on a special forces camp in Binh Dinh prov- ince, about 250 miles north of Saigon. Three Americans were reported wounded. in Buddhists 'and Catholics eri Salem" clashed Sunday, night in "We will be Fea Beye in a defensive peg Sexi willjre: we are assigned." For Nod To _ OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson returned to Ot- tawa Sunday to watch and wait for new developments in New York and Washington which might indicate a measure of agreement with his proposals for a solution to the Viet Nam situation. He went to New York Friday to tell the Canadian Society of New York that the interna- tional community at large, in- eluding such non - members of the United: Nations as Commu- nist China, should take respon- sibility for effectively sealing off the borders between North and South Viet Nam. If this could be done, aid to guerrilla force and attack and counter - attack would be stopped. This would be a prel- ude to developing a massive economic aid program for the whole Southeast Asia area. It was learned later that what Mr. Pearson has in mind is a conference of perhaps seven powers including North and South Viet Nam and Com- munist China to revive the spirit of the 1954 Geneva) con- ference on Viet Nam, Laos an Cambodia, Other members par- ticipating would be the other Big Four powers -- the U.S., Britain, France and Russia. CITES RISK Mr. Pearson said in his Fri- day night speech that "every form of outide interference by force is aggression," and the awful risk does exist of Vict Nam fighting growing into a general war. The prime minister had lunch Saturday with U Thant, United Nations secretary-general, and after their lengthy discusion religious. groups no doubt be" pentiing how-|Informants sa' ever, within the zone to whithiwere fired Pe the first encounte; between the last fall, thrown. Pearson Watches, Waits Proposals lems, Mr, Pearson' ald he wouldn't want to lay down con- ditions for holding a ,confer- ence of the international com- munity on Viet Nam, "In fact, making it a pre- condition (that an international peace-keeping force be estab- lished) might even prevent a conference," he said. But he added: "If we are going to find a solution there mut be some kind of international supervis- ion." If an international conference could agree on some form of effective policing, it might call on the United Nations to lend its agencies to its ort, a Canadian source said. Whether this would actually be done, with Communist China outside the UN, is quite another ques- tion. But in the Canadian view, the important thing is to end mil- itary operations. Apparently the government has no pre- conceived view on the form of a lasting settlement. Find 21st Body At Granduc PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. (CP) Searchers Sunday recovered an- other body, the 2ist, from the avalanche which. tumbled down on the Granduc Mining Com- pany came and killed 26 men Feb. 18. RCMP identified the body a that of Aldege Davis but gave no hometown. Five bodies are still missing at the slide site some 130 miles north of this northern B.C. coastal city. A small group of searchers-is continuing the hunt of this and other world. prob- for the bodies. IN COURT Jack Ruby, convicted slayer of presidential assas- sin Lee Harvey Oswald, is taken from his jail cell to meet with a_ psychiatrist before his hearing in Dallas today. Ruby is. having the hearing in the court where he was convicted to deter- mine if jhe should get a Sanity trial. from Amherstburg, Ont., River near Chatham to help flooding in the area. set March 29 as the date for of President Kennedy. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Ice Jams Cause Flooding CHATHAM (CP) -- The icebreaker Atomic was ordered today to the mouth of the Thames break up ice jams causing Set Date Ruby Sanity Trial DALLAS (AP) -- District' Judge Joe B. Brown today a sanity trial for condemned killer Jack Ruby. Brown, who presided over the murder trial which ended in the death verdict for Ruby March 4, 1964, said a jury will be empanelled to determine the sanity of the man who killed Lee Harvey Oswald, accused assassin