Weather Report Mainly sunny and cool today and tomorrow. Low tonight, 48. High Wednesday, 65, Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, oe VOL. 94--NO. 117 jes & 10e Si B0e Per Week he Oshawa Tine le Copy ome Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1965 Authorized os Second Cless Mall Post Office Department - tawa and for payment of Fostage in Cash, THIRTY-FOUR PAGES Municipality Wins Series Of Controls TORONTO (CP)--A series of! sweeping amendments to Municipal Acts aimed at solv- ing a number of problems in Ontario -- from hot rodders on plaza parking lots to the iack of county power to nursing homes--were proposed in the legislature Tuesday. 1 the'store closing hours, ation of industrial land, estab- lishment of boards of control, breaking of tie votes tions and joint projects by mu- licence! nicipalities \his special assistant, Lorne The amendments -- 40-odd --\Cymming, is rewriting the en- were proposed for first reading|tire Municipal Act. Mr. Cum- Other amendments affect expropri- in elec- Mr. Spooner also said that by Municipal Affairs Minister| ming retired last year as dep- Wilfred Spooner, The amendments will permit municipalities to levy special charges against developers of high - rise apartment buildings,| and councils, will be able to} pass bylaws prohibiting racing) or speeding in shopping-centre will change the present act to} ? permit a its police villages and set up a ward system. There are more than 150 po-| o uty minister. Meanwhile, the amendments township to dissolve! plazas and private parking lots. (lice villages in Ontario. Changes Encourage Thinking | Toward Regional Government Most of the proposed changes| are aimed at encouraging mu-/ nicipalities to think in terms of} regional government. There is| a relaxation of paternalism by the department in many of the amendments. | Power would be given, coun- ties to licence lodging homes, defined to include nursing homes. It would apply only to} sanitary, fire and similar regu- lations. The welfare and med- {cal aspects of nursing homes are the responsibility of wel- fare authorities. Other major changes include: | --Municipalities or counties} may carry out joint projects proposed -~Municipal councils will be restricted from resigning en masse. | ---If a store carries two or more classes of trade, which- ever class constitutes 70 per cent or more of the total Dare Pays Off |, In Gory Death Martinez, 13, and Roy Garland, 16, stood on the tracks here as the Illinois Panama Limited passenger train rushed toward them. Central's| Garland, Martinez's foot caught be- tween a rail and cross tie and he was killed Tuesday by the of assessors, he said. train, VICTORY IS SWEET Willie ington, Dallas Johnson, of Wash- D.C., returned to vesterday to receive her crown and trophy as * Miss Tan America of 1965 A clerical error declared © away with a section of the) sonally approve municipal pro-| hw ORLEANS (APDa®: si iects for expropriation of land) aay NEW LEANS (AP)--Earl) 7 j@a) ee ul m" and creating a fracas in Municipal councillors willlg Russian restaurant. near|take a | usSian-re aur jassembling industrial land and| selling it to developers. | cial Garland said he jumped first. 1966. tempt to improve the standards This con-| in-! or pass laws jointly. would permit regional trol of air pollution, for stance } --Special charges may be levelled by municipalities against high-rise builders to -- help pay for the extra-large sewage and waterworks needed to serve such build- ings. Boards of control may be established in towns and cit- jes of 45,000 or more. A city currently must have 50,000 have 100,000, --Municipal clerks will be empowered to cast the decid- ing vote in case of ties or recounts, | thronged ther jstate visit to West Germany. | the purpose of closing by-| laws. will be allowed to build air-| fields. Two or more commu-| nities must unite under the! establish an airport. | Mr. Spooner also proposes to) s the responsibility of} assessors as of The measure is an at-| qualification of apolis, finds it isn't easy to protect when there's a Queen BONN {Queen Elizabeth lifted half a} [century of Councils Will Be Restricted -- om "Stoned" vork ana From Resigning As A Whole Individual muni cipauses 1 LOSCOW Char ge MOSCOW (CP | "|The government newspaper Iz-) act stating that he must per lvestia accused a Canadian mil- itary attache in Moscow Tues- Describing Col. Curtis Green- ere gunner alleged incident, L cuse them of misbehaving. Greenleaf served on ternational truce supervisory the commission in Viet Nam in 1961) Queen on the second day of her! and won the Military Cross in'11-day visit. i northwest : Second manded the .| Horse fram 1956 to 1958. leaf as from Ottawa," "We had a dare to see who), In @ separate announcement|the 48-year-old Montreal native would stay on the tracks the luesday, Mr. Spooner said the/of swearing, uttering anti-Soviet longest before jumping," said government will license provin-|propaganda and making as if to Jan. Le jasked him to be Izvestia said that ' jing for about half an h municipal three ches, Greenleaf pressed the "itrigger of ichine-gun and shouted 7, Mark Herrick, 214, Minne- cub, candy floss leopard one's the By IAN MacDOWALL (Reuters) -- Britain's mis- hostility and the streets to on the second greet day of her night of drunken "'hooligan- "the machine - Izvestia accused Russian who had quiet after drink the American service imaginery ma "T hate an jyou, we'll shoot the lot of 'you lannihilate you." He knowledge of. the dict swearwords," | Clearly special training in the subject." In Ottawa, ithe article as a reprisal for the expulsion of mats from Canada for alleged espionage story appeared their expulsion. The article says the incident p, occurred in Russia, on a trip wit military A Moscow night |Greenleaf 4 mid-April, but he called the 4 also howed zvestia the colonel had had a officials regarded two Soviet diplo- activities. Izvestia's UO"S 10 days after Tambor aus outhern Greenleaf three American erree ab ors The Canadian spokesman in confirmed Tuesday Russian - .speaking was in. Tamboy in that around an occasional jcrowds were greater than those that turned|the scars of two world wars. | out to cheer the late president Kennedy on his visit to Bonn injthe 39-year-old monarch placed| 1963 and exceeded those that!, wreath on a memorial to the welcomed .French President de'qead of both world wars and Gaulle the year before. People in the crowd seemed/put as she drove through. the| to sense that the Queen's visit/nacked streets to the rathaus| was more than a public spec-|(tgwn hall) and to the Beetho- A police spokesman said thejtacle but also an historic occa-\yen statue where she placed al sales will "type" the store for) ------------- apa neers ars the ate to g university 149 to 1 CAT --GET OFF MY BACK Nimra, the leopard small enough to have free run of Como Park Zoo, Melts Hostility ara wnt. BULt Up Over Century Sea : . s Canadian present legislation in order With Drunken Hooliganism - Reuters) --|Izvestia article an '"'unjustified attack." The Ottawa officials Greenleaf has been in Moscow through the barriers, bringing\day charged the 'Toronto board since 1963 and his replacement the royal car to a halt, Later, of control with ignoring warn- of a 15-page report by Central! had already been named. if 3 Izvestia says the three Amer- University, they charged across|workers that teen-age &@M8Silined the need for a counselling| penal bihtae gg cate Lo immaculate flower, beds to|were creating a growing danger'service for the east Toronto u 4 o- | the Europe during World. War Students Vote: Confront Adla TORONTO (CP) -- About 100 Bundeswehr persons at a Student Union for arms on Peace Action meeting Tuesday| memorial, a bronze plaque four voted unanimously to try to ar- feet by range a confrontation here with;memory Adlai Stevenson, United States wars and tyranny." ambassador to the The meeting of university stu-|softly dents, faculty members and soldier's air 'Ich Hat' Einen| alumni resulted from a decision Kameraden Toronto rade) law Stevenson a a convocation May 28 University of rent an honorary to Mr senate Stevenson, said in-|000 the He com- PHILIP BY HER SIDE Lord Strathcona's United Na voted Queen Friday to reject peti- rived tions from faculty and student crowded streets from their hill-| representatives asking that the top residence on the Petersberg,| university not confer the degree across on Mr. REBELS ON ROPES AS JUNTA SURGES -- ~~ | Imbert Takes Over Radio, CEASE-BOMB IS OVER US. Jets Back In Savage Raid By EDWIN Q. WHITE SAIGON (AP) -- Forty U.S.\sulted in bringing the North|Sent resistance in northern Navy planes destroyed threelvieinamese to the conference|Santo ig barracks today and in-|table, there was speculation that |"ave collapsed. % 4 flicted heavy damage on other|the raiders may seek more im- military By ROBERT BERRELLEZ SANTO DOMINGO (AP)-- |Troops loyal to the Dominican} |Republic's civilian - military) Since the three - month - long Junta occupied the main rebel| air strikes so far have not re-|'adio station today and insur- Domingo appeared to Units of the Dominican Air hag ca installations in the second con- portant targets, possibly in the|/Force police moved into the si-| | al Mark come to pounces on adult hands rescue. while | the | (AP Wirephoto) The crowd was restrained as the victims of Nazi persecution. | bouquet of pink roses, the queen} |was greeted by a storm of clap-| jping and cheers. |SHOUT 'VIVA.LA._ QUEEN' Shouts of "Elizabeth" and "Viva la Queen" mingled with the cheers, THe cries replaced the traditional "heil'" which West German etiquette experts) have frowned on as recalling) the Nazi period. | At one stage the crowds burst} secutive day of air military spokesman said. The spokesman said the air- carrier Coral craft from the Sea struck at two target areas 140 miles north of the demilitar- jized zone separating North and South Viet Nam, The raid was the second in 24 hours after a six-day suspen sion of air strikes against the north, Speculation grew that the |United States may broaden its air attacks on North Viet Nam The barracks were destroyed at Hoan Lao. It was not known whether they were occupied. A military nearby Chanh Hoa. "considerably"|sion which would finally heal|/PLANES RETURN SAFELY The spokesman said 30 Sk hawks, Skyraiders and siles, bombs. Pilots reported light radio station, a power house and communica- tions and administration build- f ings were reported destroyed at|Ministny statement broadcast a f Sky|world opinion. |Warriors, supported by 10 F-4 r ' 'aise and F'-8 Crusaders, pounded the | BRITISH GO-BETWEEN? targets for 45 minutes with mis-| rockets and 50 tons of|London said the United States ground fire said no enemy planes were sighted, All the planes returned to the carrier, the spokesman y strikes |industrialized Hanoi - Haiphong|lent Santo Domingo radio sta-| lagainst North Viet Nam, a U.S.| region, i | jtion this morning after a brisk| So far the bombings have exchange of fire with snipers in) been directed against military|"earby buildings. barracks, ammunition and oil] The junta, apparently scent- depots, air fields, bridges andjing victory in the civil war, lroads and railway traffic. The|turned down Tuesday night a lnorthernmost point hit was a|United Nations appeal for a lbridge at Dong Phuong, 65|ceasefire which the rebels were |miles south of Hanoi, April 3. |reported ready to accept. | | The air strikes against the} Troops loyal to the junta ap- |north were resumed Tuesday|peared to have control of more jafter the six-day pause during|than half the industrial-subur- |which the United States was re-|ban area north of the east-west ported to have sent out feelers|corridor established by U.S. jto North Viet Nam for peace|troops leading to the interna- tional zone for refugees. The \talks. Hanoi evidently rejected them to the disappointment of|main rebel stronghold lies south of the corridor. Washington. sin . S| A North Vietnamese foreign NO CASUALTY FIGURES There still was no official fig- ure on casualties in the battle, which has been raging for three days. There have been unveri- fied reports of: many dead |among civilians living in the} northern suburbs. | in|, U.S. troops are not involved jin the fighting. Jose Antonio Mayobre of Ven- ezuela, UN Secretary - General U. Thant's special Dominican envoy, told a press conference that Gen, Antonio Imbert Bar- rera, the junta chief, 'indicated he thought he was winning and ew hours after Tuesday's raid j}called the suspension an effort jto camouflage U.S, intensifica- tion of the war and to deceive Senior western officials |made its peace approach to Ha- noi through a third country, The country was not identified, but there was speculation that the [British consul-general in Hanoi was the go-between. Teen Gangs In Toronto Regent Park TORONTO (CP) -- Controllerjin the low-rental Regent Park) Margaret Campbell Tues-|housing development. | therefore could not talk of a ceasefire," Mayobre said Col. Francisco Caamano Deno, the rebel leader, had expressed willing- ness to accept a truce. Imbert's forces were pressing Bode Terror | Resistance Broken Down rebe] pockets north of the U.S.- Jcontrolled east - west corridor across Santo Domingo. Commodore Francisco J. Riv- era Caminero, the armed forces secretary, claimed' the drive was progressing steadily. But there. were signs the junta forces were running into stiff resistance on the southern flank of the eastward push. 4 PRISONERS SHOT U.S. troops . Tuesday. inter- vened in a fierce house-to-house battle between forces of the rival Dominican leaders in an effort to direct fire away from American positions in the inter- national corridor to the south of the battle area. A Reuters news agency dis- patch said newspaper men re- ported seeing soldiers of the Imbert government shoot four prisoners belonging to the in- surgent forces. One correspondent reported that 100 insurgents were killed in Santo Domingo Tuesday in an attack on the presidential palace. The newspaper men said the number of wounded could not be ascertained and described the Caamano forces as "stun- ned," There was no source for the report, which identified the in- surgents as Communists, nor was any figure given for cas- ualties among the Imbert forces. REBELS HOLD POSITIONS chief of the rebel armed forces, said his troops were maintain- ing their positions in the area. But he conceded that about 25 of his men were killed in the battle with Imbert troops that had been raging for four days. He estimated more than 300 civilians were killed in the ac- a tank-led offensive to smash} tion. | Her charges followed release} as the Queen arrived at- Bonnjings from a group of social/Neighborhood House which out-| cheer her. | Police estimated at least 100,- persons had poured into} streets to welcome the! The queen, dressed in green, was accompanied by Prince ~ |Philip at the wreath - placing ceremony at the memorial. The couple stood with bowed heads for a few moments be- « fore'the Queen stepped forward| ] and placed the wreath Two armed steel - soldiers either side of helmeted) stood at the} | seven inscribed "in} of the victims of the As the Queen placed the! wreath a lone trumpeter played| the traditional German| (I Had a Com-} A Bundeswehr guard of honor vas drawn up on the lawns..be- the war. memorial as the and Prince Philip ar-| after a drive through} ore the Rhine River from) Bonn LAW IS AN ASS | AND ALF KNOWS CAMBRIDGE, England (Reuters) -- Britain's master jail breaker Alfred Hinds Tuesday night won a Cam- bridge University debate on the motion: "The law is an ass."' He escaped from jail three times while serving a 12-year sentence for robbery, but fin- ally had his conviction re- versed--and later won a libel action against the policeman who arrested him, Hinds, 57, told students at Cambridge University where he proposed the motion: "If you find. the law is an ass through your own experience, you should speak out and try | to alter it. "There is no use appealing to the lawyers. No lawyer ever changes the law. Only laymen can do it." "A vote for.this motion might show the judges that they are not little tin gods," he added. The motion was carried by 149 to 116. area. The report was mailed privately to controllers in| ' March. Boe, PAZ, gta comp d actories were under heavy po- a a the only/iice guard here today as most | e board of control hi d-l ¢ to vote on March 10 for a pro-|°! this Jand-locked South Amer- ery ican country was paralyzed by jposed $20,000 counselling pro- ik a by th lgram for Regent Park South ja general stri e cause y the | cing Gan, |Weekend banishment of miners' She also supported raising Cen- leader Juan Lechin Oquendo. |tral Neighborhood House's grant) About 60 per con hes re -- $2,500 to $10,000. The grant! ited to have been arrested on| arded was $5,000. | se | i : : subversion charges. Armed) The warning contained in the|miners were still in control of| report went unheeded because| many mines in the mountain re- ithe board of control feared the gion southeast of the capital. $20,000 price tag would raise the} Unconfirmed reports said 1965 homeowner's tax rate, Mrs.|those arrested included eight Campbell said in an interview.) members of the revolutionary| The report paints a sober pic-/Party of the National Left,| ture of teen-agers growing up in the heart of Toronto in loosely organized gangs that! defy authority and have a con- taminating influence on younger children. | A small group of experienced) street fighters challenge all) newcomers to their territory, | Ironically the research-| ers found in their 2%4-month study that most of the trouble- makers come from outside the larea, Out of a group of 35 only; net rN containing general threat ag man Said contents of the lett four came from the housing de-| velopment though they domin-| BLOODY STALEMATE COULD LEAD TO PEACE TALKS oie. | the wrong winner t the | pageant in Dallas April 10 | Miss Johnson i old and the daughter of Mrs Roxie Johnson, 17 years (Wirephoto) | By ARCH MacKENZIE WASHINGTON (CP)--The die seems cast for a long hot sum- mer of war in Viet Nam. Barring a decisive advantage either way in the fighting to come,' the result could be a stalemate bloody enough to lead to the peace That applies if the the war is not er intervention of. China sia in a direct 'way, observers here: say. This presupposes continuing | round The last immediate prospect of peace talk tah! caution deemed to with he inritind tte d 1 n, a 1 x-da have gone out the window | nited States a It ; against North Viet Nam. The Communists refused to nibble a the American bait--there bomb-cessation had. not Viet Nam: A Long, Hot fighting wil been much term" need 'short- that . the | handle the sand Summer key Vietnamese industrial areas lie conflict. ated teen-age activities in it. | | OTTAWA (CP) -- Secret Queen's University. Some North of 1967, Allan Grossman, refo TO NEWS HIG Letter Contains Threat On Queen MUNICH (AP) -- Security officials have seized a letter Strike Paralyzes Bolivia; 60 'Subversives' Arrested which was led by Lechin, a for- mer Bolivian vice-president. Junta President Gen. Rene Barrientos Ortuno early this year accused Lechin of trying to divide the country's army and said he was "no doubt a Communist." Lechin was ban- ished to Paraguay Saturday. That sparked off bloody dem- onstrations, and the government Monday put the country in a state of siege--one step below martial law. It also placed all able-bodied Bolivian men_be- tween 18 and 50 on military call-up orders, mi natant LIGHTS ainst Britain's Queen Eliza- beth, a Munich police spokesman said today, The spokes- er have been transmitted to all security authorities watching over the Queen's safety during her state visit to West Germany. The letter led | police to believe that its author is mentally ill. Thant, Pearson Win Queen's Degrees ary-General U Thant of the United Nations will have two hours of private talks here Saturday with Prime Minister Pearson before the two men travel to Kingston to receive honorary. degrees from Mercer Reformatory Leaves Toronto TORONTO (CP) -- Mercer reformatory for women will be moved to Brampton with the completion of a $1,500,000 correctional complex there, probably by the end rm institutions minister, said Col. Ramon Montes Arache,' real hope heré that they would. Nothing now appears to stand in the way of the militany build- ups proceeding on both sides. As the Viet Nam rainy season draws closer, military action is increasing, The Communist Viet Cong vas been committing its re- grouped forces. The Americans have been digging in with a sup- ply and transport system cap- able. of quickly expanding fight- ir forces now estimated at 45,000 men, or almost double the total at the end of 1964 BLANK CHEQUE esident Johnson said Tues- day the $700,000.000 recently voted by Congress for Viet Nam HAS American military. has a blank cheque for what it wants. Defence Secretary McNa- mara said some of the spend- ing will go for. more helicop- ters, fighter aircraft, ammuni- tion and. other battle gear. There is speculation that the air strikes against the north now may be aimed at non-mil- itary targets. Authorities in the field have been reported as conceding privately that few worthwhile targets remain in the shape of railways, bridges, roads, ferries, army buildings or radar stations. But it is doubted- that the U.S. will strike much farther north for fear of making it im- possible for China to stay out of far to the north. The stee] plant at Thai Nguye, for example, is northwest of Hanoi, the capital. United States battle units have been taking the offensive on patrol against the Viet Cong around the American bases, This is distinct from the so - called adviser role under which the American special forces began participating in the war in aid of South Viet- namese troops. These forces still bear brunt of militany action It is speculated now that American combat units may get involved directly and independ- ently of the South Viet Nam command. the Tuesday night. Brampton already has Ingleside reforma- tory for women and a reformatory for young adult male first-offenders. nga msn LY ...In THE TIMES today... Vipond In, Kelly Out In Grit Nomination Race--P, 17 Tolerance Seen Need In Asian Problems--P. 5 Green Gaels Thump Mounties In Mimico--P. 14 Ann Landers--21 Obits----31 City News--17 Sports--14, 15, 16 Classified--28, 29,°30 elevision--27 Edit oa Theatre--11 Re OF Gre Whitby News--5, 6 Comics---27 Women's--18, 19, 20, 21 Financial--32 Weather--2 mmm | ui mr " MMU TPN NET TT MIATA WT t