Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 May 1965, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, , Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties. r Ie Single Cop: S0e Per Week Home VOL. 94--NO. 118 livered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1965 She Oshawa Cimes Authorized os Second Class Mall Post Office Depa! Cttowa .and fer payment Weather Report Bright, sunny today. Warm- er Friday with cloudiness, Showers possible. Low to- night, 50. High tomorrow, 70. irtment Cash, ef Postage in TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto i Maple Leafs of the Nationa! : Leafs Trade Bathgate «In 8-Man Wings Deal tani jetliner inaugurating a new route from Karachi to London| crashed in flames in rugged FIERY JET CRASH CLAIMS 121 LIVES | Six Came Through Alive | | | | | But Were Badly Injured CAIRO (Reuters) -- A Pakis-| pilot reported having trouble |with his wing flaps. Witnesses reported seeing a ball of fire' in the sky as the jdesert country 10 miles from| airliner plunged to the ground gp |Cairo Airport today, killing 121/in the Wadi El Halazoni area, Gee ie |Hockey League announced to- killed Wednesday when it collided with a Chesapeake and Ohio freight train near A GRAVEL TRUCK was demolished almost beyond recognition and its driver _ Acid Spills From Train Wreck; 34 Cars Derailed, Man Killed CHATHAM *(CP)--Three acci-|Detroit struck a gravel dents involving trains in south-jat a crossing. western Ontario Wednesday,| William John Imeson, two of them near this Kent|Staples, Ont., driver County city of 31,000, caused|truck, was killed. the death of one person, the in-| 18, of In satisfactory condition truck the Chatham, Ont. Here work- ers look over what is left of the truck and the damaged Eighty-five per cent of the train was empty and some of of|the unloaded cars torn from the tracks were thrown 50 feet Among the wreckage were 13 injtrucks which had been aboard jury of four others and the de- railment of 34 railway cars. The largest mishap, 12 miles| suffered back injuries and scalp| diesel oil from the overturned|Ramsyof, 58, of Detroit. southwest of here on the Chesa-|cuts, and brakeman Fred Per-|locomotives. Firemen from Ral-|wife jumped t peake and Ohio Railway line, caused a scare for a time when one tank car among the 20 freight cars and five diesel en- gines derailed, burst and spread hundreds of gallons of chemical into a ditch. Police, fearing that the chem- ical might be explosive and poisonous, closed off a quarter- mile area, The chemical was later identified as phenolic acid, used in the treatment of copper wire. It can cause illness to people breathing its fumes. Chemical experts were brought in from Sarnia to try to neutralize the acid. The accident, in which a youth was killed and three rail- way workers injured, occurred when the 53-car train bound for Announce Jo By BEN WARD OTTAWA (CP)--A program of loans and grants for workers who want to move to jobs in other areas was announced in|who can afford to repay them. |initially. By increasing the size|/for a 90-minute by} the Commons Wednesday Prime Minister Pearson as part Liberals Begin Poor War: hospital are William Barker of|piggy-back railway cars. |St. Thomas, the engineer, who; Also spewn over the area was |fect, 44, of St. Thomas, with |back injuries and head cuts Conductor A. T. Hanley of St |Thomas was bruised and cut when flung from one wall to the other in the caboose at the rear jof the train. District engineer Owen Jones) jof Detroit said 350 feet of track! TORONTO (CP) -- A govern- |was ripped up and 300 feet of) ment - operated 52 - mile com- jroadbed will have to be rebuilt. muter train' system along the Damage was estimated at $2,-|CNR Jakeshore right - of - way 000,000 to $3,000,000 and officials! trom Burlington to Toronto and |said it may take a week to re-/then to Dunbarton will begin store traffic. late in 1966 or early 1967, Pre- GUARD AGAINST LOOTING | mier Robarts announced Wed- Toys, household appliances,| nesday, auto engine blocks, auto acces-/ The province will spend sories and groceries were scat-| $7,590,000 for 48 railway com- Commuter Service Planned With Dunbarton East Limit \day they have traded three iplayers, including forwards |Andy Bathgate and Billy Har- ris, to Detroit Red Wings for five players, among them vet- jeran defenceman Marcel. Prono- |vost. | The Leafs also sent Gary |Jarrett, 22-year-old left winger |who played with Tulsa of the |Central Professional Hockey |League last season, to the Red Wings. In addition to Pronovost, 34- year-old veteran of 15 seasons with Detroit, the Wings traded ;/four young players to the Leafs. train cars. --CP Wirephoto leigh Township, Chatham, Mer lin and Blenheim stood by Twelve miles northwest o 'i iThey are here, meanwhile, a station . " waten collided. with @ CPR Ed Joyal, 25, centre with the freight train and was hurleq| Wings _ the last two ee Sy into a ditch, causing minor in.|left winger: Larry Jeffrey, 24, juries to its driver, Charles| With Detroit for three years; His|tsht winger Lowell MacDonald, 23, with Detroit for one season, Erickson, 27-year-old defenceman who went to the |Wings last season in a trade jwith Chicago Black Hawks. 11 SEASONS IN NHL Bathgate, 32 - year - old right safety. 2 Sitio agenaeDemreesoriig 1 A age for commuter trains. Premier Robarts said traffic) congestion in the Metropolitan) Toronto area could be greatly} relieved if commuter trains are/ accepted by the public. It would take a four - lane freeway to} handle the traffic that is to be) borne by the railway system. ESTIMATES TIME was sent to Rochester two years ago in a_ surprise trade that sent forwards Dick Duff, Bob Nevin and Bill Col- lins. and defencemen Rod Sei- ling and Arnie Brown to New York Rangers. Harris, 29, spent 10 seasons as a centre with the Leafs, but saw little action as a regular tered over a wide area and p0-/muter cars and 10 diesel loco- \lice guarded the wreckage over-| motives to provide the new jnight against looting. service. Part of the capital cost! Sa eee ae will also go into station im- provements and relocations. The CNR will run the trains} under contract to the govern-| ment at: an estimated annual| cost of $3,500,000. Revenue from) b-Hunt Loan fares will cut the government! subsidy to about $1,500,000 or $2,000,000 | jto have it under way soon. It It is expected the commuter! will be administered by the Na-|trains will run every 20 minutes tional Employment Service during peak periods and will Loans will be made to those! handle 6,000 passengers an hour} Grants--with no repayment in-\of the trains, up to 12,000 com- volved--will go mainly to per-jmuters an hour could be car-| Mr. MacNaughton estimated Serine Leafs' American that the trip to Toronto's Union| Hockey League farm club, late Station from Burlington would|in the 1964-65 season. take 57 minutes. From Oakville) Bathgate, a native of Winni- or from Dunbarton to Toronto|neg was elated at the trade the commuting time would be|sending him to Toronto and was about 40 minutes. CNR officials}, ey figure in Leafs' drive to said the light-weight trains may|the 1963-64 Stanley Cup. During reach speeds of 60 miles an his career he has scored 291 hour F _|goals and 501 assists. He won The service is to start at 6:45)the Hart Trophy as the NHL's a.m, and end at midnight, Mon-| most valuable player in 1958-b9 day to Friday. run at 20-minute intervals dur-|p ing rush hour and at one-hour Bathgate last month was intervals other times except quoted as blaming Leat coach schedule 0n| George (Punch) Imlach for the Sundays and holidays. team's failure to win a fourth Mr. MacNaughton said the straight Stanley Cup after Tor- angers. Trains would) when he scored 40 goals for the ANDY BATHGATE The Brampton, Ont., jand Conservator quoted Bath-| |gate as saying the Leafs were too tired to defeat. Montreal. | "There is a limit to a play-| | winger, has been in professional] .y'. endurance," the newspaper| consider." raged pu peeees, = ¢ mem quoted him. "Imlach pushed a| Pronovost was a bat. tle- ' i jin the I » He went to Tor- ins he Detroit This freed the Lakeshore track- leet : \few of the players past thatjscared mainstay of the Detro jonto with centre Don McKenney) jimit physically and mentally.|defence and served with Gor- Las | ! | We played some of, our best games in practice." FED UP He was quoted at the time as jsaying he wouldn't play for Tor- onto. next season if here were confined to'a utility role. Just three days ago in New York, where he was making a |Gadsby, a 37 - year - old NHL MARCEL PRONOVOST Times;worlds fair appearance, Bath-| gate said: "I really haven't decided any- thing about next season. . "There are a lot of things to die Howe, Alex Delvecchio and Bill Gadsby as assistants to coach - general manager Sid Abel last season. The trade breaks up the veteran defensive combination of Pronovost and player for 19 seasons with the Wings, Chicago and New York. CORPSES LITTER STREETS To Bury From Reuters-AP SANTO DOMINGO (CP) ers of the rival civil war forces in the Dominican Republic to| sign a 12-hour ceasefire and al-| UN Seeks Truce )Cross can take care of wounded --jand dead United Nations and Red Cross|that has raged in the city this officials today tried to get lead-|week. |CLAIMS CONTROL Bodies in the fierce battle The junta claimed '"'absolute of the country and persons. southeast of Cairo airport. |badly injured. p93 were listed as Pakistanis, 12 Airport officials said there) Reports from Karachi said 9 were six survivors, all of them/narty of 26 Pakistani newspa- per men led by Gen. Hayauddin Of the 115 passengers aboard,|Haquib, president of the Press Trust of Pakistan newspaper syndicate, airline officials and jother guests were aboard the plane, Only one of the news- lonper men survived. | The Karachi office of Pakis- jtan International Airlines said |18 foreigners were among the passengers and that eight of Chinese and 10 other foreigners, whose nationalities were given only as Canadian, U.S., Leban- ese and Egyptian. There was no immediate breakdown or identification of the foreigners. The passenger list included at s |least three children, an airline/them were Chinese. It did not spokesman said. HITS HILL others, The Boeing 720-B of the Pa-| The airliner was opening a kistan International Airlines;new route from Karachi to Lon- plowed into a sand hill in aldon via Dhahran, on the Per- heavy fog as it prepared to/sian Gulf, Cairo and Geneva. know the nationalities of the make its final approach to the Cairo airport. Nearly impassable terrain delayed the arrival of rescuers until six hours after the crash. Six ambulances and 20 fire brigades were sent out. | "It all happened so fast I {didn't know what was going on," said one of the survivors, Gala] Alkarimi, an employee of the airline. "One minute I was sitting in- side the plane with a safety belt fastened around my waist. The next thing I remember was hearing an explosion. When I came to, I found myself lying outside the wreckage." "It was a horrible sight," one of the rescue party, 'an area of two square kilometres littered with what was left of the plane's wreckage, mutilated bodies, passenger bags, came- ras and cigarette cases." The wreckage was still burn- ing when rescuers reached the scene. The desert sand in the immediate vicinity was black- ened. About £4,000 ($12,000) was re- covered from the scene. Shortly before the crash, the | As soon as it was light enough, helicopters of the Egyp- tian Air Force flew to the site and rescued survivors. WORST CRASH The crash was the worst this year. The previous highest death toll was Feb. 6, when a Chilean DC-6 crashed near San- tiago with the loss of 85 lives. The worst disaster in the his- tory of aviation was Dec, 16, 1960, when 136 persons died in a mid-air collision between a United Airlines DC-8 and a Trans-World super - constella- tion over New York. An airline spokesman in Ka- rachi said the passengers in- cluded A. K. Qureshi, adminis« trator of The Associated Press of Pakistan. The plane that crashed t was scheduled to pick up 52 ad- ditional passengers, all guests of the airline, at Cairo for the remainder of the flight to Ge- neva and London. Another survivor, Galal Ka- rimi, said the plane was pre- paring to land at Cairo, passen- gers had been told to fasten their seat belts and "then all I heard was bang bang." U.S. Jets Hammer Targets, Then Drop 'Or-Else' Notes the removal of dead and/control"' {sons who have been out of work ried vd ded from the fighting|Called for unconditional surren-| for long periods. MAKE STATEMENTS of his '"'war on poverty" cam- paign. It will involve a $5,000, 000 Ioan fund and another $5,000,000 a year in outright grants The aim is to put new mo bility into the labor force, shift ing labor ses to areas of jabor shortage and encouraging workers to go where their skills can best be used Labor . Minister MacEachen made a simultaneous announce- ment, with additional detail during a speech to the Canadian Federation of Mayors and Mu- nicipalities at Windsor, Ont No starting date has been set for the program but Mr. Mac- Eachen told reporters he hopes lexact fare structure has notlonto had been eliminated in sx]. : ' oP Sadgunbeg. gid Fe: f the semi-finals by|¥ WILL COVER COSTS Premier Robarts and High-\rates might be higher than|Srontreal Canadiens. izone. er. tthe rene ae In either case the payment|ways Minister Charles. Mac-|those now charged by the CNR| The Red Cross said bodies of aes have ~~. ces will cover actual costs of mov-|Naughton both made state-|for its Hamilton - Toronto serv- men, women and children had|the Dominican Repubic, * n ing families and furniture plus|ments announcing the programlice. LONG WEEKEND lbeen rotting in the streets for|bert told a rd of es 1,000}targets in North Viet Nam to-lleast two guerrillas. a a resettlement allowance of $400 as the legislature began its sit-| Feeder bus services will be| lday cheering middle and upper -\day and also dropped 500, The dropping of the leaflets fora man and wife and $100\ting Wednesday. Earlier, they|provided in the 14 stations WILL KILL 60 ee bs lclass followers inside the U.S.-\leaflets warning the Commu-/capped a day of almost contin- for each dependent up to six! appeared at a press conferencejalong the 52-mile route. Some| hea : peace mission said both the| occupied rg epee org to halt aggression in Southjuous air strikes against the dependents with CNR President Donaldjexisting stations will be elim-| _ OTTAWA (CP) The jiunta. and the rebels have/S@to Domingo Sday|Viet Nam or "'bear more dis-|North on the third day of re- Single men or women will be Gordon to brief reporters onjinated because of their prox-| Canadian Highway Safety \apreed "in principle" to the 12-|night. astrous consequences," a U.S./newed raids. limited to a maximum $100 plus) the. project, imity to each other, Parking} Council predicts 60 persons |pouyr ceasefire. Imbert spoke from a balcony|spokesman said. Earlier strikes were reported transportation, Mr. Robarts said the com-/areas will be provided at all) will die in traffic accidents | But the spokesman said thatlat his headquarters in the Con-|, The pada dropesd byjeaningt ee ee Qui -- The labor minister listed these ae service is designed as a stations except Union Station! on Canada s roads | during Col. Francisco Caamano Deno, gressional Palace shortly after 25 F-105 Thun -- na a ve ba arg Ba gg south 0} ii hree categories of workers who|two- or three-year experiment.|in Toronto. the 78-hour Victoria DaY |nead of the '"constitutionalist"|. : ih bel miles of Hanoi, the Nor jet-/noi, and against a convoy of 1s will be eligible for loans, repay-|But. the government looked to! egy; +7 . weekend from 6 p.m. Fri- ' ¢gijunta troops overran the rebelinamese capital. \trucks 90 miles south of Hanoi. = eg ih. dagee i ae 'a ii COULD SERVE 15,000 j rebel government, refused '9 i ; ; he Viet Cong! Ph jay ttacked able "normall in two years it "'with high hope for success| Mr. MacNaughton said the| day to midnight Monday. sign a joint agreement with|radio station and rebel resist- _On the ground, the Vie ong) Phu Qui also was attacke at interest not exceeding six per|so that it might be adopted! Metropolitan Toronto and| , Phe council said Wednes- |Gen. Antonio Imbert Barreras,|ance in northern Santo Domingo fired a short mortar barrage|when the raids were resumed day last year's road toll of 64 during the holiday week- end was a record, Previous high was in 1957 when 50 From Reuters-AP |miles southwest of Da Nang, SAIGON (CP) Unitedj)killing one marine and wound- States aircraft made three sep-|ing two others. The marines re- arate strikes against military|ported their return fire killed at s A spokesman for the UN sine 1] 7] h ig ser pe aug ng the neg tegion transportation study, of! the 'national reconstruction"|collapsed. jinto a U.S. marine patrol 15/Tuesday. neni a ere sale ne ; a aes ; | - VEE ECL ee, Pereone Winer possibly, Other parts Of|which he was chairman,| >I nrosnects of ling steady -| the ince." c prospects of finding steady em-) the province Shows that the 663.000 papain |junta president. Caamano also has refused tO} pueenanyy ante Mn | | The UN official said efforts|meet with Imbert, contending} would be made to try to get the) that any compromise with the) y sloyment in line with their Mr. Gordon told reporters the |tion of the lakeshore corridor Queen's Tour Leaves Bonn By PETER JOHNSON BONN (Reuters) Elizabeth and Prince Philip set out today on a tour of the West German provinces after two days of rousing welcome in the capital They } iilltop Perers- berg residence rlooking Bonn by car from Koblenz where the Rhine the Moselle. There they planned to board a Rhiné steamer a three-hour ip up the Rhine Valle, Kaub to take the al train for Wies- baden, the Hesse state capital The trip up the Rhine, was a relaxing interlude for the Queen and Prince Philip after the first two hectic d of the cl ne -- Queen ft +} € heir joins for to rov 1-day night j dis- AVS r isit d by as Wednesday acular firework play called the "Rhine in flames."' An estimated 200,000 persons lined the banks of. the river as a battery of launchers fired multi-colored rockets into the sky. CROWDS CHEER Huge clapping turned out as Queen and the duke carried out their prograth in Bonn. € of e ing i crowds chee German arlier 1 the streets the unfavorable inaugurating of the government program will mean that the 2. Workers who are facing)CNR will have to seek permis- layoff of a permanent nature sion from the board of trans- and whose prospects of finding port commissioners to cancel steady employment within com-|its Hamilton - to - Toronto com- muting distance: are muter trains able: He said the service was 3%. Prey unemployed only made possible by moving workers who, on their own ini-|CNR's marshalling yards from tiative, have moved to employ- downtown Toronto to the out- ment approved by the NES in skirts of the metropolitan area, another locality and who : e assistance in moving their s and household effects WILL GIVE LEEWAY Mr. MacEachen said regula | be drawn up to pro qualifications are in their own locality; unfavor new i ously re qu lfamilie tions will vide partial forgiveness of th loans in and for repayment more than two yea necessary Outright grants without a means three Falls On 23 | NEW. YORK. (AP)--~--"All of a sudden, it was like a bomb fell) down," says the meat section| manager who was Serving cus-| tomers when the roof of aj Brooklyn supermarket, collapsed| Vednesday and rained' tons of} oncrete slabs and plaster. de- bris on customers and clerks, The manager, Sam Kinker,| |61, afid his four women custom-| ers fled through ore of the} broken windows. Twenty - three persons -- mostly women shoppers--were! injured Police al some circumstances periods where 9 rs will be made test for work ers 1, employed f of months before applying; 2. Those completing trai g jcourses or vocational rehabilita- tion and re-establishment pro grams; 3. Key unemployed firms rece de program oualified workers are available lin the firms' localities. in ategories Those who for ave been V the ur four x skilled workers and required ving financial now by ince oul the area firemen and idenis neighborhood pulled sev eral victims from 'under chunks} jof concrete. re ment revider of the Store Roof persons died in traffic acci- to be served by the commuter dents. trains could provide a potential of 15,000 riders a day two men to sign separate agree-|j ments for a daylight ceasefire) Friday in order that the Red) unta would violate rebel de-| mands for a return to the 1963) constitution. ae 4 ARCHBISHOP POCOCK CONFIRMS 203 AT WHITBY Two hundred and three adults and children from St. John the Evangelist Parish, Whitby, were confirmed by the Most Rev, Philip Pocock, DD, JCD, co-adju- tor Archbishop of Toronto, ata service in the church Wednesday night. The arch- bishop was assisted by the Rt. Rev. Dr. Paul Dwyer, dean of Ontario County and pastor of St. Gregory the Great Roman Catholic Church, Oshawa. Prior to service blessed High the confirmation Archbishop Pocock the Denis O'Connor School grounds. --Oshawa Times Photo NEWS HIGH LIGHTS McDonald Steps Down; 'No Trouble PITSBURGH (AP) David as president of the United St without the fight he promised nesday that he was withdrawi Feb. 9 election in which he J. McDonald will step down eelworkers union next month . McDonald announced Wed- ng his protests to the union's was defeated by Secretary- Treasurer I, W. Abel by slightly more than 10,000 votes. Minaudo Killed By Avenger: Paper TORONTO (CP) -- The Star says in a story from Tra- pani, Sicily, that Onofrio Minaudo, deported from Canada last year was shot to death father Minaudo killed in 1922. Monday by a man whose The story by Star staff ) writer Robert Reguly says Sicilian police have 'arrested a suspect and marked the case closed. The man, whose name was not revealed, is a farmer who was a child when his father was killed. LMU ist One-Way Parking Restrict Town Employees Sign; Wages Increased--P. 5 Oshawa Tony's Wins Softball Opener--P. 8 Ann Landers--17 City News--13 Classified--22, 23, 24, 25 Comics--27 3 Editorial--4 Financial Obits--26 26 queries HE TIMES today... Television ions Approved--P. 13 fo ee | Sports--8, 9, 10, 11 27 Theatre---26 Whitby News---5, 6 -14, 15, 16, 17 tye ga OETA Women's Weother--2 MURMUNTMTMM T

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