Weather Report Sunny with cloudy periods to- day and Saturday. Showers or thundershowers possible in afternoon today. Low tonight, Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- . tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94 -- NO. 142 She Oshawa Gimes -- Ble Por West tig livered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 1965 Authorized as Second Class Office Department Ottawa end for HP a in Cash. Postage 50. High tomorrow, 80. FIFTY PAGES gers from many points in Ontario is expected to be 'one of the best held recent- ly. Some of those attending this year's event will be rep- resenting groups from Osh- 'The Rover Round Table of Oshawa will hold its fifth ennual " " at Camp "Samac, Saturday. The event, bringing together some Rovers and Ran- OSHAWA ROVERS HOST 85 ONTARIO ROVERS AND RANGERS awa as well as Niagara Falls, Aurora, Dunbarton, Markham, Port Hope, and Cobourg, Photo shows Rover Tom Britton, of the 7th Osh- awa D. Rose . Rover Crew, as he discussed ar- 'NOBODY WANTED LAW' PCs Rip Gordon On Press Curbs By STUART LAKE Other resolutions dealing OTTAWA (CP) -- Round oné| with changes in Canadian cus- of the newspaper and periodi-| toms were dealt with at a fast cals scrap ended abruptly in|pace and only one tariff change the Commons Thursday when | proposed by Mr. Gordon in his MPs voted approval of income/ budget had not been approved tax changes proposed in a gov-/ when the House adjourned. ernment resolution. | It will be the first item of Approval came after Con-|Commons business today to be servative front-benchers came| followed by a resolution setting as close as they could under|up a penitentiaries committee. patliamentary rules to calling) Opposition Leader Diefen- Finance Minister Gordon a liar|baker and former defence min- and demanding that he resign./ister Gordon Churchill led the More heated debate can be/onslaught against Mr. Gordon. expected when the resolutions,, The Conservative leader said stemming from Mr. Gordon's|partial truths have been the April 26 budget speech, come| cornerstone of government pol- before the House in legislation icy. He couldn't accept state- form. |ments that the changes pro- Opposition, parties minced no|posed wouldn't cut down on words in striking at the govern-| freedom of the press. ment's proposals to remove the! 'The full story of Parliament tax exemption for money spent and what happens here 'was on advertising in foreign-owned | not getting out to the people. newspapers and periodicals,,example, were always avail- rang ts for 4 events with Rangers Sharon Corbett, left, and Sally Goyne, standing: both mem- and to classify Time and Read-|able to explain matters in a er's Digest magazines as Cana-|way favorable to the govern- dian publications. ment, "Nobody Asked For Laws, Why Are They Wanted?" Mr. Diefenbaker said the|ridings were intended by the bers of the 1st Oshawa Air royal commission on _ publica- Rangers. tions recommended steps to federal government as a "sop" to newspapers. --Oshawa Times Photo 'China Sea. An amphibious reS-\nound and 750-pound bombs on B-52s Join In Viet War SAIGON (AP)--Scores of U.S. planes--including 27 B-52 heavy bombers making their debut in combat--rained tons of bombs, napalm and rockets into three square miles of Viet Cong jun- gle today. Ground troops that searched the area found no en- emy casualties from the big air ttack, military spokesmen . "6 7" Air Command flew 2,200 miles said. Two of the giant eight-en-|from Guam to make their first gined, $8,000,000 bombers were|air strike in any combat. They lost in a collision over the South|rained high explosive 1,000 - 6,000 pounds of rice, but no other major results were re- ported. The object of the mission, was to catch a large concentration jot Viet.€ong believed to be in |the jungle. Some reports said it was believed accompanied by Chinese advisers. | The B-52 jets of the Strategic cue plane made a perilous land- : . ing fa 12-foot pit to rescue|'"@ D zone jungle, a Viet Cong four survivors and picked up|Stronghold where the Commu- the body of a fifth flyer, an air|Msts were reported massing for force spokesman in Manila re-if, aeek attack on nearby. vil) rted. | s | "nares other airmen. were|_After the B-52s, a squadron} laeitie. & ia Wesche Janel?! B-57 twin-jet fighter-bombers| ag pel "ih the stormy sea, Plastered the area aren unable to take off because of a). nnon shells : fms damaged propeller. The surviv- pe | ors were transferred to a pass--WON'T COMMENT ing freighter, but the plane's, The air force declined to eva-| five crew members stayed|luate results of the raid until aboard to await a navy ship. (after a ground check. | South Vietnamese ground! Informants at Bien Hoa air| units clashed briefly with an es-|base, 15 miles north of Saigon,| * into charges that federal minis- terial aides last summer ex- timated 20 Viet Cong in the/said the B-52s had missed. part bmg igen -- guer-ot the designated target area. | and wounding others.' The Americans return- The troops also destroyed about ling from the bombing zone re-| fused to discuss their findings) s :with reporters. But- informants orion eport \said they found mostly foxholes 2 jand trenches. They said some craters left by the B-52s were 0 PM June 28 \250 yards apart and that: the! area had not been saturated. | OTTAWA (CP)--The Dorion| A. U.S. spokesman in Saigon} commission report into allega-\S@id intelligence reports several] tions of attempted bribery and|@@¥s ago indicated the Commu-| influence-peddling by aides to)Mists federal cabinet ministers will be delivered to Prime Miaiater|* Pearson Monday, June 28, it|20nes. was learned today. 4 U.S. officials believed the Viet ae e .3/Cong might be preparing for an-| Mr. Pearson has _ indicat ; that the report by Chief panics goret "pare: ee = Bipody, As Frederic Dorion of the Quebec | Sault on Bong ost last «eek, Superior Court will be made wah cales Veserne Caan: public fairly soon after it is re- altles on both sides. ceived by the government. Chief Justice Dorion heard 65 : hy | witnesses during his inquiry China Awaits : ef erted political influence to at- Hanoi's Call tempt to arrange for the re-| lease On bail of Lucien Rivard) PEKING (Reuters) -- China of Montreal, wanted in the U.S.|said today it has made all on charges of masterminding a|preparations and would send huge narcotics smuggling) Volunteers to Viet Nam racket. Rivard escaped from) promptly "when we receive the March 2 before the inquiry was} call of the Vietnamese people," completed 'and has not been re-|the'New China news agency: re- captured, |ported, QUEEN MOTHER VISITS CITY AS PART OF CANADIAN TOUR The Queen Mother will visit Oshawa next Friday during her five-day Cana- dian tour. Queen Elizabeth will pay a visit to the National Stud Farm, just north of the city, as the guest of E. P. Taylor, multi - millionaire industrialist. The royal guest is. sched- uled to leave Toronto at 10 a.m. and arrive at the stud farm 45 minutes later. The route will follow the Mac- donald-Cartier Freeway and Simcoe st. A special escort will be supplied by Oshawa City Police, who will also co- ordinate traffic movement as the royal procession moves through the city. Her Majesty will leave the stud farm. after an hour-long tour conducted by Mr. Taylor, His champion racehorse--Northern Dancer -- will be shown to the royal visitor. City school officials have said that an estimated 2,000 school children will line en ne Simcoe st. soon after 10.30 a.m. The Queen Mother will drive to Batterwood House, Port Hope, after her Osh- awa visit where she will be the luncheon guest of Can- ada's former Governor Gen- | erai Vincent Massey. | Her visit to Canada is in | connection with the 50th | anniversary of the Toronto Scottish Regiment, of which she is honorary commander- in-chief, The visit to Oshawa will be a private one and it is expected that only two cars will be used to transport the Queen Mother and_ her aides. Lady Jean Rankin, Lady-in-Waiting, and Super- iniendent R. D. Wells will accompany Her Majesty in | the royal car. The Oshawa Police escort of five motor cycles and a | police car will join an escort provided by the On- tario Provincial Police when the car leaves the M-C Free- way. Oshawa police will also operate traffic signals on Simcoe st. snvnuinenraaan TL | help Canadian periodicals, but) |newspaper people and others} , |interested "They thought they could buy silence with that." Mr. Churchill quoted from a number of daily néwspapers which he said accused Mr. Gor- don of telling falsehoods to de- fend his legislation. The minister had said there was no opposition to: his pro- jposals yet the newspapers con- jtinually challenged Mr. Gor- |don's statements that the legis- jlation didn't strike at freedom jof the press; that there were no serious objections to it' and that there were no alternatives to his proposal. "The finance minister has could make their|/been accused by leading news- representations. |papers of falsifying the rec- He said recent large adver-jord," said Mr. Churchill. tisements in daily newspapers|"There is only one recourse-- about new federal electoral! submit his resignation." Gordon 'Good Intentions' Won't Do, Churchill Says It wasn't enough for Mr. Gor-|come, which he favored, and| don to express his good inten-|the magazine and newspaper) tions that press freedom would/proposals, which he deplored. never be muzzled. | "This is a deliberate plan by "T can no longer rely on, the|the government to incorporate word of the prime minister ... .|this kind of disagreeable pro- and I doubt very much whether] Posal in a honey - coated pack- we can rely on the word of the|48@ so that the opposition can minister of finance," he said.|/be browbeaten into accepting Another former Conservative| the. whole thing," he said. minister, Angus MacLean) Max Saltsman (NDP -- Wat- (Queens) said he favored many|¢tloo South) said freedom of of the proposals in Mr. Gor- the press was not an issue in don's budget: But he would yote|the debate. But he objected to against them because of the|the "back - door approach" to measure dealing with newspa-|Keeping the newspapers Cana; per advertising. |dian - owned by taxing adver- Harold Danforth (PC--Kent, tising. : ; He also strongly criticized Ont.) objected to having a vote) putting all the budget proposals on a™~resolution calling for a into.one package requiring a 1-per-cent cut in taxable in-\single vote for approval. nothing for newspapers. "Nobody asked for this legis- lation, nobody. Why does the government want it? There must be some reason." Mr. Diefenbaker said that if Mr. Gordon were to disclose the person ,who asked for the proposed legislation, that the government would have to drop the matter at once. CALLS FOR PAUSE He also called for "a pause" in consideration of the measure so it could go before a parlia- mentary committee. Then a PRIME MINISTER WILSON _ ++. Africa Speared Him ye 2 ea ". a» He's Not Going . day over the composition of the Sto the mission in its present | will not be able to participate LB] Pleased With Wilson Peace Plans WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- ident Johnson and his cabinet meet today to review diploma- tic proposals for ending the war in Viet Nam and, to quote John- son, discuss "certain other hopes for peace that we are evaluating and considering." Certain to figure in the dis- cussion was.a new move by British Commonwealth prime ministers._to-establish a _five- member peace-seeking mission that will seek talks with gov- ernments. concerned. Johnson told a 93 - minute press conference Thursday that he welcomed. this initiative. "We are very happy they have made this suggestion,"' he said. "We have talked to them, communicated with them about it and they will have our full co-operation." But Johnson volunteered at another point that someone who made contact with top officials of North Viet Nam in behalf of the: United States reported as recently as June 7 "they are not now interested in any nego- COMMONWEALT SPLIT BY WILSON PLA Africa Rips, Asia Hedges © So Plan May Never 'Fly' By HAROLD MORRISON LONDON (CP) -- The Com- monwealth split wide open to- British-inspired summit peace mission on Viet Nam and doubts were raised whether the un- precedented mission would ever get off the ground. Two East African members of the 2l-member Commonwealth --Tanzania and Kenya -- pub- licly declared their opposition form, while others, including some Asian leaders, expressed reservations in private. Less than 24 hours after th>| Commonwealth prime minis ters' conference had announced this major peace bid, the whole moral authority of the mission seemed likely to be undermined. Already one of the five Com- monwealth leaders asked to serve on the mission--which plans to visit Peking, Moscow, Hanoi, Saigon and Washington --has dropped out. Ceylon's Prime Minister Dud- ley Senanayake announced he because of pressure of work. This itself could end the im- portant summit character of the mission, to be led by British Prime Minister Wilson. Officials said Senanayake would .either have to be re- placed by a junior minister from Ceylon or a new search would have to begin for another Asian leader to join 'The other three Asian monwealth nations--India, Pa- kistan and Malaysia--are un- likely to take part in the mis- sion for various reasons, and this would deprive it of its de- liberately-planned regional fla- vor. Tanzanian President J ulius Nyerere, the first leader to come out openly against the the mission, view today that he objected to the mission because it would put China on the spot. "The Commonwealth, as a Commonwealth group, should not appear to be backing Mr. Harold Wilson or the United States on this issue," Nyerere said. Kenya followed this up today. with a hard-hitting statement which said Wilson should not lead the mission and Britain should not even take part in the peace bid because it had com- mitted itself to backing U.S. policy in Viet Nam. Although they issued no state- ments on the question, both President Mohammed Ayub Khan of Pakistan and Prime Minister A. 'ul Rahman of Ma- laysia vcore rc-orted unhappy with the mission, representing the first joint Commonwealth peace venture in histcny, but for different reasons. The Pakistani president . « said to believe, like Kenya, that Britain was so tightly linked with u.s. policy in Southeast Asia that the mission's chances of success could be comprom- ised. Rahman, however, was said to fear that Ag mission might come up wit! Is_ that the Commoaweath" would be asked to back and which would in effect "reward aggression" by the Communists' in South aay Ce the mission before it gets a chance to move. : In addition to Wilson and Se- nanayake, others picked for the mission were' Prime Minister Sir Ababukar Tafawa Balewa of Nigeria, President Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana and Presi- dent Sir Eric Williams of Trin- plan, declared in a radio inter- By RONALD BATCHELOR LONDON -(Reuters)--A - Brit- ish Commonwealth summit mission to seek a Viet Nam peace solution was blasted to- day as a propaganda move by another Commonwealth country within hours of its launching. 'We know it is going to fail," said a spokesman for the East African nation of Tanzania, But the peace bid received an immediate welcome from the United States and South Viet Nam. President Johnson said the mission would have his govern- ment's "full co-operation." South Vietnamese government sources said the mission would be well-received in Saigon. A mission headed by British Prime Minister Wilson' with heads of government from two African, one Asian and one idad and Tobago. Wilson Peace-Try Blasted As Propaganda Attempt Latin American country was announced late Thursday night at the end of the first day of the 21 - nation Commonwealth prime ministers conference here. VISIT ALL SIDES It was hoped the leaders, travelling together, could visit Peking, Moscow, Hanoi, Saigon, New York and Washington in an attempt to end the Viet Nam war. "How can you expect the chairman (Wilson) who is com- mitted to the United States to be accepted by the. Chinese?" asked the Tanzanian spokes- man, The spokesman told reporters his delegation disputed the statement that the summit team proposal had been agreed upon unanimously by the prime min- isters, tiation of any kind." Joh said he got a similar report from the same source, not iden- tified, Feb. 15. No Overtures --scored a resounding . success on its maiden test flight today and gave the United States a great boost toward developing a military space capability. The huge rocket drilled into orbit a 21,000-pound dummy sa- tellite that<could be the fore- tunner of. manned and un- manned military machines that would patrol and perhaps con- trol outer space. The Titan 3-C, actually three rockets lined up in single file, thundered away from \its Cape Kennedy launching\pad on schedule with a tremendous rush of flame, smoke and power. Two 85-foot-tall solid fuel mo- tors trailed twin 500-foot trails of fire and generated total boos- Gigantic Titan Rocket Opens Space-War Era were organizing a new) CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)|propel the rocket above the at-|space station that would keep grouping of forces between the|A triple-barrelled Titan 3-C--|mosphere. Two minutes after/astronauts in orbit a month or Sommunist-controlled D and C\the mightiest rocket ever fired)liftoff, at an. altitude of about/more to determine whether man 24 miles, a. centre liquid-fuel| engine flanked by the solids ig- nited and the solids jettisoned and tumbled into the Atlantic. The central chamber was a 127-foot-tall Titan 3-A rocket. All three of its stages fired with) precision to hurl the chunk-of-| lead satellite into orbit more than 115 miles above the earth. The satellite was the biggest true payload ever put into space. . A combination of weather and technical troubles had blocked an. effort to put it up Thursday. The air force hopes to de-| velop the Titan 3-C as a work- horse, quick-reaction booster for a series .of manned and un- manned military payloads. The major project is a jter thrust of 2,650,000 pounds to)manned orbiting laboratory--airocket, can effectively perform military tasks in space, Two unmanned are. scheduled for aboard Titan 3-C rockets next year. If no hitches develop, the first manned Jab, with two astronauts, could be sent aloft in late 1967 or 1968. B Because of the test nature of ithe flight, the satellite carried today was an inert piece of lead. A' useful 'payload, per- haps a communications satel- lite, might be launched on the # second. test flight in September. | Before today, the U.S. Saturn | \I was the most powerful rocket fired. It develops. 1,500,000 pounds of booster thrust, slightly higher than the 1,430,- | 000 pounds of Russia's biggest ""~ laboratories j : launching f gi | late : Be iew | To Viet Cong The president, who did not go into detail on the peace ideas placed on the cabinet agenda, made it clear in response to a question that he does not favor negotiation with the Communist, Viet Cong guerrillas in South Viet Nam. He said they repre- sent no government. HAS HIS MANDATE Asked if: he was thinking about asking Congress for a broader mandate to prosecute the Viet Nam war, Johnson said he has ample power as com- mander-in-chief and that a res- olution Congress passed August authorized '"'all neces Sary measures." In one of the opening state- ments at the presidential talk- fest--his longest press confer ence to date -- Johnson con demned recent violations: of the}: ceasefire agreement in the Do minican Republic. _He said unprovoked attacks F on American and Brazilian troops there 'appear to have|= been premeditated by elements|= last} sional government to rule the year under Organization of was expected to be proposed the Dominican conflict. Und committee, and the inter-American peace country during this period. vised elections would be held within a year. the inter-American human NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Province Takes Greater EMO Power TORONTO (CP) -- A shake-up of the Emergency Measures Organization giving the provincial government widespread powers over. municipalities in the event of natural or national disaster was approved today by the leg- islature. The legislation brings EMO directly under the wing of the attomey-general's department and provides for top-level government control of emergency services. OAS To Propose Dominica Government SANTO DOMINGO (AP) -- The creation of a provi- Dominican Republic for one American States supervision today te the rival factions in er the proposal, OAS-super- The OAS rights commission force would remain in the Million Dollar Civic Square a Whitby School Board Honors Oshawa Public Sch ...In THE TIMES today... ener 'Challenge': Architect--P, 15 Earl A. Fairman--P. 5 1G P, iW Ann Landers--17 City News--15 Classified --18, 19,20, 21 Comics--8 Editorial--4 which seek to prevent the es: tablishment of peace in Santo Domingo." + we Is Hold A Obits--13 Sports--10, 11, 12 Theatre--9 Whitby News--5 Women's--16, 17 Weather--2 = Financial--13 lqreenenirneggmenmentinnemmememnatinnignl