Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Jun 1965, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

a She Oshawa Boe Per! Weak Home Delivered Weather Report Sunny and very warm today and Sunday. Showers possible tomorrow afternoon. Winds light. Low tonight, 58. High tomorrow, 85. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, ~ Imes sapere ok "boone "Cash: Authorized es. TWENTY-TWO PAGES Ottewe ond VOL. 94 -- NO. 143 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JUNE 19, 1965 adil Dorion Scolds Favreau Move Service Says OTTAWA (CP) -- Southam;by Montresl lawyer Pierre La- News Services says in an Ot-|montagne, acting for the U.S. tawa dispatch fhat the Dorion| government in extradition hear- report questions Justice Minis-|ings against suspected narcot- ter Favreau's wisdom in call-|ics conspirator Lucien Rivard. ing off last Sept. 18, the RCMP| Mr, Lamontagne said he was investigation into charges of in-| offered a $20,000 bribe by Ray- fluence - peddling by federal/mond Denis, then executive as- ministerial aides. .,,__|sistant to the immigration min- The report by Chief Justice/ister, and subjected to political Frederic Dorion of Quebec Su-|pressure by Mr. Rouleau and perior Court on his investiga-\two of Mr. Favreau's aides to tion of the allegations will be|apree to bail for Rivard. Riv- handed to Prime Minister Pear-|arq escaped Montreal jail son June 28, it was learned! warch 2, Friday. | Southam News Services) OTTAWA (CP)--New Demo- says Mr. Favreau's integrityjcrat MP Harold Winch called emerges unshaken in the report) for an investigation Friday into but that his methods of dealing!a press report giving a "'pre- with the RCMP investigation| view" of Chief Justice Dorion's are questioned. |findings in his investigation into) It quotes "a source whojallegations of bribery and cor-} claims to be informed -- and|ruption in high places. whose record in situations of} Mr. Winch, member for Van- this sort in the past has been | couver East, rose on a question remarkably accurate." lof privilege in the Commons The Southam story does notiand said the report by say whether Chief Justice Dor-/Southaf News Services, was) ion recommends that any|an insult to the chief justice, to} charges be laid. |Prime Minister Pearson and to It says - the report criticizes) Parliament. the activities of Liberal MP| Deputy-Speaker Lucien Lam- Guy Rouleau, then parliament-|oureux said he had his doubts) » ary secretary to Mr. Pearson,|whether a question of privilege| vy and the RCMP for bilingual! was involved, but said it should| | shortcomings. be. raised at the opening of the| (4 The allegations were made' Monday sitting. BEWARE! BOND AND KING GO ONE-WAY MONDAY OUP OVERTURNS EN BELLA REGIME The Fate Of All Despots Awaits Deposed Leader © oriented Algeria toward the From AP-Reuters General; 34, Takes Charge § ALGIERS (CP) -- President Ahmed Ben Bella was over- thrown in a pre-dawn coup to- Communist bloc and last year received the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. He. also recog- s As Strongman In Viet Nam Gata it nae" leaned hie. all despots,' Radio Algiers an-| The council's statement -de- : . ' att ; nounced. inounced the '"'reckless conse- By EDWIN .Q. WHITE | The war against Communist ' A revolutionary counciljquences of personal power." It || SAIGON (AP) -- Brig..Gen.|forces is going badly, he said.) - headed by Col. Houari Bou-|said the Algerian internal situ- Nguyen Cao Ky, flamboyant|There is a political mess, basic) | medienne, defence minister andjation is "anguishing" as a re- air force commander, became|inseeurity, economic collapse,| | chief of the armed: forces, took|sult of the exercise of personal South Viet Nam's youngest pre-|War profiteering and injustice. over all power, charging Ben|power. d mier today, heading the eighth} The new premier said his Bella with treason and abuse| Algeria has been in deep eco- government in 20 months. 'government was faced with 26 of personal power. nomic trouble since the French Ky, 34, took over from Dr.| "urgent tasks," including the A proclamation broadcast by|granted independence in 1962 Phan Huy Quat, who quit last/declaration of a state of war, the council denounced Ben Bellalafter a long and bloody insur- week after a dispute with Chief|austerity and the mobilization as a "diabolical dictator." reetion. Unemployment is high, of State Phan Khac Suu and/of the country's potential. Air travellers reaching Paris|many persons li on U.S. opposition from religious -ele-| All able men will, be drafted today from Algiers reported|supplied surplus' i fl pects are dim. (AP) |ments. Suu also resigned. -- = 'finto the armed forces, he said, "hearing heavy firing in the city FIGHT AT VILLA -----------| The South Vietnamese armed and the population will be during the night. : Recast I thee ; forces assumed all power in the'armed and told that it must Boumedienne, 40, an officer wth tad s pd aie a lnew government although 13 of 'throw its weight behind the war ue who had been associated with seria uiates Bee gen \the 16 cabinet posts are held effort by volunteering for mili-) " ™ Ben Bella since the early days fe bulldi 4 a lage iby civilians. tary service. | BEN BELLA of Algeria's fight for indepen-|PU UnengS.. an | "Ky has been air force com-| Special courts will be set '| . . -He'll Suffer PC Leader R Grit p |dence, was said to have been|Suard at strategic points in the mander since a month after the|and offenders, such as_profit- Fate Of Despot e trained either in Peking or| "ity. And Promises To Stay [bn 'Diem. The at force, wien" Ky warmed. 7 P| Prepon wt remain sue So, Dinh Diem. The air force, with|ties, Ky warned. om - if i i ' ing Boumedienne|°f Ben Bella, Passersby heard |U.S. aid, has grown steadily SOWS CONTROVERSY F ¢ rl Cl S aki BOUPGe OS SA7InE . » langry shouts from inside the sowed controversy; ar Mm ul alms e NG 'is detinitely not pro-Chinese. villa and several windows were Press reported one responsible sitions around Villa Joly, hom junder his leadership. Ky 'has D t} urces 'adrid | 1 Hi y iplomatic so in Mi i He has frequently flown mis-jamong South Vietnamese politi- said they had been informed broken. This presumably was sions against the Communists'cal factions and high U.S. of- g , } ; * i when Ben Bella was arrested and participated in one of the/ficials had urged the new mili- hd the coup was: accomplished by . first raids against North Viet tary regime against naming 0 1C. ae e Ic ange rightists within the Algerian Page Pig hit! ers people are beginning to realize shouted|at dest Nam in February. him premier. eo ve ohh ate Bags mesa face, saat 'vith "abdel Aris i " . a estroying the C i is "| y se / i itary y ; ne is e -S, me , Her ky 0 Tamed coveramenitme peckler. "They love you."'| wheat nk ee By Yara Sends are retake be SAN SEBASTIAN DE GARA-|tion of this rural village --jof Prime Minister Fidel Castro|Bouteflika, Ben Bella's foreign : BANDAL, Spain (AP)--A 16-\waited throughout the day forjof Cuba and visited Havana/minister. _ | | last July. This indicated that at least Pe eet dee | MY tlend,"" Mr. Disten- situation in South Viet Nam. |fond of him. is Seah nace ine Seah TOES wis | i : ; : : | : ' year-old farm. girl, who claimed/some fulfilment of the promise Reuters Ben Bella's cabinet of corruption and disruption. |) ,er retorted. "you've appar-| ACCUSES HAYS to have held regular conversa-|that one or more of the four pag Sr es ferv-|were staying on under the revo- The 69-year-old Progressive ently been living behind the) He accused Agriculture Min- are : ' ae i Riad Raa SE . . Ts ' : : Boumedienne, an ascetic, J 1 an eg ens ans tions with the Virgin Mary injvillage girls who claimed con-|ent Moslem, always has re-|lutionary council. alWvn th 3 | Conservative chief told an aud-| ~ \ister Harry Hays of being ab- e past, said today she held|tact with the Virgin Mary would|garded the army as the core| The coup occurred just as Al- jence of about 600 at the legion) : ; ' sent from duty in the capital so hall here that he has no un-| Ri d P ] plane neaigh ake fulfilled ambitions and it would: AELVQLG S FALS = much that Forestry Minister | ' a iali iety in his|Siers was engaged in arrang- : a belated rendezvous with the|receive a new heavenly visit. |°f @ socialist society in his|£ P Aare Ast ' Archangel St. Michael at_mid-| sae be utieo T | BNESL oy as |FOUR INVOLVED be easy for him to retire. S |Sauve was taking charge of ; SF" 4 meeting Jyne 29. U. . Deported night Friday, The visitations of San Sebas-/HONOR AGREEMENTS agriculture. | ' ' But he pl. d te st ' sai F B hh d I S planned to stay on and atte result, he said, was Mr. or eac Ca n ac Foreign ministers of partici- MONTREAL (CP) -- RCMP)jbec millers in which the for- Her meetings with the heav-itian de Garabandal have been fight for honesty in government rate Re and unity with prosperity in the Sauve's June 11: speech to Que-| 4 Presumpbly Ben Bella, 48,|pating states were scheduled to . ! Be: a ' : | CAPE KENNE . ] sing i r war-lik ses, enly messenger was witnessed t ial subject in re-|h@ en arrested, A statement)/meet June 24. d-Bordeau Jail officials said estry minister sugges they CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) jus ng it for war-like purposes, |enly vas a controversial subjec r : olay three, eatin. of ie abolition of ig ogeelecygd FS mighty Titan, 3-C, the most} An air force spokesman said: by a crowd of religious experts|ligious circles since June 18,|i8ned by Boumedienne and nation. "We stand for things that are, " i = 4 ae Reuters said some observers e f i cor re ae ; ia ious i H read over the ri aid a i i capee Lucien Rivard wer ejestablishment of a rival agency|powerful rocket~ ever fired,| gs yet oy f aor ag ni} a aye ee 1961, when Conchita and her adio 5 believed that the revolutionary taken in custody from the Mont-to fight the board in the inter-| [eo DF Se ONS eG: tNe Age three right. It may not be popular at} 4 the moment; you can't always! | companions claimed to|Pewer had been taken from|council's communique hinted be popular but you can be hon-| oa} jail to the United Stateslests of eastern feed er Fa ans a thundering success Nn) rockets demonstrates the flex-|gathered in this remote moun-|have received a holy visit. Ben Bella. It added that Algeria|strongly that the new govern- est and right." Friday mega rr : srallits maiden test flight Fridayjibility of the booster for mili-|tain settlement in anticipation) Conchita and Maria Dolores would continue to honor all/ment will seek to hold the con- He said the Liberal govern- EA ' sae Sli, _jand signalled the air force to|tary as well as other payloads.|/of a new holy visitation. Mazon were then 12 and the previous agreements and com-|ference as scheduled. ment "has run a course from|,, 15°. Raymond Canton of the) Mr. Diefenbaker launched his| proceed with plans to establish|I feel it will be the catalyst) The girl, Conchita Gonzalez,| ther two, Maria Cruz Gon- mitments with other countries. |G@OVERNMENT INTACT racetrack scandals to bribery RCMP said his men were called attack at a Winnipeg 'airport), military beachhead in space.|which will kick off many pro-|daughter of a village widow, Sate ahd Tanimte Gonain Gs. The ordinary life of Algiers; The Algerian embassy in linked with narcotics." to assist U.S. customs agents in press conference. He followed) In the most spectacular/grams which the air force has|was in ecstacy for approxi- Rae want 19 i went on as usual, apparently|Rabat indicated that, despite the removal of the three men|up with another blast on arrival|launching ever witnessed at|been working on and you have|mately 10 minutes in a moun-| 7 |' : , |undisturbed by the coup. Gov-|the coup, the rest of Ben Bella's in compliance with an extradi- at Regina and carried it for-|this missile wonderland, the|been reading: about. The|tain grove outside this village.|, The Catholic church in Spain/ernment offices, SOMEONE WANTS THIS LITTLE GIRL Associated Press photo- jured and orphaned in a gr . Horst Paas' picture bloody battle at. Dong, Xoia of tnis wounded, weeping June 10. Typical response girl has brought offers of to the picture came from help nationwide. She was in- Ontario, Calif., where one couple wrote: '"'We want this little girl to love and take care of with our four children." The AP is trying to locate the girl, but pros- BOUMEDIENNE . . + He'll Taste Fruit Of Power By KEN KELLY he was heckled at one point byjblind.. . . this man is earning WEYBURN, Sask. (CP) --ja man at the rear of the hall |his pay." Opposition Leader Diefenbaker| who was ejected. Mr. Diefenbaker charged that said Friday night the Canadian) "Why don't you do something|the Liberal government aimed! for Saskatchewan?" | saidsome of 'WE WERE HONEST' r / > state institu-|government remains intact. "We were honest. I want to tion order. They are 'wanted in| ward in the heart of this wheat-huge triple-barrel rocket devel-'manned orbiting laboratory|During that period a doctor has taken a cool view of theltions 'and private businesses) There. would be "no change" emphasize that. What's hap-|the U.S. for alleged -participa- growing area. joped total thrust of more than|should get the green light in|checked her pulse and found it San Sebastian developments.|were operating normally. in Algerian foreign policy, the pened since the present govern-|tion in drug trafficking between' Noting that Mr. Sauve had|3,000,000 pounds and flung into|short order." normal. Priests of this diocese haye| Ben Bella had strongly|embassy added. ment came into office? Every Mexico and Texas. said he was misunderstood, orbit a 21,000- pound dummy| Within three years, Titan 3-C| 'When she regained con-|been told to stay away from day something happens -- cor-| The three men, Julien Gag- Mr. Diefenbaker said that "no|satellite--the heaviest -payload/ rockets are expected to estab-|sciousness she told us. she had the village and have no associ- i) ruption and disruption."' non, 35, alias Jerry Massey; amount of penitential withdraw-|ever launched lish these unmanned space sys-|been speaking with St. Michael| ation with the claimed visits. _ Liberal policies were building Emile Groleau, 55, and Joseph/als can eradicate Mr. Sauve's| This orbiting chunk of lead|terms. A network of 24 commu-|and that she had received a} San Sebastian de Garabandal in Canada "a collection of/Raymond Jones, 27, were taken threat to the wheat board." is the forerunner of mannedinications satellites for swiftly;message which she would re-|is an isolated quiet farming states." by heavily-armed RCMP offi- RAISED IN COMMONS and unmanned military ma-|relaying military messages|veal later in writing," said ajcommunity more than 50 miles Mr. Diefenbaker was in full,|cers to the border at Blackpool, Mr. Sau've's 'speech wasichines which will patrol andjaround the world; from the provincial capital of : P ; reconnais-| witness. : ry ® ' ps . election - style flight, in an 80-/Que., where they were turned raised in the Commons Thurs-|perhaps dominate space, pre-|sance, navigation and satellite} Nearly 1,000 visitors -- more Santander, without either high- Strings Famed George Melachrino Dies a Pawhan. which'over to U.S. agents. iday. He was quoted as saying:|venting other nations fromlinterceptor payloads. 'than double the normal popula- ways or telephone. LONDON: Rewer) Grdlitatrs. leadex 'Guenaks Sk MARTIN. GORDON MAKE NO COMMITMENT T 0 DECLAR ATI ON chrino, 56, whose brand of sweet string music made him Publishers Seek Deferral On Paper Laws found dead in his bath here Friday. The cause of his death was not immediately known. OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's daily newspaper publishers Dunlop Employees Could Strike June 29 asked the government Friday to WHITBY -- More than 450 employees will strike the put off further action on its newspaper legislation until the publishers have a chance to find a better way to meet the prob- lem. A delegation from the Cana- dian Daily Newspaper Publish- ers Association put forth the re- quest during a 50-minute meet- ing with Finance Minister Gor- don, sponsor of the government © measure, and Prime Minister Martin. The two ministers promised to consider the request, but made no commitment. In the Commons, meanwhile, the government announced that income tax amendments, which include the newspaper measure, will be called for debate on Tuesday acting R. A. Graybiel of the Windsor Star, president of the publishers association, said the CNPA had renewed its previous re- quest that the government bill be dropped, but had asked merely that action be deferred on it, "AIL we asked for is a chance to find a better solution to the question than this proposal which is so objectionable to the vast majority of Canada's daily newspapers," Mr, Gray biel said "We pointed out that if the government proceeded with the measure in any form at this time it would make the achieve- ment of an alternative solution virtually impossible." Lae The government proposal, un- veiled in Mr. Gordon's April 26 budget, is designed as a pre ventive measure to ensure that no Canadian daily newspaper will fall under foreign owner- ship. To that end, it would disallow as a deductible expense for income tax purposes expendi- tures made by any firm for. ad- vertising in a foreign-owned Can- adian paper. CRITICISM STRONG The proposal 'has. come under heavy assault both on editorial pages across the country and within the Commons. Opposition Leader. Diefenbaker has charged the measure is the first step toward "thought control' of communications media. Mr. Gordon has strongly 'de- nied such charges. He has said several times the issue is not freedom of the press, but 'whether this-country will have ing is a Canadian press which pre- sents news and views in a Ca- nadian light." Mr. Graybiel said the publish- ers association does not oppose the finance minister's objective, but is strongly agdinst the method outlined in the budget proposals. CALLS TAX, PERNICIOUS "We feel any tax on advertis- inadvisable. A tax on newspaper advertising which makes advertising in paper A taxable and in paper B non-tax- able is pernicious. "It means that papers which the government favors are non- taxable and live and those the government cpposes are taxable and die. It's as simple as that." Mr. Graybiel said that, follow- ing a CDNPA submission May 4 branding the government pro- posal a "fundamental violation of long-established press free- dom," Prime Minister Pearson wrote to the association sug- gesting they. submit alternative proposals. "That's what we're asking for time to work out an alternative method, if there is .one. We're not sure there is but we want a chance to try SEEK ALTERNATIVES Mr. Graybiel said that during the past month the CDNPA executive has polled its member papers seeking alternative sug- gestions. These now are being correlated with the most prom- ising ones to be followed up with legal authorities "This will: take time, but we feel freedom of the press is too important not to receive the fullest consideration. The gov- ernment took 18 months to come up with its proposal; we've had only one month so far." He added that, since the gov- ernment measure is not effec- tive until next Jan. .1, .the CDNPA sees no reason to rush through the legislation at this point. Along with Mr. Graybiel,. oth- ers attending the meeting were Aurele Gratton of Ottawa Le Droit and D. S. Perigoe of-the Toronto Telegram, both CDNPA executives, and Clifford Sifton of the Regina Leader-Post, rep- resenting the Canadian section of the International Press Insti- tute. Both the Canadian section and international executive of the IPI have protested against the government measure, as has the Canadian section of the Commonwealth Press. Union, » 4 of strike action was made United Rubber Workers meeting at the hall. George Brooks, local president, said that Minister of Labor Leslie Rowntree 'approved Friday a "no board" report made by a conciliation officer. Dunlop of Canada Ltd., plant in Whitby June 29 following - a strike vote taken today. A 99.8 per cent vote in favor by members of Local 494, Bond st. UAW Ann Landers--13 City News--11 Classified--18, 19, 20 Comics----17 Editorial--4 Financial--21 ...In THE TIMES today... Times Leoks At Public School Field Doy--P. 11 Oshawa Man Wins $12,000 In Supreme Court--P. 2 Huntsville Pounds Whitby Steelers--P, 8 Obits--21 Sports--8, 9 Theatre--16 Whitby News--5 Women's--12, 13 Weather--2

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy