Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Jul 1965, p. 1

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athe sattan amie amma enh seal teak as oe € Sod 'Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties. Sunny with cloudy periods to- day. Cool. Sunday sunny with seasonable temperatures. Low tonight, 55. High tomorrow, -- 80. a ee ee The Oshawa Times Authorized as Second sae nl phi Post Office Department Ottewa and for of Postage in Cash, TWENTY PAGES VOL. 94 -- NO, 160 Pay Any: RY LB] FIGURES IT WILL GET WORSE BEFORE BETTER 7 Viet War: Not Rosy, Not Gloomy WASHINGTON (AP) -- encouraged about 'that -- east Asian problem. "We have lost in the landing each day -- some" WRECKED ENGINE, TWISTED PROPELLER, GRIM SEARCHERS Président Johnson predicted Friday that the war in Viet Nam '"'will get worse before it gets better.'"' He said more American troops will be sent there beyond the 75,000 already announced. Johnson went over the Vietnamese situation -- "I have neither a rosy nor a gloomy report," he said -- with reporters at his White House office before flying Europe's Common Market troubles, the U.S, balance of payments and U.S. fin- ances got some attention at the informal 23-minute press conference. But with the president's appointment of Henry Cabot Lodge to succeed Maxwell D. Taylor as ambassador to South Viet Nam and the Viet Cong guerrillas' step- up of their monsoon season offensive, both Johnson and the several score reporters off for a weekend at his Texas ranch. crowded about his desk focused mainly on the south- The diminishing Domini- can crisis--Johnson seemed While more will be known about the Viet Nam situa- tion after Lodge and De- fence Secretary Robert S. McNamara returns from a survey trip to Saigon next week, Johnson said, casu- alties from the rising Viet Cong guerrilla attacks are mounting, GIVES DEATH COUNT Some 4,556 Communist Viet Cong, 1,909 South Vietnamese and 40 Ameri- can soldiers' died in the May 15-July 3 period, John- son said, adding: neighborhood of 300 men in the period since I have been president. "We expect that it will get worse before it gets better. "They have had sub- stantial increases in the aggression forces. They're swinging wildly. They have , suffered substantial losses in their sneak attacks. "Our manpower needs there are increasing and will continue to do so. We have some 60,000 odd people there now, and they are GUYS' CR OTTAWA (CP)--Some of the bad guys named in the Dorion RCMP Probes DC-6 Wreckage For Any Evidence Of A Bomb 100 MILE HOUSE, B.C. (CP) A refrigerator truck headed for Vancouver today carrying 49 bodies taken from the wreckage of a Canadian Pacific airliner which exploded and crashed in central British Columbia Thurs- day. A search was to comings to- day bodies. three| other of the crash, the worst in CPA history, which took the: lives.of 46 passengers and six crew members. ora Mian were in- @ bomb ma; four-engine 4B apart in the air before it plunged to earth 30 miles southwest of this tiny community, 170 miles northeast of Vancouver. Six Vancouver pathologists were to perform autopsies on the recovered bodies during the weekend. Investigators hope the autopsies and a painstaking ex- amination of the plane's wreck- age may uncover clues on the cause of the disaster. Eyewitnesses said the plane, bound from Vancouver to White- horse, Y.T., exploded in the air and went into a. vertical dive. Its tail section lay almost a half mile from the twisted re- mains of the fuselage. TAIL CAME OFF One logger told police the tai blasted off and spiralled to earth. The gaping hole in the rear of the plane allowed pres- sure inside to push out a num- ber of passengers. Then the fuselage and wings dropped. Assistant Commissioner D. 0. Forrest of the RCMP said the possibility that a bomb blew it apart is being checked out. But he said that this "is only one among several possibilities." R. L. Bolduc of Ottawa, head of the department of trans- port's accident investigation di- vision, was quoted Friday night by a CPA spokesman as say- ing: "At daybreak . . . we start going over the plane inch by inch to find out what happened. Every scrap of metal we can find will be picked up and checked. | CIVILIANS SUFFER "If it's bent or burned, we) want to know why. And if it's/crash, bent or burned suspiciously, it} "As far as the bomb is con- will be turned over to thejcerned, you find someone com- RCMP for their lab to investi-|ing up with this theory in nearly gate further." levery disaster,"' he said. d yas found to be the AREA CLOSED ST ee : cause of the crash of a CPA The lightly-treed area was|twin-engine DC-3 at Sault au roped off and only RCMP.|Cochon, north of Quebec City, ment personnellin September, 1949. Twenty- and a doctor were permitted|three persons were killed, in- past the rope. Not even CPAjcluding Mrs. J. A. Guay, 28- officials were allowed in. year-old Quebec City housewife. CPA identified all but one of} Her husband, Mrs. Marguer- the victims and expected to re- ments was the cause of the i ing the blast. All three were hanged. Among the 46 passengers in Thursday's crash near here were three top executives of a fledgling Noranda Mines sub- sidiary rapidly building a $60,- 000,000 pulp mill in Prince George, B.C.; a mother, father and two children, from Nor- way; a mother, father and in- fant daughter recently arrived from Italy; mining and electri- cal_ contractors; a metallurgist, and a Salvation Army _ book- keeper. ite Pitre and Mrs. Pitre's lease the last name today. brother, Genereux Ruest, a watchmaker who devised a timing mechanism for a par- cel placed on the plane, were An airlines spokesman said it was too early to determine whether a bomb in one of the plane's four luggage compart- Only three crashes in Cana- dian aviation history have taken more lives. Each followed in- volvement with air turbulence found guilty of murder in caus- U.S. Makes Deepest Drive: With Viet Bombing Attacks From AP-Reuters | SAIGON (CP) U.S war-| planes made their dee p est! caught in the fire of battle of An Ho Island Friday. This estimated toll far ex- day, bombing targets 85 miles|ualties among combatants. northwest of Hanoi, a spokes-| The clash began early Fri- man said. jday when Viet Cong raiders Government naval junk forces|overran a Vietnamese naval were active off the coast of|jheadquarters on the island, 345 South Viet Nam. a U.S. spokes-|miles northeast of Saigon. The man said a junk limit captured guerrillas killed 16 Vietnamese a Viet Cong junk about 290/sailors, six militiamen and two miles northeast of Saigon. Three|U.S. Navy advisers. Viet Cong were reported killed! 4 U.S, marine rescue force, and two wounded. the first American ground con- Reports reaching Saigon to- jtingent to be used in direct re- day said two American mili- jaction against a Viet Cong at-| tary advisers captured by the tack, recaptured the base. Comunist V'-t Cong had been|Three marines' were. killed and decapitated and their heads|13 wounded. paraded through villages. | A half dozen Viet Cong were But a military spokesman) reported killed, and 51 prisoners said he knew nothing of the re-|were rounded up by the rescue ports, which came from refu-|force. gees from the Communist) The Viet Cong cohcealed areas. Ithemselves among civilians, Meanwhile, two U.S. marine|who fell victim to the crossfire sergeants missing from their}and bombardment. base 330 miles north of Saigon) Military sources Friday were believed to have been|placed the toll of a Communist killed by the Viet Cong. jambush 35 miles northwest of U.S. militaryauthorities said| ;Saigon Thursday at 151 govern-| ing for a stroll Thursday alongiand. 59 missing, including four jthe. beach at Chu Lai, U.S.~. advisers. The - guerrillas sprang the trap as a 365-man reported|battalion was en route to re- American sources | \that as many as 100 Vietnam-|lieve the Xon Dua outpost from 4 ese civilians were killed when'Viet Cong. attack. BILL 'wourcrasn, 35, * a mechanic, drove over a muddy logging road to the wreckage of a Canadian Pacific Airlines DC-6B that crashed Thursday killing all 52 aboard. Wolfgramm said there was no life and broken bodies were scat- tered everywhere. (CP. Wirephoto) '\kKidnapping ¢ harge | Minuteman Leader Sought :: For Kidnapping Two Girl KANSAS CITY. (AP)--Robert, Bolivar DePugh, leader of the} today when officers concluded DePugh probably was aware he ;|Minutemen, militant right-wing, Iwas wanted. anti -~-Communist organization,| About the same time, offic- was sought Friday on a state|ers entered DePugh's home. at Norborne, Mo., a town Lawrence F, .Gepford, prose- around 1,000 about 50 miles east \cutor of Missouri' s Jacksonjof 'Kansas City, but could not! /County, said two young women|find him. They reported five! had signed statements charging;young men and women were at the 42-year-old DePugh with|the house and two of them had holding them prisoners for two/jloaded rifles and pistols. weeks and trying to enlist them| FORMED IN 1960 to seduce Communists and gov-| The Minuteman ernment officials. nine duck-hunting _ companions He filed the kidnap chargt'started their anti - Communist Thursday but it was kept secretjunderground army in 1960. De during the early part of the|Pugh has claimed there are. 25,- search for the Minuteman|900 Minutemen throughout the leader. U.S,. training in guerrilla tac- The secrecy was lifted early|tics, of leader - and | | hospital jcaused by thunderstorms. CPA Pilot Capt. John Alfred) Steele, 41, had reported al change in course to avoid rough ma Thursday. Three sharp May day" calls of distress |were heard 15 minutes later, coinciding with eyewitness sightings of the crash. A Air' Canada DC-8F jet \flew through an area contain- report are expected to be hauled into court here next week on criminal charges. Justice Minister Lucien Car- din set the' wheels in motion irciday by formally handing the Lucien Rivard bail case to a young Scots-born Crown attor- ney "for the commencement of | appropriate criminal _ proceed- lings. John Cassells, 36 - year - old : A provincial Crown attorney for 7 : Ottawa, was given the explos- ive 140-page Dorion report, the 8,500 - page transcript of the ; Dorion judicial inquiry and the 7 bulky RCMP file .on "L'Affaire & Rivard." The prosecutor said he ex- pects to start' proceedings by the middle of next week, once he has digested the mountain offevidence and testimony. Mr. Cardin gave the Crown attorney carte blanche to de-jwho took over Wednesday from, cide whom to prosecute and onjthe embattled Guy . Favreau, what charges. Although thejissued a terse statement read- Criminal Code is a federal stat-jing in part: ute, the provinces are primar-| "The complete record has ily responsible for prosecuting)been placed in the hands of the offenders. provincial Crown prosecutor at The new minister,|Ottawa for the commencement U.K. Doctors Make Threats Of Quitting Health Service JUSTICE MINISTER CARDI™' justice ing thunder clouds before it crashed Noy, 18, 1963, near St. | Therese, Que., killing all 118) dian air disaster, Aged InUS. | Gain Benefit Of Medicare WASHINGTON U.S. Senate and House of Re resentatives have approved a historic program of broad pro- tection against medical costs fo boosting all cheques. The Senate passage by a 68-21 vote Friday sent the legislation| to conference with the. House.} That branch approved _ its ver-| social SWANSEA, Wales (AP)--Del-| "We knew at the start that a jegates:to the annual conference} minority would abuse the serv- of the British Medical Associa-|ice, but we also knew that they strike into North Viet Nam to-|ceeded the official count of cas-|aboard. It was the worst Cana-|tion voted today to quit serving] were usually people who just the national free health service|could not cope with life. They unless they are permitted to|needed someone to lean on. We 'charge patients a consultation) }were prepared to pay that small | fee. |price. Supporters of the move said) "How wrong we were. We a disproportionate amount of|now know that we do 16 per |\the time of general practition-|cent of our work on four per ers in the health service is now jcent of our. patients," ltaken up by hypochondriacs and; '"'We now know that, just as {ec zat malingerers. \the demand for alcohol. would . D. L. Williams, who spokejrise if it were free, so the de- jin Litho of the proposal, naa bo for free medical | Service |the conference: progressively -- increases.' (AP) -- The| 119,000,000 older Americans and} security| sion 313 to 115 April 8. Now the} differences must be adjusted. Democratic leaders said today they hope the-- conference --can! ome, \the two disappeared after leav- |ment soldiers dead, 25 wounded | begin next Wednesday and that final agreement can be reached on the measure by the week, HAVE SAME FEATURES But the long battle to enact} a medicare bill, as it is often| called, ended in effect with the} Senate vote since both versions | contain the same essential fea-| ~~ These include: A basic health plan Anancell sale social security covering stays, post - nursing home care, outpatient hospital diagnostic services, and! more health visits for persons 65 or over. 2. A. voluntary, supplemental} insurance plan covering doctor: fees for services at 'home, in the office or the hospital, as well as other services not included in the basic plan. The premium would be $3 a month. 3. A seven-per-cent increase, retroactive to Jan. 1, in all pres-| ent social security benefits for| retired persons, families and) disabled persons The. estimated approximate yearly programs will be largely, fi- nanced through increased social $7 ,000,000,000. security taxes on both employ-| oy ers and employees. The grams will start next year. cost of the} the end of| } hospital) The end of many years association Jed to this almost tearful farewell between Eldon M. 'Curly' Blocker, foreman of the Reading Park Zoo in Fresno, Cali- fornia, and one of the zoo's camels, Curly has retired j of FACE CHARGES appropriate criminal ceedings. 'Legal officers of my depart- mnt and. the RCMP are avail- able torender any assistance requested in order to ensure there will be no delay." . The action came 10 days after the publication of the re- port by Quebec Chief Justice Frederic Dorion, who said he found 'prima facil' evidence of criminal acts by various per- sons but did not name them in that context. The judge's report says there is no doubt that Raymond Denis, a Montreal lawyer then serving as executive assistant to the immigration minister, offered a $20,000 oribe to his friend 'Pierre Lamontagne on the night of July 14 last year in Ottawa. The bribe was intended to in- duce Mr. Lamontagne to drop his opposition as coun: . for the American government to Riv- ard's bail application during an pro- e é i ' E FS 75,000 that will be. there * very shortly. There will be others that will be required. "Whatever is required I am sure will be supplied. * We don't plan to let up until the aggression ceases." ; As for his reappointment » of Lodge, the 1960 Republi- can vice-presidential nom» ~ inee and Taylor's predeces- sor in the Saigon post, Johne son denounced as '"'ir-° responsible and inaccurate * and untrue" any suggestion that Taylor left in disagree- ment over Viet Nam policy. SOHN, CARORLS: ORDERED INTO. ACTION. extradition hearing. Rivard, wanted in the U.S. on dope smuggling charges, failed to obtain» release on bail and broke out of jail in Montreal March 2. The Dorion report also con- cluded that Rivard's wife Marie and three of his henchmen -- |Eddy Lechasseur, Robert Gig- nac and Guy Masson--lied at the inquiry and conspired to obstruct the course of justice. Lechasseur and Gignac already have been charged with per- jury. The four used Guy Rouleay, former. parliamentary _ sec- retary to Prime Minister Pear- son, to exert political influence on Mr. Lamontagne so_ he would agree to Rivard's bail elapplication, the réport said. Chief Justice Dorion crit- icized Mr. Favreau, Mr. Rou- leau and three cabinet assist- ants for their roles in the ex- tradition case and the RCMP investigation that followed, but said none of them broke the 'law, Ottawa Plans 'Kid TORONTO (CP) -- An agree- ment between the federal gov- ernment and both sides of the printing industry in the Toronto area to help the industry cope with the problems of automa- tion was announced Friday by Labor Minister MacEachen. Mr. MacEachen said the agreement, providing financial and technical assistance to as- sess future manpower require- ments in the face of technolog- ical and economic change, is "an important and_ possibly revolutionary step." "The agreement represents a real breakthrough in dealing with the problem of automa- tion," he told a press. -confer- ence. "I believe Canada is pioneering in this field." The agreement was signed between the labor department's new manpower consultative service and a joint committee composed of the Toronto locals of the International Typograph- ical Union(CLC) and the On- tario Printing Industries Coun- cil, representing 115 employers but excluding newspaper pub- lishers. To Printing Craft Under the agreement a re search subcommittee, headed by Prof. G. V. Doxey of York University's economics depart> ment, will conduct a $10,000 program to assess* the mane power adjustment problems re- sulting from technological de velopments in the industry: Prof. Doxey : will assemble data this summer and visit re- training establishments for printers in' the United States. He expects to have a prelimin- ad report prepared by Decem- Cost of the program will be shared equally between the fed- eral government and the print- ing organizations with the em- ployers' council paying 50 per cent and the remainder, of costs divided among the three unions. A strike of 680 Typographical Union members at the three Toronto daily papers, a year old Friday, began over the is- sue of automation -- the use of computers to do some work of printers. This question was set- tled after the strike started, but other issues have kept it ing. The papers continue to. publish: Mariner 'Picks Up' Helicopters Search from a motel Thursday by NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Mars In Four Days PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -- The U.S. spacecraft Mariner 4 -- slated for a photographic rendezvous with Mars next Wednesday -- was speeding toward that appointment today at 9,870 miles an hour. Four days from now, the space vehicle is scheduled to intercept the planet's orbit around the sun and snap up: to 21 close-up photographs. For Kidnapped Girl KANSAS CITY (AP) -- Six helicopters joined the search today for nine-year-old Denise Clinton who was kidnapped a bandit. On the ground, a small army of volunteers and officers resumed their foot- by-foot sweeps over rural terrain at the north edge of the city. Hope dimmed for the safety of the little girl. EVEN THE BEST OF FRIENDS MUST PART after almost 20 zookeeper and years as foreman of the big menagerie. li --(AP. Wirephoto) Ann Landers--11 City) News--9 Classified----16, Comics--19 Editorial---4 Financial--18 17-18, 19 nner ttnteteeret ene tn THE TIMES today... Summer In Oshawa: Photo Feature--P. 9 $150,000 Town Sewer Loan Approved For Whitby--P. § Brooklin Loses Sth Straight; Beaten 11-8--P. 6 Obits---18 Sports--6, 7 Theatre--15 Whitby News--5 Women's--10, 11 Weather--2 } i i

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