Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow. manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94 -- NO, 164 The Oshawa Times Sttawe "end. for "povment of "Postage tn Cash Payment Per Weak Tome Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1965 Ottawa ond Weather Report Sunny with today and Friday. Cool to- night, continuing tomorrow. Low tonight, 55. morrow, 77. Postage in oat it a at i Be pene cmegmnnignen'g oo BR ges cloudy periods High to- TWENTY-EIGHT PA he diesel from entering the: plant and picking up a rail- way car. The men believed the car contained castings. They were warned against violence by Chief union stew- ard (Local 1817) Perey Sweet, who told them a promise has been made that no more rail cars will go into the plant. Two Cana- dian National Railways offi- STAYING ON has agreed to stay on Queen's representative in Canada, Prime Minister Pearson. announced yes- terday. The official five- year term has ended, but Mr. Pearson has set no limit onthe extension. See story, page 2. (CP) NDP Roasts Grits Over Ruto-Treaty TORONTO (CP)--New Dem- ocratic Party delegates roasted the government Wednes-| day about the side effects of the Canada-United States auto agreement, but a resolution on the matter was rejected be-| cause it could produce '"'dis- astrous" side-effects on its own. The resolution before the! party's national convention was) sent back to committee because| ceived, and one expert said alwhether the system worked? of a section that asked the gov- ernment to "sharply reduce and eventually eliminate 'the); tariff on cars imported by in- dividuals so as to force prices down to U.S. levels." Under the agreement, manu- facturers, but not individuals, can ship cars across the border duty-free. Just before the resolution was to come to a vote, an unidenti- fied delegate stood and said it would be disastrous. If the gov- ernment did eliminate the tariff on cars entirely, it could mean the end of the Canadian auto industry, since cars could be produced more cheaply in the U.S. and sold in Canada, he said, The resolution will come be- fore the convention again. DEALS WITH AID Much of it deals with the fi- nancial assistance, being paid to) 7 workers who are dislocated be- cause of the auto agreement. It demands "adequate assist- ance" and opposes extension of similar agreements to other in- dustries until the interests of the workers are fully protected. Reid Scott, Parliament for Toronto Dan- forth, said the government com-| 7 mitted "a monumental blun- der" with its assistance plan for dislocated workers. By pro- viding only partial assistance, a precedent had been created. "What this stupid govern- ment is doing is building up a situation where the trade union movement is going: to oppose these rationalization schemes." When 'the chips were down, the government showed itself as a "sham, fraud and facade." NDP member of| ' today what they said were ex- actly the kind of Mars picture signals they hoped for. Late today or eatly Friday they plan to make public what should be the first close-up photograph of the unknown planet's surface. It could indi- cate whether Mars harbors life, Solving a mystery that has in- trigued man for ages. Mariner 4 flew past Mars Wednesday night and its signals Mariner 4 Just Right PASADENA, Calif. (AP)--Sci-| jentists received from Mariner 4] 134,000,000 miles away, straight line, There was considerable con- fusion after the hint-of-trouble announcement at the laboratory) Wednesday night. At a press conference later, Daniel Schneiderman, Mariner project director, said the space- craft got at least six or seven pictures. Dr. William H. Pickering, di- rector of Jet Propulsion Lab- oratory, said:. "I think six or seven is the minimum pessimis- in a TROUBLE BREAKS AT FITTINGS AS DIESEL TRIES TO ENTER About 100 Fittings Limit- ed steel workers massed at a rail-siding gate east of Court street this morning in an attempt to prevent a cials heaved logs off the rails but had trouble open- ing the gate. The diesel turned back, See story Page 15. --Oshawa Times Photo Expert Feels | Bomb Caused Plane Crash VANCOUVER (CP)--An Am-| erican expert in plane crash} investigation said today he has "a strong subjective feeling' that. the crash last Thursday -of a Canadian Pacific Airlines DC4B at 100 Mile House, 170 miles northeast of here, was due to "some unusual force like a bomb." Dr, Warren Lovell: of Seattle said he cannot prove his view. and that federal trahsport de- partment investigators have a "tremendous job of reconstruc- tion" ahead of them in trying to establish its truth. But he said evidence is piling up and he personally is certain "some darn unusual force" shook the CPA aircraft before it took 52 persons to their death. Dr. Lovell said he is confi- jhinted at trouble in the cam- jera's tape recorder. | | But this morning, transmit-| ting from beyond Mars en route} to an orbit around the sun, the| windmill - shaped, 575 - pound) spacecraft began relaying .the| first of a hoped-for score of photos. Signals came in at the rate of one line every 2% minutes. In all, it required eight hours, 35 minutes, for all 200 lines of |the picture to be received. | Jubilant scientists at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which built and controlled Mariner, said "the raw data is exactly jwhat we expected." |PATTERN SHOWS They said the transmissions should produce "a valid pic- \ture.' Two hours after the start of jsignals 35 lines had been re- i | definite pattern was showing. | | The program called for Mar- iner to take up to 21 pictures as) it passed within 5,600 miles of Mars, store them on tape, then play them back starting today. The pictures were planned to|vision shows is stored. A timer/infant"s toilet seat. be 100 times better than those starts radioing the data to earth\driven with tremendous showing/as a stream of digits receivediinto the seat," from earth telescopes, objects as small as 1% miles across, The fly-by climaxed a 228- day, 325,000,000 - mile curving) Wednesday craft was Three CF-5 fighter-bomb- bearing RCAF mark- ings, streak by in the air at ers, lif we've got something before |stone, tic estimate. I think there are|cy the transport department, /20 pictures on that tape." RCMP and other experts will| up Mariner itself was scheduled) jto settle the question starting atl 15:50 a.m. (8:50 a.m. EDT)| today, when it was to begin re-| llaying the picture data across} jan explosion in a lavatory of| Wednesday that U.S. nearly 135,000,000 miles of space| ithe aircraft before the crash. oe lseparating the spacecraft from! earth. |KEPT ON TAPE | Because of the distance from}: earth, the 575-pound spacecraft! could not transmit its pictures! |the instant it took them. They had to be recorded on tape and| then the information had to he} jrelayed slowly, to avoid garbl- ing, after Mariner had passed beyond Mars and into interplan- etary. space. Each picture hours to relay. expected. When will it takes eight Two a day are be known "'We hope to be able to tell we get the first picture com- plete," said Pickering. Mariner keeps the pictures) on| tape just as videotape for tele- at tracking stations at Gold- Calif. South Africa, | Australia. voyage from earth. The space-|here for processing by comput-|of uncovering evidence of al about ers. a speed close to-1,000 MPH. The government announced, today it is pur- Canadian |ISN"T CLEAR overnight with holes as if shot, was " provocative evidence." turned over to the RCMP a well-preserved fore of the aircraft, were buried tiny particles of wood covered with formica, or arborite. They came from the back side of the wall of the la- vatory, The same material was lin the legs of some of the peo- |ple. Johannesburg,/Dr. Tom Sterling, an explosives and Woomera,|expert who will go to the crash The data is relayed|scene today, has a good chance} |bomb explosion uncover the "smouldering| story" of the crash. The job| would probably take months, he} said. |lar forces could be scaled down. Investigators agree there was| But he said a nightgown and bag, found "IT personally found and section of the in which the planning for a possible call- | plans jhave been fluid and have been Dr. Lovell, who returned to|altered repeatedly by events. Seattle after a week here, said| in a telephone interview from|and as it changes, |his home that autopsies on the|change our plans," he said. victims did not turn up clear- [cut evidence of a bomb. lsign forces to South Viet Nam in relation to a military plan riddled| that has been established and very |approved by constitutional authorities. | and -we supply forces in accord- ance with it until the situation changes, Changes in the situa- tion are beyond our control." DENIS OFFERS NO PLE TO BRIBE-BID CHARGE 179,000 By 1966 WASHINGTON (AP) --_U.S. military chiefs have 000 men by the end of the year, it was learned today, This would be more than 100,- 1000 above the 75,000-man U.S. jforce now 'scheduled to be in |South Viet Nam. This recommendation by the |joint chiefs of staff will be con- sidered by the government in the light of what Defence Sec- retary Robert McNamara deter- mines during his week-long in- |spection visit to Viet Nam. Mc- Namara left Wednesday night. Sources told Press the joint chiefs would in- clude the remainder of the Ist Infantry Division in the new projections for a buildup to meet growing Communist strength. One brigade of that division landed in Viet Nam this week after travelling from its home base at Fort Riley, Kan. A buildup as big as 179,000 men could well bring at least a limited mobilization of reserve ists and national guardsmen to replace regular troops drawn into the growing conflict in Viet Nam. GEAR FOR MUSTER The armed services, it was disclosed, are starting to gear up for such a possible muster of guardsmen and reservists. They have submitted to de- fence officials tentative esti- mates totalling more than 200,- 000 citizen servicemen. The sources emphasize that is still in the early stages and that the totals of men the services have estimated they |would need to back up the regu- McNamara told a press con- for committing troops changing we must "The situation is "At any given time, we as- the appropriate) "That flan remains in effect "It's darn suspicious to me. "We also found a piece of an Arborite was force Dr. Lovell said he believes EVERYTHING IN ITALIAN STYLE ROME (AP)--After Di- vorce Italian Style and Mar- | riage Italian Style, the fol- lowing motion-picture titles have been filed with the Italian cinema office: Espionage Italian Style, Folly Italian Style, and Household Italian Style. RCAF WILL TAKE TO AIR IN 1,000-MILE-PER-HOUR FIGHTER-BOMBERS @hasing the planes from the Northrop aircraft firm for use as a ground support plane. The plane is called the Northrop F-5, but the RCAF designation will be CF-5, (CP) | For Viet recom- mended unanimously that the strength of U.S. forces in South Viet Nam be increased to 179,- The Associated): |U.S. |Johnson's plane three howrs | earlier, |Humphrev were itary Willard Wirtz, jwith the vice-president to the jembassy. 'ivid Bruce joined them fonds at the side of the coffin. jmourned the loss of the urbane LONDON (AP)--In death, Ad- lai Ewing Stevenson started the journey home today--back to Washington where the high- est gift of the American people eluded him, then on to Illinois for burial in the state that elected him governor. Accompanying the body of the fallen statesman -were Vice- President Hubert Humphrey, Stevenson's three sons and a party of U.S. officials. The eloquent spokesman for U.S. policy as ambassador to the United Nations since 1961 and twice the unsuccessful Democratic candidate for pres- ident, Stevenson collapsed and died outside the U.S. Embassy Wednesday. The embassy said he had suffered a heart attack. He was 65. The coffin was removed from a crimson-coyered catafalque in the foyer of the U.S. Embassy for the trip to the airport, where President Johnson's plane was waiting. SERVICE FRIDAY Humphrey, the three younger Stevensons and a delegation of officials had arrived in There were tentative plans for a service in the Washington Cathedral Friday. Among those accompanying Labor Secre- Undersec-| retary of State George Ball and) Stevenson's sons, Adlai, John} and Borden, and the wives of Adlai and John. Humphrey's party was met at the airport by Foreign Secre- tary Michael Stewart, who. rode U.S. Ambassador Da- there, and the three men stood with bowed heads for about. 30 sec- Prime Minister Wilson also came to the coffin to pay his respects. The Queen sent a mes- sage of sympathy to Ste- venson's family. After the Washington service, the body will be flown to Springfield, Ill., to lie in state.) It was there Stevenson served as governor of Illinois from 1948 until 1952. Sunday, the body will he taken .to Bloomington, IIL, where he grew up. Funeral ADLAI STEVENSON: MINUTES BEFORE DEATH Ma nage i Stevenson Begins The Voyage Home him a noted speaker and formi- dable debater. Correspondent Eric Sevareid of the Columbia Broadcasting System said Stevenson told him Monday night he wanted to re- sign from his UN post, In a broadcast from London, Seva- reid said Stevenson told him, 'for a while I would just like to sit in the shade with a glass of wine in my hands and watch people dance." Stevenson had said he planned to return to law practice in New York and Chicago, but he wasn't sure how or when to tell Johnson he wanted to quit, Se- vareid said. Stevenson had stopped off in London en route home from a general meeting of the UN Eco- nomic and Social Council. His stay attracted little attention, but there were indications she OTTAWA (CP) '-- Raymond Denis, the ex-ministerial aide accused of offering a $20,000 bribe in the Rivard affair, ap- peared briefly in court today and was remanded until July 29. He entered no formal plea to charges of attempted bribery and obstruction of justice, but made it clear through counsel Lou Assaly of Ottawa that he will plead not guilty on both counts. "T can tell you right now that the plea on both charges will be not guilty," said Mr. Assaly after magistrate's court clerk Del Dupuis read out the charges. Magistrate L. A. Sherwood then set July 29 for Mr. Denis' next court appearance. Denis, a 32-year-old lawyer who was executive assistant to then - immigration minister Tremblay at the time of the al- leged offences, was in the half- filled court room for barely five minutes. Afterwards he continued free on the cash bail of $1,000 which was posted on his behalf Wed- nesday night after his arrest and formal charging by RCMP officers who flew him here from Montreal aboard an RCMP aircraft. Mr. Assaly, a veteran Ottawa criminal lawyer, told Magis- trate Sherwood that Mr. Denis CONSIDERS TRIAL SITE Outside the court, Mr. Assaly told reporters he will consider between now and July 29 whether to seek a change of venue on grounds it would be difficult to recruit 12 fluently- bilingual jurors in this city. In event of a trial, testimony likely will be given in both English and: French. Crown Prosecutor John Cas- sels, assigned the case by Jus- tice Minister Cardin, already has said the Crown is ready to provide adequate translation fa- cilities to meet this problem. Mr. Cassel 1s dratted the charges against Mr. Denis un- der two rarely-used sections of the criminal code. They alleged 1. One year ago in Ottawa, Mr. Denis "did unlawfully and corruptly" offer "a sum of money" to Montreal lawyer Pierre Lamontagne to have him drop his opposition to bail for Lucien Rivard, the accused nar- 'all: likelihood" will choose|'® 14 by judge and jury 'when( rom meg A Not-Guilty Plea On Both, Defence Counsel Assures -- RAYMOND DENIS rocked the Pearson Mr. Lamontagne at the . was acting on United States scvatnadind is have Rivard extradited to set off the controversy which government, narcotics conspiracy career Texas. me 2. At about the same Mr. Denis "did willfully attempt to obstract course of ae by ve ar' for preliminary = earing. ARR The defence elects the trial" pay a --}method at this stage of the pro-| ace sections 368 ce ceedings even though the ~ (1) of the code . respectively, liminary hearing could quashieach carry sme gen: the charges and result in n0jtence ot, bro rears y trial at ment. years, Mr. Denis, who spent re day at an Ottawa hotel after being released on bail, was per in a black suit and colored tie for his brief court appearance. As the charges were read, he stood with eyes downcast. In the course of his briet Te marks, Mr. Assaly referred to "discussions in chambers" among himself, Magistrate Sherwood and Mr, 'Cassells. He did not elaborate. Mr. Assaly asked that bail be continued at $1,000. With no Gb- jection from Mr. Cassells, istrate Sherwood qui that: granted the request. The charges were laid tollow- ing study of the Dorion report by Mr. Cassells in co-operation with RCMP and justice depart- ment officials. Mr. Cardin has promised that further charges will be laid as a result of the cotics conspirator whose case report. was conferring on a p new Western initiative on ais armament, linked to the sur- prise Soviet agreement to re- sume arms talks in Geneva. Monday night, he appeared in a brief television interview to defend U.S. policy in Viet Nam. Just before he died, he taped a radio interview at the embassy in which he said he had been under pressure from many sources to break with Johnson over Viet Nam. He said he had refused and again defended U.S. policy in Viet Nam. "We drew a line (in Europe)" Stevenson said, "and that line has been--even though we may not like it, not a very satisfac- tory one--it has been respected by the Russians on the one side, by the West on the other, And we shall have to come to some- thing like this in Asia." The interview was broadcast by the BBC Wednesday night. WENT FOR WALK After the interview, Stevenson went for a walk in the late after- noon sun with an old friend and colleague, Mrs. Marietta Tree, the U.S. delegate to the UN) trusteeship council. He col- lapsed about 50 yards from the embassy. Mrs. Tree called for help, then tried to revive Stevenson with mouth-to-mouth resuscita- tion, James Yates, doorman at the International. - Sportsman's Club nearby, telephoned for a doctor and ran to the embassy. service and burial in the family plot will take place Monday. the world Leaders across intellectual, whose moving elo-| quence and sparkling wit made Doctors_tried_artificial respir-| = dorsing peaceful co-existence final plenary session today. Two Americans, 40 fles on the government unit, TORONTO (CP) -- Eamon to a two-year term as federal cratic Party, it was announced hard. Regier of Burnaby, B.C., NEWS HIGHLIGHTS. Chinese Lose Challenge For Leadership HELSINKI (Reuters) -- Chinese Communist delegates: fought a losing battle Wednesday to break Soviet leadership' . at the World Peace Council Congress meeting here. Despite © fierce Chinese objections, a Soviet - backed resolution en- between East and West was -- adopted by a working committee. It will be presented to the- Viets Die In Battle SAIGON (AP) -- Viet Cong guerrillas killed two Ameri- cans and at least 40 South Vietnamese troops today in an.. hour-long attack on a government command post 5 miles~ north of Saigon, witnesses reported. The guerrillas laid dowa- their barrage with 81-mm mortars and 57-mm recoilless rie~ engaged in a road-clearing.. operation along Route 13 in an area controlled by the he Cong, informants at the scene said. Eamon Park New President Of The NDP Park of Toronto was elected > president of the New Demoe~ Wednesday. He defeated Ers. who quickly asked: the haa <i vention to make the choice unanimous. Fitting Pickets Hurl Insults As ation, an massage, An ambulance Stevenson to St. George's Hos- pital, where he' was pronounced] ; dead. injection and _heart}= sped| = ..In THE TIMES today... : Diesel Stalls -- P. 15. . Whitby PUC Purchases Heydenshore Park -- P. 5. Tony's Down Randall-Roy 4-3 P. Obits 27 Ann Landers 18 Sports 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 City News 15 =--Theatre 20 Classified Whitby News 5, 6 Comics 23 Women's 16, 17, 18 Editorial 4 Weather 2 Financial 27