Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Jul 1965, p. 1

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er er eetnmee_ a eran rms Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94 -- NO. 167 86e She Oshawa Zines per Week Home Beiivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JULY 19, 1965 and Authorized os Second Class Mail Post for payment of Ottewa Weather Report Sunny, some clouds, Continu- ing cool today. tonight, 55. High Tuesday, 75. Office Department Postage in Cash, , Tuesday, Low EIGHTEEN PAGES 'OSHAWA TEAM IN ACTION AT MOSPORT EVENT Neil, finished 15th overall in the race and wound up third in class position, Pictured above handling the pit stop are Max Egli, on right, of Brooklin, and the crew chief, Martin Chenhall of A tense moment for the 'Team Oshawa -- racing a Corvair during the 90-lap Canadian Touring Trophy race at Mosport Saturday-- occurs at a hurried pit stop. The car, driven by Dale U.S. Units Hit By Viet Cong SAIGON. (AP)--Troops of thejto reach Pleiku after travelling newly-atrived U.S. 1st Divisionjfrom Qui Nhon, on the South were attacked by the Viet Cong|China Sea coast 120 miles away. for the first time during the|Pleiku had been receiving vital night and three Americans were|shipments of ammunition, killed, a U.S. spokesman an-jequipment and food by air- nounced today. lifts. The spokesman said "'sey- The Vietnamese Army was eral" more Americans were/reported to have rebuilt two of wounded in the attack that be-\the bridges destroyed by the gan with a .mortar barrage Viet Cong and put a third in against forward elements of the|Condition to handle some traf- division's. 2nd Brigade outside' fic. a 1e the Bien Hoa'air base 12 miles|_ McNamara toured the {Nam countryside today in the |bomb-scare on a jet airliner on|Smuggling racket. TI's UP TO COUNCIL NOW OTTAWA (CP) -- Flamboy-|wants him as a witness in the jant racketeer suspect Lucien|. Denis' counsel, Louis Assaly, |Rivard may testify at the Ray-|said Sunday in Edmonton where |mond Denis attempted bribery|he was visiting that he has not jhearing here before heingidecided whether he wishes to |packed off to the United States.\call Rivard as a defence wit- Justice Minister Lucien Car-/ness. din announced Sunday he is de-/A former executive assistant} laying Rivard's extradition|to two Liberal cabinet minis- while Ontario Crown attorney|ters, Denis was charged Wed- John Cassels decides whether to/nesday with attempting bribery) call Rivard at Denis' prelim-jand obstruction of justice inary hearing, tentatively set for July 29. Mr. Cardin said Saturday he The Dorion report published a month ago said Rivard is a hoped to sign Rivard's extra-|former contributor to the Lib- dition warrant early this week)/Robert Gignac, promised the) and he immediately was ac- Liberals $50,000 or $60,000 if Ri- cused by opposition party|vard was freed on bail. spokesmen of trying to "hush| Rivard, 50, is wanted in Lar- up" possible links between the/edo, Texas, on charges of mas- Liberals and crime syndicates.\terminding a huge dope smug- The minister cut short his|with a $164,000 gold bullion rob-| week-end stay at his home injbery in Northern Ontario June Sorel, Que., Sunday, conferred) PROMISED SPEED with his senior officials here) Mr. Cardin said in a_tele- and called a press conference|phone interview from Sorel Sat- to disclose his shift in strategy,|\urday he would waste no time) He said Rivard will be heldiin approving Rivard's extradi-| in Montreal at least until late| tion, He said Quebec authorities '}this. week, when Mr. Cassells| withdrew charges of jail-break- likely would decide whether heling and car t against the Rivards Lawyers For Quick Extrad | MONTREAL (CP) -- Lucien|was made by 47 police aided by| ri pe lboge gpa |Rivard, the man who shook the|a helicopter and ® launch. | and first in; Production |\federal government with his) Rivard, F reddy Cadiuex, 48,| Class (See story on Page |weird jail break in March and/and Sebastian Boucher, 35, were 9.) ee Pee | whose or Friday page ing ba: ly . a ae pi a i ii 5 ishrouded with police secrecy,|woods on the south shore of the) --Oshays Times Photo. | will remain in Canada fora few'Lake St. Louis opening of the more days. St. Lawrence River, less than 15) The 50-year-old narcotics sus-|miles from Montreal city hall) pect, 25 pounds heavier than be-| which itself is some eight miles fore his 136 days on the loose from Bordeaux prison, from prison, will have to wait) Rivard and Andre Durocher, Thy Belafonte nd him to Texas where he is|their bizarre escape. They used SAN (AP)---A|wanted in a $56,000,000 dope-|a home-made facsimile of a pis-| FRANCISCO Federal government officials|guards after obtaining permis-| had indicated earlier that Ri-|sion to water the prison skating} vard probably would be extra-jrink -- in above - freezing dited during the weekend. Both) weather. Rivard's lawyers and the U.S DISARM GUARD government wanted him out of They then disarmed a guard Canada as soon as possible. on the inside wall and scram-| The delay was announced|)ieq tq safety by throwing the Sunday night in Ottawa by Jus-\ Voting rink hose over the 27- which singer. Harry Belafonte left San Francisco Sunday cul- minated a week of threats against the Negro, the San Francisco Chronicle says. A telephoned threat by an anonymous woman warned '"'the |Seattle flight will never get jthere," and Belafonte's taxiing |Western Airlines plane was or- dered back to the San Francisco 'airport terminal. The flight left | oe it oon be dae - week| was captured, he said he left| mee 8 Cece on i |Rivard in Spain but police did} for Seattle Whether Rivard will be handed) yo place much faith-in his testi-| over to American authorities, ~ |WANT HIM KEPT tice Minister Lucien Cardin. Helioo+ outer wall, When Durocher| 'Mey May Call Rivard At Denis Trial beefy prisoner to clear the way for his speedy transfer to the U.S. Opposition Leader Diefen- baker commented in his riding of Prince Albert that this move "has all the appearances of a cover-up." "This latest action is cer- tainly in keeping with the whole picture . . . which would have tion."' He said the government should not try to avoid reveal- ing the full facts of Rivard's "happy escape' from Bordeaux jail March 2. Spokesmen for the New Dem- ocratic and Social Credit par- ties were equally critical of any speedy extradition. SHOULD BE TOLD "We should be told all he (Ri- vard) knows about the contribu- tion of the underworld to the Liberal party or any other par- ties,' said NDP Whip Stanley Knowles: "This is the most alarming part of the whole Dor- ion business," Press ® ° ition from the jail break, to speed up extradition to Texas. In the aft- ermoon, his lawyer Raymond Daoust said further appeals against extradition to the Que-| bee Appeals Court and the Su- preme Court of Canada would not be pursued "'because of the time it would take." MAKE DECISION The lawyer said he and hisipaying been able rapidly to de- jtermine the American base to the plane. belonged, the American military surrender the right after the jlanding of the plane,'"' the state- |ment said. ministry p- client had decided the narcot- D until later this week. before aja fellow prisoner since recap-|' h Téa ene » |decision is taken on whether tojtured, startled Canada with|ics charge should be faced in which se Texas as soon as possible. Rivard, his hair in a blackjauthorities to |tol to disarm and tie up several) pompadour instead of the grey) Photos taken brush cut he had in prison, said a few words to his shapely red- haired wife in the courthouse, then was permitted to see her in the afternoon. "He was calm and even joked," one of his lawyers said. The Rivards embraced as y met in a room near the cell in which Rivard is being held in QPP headquarters. - OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min-| ister Pearson announced today) the federal government will fi- nancially support provincial) medical care programs, hoping} eventually to meld them into) national comprehensive and) universal medical insur ance) plan. | Mr. Pearson, in a_ speech} prepared for the opening of} this week's federal - provincial) conference, said that medical] care insurance clearly is a) matter of provincial constitu- tional jurisdiction. | But he said the federal gov-| LUCIEN RIVARD ajbeen covered up forever if not} year ago to free Rivard on bail.|/for the efforts of the opposi-| U S Ch d S. Charge In "A" Case |} PARIS (AP) -- The defence ministry charged today that a U.S. photo reconnaissance plane that flew near the Freneh nu- clear complex at Pierrelatte |was on a mission to take '"'un- authorized pictures." The nuclear plant there is working on France's first hy- drogen bomb, A statement from the minis- sented at the U.S. Embassy in Paris 'by fhe French foreign ministry. The statement said cameras aboard the plane, an RF-101, had taken 175 pictures of the complex Friday. Some reports said French fighters chased the plane out |of the area. American officials said they "understood" a French fighter identified the American plane and then flew away. The defence ministry said the U.S. plane, which was based at Ramstein, West Germany, made four runs over the atomic jinstallation, |ASKED FOR PICTURES "The French aerial defence, asked | The accused the \plane of three violations: fly- ing in a restricted zone, taking |\photographs without authoriza- jtion and taking pictures in a restricted zone, According to French news re- ports, French fighter planes were sent up to chase the U.S. plane out of the area. _jis made available to all Cana- try said a protest had been pre-|for publication at ernment had a responsibility to) see that medical care insurance dians. "We are ready to regard |medicare as a part of Can- ada's basic social standards," he sale, es i responsibility of the government to co-operate: with the provinces in making medi- care financially possible for all Canadians. | "The . government accepts) \that responsibility." | Mr. Pearson's speech was jprepared for delivery at the lopening of the conference at |2:30 p.m. EDT but his office announced it could be made | public at noon. Premier Lesage of Quebec earlier distributed the*text of his provinee's brief, noon. . Mr. Pearson said the federal on just another shared - 'cost OTTAWA TO MAKE GRANT PROVINCIAL MEDICAL CARE National Insurance Plan Ultimate Objective -- PM care, but the federal govern- ment "will support provincial medicare plans by. means of a fiscal contribution of pre-deter- mined size." He did not say how the size of the federal grant will be de- termined. There were reports that it might be done on a per- capita basis, in some way siml- lar to present federal grants te universities. But the prime minister estab- lished four criteria on which federal financial, help for pro- vincial medicare plans would be based. They are: --Benefits should cover all services by physicians, gen- eral practitioners and special- ists, and include dental treat- ment, prescribed drugs and "other important services." In short, the plans must be comprehensive. --Participation should cover all residents of a province on uniform terms and_ condi- tions. "It would hardly be logical to bring a federal contribution into play for plans not aimed at univ coverage." --The provincial plang should be publicly adminis- tered,. either directly by pro vincial governments or agencies established by the provincial governments. ; --There should be ments between the to ensure full trai ty for persons moving from on iprogram in supporting medi- province to another. Ottawa Asked To Pay 25PC Universities | By BOB EXELL |capita, OTTAWA (CP) Ontario lasked the federal government today to undertake immediately to pay 25 per cent of operating costs of universities. The province also called for a |50-per-cent federal contribution |\to new university construction lcosts, saying the well of private funds for university expansion jis drying up. | | In his opening statement to \the federal - provincial confer- ence which began here today, |Premier John Robarts said the |present. method of calculating joperating grants on the basis of jgeneral population is unsatis- \factory. | At the existing rate of $2 per | Operations Ontario would realize only about $240 per pupil this year in federal aid to higher education, he said, He estimated the annual cost per pupil in Ontario universities at about $2,000. Provincial grants already make up about $1,000 of this amount and the federal government should con- tribute $500, the premier said. The remaining $500 could be met through tuition fees and other sources, "It would seem reasonable that the federal contribution te the operating grants to univer- sities should be approximately 25 per cent of the total cost of operation," said Mr. Robarts. | NEWS HIGHLIGHTS "iar ans gsi on SECRET DRINKER PUTS CRIMP had) and Saturday nights in Can Eat Meat Fridays On Trains northeast of Saigon. The 1st Division troops had} arrived in Viet Nam last week.| second day of field trips during his current first-hand look at Opposition spokesman that Ri-|QPP headquarters in downtown It was their first action in. Viet gag a Cihig:dintinnd thei Nam. |more than 90,000 South Vietna- U.S. planes pushed the wat) mese and allied troops, includ- deeper into North Viet Nam to-\ine 3,000. Americans, were put day, bombing a 10-mile stretch) oyt of action during the first of railroad track starting 90\six months of this year. miles morthwest of Hanoi, a prime Minister A. Milton U.S, spokesman announced. | Obote of Ug anda, arriving in It was the deepest penetra-\Tokyo after a visit to Peking, tion of North Vietnamese terri-|said Chinese leaders want an tory announced so far. Resultsjearly negotiated settlement of of the raid were not reported.|the Viet Nam war but insist A U.S. Navy jet bomber wasithat all foreign troops must shot down over North Viet Nam|withdraw from the country, Sunday a short time after U.S.| first. ; Defence Secretary McNamara|-------~--~~~ " ~ watched it roar off along with 13 others from the catapults of the 7th Fleet carrier Independ- Two Forest Fires | previously demanded B I 0 4 vard be kept in Canada to sill foie dr et : a! {tion him about his escape from|ports he to police nothing um in ntarlo |the provincial Bordeaux jail at)about his activities while he TORONTO (CP)--The lands Montreal March 2 and aboutjevaded capture. and forests department re-|all possible connections with the) Rivard was in jail awaiting} ported only two forest fires are/alleged bribe léading to the/appeal against extradition when) burning in Ontario today. | Dorion inquiry. jit was alleged Montreal lawyer! One is in the Pembroke dis-| Rivard was arrested with two|Pierre Lamontagne, acting for} trict and the other in the Fort\other men at 5:05 p.m. Friday|the U.S. government "in the} Frances district /by.a combined squad of RCMP,|case, was offered $20,000 not to } there were Te-| WIGAN, England (Reuters) A secret drinker on the out- skirts of this northern Eng- land industrial town has blocked the local council's new sewage 'pumping station. A flood of pocket-sized bot- tles of Scotch whisky has sev- OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's Roman Catholics will be IN TOWN'S SEWAGE PUMPERS allowed to eat meat while travelling on trains beginning this Friday, it was announced today by the Canadian Catholic Conference. The dispensation from church' laws of abstinence also applies to other days when Catholics may not eat meat, Husband Believed To Be Lost Council Surveyor James Holding said the tiny bottles had been flushed down a toilet, presumably after pri- vate drinking sessions in the bathroom. "We feel pretty -sure the secret drunker is a woman til 9 a.m. today one new fire! was reported and none exting-(lice. Although the senior forces uished. |would give no details, police at ate fire danger rating. During the last 24 hours un-|Quebec Provincial, Ontario Pro-| oppose bail for Rivard vincial and City of Montreal po-| The LAST WISH UNANSWERED - DIED IN HONOLULU narcotics jtaken to Montreal criminal 'court Saturday morning and the All districts report a moder-|Chateauguay near where RiQuebec government dropped| vard was nabbed said the raidicharges' against him arising! | suspect was} eral times brought pumping to a standstill, and engineers have had to dismantle equip- ment to remove them. whose husband knows said, noth- ing of her habit," Holding ence, a U.S. spokesman an- nounced. In other developments, a U.S. spokesman announced that a large Vietnamese army task force has reopened key 'Route 19 in the central mountains with the help of U.S. B-52 bombers from Guam. But 20 miles east of Saigon, the Viet Cong blew up seven bridges and blocked Route 15. connecting the capital with the coastal base of Vung Tau, a spokesman reported. Vung Tau is the site of a large American air installation and one of the headquarters of the U.S. 173rd Airborne Brigade. Since early last month, most ef Route 19 had been cut off and controlled by the Viet Cong. The reopening of the route, which winds through a high mountain pass, enabled a con voy carrying 411 tons of cargo! SYNGMAN RHEE HONOLULU (AP) --_ Sing- man Rhee, a fierce, old Korean patriot whose greatest dream and last wish eluded him, died at Maunalani Hospital. here to- day of a stroke. He was 90, in falling health for at least three years. The former South Korean president's. last wish was "to go home and die," but increas- ing debility prevented his re- turn. The founder of the Korean re- public was admitted to hospital a month ago afetr he began b'eeding internally Doctors: said they. had an hour's indication that death was near, giving them time to summon his Austrian-born wife, Francesca, 65, and his adopted son, Rhee In-Soo; Unfulfilled was his life's am- bition and dream -- unification of Korea as a republic. The mountainous peninsuia-on Asia's east coast still is. divided along the truce line where the bloody Korean War was halted in 1953, : So pronounced were the in- firmities of great age that Rhee knew little of what had hap- pened in Korea since he fled. The former Tiger of Korea, once a driving chief executive who defied communism and the United Nations, became a homesick and tired old man, A nurse said Rhee was kept alive by a dwifdling hope. of go- ing home to die. This hope seemed to be the only strength he had left. His health, his stamina and the power he once wielded faded when student riots toppled him from the presidency. Rhee was the Korean repub- lic's first president and served in the job 12 years. He, had just been re-elected to a fourth term when his government: was overthrown. Charges of ballot box stuffing, strong-arm' influ ence and trickery were hurled Singman Rhee, Korea Patriot, Dies at the white-haired president. He fled the country after pro- tests erupted into violence. During his stormy life, Rhee battled the Korean monarchy, Japanese militarists and North Korean and Chinese Commu- nists, all with a degree of suc- cess, The Korean War made him the major voice of anti-commu- nism in the Far East, A violent foe of the Reds, he fought fre- quently with the United States and United Nations over con- duct of the war. He opposed the truce, contending his armies could. drive through North Ko- rea and unify the country un- der one flag. LEWISTON, N.Y. (AP) -- The husband of a 4l-year- old Ganadian woman, whose body was recovered from the Niagara River, is believed also to have drowned, Niagara County sheriff's deputies said today, Mr. and Mrs. John D. Cuthbertson, of Port Credit, Ont., were last seen early Sunday morning when they tied up their 16-foot inboard © cruiser, Negotiations Are Called Off TORONTO (CP) -- Negotiations between the Toronto Construction Association and the Bricklayers, Masons. and Plasterers International Union of America (CLC) have been called off with no indication of settlement in a strike that has halted millions of dollars worth of construction here. ...In THE TIMES today... City Letter-carriers re-affirm Strike Move -- P. 1 Gene Littler Wins Canadian Open -- P. 6 reer EH Ann Landers -- 11 City News -- 9 Classified -- 14,15, 16 Comics 13 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 17 Obits -- 17 Sports 6, 7, 18 Theatre 12 Whitby News 5 Women's 10, 11 Weather 2

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