Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Sep 1965, p. 1

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a ee ee eS HY OIE, gos ti Weather Report Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowe ¢ ve ™ } te ) ' Becoming cloudy tonight and aarti sikh: Pidntoteus £4 «at Pie] A Cee a 4 \ Athntalas 4 Ad Tose, ceusalcal Me ce d neighboring centres in One ' Ail late Tuesday, Low tonight 40, . tario and Durham Counties, h tomorrow, 62. | | : ; . VOL. 94 -- NO. 225 see Pe Henn ee etnarea OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1965 eee See Ere EIGHTEEN PAGES. TRUCE LINE IS TENS FOR INDIA, PAKISTA unre ig a ecg ni Mnfrs et m I te TINTER'S FIRST SIG TORONTO (CP)--Frost was reported in many Ontario cen- tres early this morning as the first sign of winter swept across the province, setting low tem- perature marks and leaving residents shivering after an ear- lier heat wave. The temperatures started to dip Saturday, but clear skies and a high of 65 were recorded in Toronto. The cold snap, caused by a high pressure area in the Lakehead region and a low, east of Hudson's Bay, moved into the province about mid-morning Sunday. Temperatures continued to fall Sunday afternuon and by evening, the thermometer read 40 degrees in inost Southern On- tario centres. Record lows for the month of September were registered late Sunday night and early Monday morning. All the records were in the mid-20s. London temperatures dropped to a chilly 26, break- ing the previous record of 28 degrees set Sept. 29, 1929. Toronto International airport recorded a 25-degree reading, --three degrees lower than the previous record set Sept. 28, 1947, Thermometers in Tren- ton fell to 29 degrees, equalling a record set Sept. 30, 1932, SIX LOWS SET The weather office also re- ported six record lows for Sept. 27 Hamilton was the warmest of the minimum areas with a reading of 35 degrees, break- ing the previous record of 36 set in 1947. Killaloe reported the coldest of the record lows with 20 degrees, four points less than the previous record in 1939. "JIM" HALL ACKNOWLEDGES AN ADORING MOSPORT CROWD Hand outstretched, Texan "Jimmy" Hall acknowl- edges the cheers of an ador- ing crowd, They had seen Hall fight his Chevy pow- back of the rolling start to snatch victory in the Cana- dian Grand Prix from New Zealander Bruce McLaren by less than @ second. The pair had fought nose to tail for the last 20 laps of the race. During the fight Hall smashed the lap record for Mosport with a blistering lap of 1 minute, 25 seconds flat. (For more pictures and story of the race see Page 3.) --Oshawa Times Photo ered Chaparral from the He'll Fight For Canada | ADEN (Reuters)--The Brit-|thur Charles, was assassinated.| i The curfew also was lifted inj}day reported all quiet through-| '§ ish "Dief" Says 'British End Foc) Ny nemeReNt Curfew n Settlement high commissioner today British s t thorities to-| Said a Viet Cong headquarters) r cibictek olf im aan located: Results of the led SAIGON (CP)--U.S. B-52s hit) South Viet Nam for the 33rd time today, govermment troops claimed they killed 48 Viet Cong in a single engagement and the Viet Cong announced they had xecuted two U.S. advisers. . The 'United States 'admitted that its plane twice had bombed by mistake a bridge in the north - south demilitarized zone Sept. 16-17, killing more} than 23 persons. | The B-52s struck a Viet Cong} area 55 miles northwest of Sai- gon near the Cambodian border. 1U.S. intelligence reports have eyrentrenteemmm tt Bridge Hit By Mistake tempt to overrun an. outpost southwest of Quang Ngai Sun- day. A U.S. military spokesman said U.S. planes bombed the Ben Hai bridge inthe demili- tarized zone Sept, 16-17. and blamed the error on~ naviga- tional mistakes due to. bad weather and "similarity of ter- rain situated in North Viet Nam." Dies At Age 60 TORONTO (CP)--Einar Val- emar Rechnitzer, 60, chair- Dean Rusk On The Job 'At The UN UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- State Secretary Dean Rusk sweeps into a whirl of diplo- jmatic appointments to- |day which inclyded Pakistan's foreign minister and perhaps Soviet Foreign Minister Gro- myko, Launching a two-week visit to the headquarters of the United) Nations, Rusk planned to see as many as he could of the s8--by jlatest official. coust--leaders at- ltending the UN General Assem- lbly's 20th anniversary session. | Pakistani Foreign Minister Z. A. Bhutto got a morning date with Rusk, presumably to press for the plebiscite in Kashmir Pakistan wants and India op- poses. The United States does not want to take sides in the quarrel and says it should be handled through the United Na- (CP)--The India-Pakistan truce line was reported tense and troubled today as a Canadian truce expert headed for the area where both sides have charged numerous. viola- tions since the ceasefire went into effect five days ago. Maj.-Gen. Bruce MacDonald of Edmonton, former head of the United Nations peace force for the Nicosia zone of Cyprus, will head the UN India-Pakis- tan observer mission along the ceasefire line. One report said that at present there were only 10 UN men to cover a 1,000- mile front south of Kashmir. MacDonald flew to New Delhi by way of Cairo, after spend- ing Sunday night in Beirut. He was due in the Indian capital Tuesday morning. UN Secretary + General U Thant informed the Security Council that the ceasefire is "not holding" and said both sides were stalling on troop withdrawals, CHARGES ATTACKS Pakistan charged India with two major attacks, and claimed the attackers were repulsed. The Pakistani govern- ment said Indian troops at- tacked Saturday night with tanks and artillery on the Fa- zilka front, near Lahore, but were driven back after 90 In- dians were killed and 78 cap- tured, All-India Radio said the Pa- kistani report of 90 Indian dead was untrye but it admitted that 71 Indians are missing includ- ing two officers. An Indian defence ministry spokesman said that more than 1,000 Pakistani troops m ov e-d across the Sutlev River into In- dian territory in the Fazilka area, "If they don't get out there is going to be a fight," the spokesman said, Numerous Violations Seen By Foes In Big Conflict RAWALPINDI, Pakista ny called the situation around La- hore: "'explosive,"' Radio. Pakistan: said Sunday that Indian troops were forced to evacuate outposts in the Fa- zilka area after an all-night battle. It said Indian troops vio lated the ceasefire Saturday by setting up an outpost on Pakis- tani territory. SAYS REPULSE RAIDS An official Pakistani spokes- man said his country's troops beat off an Indian attack on @ post northwest of Ramgarh, in Rajasthan near the Arabian Sea. He said the troops cap- tured two more posts in the same area which, he said, In- dian forces captured after the ceasefire. In letters to Thant during the weekend, India charged that the Pakistanis attacked first on the two fronts, as well as near Gadra in the disputed Hima- layan state of Kashmir, Pakis- tan also protested the alleged Indian intrusions of Thant. Thant said in a two-page re- port to the Security Council that the deterioration in the La» hore area began Friday when Indian troops opened with artillery, tanks, recoilless rifles and small arms near & small canal separating the two sides southwest of the city. _- "As a result of this acti the local Pakistani com: claims to have suffered a ber of casualties in killed Lon gga and missing," said. FIGHT IN KASHMIR Heavy fighting was also re ported between "freedom fight- ers" in Kashmir, who said they were not bound by the truce, and Indian troops, Both nations agreed last week to heed a Security Council call for a ceasefire in their unde- clared, 22 - day » old war overt ownership of divided Kashmir, heT truce went into affect at ae A. UN report Sunday night dawn Thursday, MONCTON (CP) -- His cam-jlifted an 11-hour dusk-to-dawn|the Little Aden area, 16 miles out the state with no incidents) Were not announced. | x BS ng ap At SS fn custew in Aden's old Arab set-|from here, where a Britis h) during the night. : | Communist broadcasts an-|ong varies Coteus tok tive Leader Diefenbaker took to|tlement of Crater, scene of army base and.the British Pe-| Bars and movie theatres| nounced that the Viet Cong eX-| since 1964 died today in. his the rails today to cut a 13-sta-| humerous assassinations and, troleum Company's oil refinery) were declared out of bounds to) ecuted the two Americans in Tel roronto peti tion swath through Quebec after} grenade attacks by Arab terror-| are located. | British servicemen Sunday and/ prisal for the execution of three/ Mr Rechnitser had. been telling a St. John's, Nfld., aud-| ists. | The rest of the 75-square-/a night curfew was extended to} Communist sympathizers last) esident of MacLaren's be-|get in a proposed afternoon dis- fence he will stage the fight of}. About 100 British service fam-| mile barren, dusty British pro-|11 hours after sporadic night|week by a South Vietnamese |s eon 1955 and 1964 cussion with Gromyko remained his life for "the average Cana-jilies live in the settlement,|tectorate remained under cur-) clashes between British patrols|firing squad. A U.S. spokesman} Te Wan a past-president oflin doubt dian." which has been under curfew| few restrictions imposed Satur-/ and Arab terrorists. accused the Viet Cong of "wane| i, ' Cahaiian Association of] Rusk intended to go over a since the, start of the month)day when Britain revoked self-' Qpnosition parties warned|ton murder of American mili-) | t tions, Rusk had appointments today also with the foreign ministers of France, the Netherlands and Tunisia, but whether he would Politicians As' Honest Now As 10 Years Ago -- Thompson PORT HOPE, Ont. (CP) -- "Politicians can no longer hide what they are doing from elaring } If "aver- ry : ; | + Advertising Agencies and of the|wide range of subjects with the| Robert Thompson, national age Canadian' Mr. Diefenbac| Whe the British speaker of the| rule following mounting wave) people in this British protec-|'@'¥ prisoners. \Coandien "Adseriioans Advisory|Soviet foreign affairs chief, but\leader of the Social Credit| the public." ker said: "I want to do some- Aden legislative council, Sir Ar-: of terrorism, jforate on. the South Arabian} Radio Hanoi identified the|poard. U.S. officials foresaw no quick| party, told a group of business-| In @ speech that was \mainly thing for them." Today he was|_ Peninstla not to co-oper-| Americans as Capt. Humbert R.| Born in London, Ont., his first|breakthrough on major east-|men Saturday night that some of a religious nature, with the setting out to meet them on sta-| jate with Sir Richard Turnbull,| Versace of Baltimore, Md., and/joh was as a reporter with the|west questions. politicians are going to play up 4 inevitable political asides, he tion platforms from Amquit 0, Montreal | Saturday night he told his St.) CCOC Says Government is'wniting s¥ay-athe'mn| TOO Alert Lo Politics archy, Canadian constitu tion and the morality of the na- tion and unl_:s "you and I, the people" rally together by Noy.\°%a! |lature Saturday. Aden is the }main British military. base in \the Middle East. tion for the Liberation of the The . Cairo-backed Organiza-| TORONTO (CP) -- The fed-jtraining which, it seems to us, Occupied South said "co-oper- government has been pay-|should have/the greatest atten-| ation with the colonizer 'is a | who: took over direct rule and| Sgt. Kenneth M. Roraback. Ver-|weekly London Advertiser, | dismissed the Aden state legis-|sace was captured in October,! He was news editor of The 1963, and Roraback a month later. ldaily, South Vietnamese \claimed 48 Viet Cong troops|pondent for the Toronto Star werejbefore he joined MacLarens in) jkilled in an unsuccessful at-'1930. Public Ledger, a Philadelphia and legislative corres- The most promising topic ap- peared to be an agreement to stop the spread of nuclear weapons. Both the Russian and American presentations to: the general assembly listed this as) top priority. | The assembly's 25 - nation steering committee scheduled a meeting this afternoon to decide corruption as the main issue in the Nov. 8 election campaign. But men in: public life are no more dishonest than five or 10 years ago, he said in this com- munity, 30 miles east of Osh-) awa. Mr. Thompson said a speed- up in communications had merely put corruption more in called for the election to Parlia- ment of men above reproach, regardless of their political affiliation. One of the great weaknesses of democracy in Canada is that "we don't make Christianity relevant in our daily living," he 8 it will be too late to stop it, |/N& more attention recently to|tion," Mr. Tittle said, crime against .the country." -- | B iti h E t C , " ' the political result of its spend-| "With the tremendous num-| Britain revoked self-rule in| Tl § Xpor ampaign There are not going to be what to do with Gromyko's pro-| evidence, said, posals for a nuclear non-dis- semination treaty and for a dec- laration against "foreign inter- a NEWS HIGHLIGHTS na gnenronratiecarr aaa ' "" ing than it has to the real eco-|ber of young people coming into Aden because of mounting ter-| any second chances. The elec- | Pp Off I US R Bl many years to come." . é bess : » are it. ays n atveg ed oc 2 e nadian Chamber of Commerce,|we think that more education ference in the internal affairs Se Wecide Hiese ti 2 nomic needs of tke country, A./the work force and with the nat-|Torism. The council of minis-| tion will decide these things for)y, Tittle, president of the Ca-|ure of jobs changing so quickly,|ters was accused of condoning | Selecting Newfoundland--Brit- said today. and more on-the-jot training Former chief minister Abdul) LONDON (Reuters) -- Trade|seven months of this year,jof states." By the latter, Gro- ain's first colony--as the stage and retraining is going to be Qawee Mackawee Sunday night' statistics suggested Sunday that|showed the British are doing|myko said he means what he for his first campaign attack on ot the WU cat eee necessary to keep a reasonable| denied they had obstructed pro-| Britain's export drive is paying|well in the American market.|/terms aggression by the United ; : the new maple leaf flag, the 70- at ihe Chamber that the env: lepel of employment. gress but admitted "we have) off in the United States, China| Total British exports to the|States in Viet Nam, the Domin- Mother 5 Children Die ws leader hag grote ware Senirene ght 'th have sub-| Ve think efforts in this di- been elements of obstruction injand the Soviet bloc. Its sales| United States in this periodjican Republic and the Congo. ' of applause with his defence of/ 7 nS sg stion rection should take high prior-|the way of British plans aimed|record in the Commonwealth,|were valued at £272,400,000 PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- A mother and five of her chil- British traditions. stantially ignored the question interests at| particularly India and Canada,| ($817,200,000), jity over universal welfare/at promoting her compared with schemes which are not designed) the expense of the people of| appears patchy and uncertain, | £228,000,000 during the same to benefit the indigent and the) South Arabia," | however. period last year. needy people, but are designed) He said:. 'We reject co-oper-| The British export battle also| The trade statistics described to cover all the people of the ation demanded of us as be-| looked as if it was being won| the British sales record in Can-) dren burned to death today when fire swept a two-storey row house in densely populated north Philadelphia. Four other children escaped the flames. Authorities said the vic- tims were Mrs. Lucille Miller, 52, and her children Rupert, 14, Byron Jr., 13, Wallace 10, Raymond 7, and Anthony, 4. Hunt Arsonist In Scarborough TORONTO (CP)--A wave of of establishing priorities on its spending -- a point that was strongly urged by the Chamber at its meeting last year in Win nipeg. "We stood alone," he said standing before a huge Union Jack in a downtown hall filled by some 700 persons "J have no apology to offer '. ' country whether they need it}tween master and servant"? jon the West European front,|ada: Imports of British goods|fires believed to have been set '. port We have been particularly|or not and whether they like it. A British spokesman saidjwith major advances in West! increased in the first quarter of|h i Z for the stand the Conservative a } i I aid} j t qi y an arsonist in suburban party took on that question--Ict C™cerned about education andlor not. Sunday the high commissioner) Germany and France, despite|this year, but declined in the|Scarborough during the week- N.Y. Herald Tribune Appears A few hours earlier, Mr. Dief- enbaker was met at St. John's airport by about 300 persons, night. that be clear." swim ve . > | would set up an advisory com-|the tariff barriers of the Euro-|second quarter, resulting in ajend, has prompted residents to r ed ti 4 rald 'Tribun ap- WAVE UNION 3ACKS ss og of ee ie hang Fed pan -- ce 2 Peg of ro ag be Fig thejorganize street patrols and amen fg al Se Pig et Priva tho Ul : s . could sensibly contribute to a| The trade figures, based on|first six months o com:|leave porch lights on during the a , ik Equal Pay Asked | proper administration." |sales made during the first! pared to the 1964 figure. e ' down 11 days ago in support of the strikebound New York Times. The newspaper resigned from the Publishers Associa tion ef New York Saturday, citing 'economic and other cone siderations" for resuming publication. \VATICAN HEARS NEW APPEAL many of them carrying Union i Jacks. The calvacade of cars . »s . ] carrying the party leader into In Car Industry ° Seek Missing Aircraftsman the city were plastered with : Union Jacks and loudspeakers | NORTH BAY (CP) -- RCAF search and rescue aircraft to- blared out, British army) HAMILTON (CP)--Equal pay} support the Canadian position at u Vy ] day joined ground searchers in a hunt for Leading Aircraft- marches for. Canadian and American] the convention | pie man Joseph R. Levasseur, 32, of this RCAF station here, i Mr. Diefenbaker attacked the sonny in the automotive in-| Mr. Burt said economists and| omer + goign on hunting trip near Timagami, 60 government for the alleged ero- dustry was demanded Sunday| editorial writers have termed VATICAN CITY (AP ¥ ? we rm i miles north of here. 5 wi | ' Al AP) -- The Father Arrupe, a Spanish- Y sion of British traditions and in- by delegates to the Canadian the demand for wage parity un Vatican ecumenical council born prelate A lived "le oie Puan en f° stitutions after the provincial pepe Auto Workers Council economic and impractical heard appeals today for a dras- worked many years in Japan say mass for 3,000 gypsies. tem pi ee : party leader, James Greene, in- (CLC). But, he said, "the great bulk tie new approach to' the b k aye ' 4 ' 4 ~ fay / "shbae- thls : : : é ; i é prob- spoke to the council as the as- various parts of Europe, en- ! i troduced him as the man w ho| The 140 delegates, made up| f Canadians will see that our lem of world atheism. The pleas sembly of Roman Catholic car- camped in caravan Graliees and eee In THE TIMES today eee ! staged the "magnificent effort," |of elected representatives of|Wage - price program is the included a proposal for "a dinals, patriarchs, archbishops tents on a broad field that { on behalf of the Union Jack. | UAW locals across the country,| Spearhead of what will eventu "f said from the beginning,"|}endorsed a_ resolution asking ally result in Canadians enjoy said Mr. Diefenbaker, 'that the|that the issue be at the top of|ing the American standard of} new flag represented the begin-|the 1967-68 bargaining agenda. | living." Tories Hold Annual Picnic -- P. 9 Ontario Hospital Nurses Hold Reunion -- P. 5 Vancouver Firefighters Win Soccer Title -- P. 6 worldwide campaign' to eradi- cate if "Atheism is not only a phil- osophical problem but has eco- and bishops debated a schema on modern world problems. Other council fathers echoed his appeal, saying it was not downpours turned into a quag- mire, As the Italian, Spanish, Ger- ning of steps by this govern-| The issue will be raised at the} The recent Canada - United nomic causes," said Very Rev. enough to denounce 'sthelam man, French and Hungarian Ann Landers -- 11 Orbits oe 17 ment that will lead ultimately to union's international convention) States auto trade agreement, Pedro Arrupe, the new head of and proposing positive action to gypsies stood on the sadden City News -- 9 Sports = 6, 7, 8 other steps being taken next May in Long Beach, Calif.| which removed tariffs on vehi-| the powerful Society of Jesus combat it ground before him, Pope Paul Classified 14, 15, 16 Theat 12 A few weeks after the flag) Canadian UAW Director|cles and auto.parts between the| (Jecuits). "Reform of the social The 2,200 bishops went into called them "wanderers without a a ge i $a was proclaimed, he said the| George Burt told the delegates) two countries, has given the un-| structure is necessary in the the third week of the council's rest you who have been 13 a aay Ce oS Young Liberals of Ontario had/that the union's international! ion the arsenal to win the forth- fight against atheism fourth and final session after an- marching for centuries and who | . Editorial: ---- 4 Women's -- 10, 11 voted for the abolition of pa Walter Reuther, get pg bargaining battle, | "The matter is urgent, This other unprecedented day Sun- do not know where you will ar- Financi¢! = V7 Weether 2x. monarchy said " 3 already committed himself is the time for ection.' day in the life of Pope Paul. rive, A

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