Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Sep 1965, p. 2

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cn tit EEL ETE 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, September 29, 1965 Police Busy Lot For Pope's Visit NEW YORK (AP) -- More than two-thirds of the 26,000 po- lice in New York City will be i assignments next Mon- ay directly related to the visit of Pope Paul, Commissioner Vincent L. Broderick said 18,000 policemen will have some task of traffic and crowd control and security during the 14-hour visit of the Pope. The overtime pay alone, 'Broderick estimated, will cost the city more than $1,000,000. Pope Paul is coming to the United States to make a spe- cial plea for peace at the United Nations, While here, the Pope will con- fer with President Johnson and with American religious lead- ers, celebrate a mass at Yankee Stadium and visit the Vatican pavilion at the world's fair. Broderick said police security checks were made of persons living along the route of the 24- mile motorcade, He said some buildings along the way from Kennedy Airport to Manhattan probably would be sealed off. The police commissioner urged people to stay at home and watch the visit on televi- sion. He also warned motorists to leave their cars at home that day and asked truckers to plan deliveries so that they will not be in an area the same time as the Pope. Meanwhile, in Rome, Brit- ain's John Cardinal Heenan | said he believes the Pope would accept an invitation to visit England in 1967. Polish sources said earlier that secret negotiations are un- der way for a possible papal visit to Poland. UN Complete ly Dominated By Indo-Pakistan Clashes To South yen Cao Ky was threatened to- ports that a major Viet Cong A U.S. spokesman announced today that South Vietnamese forces and U.S. planes beat off an attack by one of the largest Viet Cong concentrations in sev- Student Rioters A Threai _ SAIGON (CP)--The military|eral months, possibly more than|the Viet Cong suffered heavy government of Premier Ngu-|2,000 guerrillas. day with student demonstra-|ther fighting was reported to-|launched a two-pronged attack tions in Saigon over alleged re-|day in the area 45 miles north-| Tuesday against the South Viet- ligious discrimination amid re-| west of Qui Nhon. buildup was under way in South) battalions Viet Nam's Binh Dinh prevince,|losses and many Viet Cong 295 miles northeast of Saigon.|were believed to have been Viet Government losses in a battle last week. The spokesman said no fur-- Two Communist battalions jnamese troops from the east The government force of two| and west, while two other batta- suffered moderate} lions struck from the southwest. U.S. intelligence sources said the Viet Cong have begun a killed by the U.S. air strikes,|byjldup in Binh Dinh province, oe, -- war but 0/in which Qui Nhon is located. ly count was made. | "| The action took place in the | TOP. Tia aoe ee area of Phu Cu Pass, where| cot Sale carder in the wee : : they believed that North Viet- Her Power Is PENSACOLA, Fila. (AP)-- Tropical storm Debbie stalled just short of slamming into the posh gulf coast of Florida and Alabama today and forecasters said the storm appeared to be losing power. Debbie's Stalled Off:Coast, |i:'si="vsiomens, norm namese troops are operating in the province. }execution awaits Americans jcaptured by the Viet .Cong in jthe future and the brother of |Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu was s . s * Diminishing sentenced to five years' solitary Premier Ky refused to re- esive a delegation of students, and the students said they would demonstrate outside his office if permission was not granted. It was the first time since Ky came to power in a coup three months ago that demon- strations were threatened against him. Tawny Canadian Port NDON WINER LIMIT From the mouth of the Mis-\ confinement for extortion. sissippi River to Panama City, Fla., hundreds of people on low | lying islands and beaches sand- bagged disappearing founda-| tions or else gave up and went In an advisory early today, inland. the 'weather bureau said the storm probably would remain stationary about 115 miles south} southwest of Mobile, Ala., for "ih GIAN THI YEN -- FROM WAR'S PAWN TO A NEW HAPPY LIFE | CALL... DIXON'S Your table is waiting! Dine in leisured elegance in the Blue Room, your every wish fulfilled with continental subtlety, your every taste captured with 'cordon blue' cuisine. The sophisticated intimacy of the cocktail hour, the gracious luxury of glass-encircled dining is as close as your phone. Call for reservations and Repercussions from the Indian-/dian officials oppose a plebi-| Se Pakistani border clashes con-/scite. India does not object to! tinued to dominate the United/the presence of UN observers. Nations today as External Af-; India and Pakistan agreed to UNITED NATIONS (CP) --lany role for a UN force and In-| ' Horst Faas' 6 e b j | 7 fairs Minister Sardar S. Singh)a ceasefire a week ago va Eyewitness Info wel advisory said. of India headed for New Yorkiclashes continued and the Se- to attend the General Assembly.|curity Council has renewed its Sing, scheduled to arrive thisi\demand that both countries afternoon, was expected to re-jhonor the ceasefire and with- ply to pooner yoyo that/draw to their positions of Aug.| | india is responsible for the con-|5 when hostilities began. | ; | ae in Necunte because of her| Secretary-General o Thant is) HAYNEVILLE, Ala. (AP)--A rights slaying--that of a young| refusal to allow a plebiscite in|setting up a new observer|Prosecutor was expected today/Ku Klux Klansman accused of the. Himalayan state. group, headed by Maj. - Gen. to produce eyewitness tes- killing a Detroit housewife. Pakistan Foreign Minister Z.|Bruce Macdonald of Edmonton,|timony in an attempt to link) In the first day of testimony} A. Bhutto told the 117-member|to supplement the work of the|10mas L. Coleman to the kill- in Coleman's trial, Gamble! General Assembly Tuesday the|United NatiohA military obser-|i"& of a civil rights worker. | made no effort to put the death! UN should force India to accept/vations group in India and Pak- There was a possibility also) weapon, a .12-gauge automatic} a_UN force in Kashmir whilelistan since 1949.\ |that the state, with the consent! shotgun, in the hands of the| peace negotiations are under} Canada also Has set up 117/ of defence counsel, would put/ prominent Hayneville resident| way. Air Transport Unit, under the|imto the record of Coleman's|who was first charged with He proposed that both Indianicommand of Wing Cmdr. R. T.| 'tial the testimony it had hoped) murder, but later indicted only abd Pakistani forces withdraw/Heaslip, to serve both groups in|'? 8et from a wounded priest.) for manslaughter. from Kashmir and be replaced|the disputed area, Heaslip will| Coleman, 55, a highway en- For Rights-Trial 'Smiles Again | (A photograph of a | wounded Vietnamese girl, taken by The Associated Press' Horst Faas, Pulitzer Prize winner, touched North American hearts and brought forth many offers of help. Here is what has happened to the child since The first six witnesses testi-! the picture was taken.) the next six to 12 hours while/ weakening slowly. "Most warnings will praba- be lowered later today,"| revel in "Royal Blue" carpet treatment at the Canadiana soon. FOR { [a \y ean OIL FURNACES Ih KSY FUEL OIL Now Official North Metro Airline Limousine Terminal AND HEATING SERVICE this H "squalls, winds and] | SERVING THE PUBLIC ~ : Or), See te ed OVER 50 YEARS Canadiana MOTOR HOTEL rains generated by the storm! raked hundreds of miles of 313 ALBERT ST. OSHAWA Right on Hwy 401 at Kennedy Rd., interchange 59, Toronto, Ont. Florida Panhandle _coast-| 723-4663 Tel. 291-1171, Area Code 416 Licensed Under the Liquor Licence Act line. Wind-whipped tides and) pounding surf ate into the) beaches. | by a UN force of African,/have three Caribou transports Asian and Latin-American con-jand three Otter reconnaissance tingents pending a plebiscite. planes in the area as well as Indian Prime Minister Shas-jair personnel totalling about 100) tri, however, rejected earlier|Canadians. | Johnson Had No Business | Signing Auto-Pact: Senator |gineer and part - time deputy sheriff, is charged with man- slaughter in the shotgun slay- ing of Jonathan M. Daniels, a white Episcopal (Anglican) seminary student from Keene, N.H. Another clergyman, Rev. Richard Morrisroe of Chicago, was critically wounded in the shooting which left Daniels dead outside of a Hayneville grocery store Aug. 20. "WASHINGTON (CP) -- ator Albert Gore (Dem. Tenn.), Sid today President Johnson| ignored a 54-year-old line of au- rity between the executive] id congress in negotiating the) @Ontroversial auto trade agree ment with Canada "Gore, in a prepared speech attacking the pill implementing the. agreement, said a serious imbalance already exists be- tween the power of the White House and legislative. branch. "The ratification of the pres-| ident's action in negotiating this| twade agreement will further efode the Congress' standing,"| the senator declared. a*'Not since 1911 has the pres- ident negotiated a trade agree- day. Democratic Sen-;ment of this sort--one requir-| Catholic priest, is still under ing implementing legislation--| without prior authority of Con-! gress." Johnson and Prime Minister Pearson signed the agreement last Jan. 16 at the president's Texas ranch. The Senate began debate on the implementation bill Tues-| leaders said they hope to pass it this week. The House of Representatives passed it Aug. 31. Senator Russell B. Long (Dem. La.) floor manager for| the bill, said in opening the de-| bate Tuesday that the agree- ment was to the advantage of the United States and Canada. e TORONTO cjation of Canadian Television CBC Agreements Severed By TV-Radio Artist'sUnion| Warmer Air Moving In; (CP)--The Asso-| The association is attempting | jby its action against the CBC and Radio Artists (Ind.) will|to force writers either to join Gancel agreements. with the/ACTRA or obtain the $50 work GBC Oct. 1. In a statement Tuesday AC- TRA said its 3,000 performers|membership in another union,\issued at 5:30 a.m. EDT: and writers have been informed] writers that after Oct. 1 they may work|waiver permit which would al-¢xtreme only on CBC productions which|low them to work for the cer-|today is unlikely to move|North Bay. s 58 are written by persons quali- fied by ACTRA: tAn association spokesman ex- plained that most Canadian\poration feels that the ACTRA|0ns are expected free-lance performers are mem- bers or pay work-permit fees,/ment of control over the CBC's| Southern Lake Huron, Windsor, | wroosonee but ACTRA has been less suc-lright to determine program London: Mainly sunny F cessful in organizing writers. permits, the spokesman said. In special cases, would be granted a poration without paying. Cecil Smith, information di- rector of the CBC, said the cor- |\demands would impose an ele- content. HERE and THERE Fire did a total of $180 dam- age to two homes last night. The first was at 104 Park rd. $., where ashes placed in a cardboard box caught fire in a@ back room. The Fire De partment estimated damage to the building at $190 and damage to contents at $60 Second blaze was at 511 How- ard st. home of J. Lew, where clothes in an upstairs yoom caught fire. Damage was put at $20. Cause of the sudden fire is not known. City ambulance answered six rou- tine ambulance calls last night. Mr. and Mrs. E. Drapuk, of 622 Dean ave., say that _Keith Hooley, who appeared with two other men in Bow- manville Court Tuesday on an indecent assault charge, does not live at their address as reported in Wednesday's paper. | City woman Mrs. Herbert Schuerman was a_ delegate fn Saskatoon at the recent eighth National Conference of Mental Retardation. Some 450 delegates attended the event, Sponsored by the Canadian Association for Retarded Chil- éren. Mrs. Schuerman repre- sented Region 9, Ontario F oeseirr ig for the Mentally . Congratulations are being extended to Marie Ann Zales- chook, 373 Athol st. e., who is celebrating her birthday today. Isabell Flett, RR 2, Oshawa, was the top dairy showman in the junior calf club show held at the Scott Township Fall Fair, Dorothy Brown, RR 1, Oshawa, had the top Angus entry in the steer class. The Durham Riding New Democratic, Party nominat- ing convention will be held in Dr. Powell School, Port Hope, on Oct. 4, The speak- er will be Walter Pitman, former MP for Peterborough Riding jmately to a court order oust- | such as Father Morrisroe, a Roman PORK SHOULDER ROAST | 39: Sunny, Overcast Periods SLICED PORK STEAKS SIRLOIN - WING STEAK BONELESS RUMP or ROUND STEAK ROAST .. 719 iH LB UAL TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts|Trenton Kingston air over|Killaloe y 60 Ontario|Muskoka |. 2 62 sevsceseee 50 68 Warmer FREEZER southwestern | Synopsis: |deeper into the province until|sudbury ;. 58 Thursday. Elsewhere in the) pariton |province mainly cloudy condi-\sayit Ste. Marie.. Kapuskasing ..... White River... Clair, Lake Erie, fied primarily on what went on | Varner, told the jury she had young Vietnamese girl in the| rights group, and that Coleman cent victims, is learning to! Frescoes Fade ";."" iphotographer, saw her last pear in court. His absence|.o's National Institute of 'An-|X0ai -- her left shoulder and} mond Flowers for a postpone-|; 499-year-old Mayan frescoes) Shelling had just killed her ing Flowers and his staff from morning newspaper, El Univer-|'e?: Their home lay in- ruins. prosecutor from the circuit so- taken 20 years ago and one| Yen, her mother and two Ble back In charge, coes of Nonampak are fading. Faas' photograph of the girl,| pressed hope the trial would gojeastern Mexico, was an im-!fers to help. clear the way for the start of|period extended from the 4th to) A spokesman for Foster Par-| |quarters in New York City, said) generous people."' adopt a child by proxy for $15) tive in Saigon found the child in| her head. shaved for necessary man said. "But she is learning} mother $8 monthly benefit, Lake St. for a house for the family and before and after the shooting. By CHARLES WEST | decided to close the store for | shotograph, her face mirroring told the group it was closed. _|smile again, When Horst Faas, Associated) Ask Rescue |June, she was stumbling across| brought demands from Ala-|thropology has been challenged|and bandaged, a wound on her ment of the trial and led ulti-|pefore it is too late father, her seven - year - old the prosecution. sal, which published two sets of} She was on her way to a hel-| eee See Be a) freshly snapped--showing how small brothers survived the! WANT EARLY VERDICT Bonampak, in the remote jun- and a subsequent news story, to the jury of 12 white men to-|portant religious centre of the another trial involving a civillthe 10th centuries AD. ents Plan, Inc., a voluntary} jit received "a great response The agency conducts a world- a month. a hospital treatment, and still. bears a) e to smile once more," | clothing, supplies and special z job for the mother. The storekeeper, Mrs. Virginia) yew yorK (AP) -- The| fear of trouble from a_ cCivilli,, anguish of all war's inno- eT Her name is Gian Thi Yen. Press Pulitzer Prize - winning treatment and is unable to ap-. MEXICO (Reuters) -- Mexi-|2 battle-littered field at Dong) bama Attorney - General Rich-/t9 rescue a unique "gallery" of cheek uncovered. The challenge comes from the)rother and. four-year-old | sis- Flowers had taken over 45\photographs side by side--onelicopter for medical evacuation. | but the court order put Gam- tragically fast the famous fres-|shelling. | State and defence counsel ex-|gles of Chiapas state, in south-/touched off an outpouring of of- day. An early verdict would Mayan empire whose classic GOT GREAT RESPONSE pines oe a4 --- agency with international head-} WEATHER FORECAST . . + Many applications from! wide program whereby donors) The agency's field representa-| "Yen spent 22 days there, had scar on her cheek," the spokes-| The agency is giving Yen's medical care and is arranging and|,, warmer Thursday, light winds. Timmins | Niagara, Western Lake On- tario, northern Lake Huron, Southern Georgian Bay, Ham- ilton, Toronto: Sunny with a few cloudy periods and warmer BONELESS SPECIAL e STUFFED PORK ROAST LEAN SLICED SIDE BACON Thursday, light winds Northern Georgian Bay, Ti- magami, Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, Southern White River, North Bay,. Sudbury: Partial clearing overnight, mainly cloudy Thursday, a little war- mer, light winds. Northern White River, Coch- lrane: Mainly cloudy Thursday jwith occasional rain towards fevening, light winds. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Thursday: Windsor 58 54% G.1.0's *Guaranteed Investment Certificates A'/2% SAVINGS 4 ACCOUNTS SIDES of VEAL Cut & Wrapped Free SEASONED JITNEY . BURGERS Wieners 5 LB. BOX SEASONED 9: BEEF PATTIES 5... 39 << Thee. &e Interest Calculated and Paid Quarterly London ... eee Kitchener .. Mount Forest..... |Wingham | Hamilton St. Catharines. Toronto ... Peterborough SAVINGS HOURS MONDAY -- THURS. 9 TO 6 SATURDAY 9 TO § FRIDAY 9 TO 9 DON'T FORGET Che Rih Room | Continental French Buffet Served Daily 11:30 - 2 p.m. -- 5 to 8 p.m. | GENOSHA HOTEL HEAD OFFICE 19 Simeoe St. N, Oshawe 723-5221 23 King St. W. Bowmanville ta Tel, 623-2527 CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION Bowmanville Office Closed on Wednesdoys SALMON STEAKS READY TO EAT 19 3 lbs. Veal 3 lbs. Bologna 3 lbs. Rib Stew ANY ONEITEM $1.00 4 lbs. Country Sausage Patties BY THE PIECE 12 KING ST. E. 723-3633 STORE HOURS: Open Friday till 9 P.M. Saturday till 6 P.M.

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