Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Oct 1965, p. 1

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Weather Report Cloudy and cool today and to- night. Warmer and fair Fri- day. Low tonight, 82. High to- morrow, 52. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowe manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, The Oshawa Cine Authorized os Second Ciess Mali Post Ottawa and for payment of Pi Daparimens _ VOL. 94 -- NO. 251 See Rca THIRTY-FOUR PAGES be, Por iesk These "Belivered - OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1965 PRIME MINISTER Pear- son is crushed by people trying to shake hands with him at a rally at Yorkdale shopping centre in Toronto Wednesday night. More than 18,000 persons attended the rally, which _ included marching bands, major- ettes, indian dancers and hundreds of signs support- ing the Liberals. (CP) Pearson Draws 18,000, Crowd But Nobody Could Hear Him By THE CANADIAN PRESS As New Democratic Leader T. C. Douglas was raising his voice- in Hamilton Wednesday night against an alleged curb on went to the city hall, signed the guest book and held a press conference before driving to Saint John with brief stops at two communities. hitches. IT'S 'MOST ABSURD' Earlier Wednesday, Mr. Pear- son said allegations that a Lib- freedom of speech, Prime Min- ister Pearson was unable to faise his voice in Toronto be- cause it was being curbed by faulty loudspeakers. In terms of speech-making, Mr. Pearson's big Toronto rally in Yorkdale Shopping Centre didn't come off. When the loud- speaker system failed, and a hand microphone proved too He told the press conference eral government would con- a Conservative govern-|script Canadians for military ment would do away with|service in Viet Nam as the most forced retirements in the armedjabsurd story of the campaign. forces and would pay a special|He told a luncheon meeting of bonus to servicemen who re-en-'community leaders and news- COULD LEAD TO LARGEST EVER light for the task, many of the omy ters who turned out t hear a thing. A shopping centre official es- timated that between 18,000 and 20,000 persons--including shop- pers--were in the area ai the time. But only those nearest Mr. Pearson were able to hear him say: "It doesn't really matter if I make a speech but that you have come out to help get our candidates elected Nov. 8." The freedom of speech that Mr. Douglas was talking about concerned an NDP advertise- ment which he said some pri- vate television stations refused to show because it attacked Ca- nadian commercial and adver- tising interests. He told some 2,000 supporters in a theatre that this involved suppressing) facts and curbing his party's| freedom of speech. HOISTS FLAG ISSUE Meanwhile Conservative nadian Wheat Board today an- $200 Million Wheat Sales list at the end of their regular|paper editors of ethnic groups) \that the government has no in- jtention of sending military forces to Viet Nam. Mr. Douglas spoke in Hamil- ton Wednesday night after fly- ing in from Alberta, with a brief stop in Winnipeg where he} issued a statement on National) Students' Day. He said it is in| the power of the next Parlia- ment to end tuition fees on all forms of higher education. Canada cannot afford to lose talented young men who go to the United States "not merely for better salaries, but even more to find the opportunity to use their skills and knowledge." Social Credit Leader Thomp-} son told a grous of university Settled With Red Chinese WINNIPEG (CP) -- The Ca-immediate agreement, signed earlier in Montreal, is for a min- nounced a three - year agreejimum of 112,000,000 bushels ment with China for the sale of|and a maximum of 186,700,000 at least 112,000,000 bushels of|bushels over a three-year period wheat starting next Aug. 1, and/beginning Aug. 1, 1966. Specific added it may be renegotiated/quantities, prices and shipping for as much as 466,000,000 bu-|periods are to be negotiated pe- shels over a five-year term. _riodically. The announcement was timed; Before next May 1, however, to coincide with the arrival|"consideration will be given" to here of trade minister sharp,|two: alternatives: who said its value could range) 4, Increasing the quantity of from a minimum of $200,000,-'the three-year agreement to a 000 in three years to $900,000,-/ minimum of 168,000,000 bushels 000 if the maximum five-year/and a maximum of 280,000,000 deal is worked out. i |bushels; e "On this basis," said ' ae =, ata St ee Extending the agreement trade minister, "This would be), tive years, involving a mini- Be eer yo hr at aeres,{mum of 280,000,000 bushels and : | students in Regina Wednesday that Social Credit is a combina- tion of all the things that small- 1 liberals believe in, such as pri- vate enterprise and free trade, and the things which small-c Conservatives believe in, such as the fact that deficit financing is wrong. Creditiste Leader Real Ca- jouette told about 250 people at | St. Andre Avellin, Que., Wednes- day night that Canada needs a| national farm policy. "Tt is time we had a farm| policy, just as we have a labor policy." ELECTION | REPORT | Marble Mountain suicide teagn CANTERBURY URGING FORCE OVER RHODESIA SUICIDE RAID 'Air-Base 'Crippled| By Cong | SAIGON (CP) -- Viet Cong jguerrillas struck two lightning \blows at United States air in- |stallations in the northern pro- \vinces of South Viet Nam Wed- Inesday night and damaged or \destroyed 40 helicopters and jseven jet aircraft. In what a marine spokesman described as a suicide attack, two squads of guerrillas as- jsaulted the ma in helicopter \base at Marble Mountain, east of Da Nang, blowing up aircraft |with mortar shells and demoli- jtion charges. | They destroyed 18 helicopters) jand damaged 22 others. Marine casualties were said ito be "very light." A second Viet Cong attack on Chu Lai air strip, 60 miles south of Da Nang, succeeded in destroying two A - 4 Skyhawk jets and damaging five others. Five guerrillas penetrated marine defence at Chu Lai. Two were killed and the other three captured, | | L 39 Altogether, 39 Viet Cong were killed by marine defenders in Wednesday night's attack. Marble Mountain is located on a spit of land jutting out into the South China Sea to the east of the port of Da Nang. Maj. - Gen. Lewis W Walt, commander of marines in Viet Nam; reported a wounded guer- Hilla who was captured said the ~ OL' DOG AND Lacy, a usually boistrous Boxer, stares suspiciously at a moving meal -- a tiny mouse that imprudently left its lair to-wander about the stoop of the home of South ' African photographer Ter- ence McNally. McNally stepped in before Lucy in- jured. the mouse. (AP) came in boats down the Da Nang River and 200 or more guerrillas were supposed to back them up. Walt said a marine patrol ambushed 100 Viet Cong near Da Nang a few hours before the guerrilla raid. The marines) killed 15 of the enemy in stand-| up fighting. Four Viet Cong' were bayoneted to death. ° | It was believed this was part of the backup force for the la- ter raid. DIDN'T REACH BASE Walt said he believed the main Da Nang base, with its big jet airport 370 miles north- ast of Saigon, was the in- tended target but the Viet Cong failed to get near it. The main Da Nang air base TORONTO (CP)--Police be- lieve fake invoices seized Tues- day in raids here are the key to a suspected phoney bankruptcy: and insurance-fraud racket in Montreal and Toronto. Inspector 'John Mullen of the Metropolitan Toronto fraud squad said Wednesday the in- voices were among documents impounded in raids on 10 Tor- onto businesses and the homes of four company execitives. Nine accountants are study- Phoney Invoices 'Key To Rackets gang that killed four men in Quebec. Police sources. said Montreal wholesalers. sent the invoices to companies here without any merchandise. Other times they sent part of the shipment of goods so accomplices here would have bills of lading as well. But sometimes junk worth much less than the amounts on the invoices was sent. --_-- ime Some - insurance companies called the fraud squad after Archbishop Urges Action If Rhodesia Should Split Sir Frederic Bennett, vice- chairman of the Tory party's commonwealth affairs commit- tee, denounced the archbishop's equating the white Rhodesians with the German Nazis. LONDON (AP)--Controversy boiled today over the Arch- bishop of Canterbury's suggest- ion that Christians should sup- port military action against Rhodesia's white settlers if they declare independence without Britain's approval. Critics ranging from Conser. as irresponsible. a long history of African mis sionary work, dissociated itsel! in Aberdeen. dissented. sing with land. our vative members of Parliament to the socialist president of the Methodist Conference, Lord So- per, denounced the suggestion The Church of Scotland, with from the archbishop's views and from a resolution support- ing the archbishop passed by the British Council of Churches Salvation Army leaders also The archbishop, Dr. Michael Ramsey, is spiritual leader of the Church of England. Addres- the British Council of Churches on Tuesday he com- pared Britain's responsibility to '\Rhodesia's Negroes 1939 treaty obligations to Po- its "Our country has obligations "\to Rhodesia . .. .If gov- The archbishop in a BBC in- terview Wednesday night said: "Although it is not the busi- ness of the church to tell the politicians what to do over the Rhodesia crisis, it still has an obligation to protect all races, whatever their creed or color, "If force is really practical, then the church believes that the Christian conscience should allow the use of force. A peace force is infinately preferable to an indiscriminate force." Peter van der Byl, Rhodesian deputy minister of information who now is in London, issued a statement saying: "None of us in Rhodesia who 20 years ago fought with Brit. ain against the common fos could ever have foreseen a time when the primate of all Eng- land would publicly support the dispatch of our former com- rades - in - arms to shoot dows their own kith and kin," f ernment thought it practicable and desirable to use force in discharging not a new but 'a continuing obligation to Rhode- sia,. then as Christian people, unless we are pacifists, it prould be right to say that force should be used." The council, representing all denominations except the Ro- man Catholics, voted 60 to 5 to urge the government "to take whatever measures might be necessary" to establish fully re- presentative government in Rhodesia. There were signs that the archbishop's statement had caused some embarrassment to Prime Minister Wilson, who now is in Rhodesia trying to reach an agreement with the white minority government as- suring ultimate political control for the Negro majority. Wilson has privately ruled out the use of British troops against the white settlers, most of whom are immigrants from Britain or of British descent. Publicly, government and Conservative leaders kept si- lence. But a chorus of protest went up from Conservative backbenchers. Bernard Braine and Gilbert Longden protested in a letter to The ™, . The Times: Wilson Meets Negro Chiefs SALISBURY (Reuters)--Two African nationalist leaders were scheduled to meet with British Prime Minister Wilson and on be able to open ine new a of oe , Observers said if either of the two rival Negro leaders, Joshua Nkomo or Rev. Ndabanigni Sithole, were willing to make the present 1961 constitution work, a solution could be found for the current crisis, White - governed Rhodesia is seeking independence but Brit- ain has refused it unless the way is paved for wider repre- sentation of the country's ma- jority Negroes. So far the two nationalist leaders have both boycotted the present constitution on the grounds that it will in fact pro- long minority white domina- tion. But if they shift their stand, Wilson would be able to tell Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith that the total stalemate on the independence has been broken, Leader Diefenbaker was in Saint John, N.B. hoisting the| flag issue before some 3,200 per- sons in a nearly full arena. | The Liberal campaign in 1963) said nothing about a change in) symbols, he said, and now the/ Liberals were saying they) needed a majority to adopt! some "unpopular" measures. | But after the things they had done in the last 2% yeers, Th Canadian Wheat Board." board statement said t Officer Fires To Stop Boys ST RATFORD (CP) --A po-| a maximum of 466,000,000 bush-| > he|els- 1g | Terms are similar to those in| - jthe current three-year agree-|= |ment, expiring next July 31, un-| | \der which China already has or-) = \dered the maximum 187,000,000) = jbushels worth about $336,000,-| ©, 000. | el Douglas -- P. 2 All Other Party Leaders On Page 3 STMT =\them," Walt 'said. = |something = |north," Elsp against North Viet Nam and th is "the one that "It means The Da Nang base is ringboard for U.S. air attacks e Viet Cong. is hurting to the people up} ing the records but it may take several weeks before any deci-|were trying to drfraud them. sion is reached on the laying} Police sources said the Tor- of charges. ' jonto companies would report The raids were connected/heavy fire or theft. losses to with a Montreal bankruptcy/their insurance companies and ring but Police Chief James|produce fake invoices to sup- Mackey of Toronto said there|port their claims for compensa- was no connection with thejtion. suspecting certain individuals liceman fired four warning | shots Wednesday to halt two NEWS HIGHLIGHTS CPR Jumps Toronto-Montreal Fares MONTREAL (CP) -- The CPR will raise coach class fares on Montreal - Toronto trains by $1.50, effective Sun- day, a spokesman for the railway said today. The new rates are between 40 cents and $1.50 above the price of PREMIER REFUTES STORY Robarts Denies Decision "what could they possibly do/l6-year-old youths in a foot | that could be more unpopular?" |chase across a plowed field in He was speaking at an all-/Huron County. : province rally for the 10 Con-) The chase started when the) servative candidates in New|pair jumped from a car which coach tickets on CNR trains between the two cities. Canada Would Recognize China If... Brunswick. Arriving earlier in the day at Fredericton, Mr. Diefenbaker "FORGET Constable Gordon Smyth of! nearby St. Marys had pursued Hor about 15 miles. THE OIL, CHECK THE ROAST BOSTON (AP)--Chalk one up for women drivers: They are cooking under the hood of the car, with the youngsters in the back seat and the wheel | rolling. "Forget about the oil, just check the roast," one pioneer chef told her filling station attendant. Sure enough there it was, a foil-wrapped pack- age riding on the exhaust manifold, hottest spot under the hood. We tried it, following the lead of Norma Bidwell, Cana- dian housewife whose been roasting-while-rolling all sum- mer. Mrs. Bidwell, food edi- tor of the Hamilton Specta- tor, said: "My husband scoffed the first time I handed him a three - pound foil wrapped package of raw meat and said, "we'll cook it under the hood." "But 10 minutes after we arrived at the cottage the six of us were munching happily MBA D202 AMOR MMR ill MMM ak on hot roast beef sandwiches | with tender-crisp unions and seasoning with cook on Sauce." The rules for road cooking: | Wrap a two-to-three pound roast, not over two inches | thick (for a three-hour yirive) | in a large sheet of extra- | heavy-duty foil, fold edges to- gether twice to make a lock | seam; Use a wire hanger to an- | chor the meat to the mani- | fold; Stop halfway to your desti- nation to turn the roast; Don't stop to visit with friends for your roast needs three hours driving time: Don't try turkey. "During the early stages of turkey's cooking, it gets bouncy. It sticks its elbows out and pushes away from the heat. You try to push it back and its sticks a drum stick through the foil."' This means trouble -- like grease burning on the mani- fold. a ee Found tired, hungry 'and erying in a skid-row hotel in ABANDONED IN A S Vancouver, this abandoned tot falls asleep over his first KID-ROW HOTEL TOROTO (CP) Premier Robarts said today '"'there has been absolutely no decision" made on a royal commission report on Metropolitan Tor- onto's future. The premier was comment- ing on a Globe and Mail copy- righted story saying the govern- ment has already discarded the report's proposal for an 11-dis- trict education system. Municipal Affairs Minister Spooner termed the story "pure speculation" and said govern- ment plans to begin studies in mid-November on what action to take. By then all submis- sions from hearings held by the commission will be in. Mr. Spooner said Commis- sioner Carl Goldenberg's blue-| print for a new metropolitan) plan is still being studied by his} department. After the cabinet makes a "general decision", all legislature members for On Metro's Future Made "We: will wait until mid-No- vember until we're sure every- one has an opportunity to rec- ord his opinion," he said. The Globe and Mail story said the government's decision to discard the 11-district educa- tion system proposal had al- ready been made. Shredder Rips Boy's Arm Otf STRATHROY, Ont. Charles D. Viaene, 16, of Strath- roy, had his right arm ampu- tated at the elbow in hospital|= Wednesday after an accident on his father's: tobacco farm. The youth was operating a|~ tractor drawing a stalk shred-|= ding machine. He got off the tractor to check the machine and his arm became entangled. Metropolitan Toronto will dis- cuss it. E Commissioner Goldenberg, a Montreal lawyer, suggested re-| moving nine of 13 municipal structures in the city. | Mr. Spooner said his depart- ment is still: receiving briefs from municipalities, school boards, | | ® meal in an emergency shel- ter. Police are seeking the parents. (CP) "I had to break my arm to get it out of there,"' the youth said. After he freed himself he got/= back on the tractor and drove it to the fatmhouse, about a mile away, with his right arm hanging at the elbow. j Strathroy is 25 miles west of London. | (CP) --|2 HALIFAX (CP) -- External Affairs Minister Martin said Wednesday Canada will support Red China's admis- sion to the United Nations only if Peking displays a will- ingness to negotiate peaceful settlements to' Indochinese conflicts. 'Certainly the world organization must be uni- versal," he said. But first Peking must abandon attempts to set up a competing body." Youth Gets 4 Years On Dope-Raps TORONTO (CP) -- George William Sikorski, 19, of Port Arthur was sentenced Wednesday to four years in prison for possession of morphine, and trafficking in bar- bituates and heroin. Margaret Joyce Littler, 36, of Water- loo was sentenced to two years in prison for selling a capsule of heroin for $15 to an RCMP undercover agent. In THE TIMES Planning Committee Out--P. 13 Lights, Or Human Chain?--P, 6 Bombers Whomp Stamps--P. 8 veg Ann Landers--17 City News--13 Classified --26, 27, 28 Comics--30 Editorial--4 Financial--29 Obits--29 Sports--8, 9, 10, 11 Theatre--20 Whitby News--5, 6, 7 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17 Weather--2 Now in its 13th day the Greater Oshawa Communi- ty Chest has reached the $103,920 mark of its 306,$300 target.

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