Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Nov 1965, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

_ Home Newsp aner. Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow. manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboting 'centres in Ons tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94 -- NO. 279 Boe Per Wesk Home Belvered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1965 'Weather Renort Cloudy with sunny intervals today. Few snowflurries Wed- hesday. Low tonigit, 27; nigh tomorrow, 34. Re, ? " TWENTY-FOUR PAGES US. BBILD-UP SEEN Viet Cong its Again By EDWIN Q. WHITE SAIGON (AP)--The Viet Cong returned to the attack today after a brief lull in heavy ground fighting during Defence Secretary McNamara's latest inspection of the South Viet- namese war zone. Another major buildup of U.S. and South Vietnamese forces seemed certain in the wake of McNamara's visit. He left for Guam Monday night with: a warning that North Viet Nam had clearly decided to escalate the conflict. He forecast a long war. Within hours of McNamara's departure, the 85,000-ton nu- clear-powered aircraft carrier Enterprise left the Philippines to join units of the U.S. 7th Fleet operating in Viet. Nam.. The world's largest carrier was es- corted on her first mission by the guided missile frigate Bain- bridge, also nuclear-powered. In South Viet Nam's Central Highlands, a guerrilla battalion apparently overwhelmed 200 government, militiamen 15 miles ' east of An Khe, headquarters of the U.S. Ist Air Cavalry di- vision. McNamara visited the Foi encampment Mon- jay. ATTACK CAMP About 200 other guerrillas at- tacked a South Vietnamese spe- cial forces camp and a nearby militia post 90 miles southwest of Saigon, near the Cambodian border in Phong Dinh Province. The guerrillas fired recoilless rifles and mortars for almost five hours. U.S. spokesmen re- ported 15 Viet Cong dead and light government casualties, but no U.S. dead or wounded. A few miles away the Viet Cong released 24 captured gov- ernment agent Ay what Saigon spokesmen ca a periodic move to undermine government morale. South Vietnamese mili- tary commanders feared 'these troops to surrender rather than fight. U.S. spokesmen said air force and navy jets battered bridges, highways and suspected troop concentrations in North Viet Nam, while two air wings flew 399 attacks against suspected Viet Cong targets in the south. More than 200 structures, in- cluding fortifications, were de- Stroyed within South Viet Nam, the spokesmen reported. B-52 bombers from Guam un- leashed their heavy explosives on three suspected Viet Cong | Camps in Binh: Duong Province, '40 miles northwest of Saigon. |Results of the strike were not announced, PROVIDE MEN | After conferences with mili- tary and political leaders, Mc- |Namara told an airport press jconference that the United |States will continue to provide} the men needed to wage the! |war. He also spoke of increases in the strength of the 500,000- strong South Vietnamese armed |forces, ee | McNamara's statement rein- British Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart right, stands with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko Speaking at a banquet for a He said that in trying to save|Nam, said today the Commu- forced speculation that he will| urge President Johnson to build) R up the U.S, force in South Viet Nam from the present 165,700 men to 300,000. } | fil s North Vietnamese government! n 1 tration delegation, Chinese vice - pre- mier Hisieh Fu-chih said the WASHINGTON (AP) De- U.S. was at its wit's end injfence Secretary McNamara, Viet Nam. back home from South Viet itself from failure it had sent more troops to South Viet Nam, extended its bombing of North Viet Nam and continued with its "peace talk intrigues." mier Le Thanh Nghi replied: "Overcoming all difficulties and whatever the cost, we people of Viet Nam are firmly carrying on the struggle to frustrate the U.S. imperialist schemes of ag- North Vietnamese Vice-Pre-| gression and war expansion." nists are tripling the rate of in- filtration from the north. He also declared that we've stopped losing the war." McNamara, with Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, talked with reporters as he stepped out of a jet plane that had flown him non-stop from Guam. - McNamara said he believes DISCUSS NUCLEAR PROBLEMS at their meeting in Moscow today. They met to discuss problems of preventing the spread of nuclear weapons. Mourn | | | | Stewart is on a four day visit of the Soviet capital. --(AP wirephoto via cable from Moscow) eds Triple |Assembly Drags On Key Issues UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- With only half of the key is- sues on its agenda disposed of, the UN General Assembly cast about today for some way of winding up business by its Dec. 21 target for adjournment. Assembly president Amintore Fanfani of Italy was reported consulting with advisers on the prospect of transferring items from the lagging main political committee to other committees. The 117-nation political com- mittee has been tied up for six there now are nine North Viet Nam regular regiments in South releases may encourage their) Viet Nam, weeks with debate on a series of disarmament. proposals. It ropean states--will probably get token treatment or be relegated to a lesser committee. CYPRUS TOUCHY The remaining item, Cyprus, is expected to touch off lively debate. | The special political commit- | tee still has before it the thorny problem of peacekeeping fi- nances which caused the East- Death Of Queen BRUSSELS (Reuters) -- Women and war veterans wept as the flag - draped carriage bearing the body of Belgium's beloved dowager Queen Elisabeth was drawn through Brussels' silent streets today. The German - born queen, whose patriotism inspired her people through two world wars, died last Tuesday at 89. She was buried today in the royal crypt at Laeken Church, beside her husband, Albert, the "warrior king" of the First World War. Three reigning monarchs and more than 60 royal princes, dukes and counts followed in solemn procession as 40° grena- diers drew the simple mahog- any coffin from the royal pal- ace to the ancient gothic Ca- thedral of St. Michel for the fu- neral service. jneth Kaunda. TO RETIRE Maj.-Gen. John M. Rock- ingham, 54, who command- ed Canadian Army brigades in North-west Europe and Korea, will retire from the Army Jan. 15. Gen Rock- ingham, known in the forces as "Rocky," will join the Calgary firm of lLoram Ltd. (CP Wirephoto) By GEOFFREY WHITEHEAD vance detachment of the RAF, being sent at the urgent request! tegic dam on the Rhodesian Zambian airstrips today. ZAMBIA AWAIT RAF SQUADRON Token Force Dispatched | In Response To Kaunda Zambia and Rhodesia admin- ister the dam jointly; but,the power station is on the 0- desian side of the border. Last Friday saboteurs blew up a pylon inside Zambia, causing a temporary shutdown at one big copper mine and curtailing power to two other mines. HEAD OFF ASSISTANCE The main purpose of the goy- ernment's decision, which was made in principle at an emer- gency cabinet meeting Monday, is to head off the possibility that Arab or African troops will be sent to Zambia's assistance. (in Ghana, about 3,000 per- sons Monday joined a volunteer militia established by the gove ernment last week "'for the lib- eration of Southern Rhodesia." It was understood that the British units also would man airfields in Zambia so that they could be used to fly out copper exports and fly in oil supplies if the normal trade route through Rhodesia is blocked by Prime Minister Ian Smith's white-minority break-away gove ernment. s LONDON (Reuters)--An ad- of Zambia to help guard a stra- border, was expected to land on A well-informed source said Prime Minister Wilson decided Monday night to send a token military force to Zambia in re- sponse to repeated calls for help from Zambia's President Ken- Final details of the operation were expected to be settled at a cabinet meeting today. It was believed that the air- craft to be sent to Zambia will be unarmed reconnaissance planes. A small force of ground troops, probably from the RAF co, was expected to fol- ow. Power from the big Kariba Dam is Zambia's lifeline. The dam's hydroelectric output, third largest in the world, feeds the "copper - belt" on which much of Zambia's economy de- pends, The royal mourners followed |" in chill wintery sunshine. First came King Baudouin, Queen Elisabeth's grandson, accompa- nied by his father, ex-king Leo- pold Ill, the queen's eldest son. King Leopold brushed tears from his eyes as the grenadiers lifted the coffin on their shoul- West deadlock that paralysed the last assembly session. ders at the flower-decked steps of the cathedral. The: committee dealt briefly; Behind came King Olav of with the issue last week but un-|Norway, Grand Duke. Jean. of der African pressure switched to the question of racje! segre- Luxembourg and former King More Babies Seen Need JOHANNESBURG (AP) -- A South African deputy minister has appealed to white married couples to celebrate South Af- China Troops Probe South NEW DELHI (AP) -- Chines troops are. probing . south all tually the entire front from R fi Humbert of Italy. The Queen's|rica's fifth anniversary as-a re- woe along: India's Himalayan fron- 4 teil passes more than tier and some Indian blood is This would be about 18,000/still has six items on its docket. |*? * ' 4 : ' Bid. ld gation, This dedate ix expected being spilled. miles across the subcontinent. Government * Cavalier" In Spy Case, Dief Says OOA (CP) -- Conserva- etaoii tive Leader Diefenbaker said Monday the government han- dling of the Spencer spy case is "a cavalier way of dealing with espionage.' f He told a press conference that his party will take "ap- propriate action to get to the bottom of this'? when Parlia- ment opens Jan. 18. He said the justice depart- ment gave an indication that it "had-a--case"' at the time two Russians were expelled from Canada for paying money to two Canadians for information. The expulsion occurred last May. At that time, he said, the gov- ernment indicated that thou- sands of dollars had been paid for the information. Now the government was "running away from its own case" created by its own statement. Justice Minister Cardin has said that no criminal proceed- ings will be undertaken against the man, who has been identi- men based on U.S. intelligence! estimates of about 2,000 men to| a North Vietnamese regiment. He said the rate of infiltra-| tion from the north had been} about 1,500 a month during the] recent rainy season, but the| irate during the dry season is} jexpected to be 4,500 a month. | | Sex-at-Eight Plan Backed | fied as Victor G. Spencer, 57, a former Vancouver postal worker. He said there was not enough evidence for prosecu- tion, The Conservative chief said the government should give Mr.| Spencer every opportunity to} | | talk. There should be a com-| mission of inquiry into the mat-|_TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Henry) ter. \Fenigstein, psychiatrist at the) = Toronto' Psychiatric Hospital,! ng ane mating necmaee ar parents must start teach-| rec . ae ling their children about sex by} i says. ne pea is living under Al the ~age--of--cight-to--as-sist assumed name in a rest honie| ' Finns ni ae dit | on the outskirts of the city. aoe aera wean to the| It says Spencer has refused to|nublin Home and School Asso- \say anything since admitting to/cjation in suburban North York,| ja Province reporter Nov. 1 that/ Dr, Fenigstein told parents if! jhe was the man accused of giv-|they waited until the children jing information to the Russians./are older "they will be able to | The newspaper says Spencer, |tell you more than you could tell la delegate to the recent conven-|them."' tion of the British Columbia | He said parents should not! |Federation of Labor (CLC) in| forbid discussion of sex in. the} Vancouver, attempted to seize|home but should encourage} jthe camera of a newspaper pho-| their children to ask qtestions| tographer who took his picture|so they will be well informed lin the lobby of a hotel. 'before maturity. Air War In Viet Nam Is Far WASHINGTON (AP)--On the} basis of the Pentagon's stated objectives, the U.S. air war against North Viet Nam is far from a success after nearly 10 months. Based on the same announced goals, there are. some elements of failure. These views are the consen- sus in discussions with qualified sources within and. outside the U.S. government, and are sup- ported in a study of other in- formation available from the government. A main objective of the bomb- ings, which began last Feb. 7, was to cut down the flow of North Vietnamese soldiers supplies into South Viet Nam The eviderce, chi the.gov. ernment's own shows that despite heavy battle losses Communist forces in South Viet Nam are: stronger in numbers than ever before. U.S. officials also believe the enemy has the capability of moving as many as four more divisions into South Viet Nam during the next six months_ Another major announced goal of the bombing was to prod the North Vietnamese into--halt- ing their support of the Viet Cong in the south. Hanoi's lead- ers now seem more defiant than eon and! | motor scooters at St. Two of the issues, introduced by Britain and the Soviet Un- ion, are expected to take at least two weeks for disposition. Britain wants a full airing of its item calling for peaceful set- tlement of disputes. The Russians are certain to demand full debate on their item dealing with 'the inadmis- sibility of intervention in the domestic affairs of states." This has been viewed as a launching pad for Communist attacks on U.S, intervention in the Domin- ican revolt and American. pol- icy in Viet Nam. Three other political items-- peaceful uses of outer space, Korea and relations among Eu- Net yearali broiher, the Duke of) to run into next week. |Bavaria, braved the cold to} bn a ge - nations to) walk with the royal relatives. Speak In the Gebate on peace-| Other mourners. included the an irish proposal to Tare ipel vam: (king) Mwambuisa of ; '©|Burundi and President- Kayib-| permanent members of the Se-\anda of neighboring Rwanda, | eration to shoulder 70 per cent of the cost. The Soviet Union has rejected it as a violation of the UN char- ter. If the assembly fails to meet its deadline, it will have to re- sume the session in January. Delegates in general are reluc- tant to gloss over or drop any major items in order to meet the target date. a 1UNS AND MOTOR $ nec fae COOTERS DRAW WORLDWIDE NOTICE GRANITE CITY, Ill. (AP) The nuns and their yellow Elia- beth Hospital are world fa- mous. They might even have taken the place of Santa Claus if a 10-year-old Rome, Italy, boy named Marco Venturi had his way. Marco, after reading an As- sociated Press story on the nuns and scooters, wrote a letter to the hospital in this St. Louis suburb. He said his mother had to help him carry his load of school books to classes. From Success Indications point to intensified) Hanoi, North Viet Nam's cap- U.S. bombing of North -Viet\ital and seat of much of her in-| Nam. dustry, and Haiphong, chief Defence Secretary McNamarajport of entny for seaborne sup- almost certainly waquid dispute|plies from Russia, are also off any conclusion that the limited limits. air war has been a failure. Authorities reflected his views|complished? According to data contend that if it were not for javailable here, more than 50 the bombings, infitration of/bridges have been at least men and arms would have been|porarily disabled. far greater, The railway in North Viet Critics in the armed services|Nam has been reduced to op-} and in congress do not complain | erating only sporadically and in that hammering at communica-| sections. tions lines obviously is not do-| Intelligence reports indicate ing the job. What they want is|that road traffic is at a stand- a wider ranging assault to/still during the day and is get- knock out North Viet Nam's/ting that way at night with an ability to sustain the aggression! increase in night raids. south of the Fag Reger divid-| Another major target in- the MB Heke ane Viet Nam. | north has been ammunition. de- Reports from diplomatic) pots. These are difficult targets sources with contacts in North|to destroy, since the storage-fa- Viet Nam say that the Commu-/cilities are dug in. Still, about nists can carry on with consiq-|one-third of North Viet Nam's erable hardship but no basic!ammunition capacity is esti- dislocation. |mated to have been destroyed, The U.S, fighter-bombers are} But, with all of this bombing, destroying much in the Aapgelithe latest figures released by area, these reports say, but WHe|the defence department a month | North Vietnamese are quickly!aco showed that Communist ither repairing or bvpassing! strength in South Viet Nam had damaged areas risen by about 40,000. or ;so in U.S. jets are barred fromjthe previous three or four jchopping at North Viet Nam's}months to 240,000, including reg- | industry, food and power facili-julars, irregulars and political Fst agents. le So, what has the bombing ac-| tem-| ~ Marco said the burden of the | books was intolerable, physi- cally if not mentally, and he could make good use of one of the electric scooters. "Would you be able to send me one that you don't happen | to be needing,"' asked the lad, mentioning that he thought of the hospital "even though you are so far away." That.was only one of hun- dreds of letters hospital ad- ministrator Sister Mary Thomas and her staff have received since the story was printed last spring. The scooters, costing about $135 each, were donated to the staff, after the staff de- termined that such vehicles could reduce the travel time in corridors and allow more work to be done by a limited number of personiiet. |The letters have come from ali parts of North America and Europe. Most are inqui- ries from hospitals asking about the scooters and the time they save. But there are the occasional whimsical ones like Marco's. "We wrote Marco and. told him that we needed all our nine scooters," said Sister Mary--f-h-o-m-a-s.--_"And we thanked him for his interest in the hospital." | Sister Mary -Frances rides her yellow motor scooter down corridoA, in St. Elizabeth hospital "in Granite City Il, curity Council voting for an op-| \formerly a Belgian - adminis- jtered territory. There were no women in the procession. They waited in the black and silver hung cathe- dral. Among them were Queen Fa- biola, King Baudouin's Spanish- born wife veiled in black; Prin- cess Paola, Italian-born wife of Prince Albert, Baudouin's younger brother and heir appar- ent; Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent, representing Britain's Queen Elizabeth, and two crown princesses--Beatrix..of Holland and Margrethe of Denmark. 100 Resume Jobs Cobourg Area CQBOURG, Ont. (CP)--More than\100 workers, members of Local 788 of the International Association of Machinists (CLC), returned to work today after a 10-week strike against the Winchester - Western Fire- arms Ltd. plant here. The workers ratified a new two-year contract with the com- pany Sunday providing a 21- cent an hour wage increase, new shift differentials, shorter probationary period for new employees and increased over- time pay. Union members received an average $1.95 an hour before public in a special way--by having babies. "You cannot celebrate 'the festival better next year than by giving a white child to this wonderful country of. ours," said Michiel Botha, deputy min- ister of African (Negro) admin- istration and development. Botha, speaking at a white men's club, said: "T would like to ask all white couples who can to give a white child to the republic. "Our country needs more of us (whites), Our population can increase in only two ways--by immigration and by births, Let those who can help in this way." Statistics show there are 427,- 000 white couples. aged between 20 and .45 in South Africa, yet they had only produced 69,000 babies in the last statistical year, he said. Latest statistics give white- ruled South Africa's total pop- ulation as nearly 18,000,000 of which a little more than 12,000,- 000 are negroes and only 3,500,- 000 are whites. Plan Revision Bible Version VATICAN CITY (Reuters) -- Pope Paul has set up a new commission to revise the Vul- gate, the Latin version of the Bible, it was learned today. German Augustin Cardinal] Bea of the. Roman Curia, an authoritative biblical scholar, the settlement. has been named its president. Birth Control VATICAN CITY (AP) -- A Vatican ecumenical council source said today that the as- sembly's birth control vide a basis for possible change in church teaching against con- traception, while upholding cur- rent restrictions, The source said the revision --in line with a request by Pope Paul--had been done in such a way.as to more than satisfy pro-| gressive bishops. Birth control is discussed in the council's document on mod- ern world problems. The final text of this document was sent to the printer today after ap- proval by Pope Paul and prior to a final round of voting in the council Saturday. | Pope Paul is said to have sent word last week to the commis- Church Council Revises docu-| present. ment has been revised to pro-| Document text to avoid any doubts in the minds of Roman Catholics on where the church stands at MENTION TWO POPES The informant said that the commission put in references to Pius XI and Pius XII, but also subject by Pope Paul. All this was done in such a way, the informant added, as to indicate church teaching on birth control was a still evolv- ing process. Thus, the source said, the idea was given that the teaching could develop with- past papal writings. cifically mentioning the writ- ings of Pius XI and Pius XII has been viewed here as poss' sion drafting the document that he 'wanted specific mention of the teachings of Popes Pius XI 'and Piug XII put into-the final bly meaning an indefinite post- jponement of a final papal deci-|: Peking is flooding New Delhi with protest notes charging In- dia with provocations and war- like activity, Why this Chinese war of nerves? Tdo theories are popu- The Chinese have mad@ probes into the northeast fron- tier agency for the first time since they launched a major ate tack there in 1962 and one In- dian expert on China said Pe nagntioned a statement on the},,...... out changes necessarily repre-|= senting a complete rejection of|= Pope Paul's interest in spe-|: lar in government circles: --The Chinese, frustrated by a lack of success in Africa and Southeast Asia, are hard- ening their stance from India to Korea in order to exploit every opportunity to cause trouble, especially for the United States. --The Chinese intend to give moral support to Pakistan in its conflict with India and at the same time create "'irrita- tions" and conflicting claims that could be propaganda preparation for renewed hos-! tilities against India. | New Delhi doesn't expect a major Chinese attack soon, how- ever. PASSES SNOWED IN One of Prime Minister Shas-| Plan Collapses tri's Chinese experts notes that the winter snows have closed;~OTTAWA (CP)--Atomic En- the mountain passes leading|©tsy of Canada Ltd. announced south from Chinese-held Tibet to|today that plans- for a heavy the Indian plains. water plant at Estevan, Sask., Neither do Indian experts ex-|have fallen through. pect a major Chinese interven-| The brief announcement said tion in the Viet Nam war. Dynamic Power Corp. of Cal- Chinese troops on the Indian|gany had been unable 'to Ob front push across the border/tain adequate assurances of fi- with impunity and in the last/nancing'"' to meet terms of its two weeks have heated up vir-iproposal to build the plant. king's current campaign seems aimed at destroying the last vestiges of restrictions léft over from the 1962 border war. After that bloodletting, Ching unilaterally announced demili- taried ones had been estab- lished along its frontier with In- dia, The Chinese now have vio- lated their own ground rules and obviously no longer con- sider them valid. This, the Indians fear, may- be groundwork for a new, serious attack -- perhaps after the passes are clear of snow next jspring; Heavy Water Unit NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Ask Death Penalty For Editor CAIRO (AP) -- The government of the United Arab Republic annaunced today it will seek the death penalty for newspaper editor Mustafa Amin charged with passing . information to a foreign power. The country was not inden- tified in the indictment but Amin a former editor of the .. Cairo newspaper Akhbar Elyom was arrested July 21 with Bruce Taylor Odell U.S. embassy official accused of being a. U.S. Central Intelligence agent. Ex-Lawyer Faces $146,000 Theft TORONTO (CP) -- John Mills Drysdale 39 of Toronto a disbarred lawyer who was an unsuccessful Liberal can- didate for Scarborough East in the 1963 provincial election has been charged with theft involvng $146,000. -- ...In THE TIMES today... Labor Council Seeks. Board Policy on Struck-Plant Buying--P. 1% Two Seek Whitby Twsp. Reeveship--P. 5 Whitby Steelers Lose ot Home--P. 8 via nau DUI Obits -- 20 Sports -- 8, 9, 10 Theatre -- 10 Whitby News --= 5, 6 Women's 12, 13, 14 Weather ---- 2 Ann Landers -- 14 City News -- 11 Classified -- 16, 17, 18, 19 Comics -- 21 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 20 sion on the question of contra- ception, LA ee | RT A a TT TH NH TT

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy