Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Mar 1966, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax Pickering ond neighboring centres in, Ont- ario and Durham Counties. 10¢ Single C: 50¢ Per Week Home VOL. 95 -- NO. 51 She Osharwn Times Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office elivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 19 66 Ottawa and for payment of Weather Report Showers Cooler Saturday. night, 48. High 52. irtment sa ( Postage in tonight, Cloudy Low to- tomorrow, TWENTY-EIGHT GEMINI TUMBLED CRAZILY HONOLULU (AP) -- Astro- nauts Neil Armstrong and David Scott rested in Hawaii today as U.S. scientists probed into why Gemini 8 gyrated wildly in space, forcing the flight to be cut short. The astronauts, returning 10 Cape Kennedy, Fla., by jet plane, paused in Honolulu briefly after a flight from Okin- awa. Scientists centred their atten- tion on what happened when a radio command was sent to turn on a tape recorder in the Agena satellite to which Gemini 8 was docked. While docked, Gemini 8 ' started tumbling crazily and Armstrong, the command pilot, = ' had to fight for control. After successfully backing ¢ away from Agena and the | splashdown, the astronauts were plucked from the Pacific by a destroyer and taken to Okinawa. IN GOOD SHAPE They were pronounced in ex- cellent shape. Their only prob- lem was some seasickness while the capsule bobbed around for nearly three hours, waiting for the destroyer. . Armstrong and Scott are due at Cape Kennedy Saturday for , three days of extensive flight) de-briefings that may shed some|ing manoeuvre involving the light on the trouble that caused|Agena rocket," Schirra said. the first emergency landing in| "I would say they also had the U.S. man-in-space program. |the best landing so far in the On hand to greet Armstrong|Gemini project." and Scott was fellow astronaut! 'The blackened, scorched Gem- Walter Schirra, who flew tojini 8 capsule remained on the Okinawa when Gemini 8's mis-|deck of the destroyer under a sion ended after only 614 orbits. | protective cover. The navy was, As they waited for the de-|to ship it back to the United stroyer, the astronauts and the|States in a few days. three air force pararescue.men| The National Aeronautics and who had attached the flotation | space Administration Thursday collar to the capsule all became) ade public tape recordings of seasick, Schirra reported. ¥ the conversations between the Scott and Armstrong were "disappointed that they had not| astronauts and the ground, They | covered the critical three-hour carried out all the objectives of Gemini 8 but were pleased with|20-minute period' from the mo- the space rendezvous and dock- HAWAII WELCOMES Scott (Left) and Armstrong un trouble to the start of the re- entry to earth, The tape recordings show that the first indication the ground had of trouble was when Gem- ini 8 swept out of a communi- cations blackout and made coa- tact with the tracking ship Coas- tal Sentry Quebec in the Paci- fic. The ship radar detected that the Gemini had separated from} the Agena--less than 30 minutes after lifking up with it in an historie space feat. 'WE ARE TUMBLING' A controller aboard the ship 'ment the ground leamed of the asked the astronauts if they had | to ASTRONAUTS JOEY DREAMS - - SPEECH OR AGE? ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) Premier Joseph Smallwood has had a dream come true in the legislature. The premier fell asleep Thursday during a speech by James J. Greene, Pro- gressive Conservative mem- . ber for St. John's East and former opposition leader. Mr. Smallwood said: "While I was asleep I had a dream that Mr. Greene was speaking and when I woke up he was. "It is the first tinte. since being a member of the house that I fell asleep. I don't know whether it was because of advancing age or because of the way Mr. Greene was speaking." Something went wrong with) Bold Change eeprantighl ang hy thot strong had to-switch to an emer-| Requested s In Prisons gency system that finally ena-| OTTAWA (CP)--A delegation separated. Armstrong,ina strong, calm voice, replied: "We have serious troubie| here. We're tumbling end over end. It's rolling and we can't turn anything off."' -\cant for Christian unity efforts: *\munication for Catholics who 'imarry before a non-Catholic VATICAN CITY (AP)--Pope Paul today lifted the excommu- nication of Roman Catholics married outside their church and abolished the mixed mar- riage pledge by non-Catholics to raise children in the church. These were among historic changes ordered in a papal doc- ument on mixed marriages of Roman Catholics and persons of other beliefs. The changes, vastly signifi- 1. Lift the penalty of excom- minister, both in the future and retroactively for couples already married. 2. Eliminate the requirement that a non-Catholic make writ- ten promises to have children baptized and educated as Ca- tholics, put the responsibility on the Catholic spouse instead and invite the non-Catholic to prom- ise to respect the Catholic part- ner's duty. 3. Permit non-Catholic minis- ters to attend mixed marriages in Catholic churches and, after the marriage vows have been said before the Catholic priest, to deliver their own exhortation publicly, with the entire mixed congregation joining in common prayer. The 1,500-word Latin docu- ment was entitled Matrimonii Pope Paul Lifts Ban. Mixed Marriages Historic Step Significant ' In Christian Unity Efforts Sacramentum (The Sacrament of Matrimony). It retained the Roman Catho- lie Church's position that mar- riage between Catholics, or be- tween a Catholic and a non-Ca- tholic, is valid only if performed before a Catholic priest. The long - awaited document was issued just four days be- fore Dr. Michael Ramsey, the Anglican Archbishop of Canter- bury, comes here on an official visit to Pope Paul. The treatment of the non-Ca- tholic partner in a mixed mar- riage is known to be one of the matters the archbishop wants to discuss with the Pope. Dr. Ram- sey has said he intends to talk about "practical matters which can hurt feelings and consci- ences." The papal document was is- sued in Latin as an official in- struction by the Vatican's Con- gregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the former holy office. One important change allows a non-Catholic minister to take part in the wedding of a Ca- tholic and a non-Catholic before a Roman Catholic priest. The minister will be able to give the couple his blessing after they have exchanged their marriage vows. Common prayer also will be allowed at the ceremony, with the priest, the minister and the newlyweds praying together. bled him to stabilize the craft after a 3-minute battle. The emergency system is nor- | mally used only for the re-entry |manoeuvre. With Gemini's fuel : 5 sant jrunning low, mission control|SPeaking for 45 prominen 14 |centre in Houston, Tex., ordered|84nizations today urged bo |Armstrong and Scott to zoturn|Changes within the building pro- Ito earth as soon as possible |gram for federal penitentiaries. Avinat 1d th : i a Solicitor-General Larry Pen- rmstrong told the ground/nej; was asked to make new station at Hawaii that after|}maximum - security institutions docking he had used the Gem-|as low a priority as he can, in ini jets to make a 180-degree turn and the spacecraft control system was shut down just be-| fore a series of commands were} fo 'be sent to use the Agena jeis for manoeuvres. SENDS CODE SIGNAL Scott sent an electrical signal! favor of emphasis on facilities and staff for psyschiatric treat ment of prisoners. Research and experiment in} | clinical criminology should take place within the penitentiary system across Canada, said the delegation's brief. Among organizations repre- e- saec rhednxa R. Baptism, Education Covered In Third Major Provision The instruction lifts the pen- that, should the non-Catholte alty 'of excommunication for a|feel he cannot 'formulate this Catholic who marries a non-Ca-/promise (not to impede the Ca- tholic before anyone but a Ro-|tholi¢ in rearing children as Ca- LISA LEAVES HOSPITAL Lisa Parker, who owes Georgetown, 'P.E.I. with her her life to an electric stim- husband Frank so they could ulator that speeds her be near the hospital as long with the code 041 to start a tape|meeting with the solicitor-gen- recorder that would register|eral were the Canadian medical, |- what happened in the Agena|psychiatric and mental health during the manoeuvres. | associations, the Anglican, Pres- man Catholic priest. The cutting|tholics) without hurting his con- away of excommunication in|science, the ordinary (local such cases is retroactive, the| bishop) must refer the case with document said, covering mar-|all its elements to the holy sec." ARTIST'S SKETCH 'illus- trates the tumbling action that started while the Gemini 8 spacecraft was docked with the Agena tar- Panna ms sm Mine Kills Strikers Arrested At School Id Refugees Violence At Picket Line SAIGON (Reuters) -- Fifteen | South Vietnamese farmers were} At the time the signal was |byterian and United Churches of sent the Gemini-Agena combina-|C@2da, the YMCA, Ld ee tion began bucking like a|J0nn Howard Society and the stallion. By teg > 9 apt boheme Armstrong said he "tried to The Canadian Corrections As- : sociation co-ordinated the pres- regain control of the combina- _ heart beat, leaves Toronto's as necessary. Doctors hope Hospital for Sick Children Lisa eventually won't need Thursday, a day after her the artificial stimulation of first birthday. Holding her the pacer. is her smiling mother, who moved to Toronto from (CP Wirephoto) i. }entation and many of the brief's we were just barely/arguments reiterated positions 7 +0 = our wen 2 '7 the| the association has held and ar-| rates were too excessive for an! sued yigorously for several undocking so we continued to at-| years tempt to send the ACS (attitude) _-_-- control system) off. "After we got the rates down| to a point where we felt we} could safely undock . . . (we)! manoeuvred away from the Indonesia Held Gerda Dossier In Quebec, Too riages already performed as| well as such marriages in the| | future. A third major provision will henceforth put the responsibility for baptizing and educating chil- dren as Roman Catholics upon the Catholic spouse. Church law has been that the non-Catholic in a mixed marriage must make a written promise about the children. The changes decreed today in the 1,500-word document said "a guarantee will be requested through an explicit promise by! REMOVES SORE POINT The requirement of a written promise by a non-Catholic to raise children as Roman Catho- lics had been 'a sore point for years for many Protestants who married Catholics. That require- ment now has been wiped out in a move of major significance for Christian unity efforts. Theinstruction said the changes will be incorporated into the church's code of canon law, now undergoing a lengthy process of revision, if they re- Agena at several feet per sec- In Tough Grip | ,ond as soon as possible," target ship and continued after the two were dis- engaged during their orbit of the earth yesterday. The still unexplained tumbling caused the flight of Gemini | -8 to be terminated with an emergency splashdown in the western Pacific. (AP Wirephoto Sketch) Un A AL " mil nny manne iini jet control system failed. JAKARTA (Reuters) -- The army took a tough grip on Indo- nesia today, placing 15 minis- ters in protective custody and pointing the guns of armored cars and tanks at President Su- karno's palace. In an announcement broad. cast by Jakarta radio, the army. |chief, Lt.-Gen. Suharto, said the |ministers -- including Foreign |Minister Subandrio--were being |protected against unbridled ac- |tions of. certain groups of people. The general said he was mak- ing the announcement on 'behalf {of President Sukarno. Officials are puzzled by what happened at the instant the tape recorder signal was sent. They also wonder why the main Gem- QUEBEC (CP)--Justice Min- ister Claude Wagner of Quebec said Thursday he has a dossier on Gerda Munsinger, the Ger- man blonde involved in the Ot- tawa sex-and-security case. Mr.: Wagner told reporters that if Mrs. Munsinger comes to Canada he will have specific questions to ask her. 'We will certainly have ques- tions to ask Mrs. Munsinger if she comes to the inquiry called by Ottawa. These questions will be based on facts, we won't be just fishing." Asked whether these ques- tions would deal with organized crime, he replied: "Yes."' CHELMSFORD, Ont. (CP) --| killed and four injured when a|Ten strikers were arrested this Viet Cong mine exploded on ajMmorning as violence erupted at road 240 miles northeast of Sai-|a picket line on the Chelmsford the press' echoed across the school yard as police and pick- ets pushed back and forth. Some students were pushed into roadside ditches. A police and they used only enough force (Diplomatic sources in Singa- Dr. Baker told her she was suffering from symptoms of leu- |kemia and said she must take ja long rest. | Gerda did not follow his ad- |vice. In January, 1961, she had |to take to her bed. | At this time several friends j\lent her money to get her out of temporary difficulties. A month later she left for Ger- many. Shortly before she left she met a friend and told her about |her condition and, while saying |goodbye, said she was going back to die "peacefully in Ger- many." ceive '"'positive support.as time The the Catholic spouse . . . non-Catholic spouse should be invited to promise openly and sincerely that he will create no obstacle to the fulfilment of that) duty' (by his or her Catholic! partner)." ' The papal instruction said goes on. The changes become effective at once, however, on an experimental basis." The Vatican ecumenical coun- cil had prepared, among its doc- uments for action, a potential decree of 11 propositions con- cerning mixed marriage. NEWS H agen IGHLIGHTS Seaway Open To Traffic April 4 OTTAWA (CP) -- The St. Lawrence Seaway Author- ity said today the Montreal - Lake Ontario section of the gon today. Valley District Composite Some of the farmers were travelling in a small scooter bus and others on bicycles The incident took place just a few miles from where 54 farm- ers were killed in similar acts/ of guerrilla terrorism last month. The farmers were refugees from a Viet Cong - controlled | area where U.S. troops have) . ; been trying to protect harvest-| ers. : | Sneak Preview For Summer Toronto was expected to get a sneak preview of summer to. day with a high of 65 predicted two degrees over the previous} School. to keep the highway clear. pore said Suharto actually had The 10 pickets arrested were|assumed full control in .Ja- to appear in court at Sudbury /karta, the Indonesian capital.) today, charged with trying to} Suybandrio and other ministers MONTREAL (CP)--La Presse says it has learned that the ru- mor that Gerda Munsinger had Furniture Fraud seaway will be open to traffic at 8 a.m. EST, April 4, The authority said the opening date was the earliest on record in the seaway's seven-year history. The trouble was_ short-lived, and all teachers were reported at work shortly after school opened. About 50 of the 900 stu- dents in the school were miss- ing from their classrooms. Violence began as representa-| tives of unions represented by the Sudbury District Labor Council swelled ranks of the picket line set up by striking caretakers and office workers, in protest against use by the school board of Section 89 of the | Labor Relations Act. | The section permits a muni- cipal body to remove municipal employees from provisions of the act. Labor Minister Rown- tree announced in the legisla- ture Thursday that the section is to be repealed. As buses carrying students ap- proached the school, students constable attempting to put an armlock on an adult picket was thrown over his head to' the ground, but was unhurt. Picket John Frith, shop stew- ard at an iron ore plant in near-| by Copper Cliff had his glasses broken as four constables wres- tled him into a cruiser. Police said that despite the shoving, there were no injuries, stop the movement of school have been the targets of recent buses. mass demonstrations by stu- A protest at the picket line|dents accusing them of being died in Germany of leukemia arose because a Montreal doc- tor once told her she had mild symptoms of leukemia. had been called for earlier in the week by the labor council. Thursday, the Canadian Union |of Public Employees (CLC) had offered to call off the strike if ithe school board would rescind} jits resolution invoking Section! | 89. ' the tools of Communist Chinese policies. Most communications be- tween Jakarta and the outside world were cut off as the long- simmering crisis in Southeast Asia's biggest nation came to the boil again. ure in a sex-and-security case that has rocked Parliament, vis- ited a Dr. Baker in the winter of 1960 for a general examina- tion, because she was feeling ill and depressed, the newspaper 'says. Miss Munsinger, .central fig-| Seen In St. John's ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--Am- |brose Peddle (PC--Grand Falls) told the legislature Thursday he has proof Attorney-General Les- lie Curtis knéw more than a year ago of the case of a fur- niture discount company ac- cused in the house of defraud- ing Newfoundlanders of more ithan $500,000. MIDGET SUB TOO K PICTURES... ... STRONG CURRENT ON HILLOCK Light Touch Needed To Lift Lost Bomb PALOMARES BEACH, Spain (AP) -- U.S. Navy expert dawn today began the delicate Amer H-bomb from the Mediterranean floor after a midget submarine's job of raising a lost Using the sub's arms, the pected to try to att s at ican the LSD (landing Alvin's crew was ex- to the bomb so the crane aboard Fort Snelling could li The nuclear weapon, missing the since the crash of a_ B-52 bomber on the Spanish coast two months ago, was reported apparently intact--indicating no lethal radioactive leakage in the mechanical ach cables ship dock) one ift it slowly 11 men. aboard the two planes were killed. Three of the bombs were recovered on shore. The 16-ton submarine Alvin is of three such deep-diving vessels used in the 120-square Cultural Exchange WASHINGTON (AP) -- A Pact Postponed Soviet spokesman said today U.S. negotiators, without explanation, postponed the signing of a new U.S. - Soviet cultural exchange pact only one hour before a scheduled signing ceremony, Home - Buying Tax Eased TORONTO (CP) -- The government has changed its mind on imposing an added tax on home-buyers. Provincial Treasurer James Allan, who announced Feb. 9 the land transfer tax would be doubled to two-fifths of one per cent, said today he has decided to exempt the first $25,000 of a purchase. ...In THE TIMES today... Word On Toxes Expected In 24 Hours--P. 13 Harness Horsemen Stand Firm--P. 8 . joined the picket line, swelling back in 1506 oT setlig to about 250 persons. The weather hasn't been this} CLEAR ROAD warm in Toronto since Nov. 3| Provincial police . constables when it reached 64. | began pushing the students back However, the weather office|in an attempt to clear the high- says the warming trend will/ Way for other buses vanish overnight and cooler, sea sonable temperatures will hit the|tapo city, Saturday, Cries of "down with the Ges police," down with the jschool board," and "'down with pictures indicated it had been found, The two-man sub Alvin W ed- nesday photographed what offi- cial sources said was "undoubt- edly" the bomb five miles 2,500 feet below the surface was partly shrouded in a g parachute. the southern coast of Spain : off ind It rey to the surface. Officials said it might take as much as three days to'bring the device up from the depths. Reliable source bomb lay on the foot hillock, exposed to strong currents which some _ feared could sweep it into a new-loca- tion. es said the slope of a 70- water. U.S, officials told reporters no pictures would be permitted of the bomb, its parachute or re- covery operations because of se- curity regulations The bomb was one of four aboard the B-52 when it collided with a jet tanker from which it was refuelling Jan. 17.Seven of mile sea search that has cost millions of dollars and occupied thousands of men. U.S. officials said none of the bombs was armed and all had elaborate safety devices to pre- vent accidental detonation. But Spanish officials disclosed that 2,000 residents of the coastal area pwere: exposed to a slight danger of- radiation, Council Lets Tender For Hall--P, 5 usnetsttadat ta Obits--24 Sports--8, 9 Theatre--19 Whitby News--5, 6 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17 Weather--2 Ann Landers--14 City News--13 Classified--20, 21, 22, 23 Comics--18 Editorial--4 Financiol--24 re

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