Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Apr 1966, p. 1

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Home Newspaper' Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, . Ajax Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO. 82 We Si fe Cory , 50e Per Week Home livered She Oshawa Times RE DIE PNA SID O OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1966 MRE IW MT PEA ABMS I IO AG Authorized as Second Class Ma Ottawe and for payment row, 50. Post Office Department Postage in Cash, ih het PAL RESIS TBE A ROAR Weather Report Much cooler Tuesday. Sunny with a few cloudy periods. Low tonight, 35, High tomor- TWENTY-FOUR PAGES ee sa ae BULLET IN THE HEART Springs, Colo., in open heart surgery, Canchola was shot in the abdomen and the bul- let worked its way through a Surgeons remove a 22- caliber bullet, arrow, from the heart of Eli Canchola, 27, right, of Colorado -- AND HE SURVIVES tions to remove foreign ob- jects have ever been per- formed, Canchola is report- ed in good condition. vein to the heart. Doctors at Penrose Memorial Hos- pital, who removed the bul- let, said only 15 such opera- Kidney Malfunction Hits Heart Patient scious since the operation. Sur-|cut deep into North Viet Nam's HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)--Mar-| dition was listed this morning| cel DeRudder's surgeons are) 8 "just the same. | DeRudder underwent a six- concerned today about a new] nour operation Thursday in complication -- kidney malfune-| which a mechanica! pump was| tion--as their unconscious pa-| attached to his heart and as-| tient's partial artificial heart|cending aorta to provide a tem- continued pumping. |porary bypass of bis damaged Methodist Hospital's last ad-|left ventricle. visory reported the 65-year-old) The pump 'continues to func-| Westville, Ill, man "has im-|tion quite well," the advisory) proved in several respects'--|said, adding that DeRudder's) although "some decrease of central nervous system was be- kidney function" began develop-| ginning to "show signs of re-| ing Sunday. r The bulletin said laboratory|the reflexes.' tests indicated the kidney con-| DeRudder has been uncon- Witness Tells How Boy Was Hacked To Death CHESTER, England (Reut-;)home at Hyde, near Manches-| : ers)--A young clerk and_his/ter. | |cover with return of some of) | blonde mistress, charged with triple murder, watched today as a pathologist reconstructed in a courtroom here the killing of a teen-age boy hacked to death S2uk aittet Being, #°%-| oped Spectators in the packed pub- lic gallery craned forward when a gleaming axe and blood-spat- tered shoes were produced. Sitting impassively in the court were lan Brady, 28, and tinum - haired Myra Hind-| y, 24, charged with killing 17- year-old Edward Evans and two younger children -- 10-year-old Lesley Ann Downey and John Kilbride, 12. The bodies of the children were found last fall in shallow peat graves on the lonely moors 50 miles from here The pathologist, Dr. Charles St. Hill, said he counted 14. head wounds when he examined Ed- ward's body, found in Brady's His battered hands showed he} had tried to ward off a rain of| blows before dying, Dr. Hill) said, | An electric light cord was around his neck. It had been pulled tight and the boy died of brain injuries and stran- gulation, the doctor said. } Examining a pair of blood-| stained shoes allegedly belong- ing to Miss Hindley, the doctor said they could have been spat- tered during the killing or} while she carried the body up- stairs. ct The prosecution claims the! boy died after being lured to! play the unsuspecting role of | victim in "a demonstration of) }murder" staged by Brady for) David Smith, brother-in-law of} Miss Hindley. Dr. Hill said some of the lac erations on Edward's head| |}could have been caused by the) 7 |heel of a shoe. | Enemy MIG's he To Appear | As U.S. Attacks SAIGON (AP) -- U.S. planes geons said he possibly suf-| vital centres Sunday, again at- fered '"'temporary brain dam-|tacking a bridge on the main age" during the operation and| rail link to China. they began treating the retired) Enemy MIG fighters made no coal miner for removal of ex-|new challenge to U.S. planes. cess fluid on his brain. They) However, two U.S. jets were said the dome - shaped heart|shot down Sunday by grout pump was not the cause of De-|fire 30 miles northeast of Ha- Rudder's unconscious state. noi, a U.S. Air Force spokes- DeRudder's pulse rate, blood|man reported today. Two other pressure and respiration re-|U.S. planes were lost Saturday mained stable, the advisory|apparently to anti-aircraft fire. said. | U.S. planes flew a total of 77 jmissions against North Viet @ |Nam Sunday, returning to the @\same areas where Saturday they encountered at least 14 So- viet-built MiGs in the first ae- rial battles with Communist planes in 10 months. The Com- munists lost two MiG-l7s to U.S. air-to-air missiles. Two faster MiG-21s fought the Amer- ican planes to a standoff. On the ground in South Viet Nam, five major American op- erations met little enemy re- sistance. South Vietnamese forces claimed 245 Viet Cong killed in the Mekong delta 100 miles southwest of Saigon. A South Vietnamese spokes- man reported the Viet Cong left another 50 dead in an at- tack on a,hattalion..preparing to open a road north of Nha Trang. The weekend plane losses brought to 221 the total number of U.S. planes lost over North Viet Nam. | With De Gaulle | | BRUSSELS (AP) -- Paul Struye, president of the Bel- gian senate, advocated today that the NATO allies conciliate with France. He opposed mov- ing from France into Belgium. In his weekly foreign policy column in the Brussels conser- vative daily La Libre Belgique, Struve wrote: May Be | Conciliation Asked any NATO headquarters! OUIMET, PRODUCERS IN EMERGENCY MEET Cardin Skipped OTTAWA (CP)--Justice Min- jister Cardin may not be called as a witness before the Gerda Munsinger inquiry, a royal com- mission was informed today. C. F,. H. Carson of Toronto, counsel for Opposition Leader |Diefenbaker and former justice |minister Fulton, said commis- sion counsel J. L. O'Brien of |Montreal had said he will call] no further witnesses. | Mr. 'Obrien replied that his |statement had been "not quite so categorical" but he had ex- | pressed doubt whether he would }call further witnesses. Statements by Mr. Cardin at! a press conference and in a let- ter to Prime Minister Pearson led to the Liberal government's appointment of Mr. Justice Wishart Spence of the Supreme Court of Canada to conduct a! royal commission inquiry. | Mr. Carson read into the rec- ord a letter advising the com- mission that lawyers for the Conservative leader and Mr. Fulton would present legal ar- guments that Mr. Diefenbaker TESTIFIES Mr. Justice Leo Landre- ville of the Ontario Supreme Court is shown at Ottawa today where he testified at judicial inquiry. The in- quiry is attempting to de- termine Mr. Justice Landre- and Mr. Fulton must be given notice of the charges against] them. | | NEED POSTPONEMENT | He said that if Mr. Justice} Spence agrees, cross - examina- tion of former RCMP commis- sioner C, L. Harvison and RCMP Commissioner McClellan must be postponed, However, if the judge ruled against the application, Mr. Diefenbaker and. Mr,.. Fulton would have to consult their law- yers on whether to cross-exam- ine the two RCMP witnesses who were heard at a secret ses- sion April 6 at which neither Conservative leader was present or represented by counsel. Mr. Carson said that for the first time in his legal experi- fence he was being asked to cross - examine witnesses whose| linitial testimony he had not |heard and whom he had not been able to observe in the wit- ness box. Comeau Guilty | Sentenced To Die YARMOUTH, N. S. (CP)-- |Robert Randall Comeau, 21, Faibish Ready To Quit "Was To Be Punished" OTTAWA (CP)--Roy Faibish,! Mr. Faibish took a five-month Ottawa editor of the CBC tele-| leave of ahsenees from the- Seven vision program This Hour Has|Days program in 1965 to study Seven Days said today in aj English-language television pro-} statement he will resign his job| gramming for the government-| when his c7 t expires at the appointed committee headed by DR. MICHAEL DEBAKEY as he checks over Marcel DeRudder, the heart pati- "Our country would serve the} was found guilty Wednesday cause of Atlantic mutual under-| (correct) of capital murder in standing and peace more effi-|the slaying of Thais Marie Has- ciently by attempting to bririg}kins, 16, and sentenced to be France nearer her partners,) hanged July 20. than by accepting without con-| The nude body of the Halifax sideration -responsivilities ox ub+/schooi girl was found iast sum- ligations which could bring|mer in a clump of bushes. She thunder on our territory." \had been stabbed and beaten. DUTT UU UL ULL bE TU a Le end of May. R. M. Fowler. The Fowler re-| tient who has an artificial ville's fitness to continue in office as a result of his obtaining 2,500 shares of stock in Northern Ontario Gas when he wus mayor of Sudbury in 1956. (CP Wirephoto) Teamsters Set To Vote TORONTO (CP) -- Prelimi- nary agreement to end On- tario's three-month trucking strike was reached Saturday and 8,500 members of the inde- pendent Teamsters' Union will decide by government - super- vised vote this week whether to accept the terms. William H. Dickie, chief con- ciliation officer for the Ontario labor department, said the new proposals will be presented to the strikers for a vote by mail. No details of the proposed set- tlement were released. Two weeks ago the Team- sters' membership rejected by |a 2-to-l1 majority a settlement agreed on between union negoti- ators and the Motor Transport Industrial Relations bureau, bargaining agent for the 55 trucking companies involved. Teamster President James Hoffa approved government su- | pervision of the vote at a meet- ing in Detroit with representa- tives of both sides. Actual su- pervision will be carried out by the Ontario labor department. HH nL SGA AAA AN 70 Give Ultimatum To President Of CBC TORONTO (CP)--CBC Presi- dent Alphonse Ouimet arrived in Toronto today from Ottawa for an emergency meeting with local CBC producers who have threatened strike action over management involvement in production decisions. Mr. Ouimet is scheduled to meet later today with 70 mem- bers of the Toronto Producers Association and public affairs supervisors including those of This Hour Has Seven Days. The association is demanding that CBC management make no production decisions on _ televi- sion programs without first con- sulting the producers of the pro- grams and their supervisors, It is also demanding that no firings or "disciplinary trans- fers" be made without "'show- ing demonstrative cause." Where disputes arise the associ- ation is demanding compulsory and binding arbitration by a me- diator appointed by the federal minister of labor. The latest move in the flare- up resulting from the dismissals of Seven Days co-hosts Laurier LaPierre and Patrick Watson followed a meeting Sunday of 41 association members. The CBC said on its Sunday night radio and TV national newscasts the producers have decided to withdraw their serv- ices unless Mr. Ouimet accepts their proposals. Douglas Leiterman, executive producer of Seven Days, would not confirm the report of a strike but added the newscasts' version of the three points was "substantially correct." Although Mr. Leiterman ex- pressed doubts Saturday that Mr. Watson would appear Sun- day night as host of Document, a one-hour program which re- places Seven Days once a month, Mr. Watson videotaped a brief introduction Sunday afternoon to the documentary examining the drug LSD. About 40 members of the Seveh Days' staff issued a state- ment Saturday saying they are unwilling to continue production of the program without Mr. Watson and Mr. LaPierre. However, in an interview on the CBC national] television news Saturday night, Mr. Lei- terman declined to say whether Seven Days would be broadcast May 1 and 8, completing its current season. He also refused to say whether he would resign as ex- ecutive producer if Mr. Watson and Mr. LaPierre are not ree instated. Earlier Saturday, he had been quoted as saying he "the whole staff of Seven Days will walk out and that This Hour Has Seven Days will go off the air before completion of its season May 8." By JOHN LeBLANC OTTAWA (CP) --Mr. Justice Leo Landreville of the Supreme Court of Ontario said today that in 1956 Liberal Trade Minister C. D. Howe telephoned him to ask for action in getting the Sudbury city council to start proceedings for a natural gas franchise there. Mr. Justice Landreville, then mayor of Sudbury, is under a judicial inquiry to determine his fitness to continue in office as the result of obtaining 7,500 shares of Northern Ontario Nat- ural Gas Company stock after that firm got the Sudbury fran- chise in 1956. The 56-year-old judge, first witness as the Rand inquiry opened the last stage of its hearings here, testified that un- til receiving a call from Mr. Howe in late March of 1956, he had taken a "wait and see" at- titude toward NONG's attempt to get the Sudbury franchise. He said Mr. Howe--then en- gaged in piloting through Par- liament the controversial legis- lation for the eastbound line of Trans - Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. --telephoned him from Ottawa} and said: "Leo, what's going on up there with respect to your gas franchise? What's the holdup?" Mr. Justice Landreville said that he had advised Mr. Howe of the reason for delay in act- ing on NONG"s franchise which he said was mainly because city authorities were waiting to see whether International Nickel | Co. of Canada would sign up for natural gas for its big plant at adjacent Copper Cliff. He said that Mr. Howe '"'gave me the assurance" that Inco would sign with NONG. FRANCHISE VITAL Mr, Justice Landreville said Mr. Howe told him that it was important for the Trans-Canada Pipe Line législation that Trans- Canada's prospective payload be known and for that reason it C.D. Howe Prodded Him 'Get NONG Going - Judge would *'be important that we get our franchise through." The judge also told Ivan C. Rand, the retired Supreme Court of Canada justice con- ducting the inquiry for the fed- eral government, that during a meeting with Northern Ontario municipal officials sometime earlier, then Ontario attorney- general Dana Porter had ob- served that NONG was a te Hable compatiy. NEW GLASGOW, N.S. (CP) RCMP Cpl. Harry Sutherland, 32, pleaded guilty today to the $8,900 armed robbery last Mon- day of the Bank of Nova Scotia at nearby Trenton. Sutherland was remanded in custody in the Pictou County jail in Pictou until Tuesday when he will be sentenced in Sterllarton where he was origi- nally charged Friday. About 75 people crowded into the small courtroom and oth- ers stood in the hall and on the street when Sgt. D. S. Moody and Constable Al Fox of the) New Glasgow RCMP detach-| ment--escorted-Sutherland inte Miche Sseomcee Surncranc inte court. He was not handcuffed. RCMP Corporal Guilty 58,900 Armed Robbery for 18 years and stationed with the Nova Scotia "HH" division in Halifax, spoke briefly to his lawyer Elmer Mackay of New Glasgow before pleading guilty before Magistrate W. A. Rich- ardson. Most of the money, stolen by a lone gunman who held five bank employees at gunpoint, was recovered by RCMP Fri- day. They found it in the trunk of a car parked on an auto sales lot. Sutherland is a native of Plas- ter Rock, N.B., and married. He was stationed in Stewiacke N.S., and here before being trans- ferred to Halifax five years ago. Iie-was on the headquar- ters administration staff in Ha- Sutherland, with the RCMP |lifax. Mr. Faibish said it is clear|port was critical of CBC man-| that he was to be "impugned| agement. and punished" for hig work with} Mr. Faibish said that dissatis-| the Fowler committee on broad-| faction was expressed about his| casting and "I therefore find it) working for the committee only| intolerable to continue to be as-| after CBC Presidént J. Alphonse sociated with a management of Ouimet issued his criticism of | this kind." {the Fowler report. ' FOREIGN MINISTER Maurice Couve de Murv- ile, shown in three charac- teristic studies, responded in writing to a series of questions submitted by The Associated Press -- to one of which he denied France heart doing part of the work of his 0 Methodi said still unc had that improved wn heart. The latest st hospital advisory DeRudder was onscious, but that he ip several respects. is dism Atlantic tion, (AP Wirephoto) the North Organiza- antling Treaty (AP Wirephoto) DENIES PARIS DISMANTLING NATO FRENCH AIDE GIVES POLICY | PARIS (AP)--Denying that France is dismantling NATO, the French foreign minister said Sunday that Paris believes its withdrawal from the mili- tary structure of the North At- lantic Treaty Organization does not run against the interests of the NATO allies, Maurice Couve de Murville noted "a very close inter-rela- tion between (West) German and American forces," He spoke out for better East-West relations, denied France has in the making a non - aggression pact with the Soviet Union and said France thinks that one day she can play a useful role to- ward settling the Viet Nam problem. Couve de Murville insisted France has no intention of of- fending the United States either by the NATO stand or in con- verting U.S, dollars to gold. The foreign minister re- sponded in writing to a series of questions submitted by The Associated Press. Couve de Murville said that in pulling out of the military organization of the allianee, France is "acting normally, as any government, in the inter- ests.of our country and we be- lieve besides that what we are doing is in no manner contrary to the well-understood interests of our allies." VALUES U.S. FRIENDSHIP He said '"'American friendship is an ancient and precious value to which we are all attached in France and which we do not wish to see disappear, or even diminish." France notified its NATO al- lies last month that American and Canadian forces on her soil must be out within a year, that NATO headquarters in France must withdraw in the same time limit and 'that France would complete her force with- drawal from NATO by July 1 of this year. The United States wants to extend the deadline for its forces for at least an- other year. In. the question-and-answer exchange, Couve de Murville stressed that France intends to remain a part of the North At- Jantie treaty signed in 1949. France is divorcing itself only from the military organization which was set up after the treaty went into force and was not specifically mentioned in the pact. The United States does not draw this distinction between the treaty and the mil- itary origanization, saying that a linking the two is essential. Couve de Murvyille asserted France feels that NATO's mili- tary organization is outdated. "In the nuclear era,'"' he said **this organization does not deal with the essential element of defence which is nuclear de- fence." DISLIKES U.S. INFLUENCE The French argument is that NATO's nuclear punch is in fact overwhelmingly Amertcan- owned and -controlled and that NATO itself has no effective hand in it. Couve de Murville was asked whether it is French policy to force the United States, whether it wishes or not, into greater co-operation with West Germany in military affairs. He disclaimed any French in- fluence on this but said the United States has for three years been completing military accords with Bonn outside the NATO structure, bringing about "a very close inter-relation." As for Viet Nam, which France once ruled, Couye de Murville reiterated that France "would be happy to contribute to a peaceful settlement."' With- out specifics, he said France believes that "one day" it can play a useful role. Israel Marks 18th TELAVIV (Reuters) -- A wide rejoicings today marked for granted. ST. CATHARINES (CP) escaped Saturday from Brant ed early today by provincial NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Birthday military parade and nation- the 18th birthday of modern Israel. Veterans of the country's grim battle for sur- vival marched alongside youths born in 1948, the year of independence in the parade. Few watching the march past could recall much of the grim struggle The mar- ching youths take the existence of an independent Israel 2 Of 3 Fugitives Captured -- Two of three men who County Jail were recaptur- police. The third man eva- ded police, Still at large is Robert Gould, 24, of Ancaster Ont., who fled through a window as police closed in on a motel at Black Horse Corners, two miles south of here. Thomas Warburton, 25, of Hamilton and Kenneth Mayhew, 20 of Brantford, were recaptured. Oshawa Generals Defeat Shawin Ann Landers -- 12 City News -- 13 S Classified -- 18, 19, 20 Comics --- 22 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 21 ...In THE TIMES today... Creative Rebellion Advocated -- P. 13 Brooklin Girl To Attend Workshop -- P. 5 Obits -- 21 Theatre -- 11 Whitby News -- 5 Women's -- 14, 16 Weather -- 2 igan, 7-2, in First Game P. 8. ports ----- 8, 9, 10, 11 Fe TTT

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