Weather Report Sunny with some cloudy spells and little change in temperature. Low tonight, 50 high Thursday 72, Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman ville, Ajax Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, Be Por Week Wne otivered She Oshawa Cimes Authorized es Second Class Office Deportment Czocend ter adn el Pedeee bs tame Saigon Peace March Routed By Riot Force | Bipartisan Students Say U.S. Caused 4 Discussions 4 Da Nang Rebel Casualties VOL. 95 -- NO. 107 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1966 THIRTY-TWO PAGES 4 SAIGON (AP) -- Riot police|card saying "Americans must Requested backed by paratroops broke up stop their inhuman actions.'"' WASHINGTON (AP) «= $§én- ate Republican Leader Everett Dirksen told President Johnson Tuesday. that Congress wants more answers to what's happen- ing in Viet Nam. The president has not met with congressional leaders for several months, The Illinois Republican said during "a reasonably lengthy talk'. with Johnson he proposed a bipartisan White House brief- ing for congressional leaders, The president promised to take "ithe idea. under advisement, | Dirksen reported at a press con- ference. 4 about 280 miles of Saigon, dur- ing last week's . Operation Davey Crockett by U.S paratroopers. Scenes like _ British PM Evades Tory Policy Charge LONDON (CP)--Glum Tories} Moaned today they had the chance to nail Prime Minister Wilson to the mast only to find he had slipped from their hands through the confused bungling of Tory Leader Edward Heath. "Oh, Duncan, Duncan, the THESE VIETNAME § E women try to shelter the bodies of their infants with their own as they huddle in a Vlg thisone have been repeated again and again during the war in Viet Nam as the fighting swings and sways around non-participants. highlands, ] northwest In other developments: --State Secretary Dean Rusk reaffirmed the U.S. de- sire to negotiate peace in Viet Nam and said the administra- tion shall continue its "far- reaching, persistent. efforts to bring the other side to the peace table." --United Nations Secretary- General U Thant said military operations in Viet Nam should be scaled down in an attempt to initiate peace discussions among the major powers in cluding China. The war ir South Viet Nam can no longer be described as a' 'fight for democracy."' While he avoided any persona Aden in 1968 would lead to an Egyptian takeover Sandys, who made himself an expert on the issue, was ab- He charged also that Wilson|sent from the House Tuesday) kept from the House appeals| and Heath, who apparently} from the South Arabians for a/failed to grasp evenything Wil- British defence pact after South|son said, protested he cou} d| Arabia becomes independent in|find nothing in the March 9 of two years, ficial! Commons report dealing Tories had need of you yester-| The charges grew to such an/with the issue, day," lamented the Conserva-| extent that Wilson finally agreed) 'Hear, hear," cried his sup-| tive-supporting Daily Mail in re-|to make another statement porters, convinced they had porting Tuesday's Commons de-|Tuesday, Then he calmly in-|caught Wilson once again. assessment of the situation in bate on Tory charges that Wil-|formed the Opposition the rea-| "March 7, not March 9," said|Viet Nam, Dirksen said that gon had "grossly misled' the|son why he previously hadn't| witcon aati ad oan lopinion polls indicated a down- House over British commitments!disclosed that the South Ara- ne lward shift in public support for in the strategic Aden base. [bians were "distressed" was}, Heath sagged, scrambled y)) con's policies there. Duncan Sandys, former Com-|simply because he wasn't asked.|through another bundle of doc-| monwealth secretary, had initi-| Moreover, Colonial Secretary|¥ments and then rose to his feet WANT AN END ated the charge against Wilson,/Barbara Castle had informed|'® apologize in what The Daily} Dirksen said he thinks the maintaining Wilson had failed to|the House jast March that the Mail described as "courteous| majority of Americans want the tell the House the South Ara-|South Arabians wanted British disarray. war brought to a conclusion as bian government feared with-|military protection after 1968, rapidly as possible drawal of British forces from' Wilson added Thant told the biennial CON) Pearson told the Commons vention of the Amalagamated |i acday Whart Boycott Forecast Cthng Markey of Amerikan are inherent tai For Strike-Bound Ships "What is really at stake, un-| ment" and it might be-ome nec- MONTREAL (CP)--~An order is expected to go out from the New York headquarters of the International _ Longshore- men's Association (AFL - CIO) today ordering all longshoremen for a one-year contract and an in North America to refuse to immediate 25-cents-an-hour pay handle ships diverted from the inc Ten would be re ports of Montreal, Quebec and tr iv Jan. 1, when the Trois-Rivieres contract expired, and an The Quebec local of the ILA additional 15 cent increase would take effect Sept. 1 voted Tuesday night to reject a About 3,500 longshoreme . slate of proposals submitted |: ge ape. sO Ment aay ant Saturday by federal mediator " hacen ts Fs 5 250 in Trois- Judge Rene Lippe e other / five locals involved in the st: rejected the proposals Tuesday. MUDDIED BEDRAGGLED Viet Cong guerrilla suspect is followed by heavily-laden U.S. paratrooper as they cut through a rice paddy in the | OTTAWA (CP) -- A cabinet | almost automatically but not too effectively, Prime Minister Navy Steers Away From London Docks LONDON (AP)--The ment kept a Royal Navy frigate govern- ties is brought about,"' he said,| two-level cabinet, he suggested. 'is the independence, the iden "This would mean that the tity of and the survival of the| cabinet itself would be smaller of oul fear trouble eamen The pre with Thames sence for cause merchant today would Striking Tuesday they would refuse to handle diverted ships Judge Lippe's proposals, ac- cepted by the Shipping .Federa- tion of Canada Tuesday, provide The frigate EasYbourne was to have taken part in ceremonies It was considered at this time he y ensign (the navy's flag) in Thames," an official of the y of London said cent to show t London's docks, crowded with strikebound ships, extend down the Thames past Greenwich Strike leaders expect th job in Quebec . Riviere More than 100 ships have been left idle in the area and ships have been diverted to other ports such Rimousk!, Que., Halifax and Saint John, N.B The shipping companies esti- mate they losing $1,000,000 a day because of the strike and inte ernment to crash lio--president J ; board--and to establish five re- organized departments -- man- power; energy, mines and sources Indian affairs and northern development: solicitor general; and registrar-general IS NOT A LARGER CABINET The shuffle won't: mean an enlarged cabinet "at the pres- ent time," Mr. Pearson said Revenue Minister Benson also would become president of the SRTuCE Investigation of the showed that 'tan explosion hac occurred in the left lavatory in the aft section of the aircraft," the report said, "The explosion was that it could caused- by native to the Steelworkers in of Sept-lles, Que., 300. miles north- east of Quebec, and at Port Car tier, Que., 280 miles northwest of Quebec, informed the ILA 'King Freddy' Said Missing After Royal Palace Stormed KAMAPAL (AP) -- The Ugan-'distributed there to mobs dan government captured the palace of the rebellious king of the Buganda region Tuesday night. But the fate of 'King Freddie" was not known The 41-vear-old monarch of Uganda's biggest and richest region was variously reported missing, dead, or under arrest One report to London said the the ports as country itself," tard that there would be a num- "|ber of ministers who wouldn't automatically be members." granting the freedom of Green- Bomb Blast 3ut, as privy councillors, they wich to the Royal Navy College could be ee wien a there, {ters of direct interest to their gcrous Downed Plane departments were being dis- . cussed ne OTTAWA (CP) Probable| He didn't agree that his 26- ait cause AX the crash of a CPA| member cabinet {s too large. As plane that went down near 100/government business continued Mile House in British Columbia|/to increase, a larger cabinet ast July was "explosion of a|probably would be necessary device which resulted in aerial Mr. Pearson spoke at the out di sration," the transport) set of second reading on a gov- department announced Tue ernment reor lization bill to nd the Royal VY da ate--or w~cabinet nto the ports of London and Liverpool this week to move shipping from the docks so for eign ships can get in and out. Leaders of the 65,000-member national union of seamen have warned that other 3; may join in the strike if navy men Magnitude are used as strikebreal have are of such vorker not sub been a . stance aircraft.' The DC-6B carried 46 passen gers and a crew of six to their deaths The seamen are secking duction in their work week hours from 56 with no loss pay in The troops seized the palace after an all¥lay battle, the government ' he port government did not casualty figures from battle but said eight policemen and 10 civilians were killed when mob: a sta tion, Two Britons on a survey ing project were killed by a mob re the threatened lice By KEN CLARK OTTAWA (CP)--CBC Presi- dent J. Alphonse Ouimet and a than the existing arrangement in both money and manpower Moreover it was far more com He was executive assistant to Mr, Ouimet when the president named him to head the study less an early end to the hostili-|essary to establish formally a| re-| Ugandan Army had set the pal- ace on fire and killed 200 of the king's bodyguar 50 miles east of Kampala, the government added HE'S KABAKA King Freddie Frederick Wil the kabaka of B his nickname as a student, Gren was adier guardsman and _ political , exile in London former aide di eed Tuesday over the merits 1964 study cure management- producer friction pub- licly-owned: corporation Michael ' Harrisor he chairman, told broadcasting management rejected a pro- al for "tan unbroken line" of 1uthority from top management '€) down I a group for Ugandan President Obote's government security troops iftacke t} brick-walled palace compound at Mengo, on the southwest out skirts of Kampala, after it learned that arms were Milton said it , in s Sir. Edward Mutesa Il uganda. He got ae ommons that the ( committee b OS violence to Education Costs Must Double BELLEVILLI ada will have portion « i spent on ed mer Conset v< ter George Hees He told the ber of Commer assumption that would be with the for scientific edu rogram would resident down the work Mana Jowr » dow of the level be (CP) to double mn f the an it would not gemer ti to a 0 1 e income » 1982 s 1980, for- n ar . lie minis national con- a pre The a t tion yr b va st Feh- said Ti ru bot v the va m was to thod of of the mmenda provide a workable me , ming direct shapin rogram ille , tore up the con to keep > in the need ra plex "No other organization in the world has ever worked that way in programming,' Mr, Ouimet said, He agreed that would have provided "a clear line of authority' to the ! of put ting a program on paper, but all the same it could not be instituted Mr it leve Ouimet, however, agre another Harrison tion for a parliamentary ment of the CBC at ¢ times to the the corporation's nee in the light of it eotit with ropriate mandate perform- The idea, Mr. Ouimet said, was *'excel- review and 'THINGS HAVE CHANGED' sident also said recommendation The rou! pre the 's were two dealing lation hings had 1 grou Valid today troup in 1963. The group, made f six CBC officials, was es- lished following criticisms in report on govern ranization sco rison told the commit- 1 has been examining » confrontation between man- agement and restive producers that his group "tended to find an illness and propose a cure." He said management had the right. to reject H g "became wit management" and Mr, t tani Mr ew the propo unstuck over them left the } al roup ison later or ration Harrison said there were restrictions on program ming at the CBC. But it would be impossible to give' "fullest freedom" ram pro- ducer t be in- cor he said. 'Other- corporauion jungles of the central high- lands. Scene is near Bong Son, 280 miles northwest of Saigon, where U.S. Ist Cav- alry Division troops took Two-Level Cabinet Developing: Pearson treasury board while Privy within the cabinet Is developing| Council President Favreau also| the justice minister. will remain jwould become registrar - gen- | eral There also was Minister With out Portfolio John Turner, "who could be transferred to a new in such an "informal develop-| department if sch were estab-| would be assumed by the so- \lished," A skeptical-examination of the changes began with Michael | Starr (PC Pntario) saying } success pvould depend their jupon the cabinet ministers themselves. Unless more leadership was shown, "the change will be othen-in-re He I sult 3 The former Conservative la- jbor minister said the natural functions of that department are being split The labor minister would lose control of such programs as vo- cational training and winter works while the manpower min ister would assume workers' concerns, but wouldn't have di- rect access to conciliation serv ices David Lewis (NDP York South) suggested there be two types of ministers--senior ones with full cabinet rank and jun- iors to run departments. Bigger government, new prob- lems, changes in federal-provin- cial relations and the impact of mass communications on ;Sumers were four reasons Mr Lewis gave for departmental reorganization CBC Head - Former Aide Differ Over Old Reshuffle Proposals wise the public broadcasting system becomes a corporation for those who want to express their own views," The testimony of both men came as Prime Minister Pear- son awaited the report of medi ator Stuart Keate on the pro- ducers management dispute touched off the removal for next season of the Seven Days hosts Laurier LaPierre and Patrick Watson, The report is expected soon PRESENTS A PROBLEM To Mr. Harrison's "'illness* remark, Mr. Ouimet replied that in an organization that must reconcile optimum creativity with sound administration 'we will always have a problem of this. kind." The president times with MPs, of no serious CRC across vas aware ' fencing at said he knew malaise"' i the'country now. He of such when. the Glassco led tt group, came out and Harrison thi study con: | born "a series of anti - government , demonstrations in Saigon today, ' after the South Vietnamese cap-| _ ital's mayor banned a massive! '4 Buddhist 'march of: peace" f against Premier Nguyen Cao Ky's military regime. | Several persons were injured) ¥ and a number of Buddhist| @ monks and nuns were arrested) as police scattered the demon-| strators with tear gas, | Ky's opponents demonstrated } peacefully in three other cities, | including the northern Buddhist | ; stronghold of Hue, while gov-| | ernment supporters rallied) in another. } The U.S, military command| ordered all Americans off Sai-| gon's streets in anticipation of| trouble during the scheduled| march from the Buddhist Insti-| -*% tute, focal point of past disor- | 4 ders. ~, Some 2,000 Buddhist followers i > tried to crash through the 1% barbed wire around the insti- ft, a tute but were driven off by tear Pa gas, ",' Earlier, riot police scattered |200 students staging a noisy| anti - government, anti - Am jican protest outside Saigon Uni-| versity, Blaming the United States for Ky's suppression of the rebellion in Da Nang Mon- ade { "| 4 | part in Operation Davey Crockett in an attempt to clear out the Viet Cong, (AP Wirephoto) \day, the students waved a pla-! In Hue, 400 miles northeast of Saigon, 5,000 persons demon- strated peacefully against the ruling junta and the United States for supporting. it. Elsewhere: 1,500 Buddhists and their followers demonstrated against the government in Tuy Hoa, 230 miles northeast of Saigon. They appealed to Al- lied forces to support their cause Several hundred Buddhist adherents staged a protest in Nha Trang, 190 miles north- east of the -capital. --3,000 to 4,000 Buddhists, in- cluding 1,500 troops, held a peaceful protest in Qui Nhon, 270 miles north of Saigon, A display of pro-government sympathy came in Quang Tri, where 300 demonstrators cheered appeals to march against the rebels in Hue, 33 miles to the south, where Budd- hist - led groups still manned barricades. With sizable government forces preoccupied with the po- litical unrest, the Viet Cong launched two strong attacks near the central coast Tuesday but 'were beaten off, a govern- ment spokesman said, Thirty- four Viet Cong were reported killed against light government casualties, | Prime Minister Pearson said WASHINGTON (AP) -- Rob: constitutional | ert Duncan, President Johnson's : }|champion in an Oregon cam- paign focused on Viet Nam, cap- tured that state's Democratic Senate nomination for the No- |vember general election amid Republican talk of nationwide |voter uneasiness about the _- | Asian war. 'Defense Net : Tuesday over peace candidate jthe U.S. Howard Morgan, advocates of iet Nam could find at least a par- Covers U.S. | stance in South Vie tial answer to the Republican responsible for |matters and defending federa rights in the courts, Certain administrative and operational responsibilities the regis- licitor-general and | trar-general, report, ee : Duncan, a two-term congress-| NEW YORK (AP) -- The/man, and Morgan, a former |Nike-X system has been im-|}member of the Federal Power proved to the point where it not}/Commission, stood together on| only can destroy hostile satel-| domestic matters. They argued lites-but can provide a defensive only about Viet Nam. Morgan cover for the entire United) called U.S. involvement there a |States said. Monday, necessary. has! With 1,437 of 2,946 Oregon} been' commonly regarded as| voting districts reporting, Dun- means of protecting cities OF} can had 64 per cent of the votes, vital military installations from| Morgan 33 per cent and a third long-range ballistic missile at-|candidate three per cent. tacks Voters rendered their judg- Dr. Oswald H. Lange, chief|ments in primary elections in scientist for the Nike-X project) Florida. Oklahoma and Ken-| office at the Redstone Arsenal/tucky, too. The most startling| in Alabama, talked in guarded] decision was Miami Mayor Rob-! terms of the new capabilities at i ja convention of the Aviation- Space Writers Association, Some of Lange's . prepared| speech was heavily scissored for security reasons, Lange, explaining that the |Nike-X system would employ itwo interceptors -- the long- range Zeus and short - range, high + acceleration Sprint, both! solid propellant missiles with} nuclear capability--added: | "Zeus is a carryover from the} | Nike - Zeus system which al-| jready has proved itself capable} of intercepting both ICBM tar-! gets and satellites in orbit." A Redstone arsenal spokes- man said published reports that the Nike-X system already has shot down U.S, and Soviet satel-| lites were in error "Obviously we don't go around knocking our own satel- lites out of orbit and we would be correct to say the weapon comes within interceptor range of satellites in orbit Heretofore, the system Mn yume tet | English Colt Comes EPSOM, England English colt, won the Derby h second and Black Prince t DETROIT (AP) reports that Lincoln-Mercury Romney Announces LANSING, Mich. (AP) -- Romney, frequently dential contender, announced didacy for a third term. Queen Answers Birthday Wishes OTTAWA (CP)--Queen Eliza- beth sent a message to Gover- nor- General Vanier Tuesday} thariking him and Canadians for} the id_and loyal message" on her icial birthday in Can- Colleges Inter-Club Meet Softball Ann Landers--16 City News--15 Classified --26, 27, 28, 29 Comics---25 Editorial--4 Financiol--24 Mojor League Gets 0 ada rhe Prime ~ General Pearson Governo and Minister sent messages e Queen marking »rvance of Queen was Cant ial obs The 21, 1926 April 21 a top missile scientist/tragic error; Duncan said it is| (Reuters) Henry mentioned as ... In THE TIMES today... Filling Education Gap---P. Held at Whitby-----P. 5 Johnson Advocate Gains Nomination jert King High's rematch tri |umph over Florida Governor Haydon Burns. In Oregon, Duncan will face | Republican Governor Mark Hat. |field in November for the Sen- ate seat now held by retiring | Maurine Neuberger. | Hunger Strike | By Hue Students HUE, South Viet Nam (Reut ers)--Fifty students in this rese tive anti-government stronghold hecan @ 24-hour hunger strit oegan SB Leaiur hunger strike today outside the U.S. consulate to protest against United States support for the Saigon govern- ment, They handed in a message for President Johnson demanding that the U.S. cease supporting the government of Premier Nguyen Cao Ky. Eight of the students wrote a letter in their own blood to the International Red Cross appeal- ing'for help for the victims of the civil strife in Da Nang, 55 miles to the south, where rebel troops holding out in Buddhist pagodas surrendered to govern- ment forces Monday after eight days of bloody fighting. vce NEWS HIGHLIGHTS First In Race Charlottown, an here today. Pretendre finished hird after all three horses crossed the wire in the photo-finish. Ford Announces New Model Auto Ford II today confirmed division will market a new specialty car, the Cougar, in its 1967 line. Bid For Third Term Republican Governor George a possible 1968 presi- as expected today his can- 15 Under Way--P. 10 Obits--29 Sports--10, 11, 12 Theotre--21 Whitby News--5, 6 Women's--16, 17, 18, 19 Weather--2