Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Jun 1966, p. 1

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Weather Report Warm weather on the way to be followed by another cool spell. Low tonight, 50; high Friday, 75. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Aiax Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- crio and Durham Counties. -- Hhe Oshawa Cimes Authorized es Second Post Office Department Ottewa and for Cless Me Ago Surveyor 1 Shows Moon Landing OK First TV Photos Relayed Hopes Rise B After Perfect Touchdown PASADENA, Calif. (AP) --)began 'televising pictures sent Wy si. i y bil eB | For Friday ee , \Surveyor I, defying longshot |throughout North America and j by g yg |odds against a first-try success, overseas by three U.S, net. OM ahynpallf. ii) " |televised striking photos of the| works, employing the Early | |lunar landscape today after a|Bird satellite, pace 0 | |seemingly perfect landing on| The first batch of three Big re deaths fersay bee. and other portions, : The pictures indicated to sci-/with the lunar surface vi gor ge gee lentific viewers at the Jet Pro- background. in the Mion ge te om see pulsion Laboratory that the Sea} There was nothing to hint of Semee weet. sa gponoe of Storms target area has a rel- danger to future manned lJand- pe hg 9d gegen 3 "yy a ; jatively smooth, hard surface/ing craft. ee cat, as Soh om felt ¢ japparently suitable as a possi-, A second batch of 10 oe fe tans ther bonis 9's , |ble descent point for future as-|more distant terrain--fl confiden 3 two astronauts finally would rocket skyward Friday. Twice, air force Lt.-Col. Tho- mas P. Stafford and navy Lt.- | tronauts, jfeatureless, except for a shae i | The successful gentle touch-| dow, Cmdr. Eugene A. Cernan have jclimbed aboard their waiting | : apparently that of the j|down, executed precisely as|spacecraft, in the shape of a spaceship -- and twice they've taken the slow elevator ride | scheduled, was viewed as a long| three, and what appeared to be back to the ground. |s |stride forward for the United|a large rock. | States' Apollo lunar exploration| 'The first two series, televised jprogram. Surveyor's rocket)with 200 scan lines compared @ \braking system is similar to| to 525 for a home TV sg¢; ; |that on the craft astronauts|were dim and fuzzy and diffle Fri will use for a landing later in| cult to interpret, They get another a sg the decade. | Later shots with 600 scan lines day at 9:39 a.m. EDT to ne din A picture series beginning at|--Surveyor is expected to return oa tothe nha ae 5:45 a.m. EDT, using a differ-| hundreds before the chill of the sate hour space walk. Engineers pinned the blame \for the scrubbed Gemini 9 | flight Wednesday on a faulty VOL. 95 -- NO. 114 " TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES we m4 é showed lat and 4 g i Lilli f tion, held Wednesday. Both were there to receive honor- ary degrees for outstanding achievement in their fields. Mr. Town, an eminent Ca- nadian artist, whose work received the honorary de- gree of Doctor of Laws (LL.D.) for his outstanding work as an industrialist and philanthropist. has appeared in major cities of the world and won him many international art awards, was awarded a D. Litt (Doctor of Lit- ature) and Col, McLaughlin Oshawa's Col. R. S. Me- Laughlin, chairman of Gen- eral Motors of Canada Ltd. 'informally chats with Har- old B. Town, after York University's first convoca- Talks Avert | ® ent TV screen system than that|lunar night ends its life 12 days mM | of two earlier batches, showed| hence--were far clearer. 2 ] e TOO S a broad plain devoid of major) Some shots were expected te | features, peppered with either|be better in quality, experts 4 |pebbles or pits caused by me-|say, than the nine pictures sent Occupy Rebel City SAIGON (AP)--Premier Ngu-| miles northeast of Saigon a day| yen Cao Ky's South Vietnamese/|after the ruling generals came} troops took over the Buddhist/to a political agreement with QPP Strike QUEBEC (CP) -- Agreement signal relay system, It kept a guidance command from reach- ing a black box for electronic was reached early today, head- ff astrike of Quebec P itranslation to the spacecraft. jing off astrike of Quebec Pro- |vincial Police scheduled for| REPLACE PARTS ie noon today, a Quebec Provin- Faulty parts were ep ace Association spokes-| and preliminary tests indicated the problem had been solved. However, flight officials still spite the massive campaign cial Police mounted against him by the man reported. Buddhists. He said the demands of the |teorites. There were several small prominences, and some gouging, as if the surface had been struck by objects from space at an angle. | The, pictures showed no dam- jage to the spidery, instrument- | jammed, craft, 10 feet high and | 14 feet in diameter, And they | | back by the Soviet Union's Lung |IX last Feb, 3. Surveyor's feat was regarded jas @ significant advance over |Luna IX, which scored after at least four failures. The Soviet jcraft was a 200-pound shock-re- jsistant ball containing a ca mera. nghold of Hue today with-/their Buddhist opponents in Sai-| After weeks of street disturb-| © § Piyag en't certain a protective ig any resistance from Budd-| gon. ances by Buddhist youths, Sai- oe ioe a proce around the docking ap- hist-led elements or anti-govern-| ye was the last territorial)00 appeared unnaturally calm recognize the group as bargain.|paratus on the bottle-shaped ment troops that have held the! strongpoint of the anti-govern-| today. However, some Buddhist ing Geen for QPP "members|line - up target separated as{ northern city in oven rebellion! ment forces. Its recapture was|¢lements protested the Budd. 0 i implement a checkoff of| Planned once in orbit. since mid-March. a major victory for Ky, who has) hist - government compromise) 1 dua. The target, known as an aug-| The junta's forces seized|managed to stay in power with|4steement to add 10 civilians) : : e i dapter | mon Terms of the agreement say mented target docking a Hue's radio station and other| the support of his fellow gener-|'0 the ruling directorate of 10) 10) vith "the association's rec-|(ATDA), blasted off less than showed its feet resting atop the} It apparently was ejected sey- crust -- important evidence in| eral hundred feet above the sur view of opinions of some sci-|face from a carrier vehicle entists that the surface might! equipped with small retro-rock- |be deep dust or spongy lavajets, U.S. scientists said its ime that could swallow a landing ve-| pact probably would kill a man, yesterday but they hope to make it Friday when a third attempt to launch the Titan 2 rocket will be made. (AP Wirephoto) GEMINI 9's Thomas P. Stafford, left, and his space- mate, Eugene A, Cernan leave their spacecraft after the mission was scrubbed hicle. LAUNCHED MONDAY strongpoints in the city 400jals and the United States de-|Senerals. TAKEOVER BLOODLESS U.S. Uses New Weapons In t F 23 of Da Nai jally, 4 hist stronghold, the junts»'s|a®* intermediary body with the position for rendezvous aga ognition as being truly repre-|two hours before trouble struck sentative of the 2,300-member| Gemini 9. It continued to cir 'ollowing up its seizure May/ police force, it will be allowed| cle the earth, performing a Sa ng, the other Budd-| to 'conduct negotiations through) ally, but will not 'be in prope roops swept into Hue without a/ government, juntil Friday. 'Dock Strike Talks shot after the departure of units | If still connected, the shroud North Viet Nam Offensive of the dissident-riddled 1st Viet-|tion negotiator, namese. Division. Robert Burns, chief associa-| said a member- |ship list now is being prepared --which formed the pointed nose of the rocket to prevent dam- turbulence at The 620 pound Surveyor planted its three legs firmly on the lunar crust at 2:17:37 a.m. EDT, 63 hours and 250,000 miles |after its launch Monday from Cape Kennedy. A laboratory spokesman said jafter viewing the first 144 pic- Soviets Praise Moon Landing LONDON (AP) -- The Soviet Union praised the successful controlled landing of the U.S. SAIGON (AP)--United States flyers are using two new weap- ons to blast missile sites and anti-aircraft guns in their re- vived air offensive against North Viet Nam. Both the air force and the navy disclosed Wednesday fresh devices to suppress Communist flak, which pilots have de- scribed as "so thick you could) walk on it." The air force told guardedly of "a new type of ordnance" which its fighter-bombers used over North Viet Nam since the} start of the air campaign Feb. 7, 1965. The pilot of one was res- for the first time Tuesday in their heaviest strike at a single} target in the war. This was a raid by 18 missions on the Yen| Bay supply and rail complex,| 80 miles northwest of Hanoi. An air force spokesman de clined to describe the secret weapon, but said the delivery} avec lvery-s ise -and=-the-re=) sults were devastating. He said 25 anti - aircraft emplacements were silenced. The raiders were! credited with destroying 72! warehouses and damaging 44 in the complex of 120 buildings. Anti - aircraft fire, however downed three U.S. jets, boosting to 251 the number of planes lost Election Work Begun SAIGON (AP) -- Officials of Premier Nguyen Cao Ky's elec- toral committee said today they had reached a number of "ten- tative conclusions" in their work of preparing the legal ba- sis for elections in September. They said these conclusions | would be submitted to the gov- ernment next week. The committee's three sub- committees continued to meet} in what officials said was an ef- fort to resolve "disagreements and divergencies" over the laws they are preparing for the elec- tions for a constituent assem- bly to be held Sept. 11. Committee officials said it seems likely the committee will propose election of a constitu- ent or consultative assembly of about 150 members -- roughly one seat for each 100,000 per- sons, The committee thus far has been unable to agree on a role} for the assembly beyond the drafting of a constitution, It will be up to the ruling junta to de-! cide if it also will have legisla- tive duties or perhaps the power to convert itself later into a parliament. | Wednesday more than 1,000| but it is known through a pre- U.S. consulate and an adjoin-|tion represents between 1,800 cian ing consulate residence in Hue.| and 2,000 members of the force. of-.the students sacked and burned the! liminary count that the associa-| Show No Progress MONTREAL (CP) -- Judge, The meeting broke up at 6 Rene Lippe spent Wednesday| p.m. and no date was set for a shuttling between rooms of aj future meeting, three-room suite in a mid-town| Phil Cutler, the ILA's legal ___ hotel in his mediation of the St.)counsel, later praised Judge | Lawrence River longshoremen's| Lippe for a valiant effort, but | strike but reported little pro- | said that the day had been gress. | Spent discussing job security | Officials of the Interna-| for the dock workers with no age from air launch--would dash any hopes {Gemini 9 could drive into the link-up: collar. | Such link-up practice is vital to U.S. attempts to return men to earth from the moon. Jodoin Irate Over Dispute | OTTAWA (CP)--The Quebec |longshoremen's strike is a di-| rect result of the failure by gov-} |tional Longshoremen's Associa-| result. tion (CLC), representing 4,250 ; longshoremen from Montreal,| have the question of reduction Trois-Rivieres and Quebec City,| of working crews postponed un- jernment and industry to cope with the challenges of techno- logical change, President Claude Jodoin of the Canadian Labor Congress said today. ite jis satisfactory, it will take a week of hard bargaining to end the strike and another week to get crews, cargoes and passen- gers aboard the ships. GAS RUNS SHORT The first gasoline shortage caused by the strike hit thou- sands of motorists today in southern England. Regent Petroleum, Britain's 80 of its filling stations in: the Southampton area were running dry because British coastal tankers that normally supply the local storage depot are all strikebound The union also declared "black" two large tankers manned by foreign crews, which it said were being used for "flagrant strike-breaking"', This meant the tankers, both underi Is not the end of next arth told a press con- 'ference that even if the report} The U.S. Navy's new weapon A major factor in the govern-| The agreement provides for sile. Carrier-based pilots report] '0 the Saigon regime by Lt.-Gen. of persons' appointed by the as- abtes~them-to-st nai commander of the northernmost such as length H dows, opportunity for their anti-gov-| Recommendations of this speed of sound, were highly re- last week at a surprise meeting/| coil or the justice minister, The pilot used a hand switch to grily to the announcement of There was one point on which miles. an effigy of President Johnson, | 2" ,48ked that _non-commis- cm end 3 of the ruling junta' to join _a separate body.\The | sion was that 10 civilians would posal. parties" to the ruling direc- negotiators said this matter will MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Russia "€W Junta chairman next Mon-| The government agreed that paign" and claimed that it was Roman Catholic chief of State|be allowed to have these dues The protest was made in a, The enlarged junta--or direc-| ducted directly from the pay 'anadian embassy here, by a, Cil" before June 19 to help the for disciplinary matters also re- Canadians of "provocative ac- s When Unions Un the Canadian government to relations showed Signs of im- outside Canada . . . strive to| LONDON (CP) -- A judicial development." day, faced with the grim fore- did nothing to stop "periodic back to normal in four weeks' false reports about so-called So-|Striking National Union of Sea- country's vital oil imports The statement linked activities of'union, said Wednesday that the late George leged to have spied for the Rus-|will be four weeks before most FY " et paign™ had been whipped up pected before is a vastly improved model of ment's reassertion of authority | the establishment of a commit- the Bullpup air-to-ground mis-| i? Hue was a pledge of loyalty|tee, made up of equal numbers Nguyen Chanh Thi, the rival to sociation and the government a high rate of success from a//Y : ; ' : ? aie guidance system that en-| KY whose ouster March 10 as|which will deal with matters the-winged} a ' A A Work éxplosive carriers all the way 1S8t Corps gave the Buddhists an' week, salaries and vacations. The old Bullpups, which ernment campaign. committee will be made to the cruised at nearly twice the|, Ky and Thi came to a truce| lieutenant - governor - in - coun- garded. Reliability was reported arranged by the United States. lon { POIN iSE q to be in excess of 90 per cent. Buddhist crowds reacted an-/ ONE POINT UNSETTLED s the negotiators come transmit radio command sig-| the compromise formula Wed- pede ingg olla ype tag nals. The range was seven to 10| nesday. A mob of youths burned! ; Figg ene sioned officers, who now belon In all the Americans flew 81 The agreement came after he associz ae . | n hy t to the association, be required missions Tuesday -- two fewer, two meetings ; eg ---- lawyers representing the asso- hist Institute. The chief Provi-| ciation were against this pro- * Russia Protests me named by 'mass organiza-| At the end of the negotiations, ions, religions and _ political which began Tuesday night, the . Spying Charges torate by Sunday, be studied by them at the be- It also called for election of a ginning of next week. has protested to Canada against day. The present chairman is the association, to be financed an alleged "anti - Soviet cain- Lt.-Gen, Nguyen Van Thieu, the|/by payment of dues only, wil being aggravated by the Ottawa who with Ky has been a chief deducted under a voluntary government , target of Buddhist protests, check-off system, That is, de- statement handed Wednesday to torate--is also to name a "'peo-| cheque. H. I. Clark, counsellor of the Ple's and armed forces coun-| The matter of an appeal board ( Soviet foreign ministry official,| Present war cabinet until a ci- ceived approval from the gov- It also accused unspecified vilian government takes over. 'ernment. tivities" against the Soviet em- bassy in Ottawa and called on "put an end" to these activities, Every time Soviet - Canadian provement, the statement said. "certain forces both inside and harm these relations and darken inquiry into Britain's shipping the prospectives for their future strike opens formal hearings to- The statement alleged that the Cast that the best it can hope Canadian government not only to do is get the countny's trade anti - Soviet campaigns" but time "helped to blow them up by And for the first. time, the viet spying." men has summoned the help of a : other unions and hit at the MENTIONS SPENCER : : the Wiiliam Hogarth, general sec- anti-Soviet campaign" with in- retary of the 65,000 « member vestigations into the : 7 Spencer, a Ca- even if the inquiry comes up| nadian post office employee al- with a basis for settlement, it Sians. : ships can put to sea "A particularly hostile cam-) An interim report around the Spencer case, it al-' week. Hog leged, U.K. SHIPPING INQUIRY OPENS third-biggest oil company, said} ed Oil Tapoets Slow sat in one room. | bargaining for the next con- Those of the Shipping Federa-| tract. tion of Canada, representing the] Judge Lippe said after the} shipping companies, sat in an-| meeting that if the question of other room. | job security were settled, there | likely would be a return to } a work, "Time and time again the| Rh d | PUSHKIN SAILS CLC has pressed for an all-out | 0 eSla |The Alexandr Pushkin. 9 POR atiack on this probiem," he} m1 . |sian passenger Me aig said in a prepared statement. B from Montreal Wednesday on |The suggestion seems to re- Talks egin iin: and without incident. It | ceive attention only when a dis- | was feared that damage to pas- pute has developed to a high} SALISBURY (Reuters) -- Thejsenger luggage Tursday would temperature point." |second round of informal talks| recur but it did not. Mr. Jodoin said the Interna-/between British and Rhodesian) Assistant Chief Thomas Woods| tional Longshoremen's Associa-| officials was due to open today of Montreal national harbors tion, a CLC affiliate, is resist-}behind closed doors, as did init-| board police reported threaten- ing a plan by the employers|ial discussions in London Jast ing telephone calls which said that would put several hundred! month. buses bringing passengers to the older men out of work. The two teams -- seeking a! vessel would be overturned. "The union cannot be ex-/ basis for a negotiated settlement Elsewhere, Finance Minister pected to put these men on the|of the six-month Rhodesian in-| Mitchell Sharp reported in the | block," he added. The employ-|dependence crisis -- were un- Commons Wednesday that 25,- ers had a responsibility to prove | changed, except for the addition! 000,000 bushels of export wheat, | the necessity for the reduction.|of an extra man on each side.| either aboard or to be loaded} The head of the 1,286,000-| The teams had 10 days to into 84 ships, is being tied up| member congress also criticized|think over the initial discus-|by the strike. jthe actions of Labor Minister|sions and prepare for the cur-| The Montreal waterfront was Nicholson in the dispute, rent round, relatively quiet Wednesday in comparison to the previous day when gangs of men caused dam- age to several buildings. Seven men pleaded not guilty Wednesday in municipal court to charges of trespassing on na- tional harbors board property on the Montreal waterfront. China Affi Irms . Cuban Links | Panamanian registry, cannot be! shipowners, has predicted it for assisted by tugs. next Tuesday at London and One, the 49,000-ton Esso Aus- Liverpool. jtria, unloaded and put to sea' The union said 689 ships were} from Milford Haven, Wales, be-| tied up and nearly 20,000 sea-| fore the British union ban was! men on strike, announced. The National Institute of Eco- The other, the 53,000-ton Esso| nomic and Social Research has open move toda Spain, also has unloaded. Union| estimated a long strike could/relations with Fidel Castro's| Officials said she might be able|cost Britain 20,000,000 pounds, Cuba and charged that Moscow! to sail from Fawley on_ the $60,000,000 a month on its bal-|is betraying the Cuban people. south coast without the tugs ance of payments -- the differ-| An article in the official Pe- Few oil tankers have been ence between imports and ex- king People's Daily claimed the| tied up by the strike, The union' ports. Russians are not really support- charged the oil companies with) The seamen are striking for|ing the Cubans in recent inci- diverting British-manned tank- an immediate reduction of their dents at the U.S. naval base at ers to other ports and bringing workweek to 40 from 56 hours. Guantanamo. It said China is foreign ships to British ports. (Shipping companies have offered Cuba's "most faithful and de- As the strike entered its 18th|the reduction spread over two! pendable" friend. day today, the point of conges- years The article came a day after tion was drawing steadily The seamen also want a 17- Peking announced that it had nearer for major ports. Ford/per-cent increase in their cur- renewed its trade and scientific Geddes, chairman of the Ship- rent basic wage, $42 for a 56- co-operation agreement with ping Federation. representing! hour-week. Cuba |the depression was. quite shal. He said the ILA now wants to|spokesman said, to landing speed of 8 m.p.h.-- TOKYO (AP)--China made an! = y to mend its|= F tures--received at the Goldstone Surveyor I on the moon today, tracking station on the desert|1n Britain, Prime Minister Hare to the east and relayed here--|0ld Wilson sent congratulations that the landing was firm|to President Johnson "for thig enough, however, to cause one| Magnificent further achieves foot to make a slight contact] ment in the conquest of space." depression. The official Soviet news A shadow around the edge) agency Tass said Soviet sciente of one of the two feet within/ists think highly of the Survee range of the camera indicated|yor feat calling it "an impore tant_part.of.the American-moog program." Tass pointed out, however, that the Soviet space ship Luna IX made the first soft landing on the moon Feb. 3 and age serted: "Foreign scientists ade mit that the flights of the Luna type helped the Americans over. come quickly the difficulties ine volved," Tass said that with two soft landings ha v!ng been accom- plished, '"'traffic between the earth and the moon may be ex- pected to become even livelier soon.' "This is natural, as manned flights to the moon will become possible only when the methods of soft landing in conditions where there is no atmosphere are mastered in full." low--perhaps two inches, the The camera was shut down when the earth's rotation blocked signals to Goldstone and officials said no further pic- tures were expected until 11:30 p.m. EDT tonight when Gold- stone again is in position to re- ceive. Meanwhile, tracking sta- tions at Canberra, Madrid and Johannesburg were to make en- gineering checks jvith Surveyor. its crucial terminal sequence --a cartwheel in space to point its feet moonward, then at 60 miles out a blast from its pow- erful retro-rocket engine to slow ended with all instruments ap- parently functioning. Thirty-five minutes later, it neem NEWS HIGHLIGHTS. Grossman Denies Jail Charges TORONTO (CP) -- Reforms Minister Allan Grossman has denied charges that juvenile offenders in Peterborough are locked up with adult criminals, Viets Want UN Election Observers UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- South Viet Nam asked today for United Nations observers for its election of a constitution-drafting assembly scheduled for Sept. 11. Work Stoppage Hurts Gold Reserves LONDON (AP) -- Britain's gold and foreign exchange reserves fell by £38,000,000 ($114,000,000) last month, large- ly because of the seamen's strike, syymgreemme Iineenere ee | .-. In THE TIMES today... Couple Re-united After 23 Years--P. 13 Club and City Fete Oshawa Generals--P. 8 Whitby To Have Homemaker Service--P. 5 Ann Landers--12 Obits--25 City News--13 Sports---8, 9, 10, 11 Classified--22, 23, 24, 25 . Theatre----20 Comics --26 Whitby News--5, 6 Editoridl---4 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17 Financial--21 Weather--2

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