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

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Home Newspaper ) peer eee ; , \ B84 2 ord arm weather continue OF hy ity, Bee . at least three 'days. Low to- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in sinnees ario and Durham Counties, ll VOL. 95 -- NO. 134 10¢ Copy S5¢ Per Week Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1966 Authorized @s Second Class Mall Ottawa: and for payment of night 70, high Sunday 90, Postage in Cash. TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES Just a couple of swingers are Larry Scott and David Chapliski. Carolyn Ferrer, sasha THEY'RE PLAYING&IT COOL, REAL COOL harbo-- it's one way to beat the heat. Ninety-degree temperatures are forecast object of their attention, doesn't really mind being thrown into the Oshawa fo weekend. Beach scenes like this will be a Farmers Halt Road Parades "dents seek some relief from heat wave. } --Oshawa Times Photo | Space Shot Made Meredith Back On At De Gaulle Visit Mis S] Ss Si p pi Walk NOVOSIBIRSK, U.S. 5S. R. (AP) -- The Soviet Union launched an unmanned earth satellite today at a time when French President de Gaulle was French Atom Blast Likely PAPEETE, Tahiti (Reuters) culation that France may its first nuclear explosion } in the Pacific despite' interna-!* tional protests on or about July) 2 arose here Friday with an an-| nouncement that a French min-} ister will visit the main -test) supply base. | The announcement said Pi- erre Billotte, minister for over-| seas territories and dependen- cies, will leave here June 30 for) the French Atomic Energy|de Gaulle might witness the| reported at the main Soviet space launching centre. Indications were that de : Gaulle watched the launching) TOUGALOO, Miss. (AP) but there was no immediate/James H. Meredith, celebrating confirmation. {his 33rd birthday, today re- Informed sources had re-|Sumed his journey to urge Ne- ported earlier that the visit|Stoes to register to vote, 159 would take place, making de|miles from the point where he Gaulle the first foreign leader| W458 ambushed. known to have seen the nor-| The slender Negro, disap- maby inacooseinie wa eente. | painted because the column of le site is about 1,200 miles) marchers who took over his trek -- ee © Central] gia not await his arrival in Can- BAiROWGF Ves tH the deserts of "8 Friday, started Walking with a ; son/a few friends from 'the court- 2 roti men Aslam reel °P | house at Canton toward Touga- jloo, to where the procession GOES TO LENINGRAD }moved Friday. From there, de Gaulle was to} "The whole damn thing smells | fly 1,550 miles northwest to Len-|to me," Meredith said Friday common sight as city resi- night after arriving in Canton--) 16 miles north of this college community on the outskirts of Jackson, Mississippi's capital city. Meredith drove to Tougaloo Friday night after ignoring a rally in Canton where he was to feceive a hero's welcome, He returned to Canton early today. Meredith, who broke the ra* cial barrier at fhe University of Mississippi in 1962, started the marathon civil rights effort June 5 in Memphis, Tenn., as a one-man crusade. He was wounded by shotgun fire the next day. ingrad, the next scheduled stop) on 'his tour of the Soviet Union. | Some reports had indicated| Church-State Conflict Civil rights leaders rushed in to continue the march while Meredith, now a law student at Columbia University, recuper- ated in New York. The march has coyered 244 miles in 21 jdays, with voter registration rallies at county. courthouses along the route. RALLY WAS SUBDUED Friday's night's rally in Can- ton was subdued. It' broke "up after about an hour. Meredith jane Dr. .Martin Luther King were. absent. Leaders of the militant stu-; ;dent Nonviolent Co - ordinating| |Committee, often at odds with) | more moderate organizations in-| |volved in the march, were an-| [sty over a decision not to try} | |'UP TO OTTAWA' OWEN SOUND (CP)--Onta-,ity for farm products subjidies rio's tractor - driving farmers|lies with Ottawa and not the stopped demonstrations Friday) provincial government. night, avoiding a tie-up of week-| The farmers are demanding a end highway traffic in favor of|firm $4-a-hundredweight price goodwill from motorists. They|for manufactured milk used in will renew their protests Mon-| production of butter and cheese. day. |The price now is $3.25 including The farmers, members of the|a federal subsidy of 75 cents. Ontario Farmers' Union, have} Mr. Stewart said farmers' de- been slowing traffic for nearly|mands for increased subsidies two weeks on provincial high-|are the responsibility of Canada ways to protest low milk prices.|under the British North Amer- More than 50 farmers demon-/ica Act. strated in the Owen Sound and) «when it is necessary to sub- Shelburne area Friday but re-| sidize any commodity all the cit- turned to their fields before|izens of Canada should bear the dark. : cost of such subsidy as it is OFU President John Dolmer| grossly unfair to expect the citi- said all milk producers will! zens of any one province to pro- leave the highways during the| vide such a subsidy to the rest! weekend but will continue pro-|o¢ Canada," he said. tests Monday for as long as nec-| 44, 'stewart also told the leg- essary to secure demands. lislature that a conference has Meanwhile, in Richmond,| Rian about 25 miles southwest of rcs ahaa ora Sane pose tawa, OFU officials passed out held in the history of Ontario questionnaires Friday night to agriculture." about 700 farmers in an attempt! see to assess eastern Ontario sup-|, He said the conference Oct. port for the demonstrations. | 25-28 at Vineland "will re-assess jour position as a province in the jagriculture industry, not on ly In Toronto, Agriculture Minis-|from a provincial standpoint but ter W. A. Stewart again told the/from a national] and inter- legistature that the responsibil- | national one as well." OSHAWA RESIDENT DIES AFTER CAR-CYCLE CRASH had lived in Oshawa three years. He was the son of Henri- Felix and Madleine Anne Marie Sohy and was born in France. He came to Canada 10 years ago with his family. The: deceased is survived by his parents; two brothers, Gerard and Yves and a sis- ter, Mireilli, all of Oshawa. + Pastor...plue x. Reynolde- will conduct funeral service at the MclIntosh-Anderson Funeral Chapel at 3.30 p.m. Monday. Interment will be in Oshawa Union Cemetery, A 21-year-old Oshawa man died in Toronto General Hospital last night from in- juries he received as the re- sult of a motorcycle-car ac- cident on Simcoe St. N, last Tuesday night. Dead is Guy Lucien Maur- ice Sohy of 1156 King St. E. He was a student at gs- way es Foo a member ~of College Park Seventh Da' Adventist Church. Sohy also spent one year - at Andrew's University at Berrien Springs, Mich, He Giant U.S. Planes Bombard Offer May End UK. Ship Strike Militant Union Group Resists Move To Accept 2 LONDON (Reuters)--Britain's| If they accept the court of in- seamen announced today they|quiry's recommendations on pay will accept a new offer from | and leave, plus the extra leave shipowners as a basis for nego-| offered by the shipowners, Brit- tiations on a settlement of the ish seamen will have their pres- shipping strike, now in its 41st|ent 56-hour week at sea cut by -Mng July 1. : i That amount provided in a bill day. | Observers saw the announce-| ment S a major breakthrough. | At today's meeting of the na-' tional executive of the Seamen's| Union there was a move by the moderate wing to accept the! employers' offer immediately. ut militant executive mem- befs apparently resisted this and an amendment that the of- fer be made a basis for negotia- agreed Friday night to offer the seamen nine days extra leave a year. on top of the 39 days' paid leave recommended by a government-appointed court of inquiry. This offer, regarded as a ma- jor concession by the employ- ers, was seen here as a new hope of getting the Seamen's Union executive to compromise and call off the strike, * HEAR REPORTS The union executive today heard reports from members of a negotiating committee who have been meeting the shipown- ers. The discussions were ex- pected to go on all day. House Passes . War Costs eight hours immediately. There would be another cut of eight hours next June and 48 days paid leave a year against the present average of 53. Observers saw the position as a fight between moderate sea- _ men's leaders--who seem to be willing to accept the n --and militants who waft to bat- tle on for the original| demand of an immediate 40-hour week has already sailed out for Ca- lais. It belongs to the Cross- Channel Car Ferry' Company which agreed two days ago to give its seamen the full demand of a 40-hour week. Holy See Signs Pact With Reds BELGRADE (AP) --' Yugos- lavia and the Vatican today signed an agreement on re-es- tablishment of diplomatic rela- tions broken 14 years ago. The agreement on exchange WASHINGTON (AP) -- The House of Representatives ap- propriations com mittee en- dorsed Friday a $58,600,000,000 down payment on the cost of running the defence department and@ financing the war in Viet Nam for the fiscal year start- sent.to the House for action! scheduled for next week won't be enough "if combat opera- tions continue at a high level," the committee said in a formal report. The committee emphasized that its arbitrary decision to fi- nance the defence program for a full year should not be con- strued as a prediction on when of diplomatic representatives was confirmed by a p which outlined attitudes of the two sides .on relations between Yugoslavia and the Roman Ca- holic Church. An official announcement said government of Yugoslay and the Holy See PB prann 'perform exchange cial representatives, to whom . 'will be' guaranteed privilege and immunity accorded to lomatic representatives." The move marked a major turning point in the Roman Ca- tholic Church's approach to the Communist world. It the Holy See a formal diplomatic mission. in a Communist capi- - tal for the first time since 1952 and pointed the way to possi- Commission's main supply base|launching of a Soviet space ve-| on Hao Island, 497 miles east of/hicle. France and the Soviet} Tahiti in the Tuamotu archipel-|Union will sign next Thursday | ago. an agreement of co-operation in} From there he will travel by|space research and the exploita- |to raise the march's tents at| /Canton in defiance of police or-| ble deplomatic ties with other Communist lands, including the Soviet Union. Yugoslavia promised ¢om- the war will end. Added to the $42,000,000,000 in unexpended arts from pre- vious appropriations, the new North Viet Supply Depots SAIGON (AP) -- Giant B-52 Increases In Warsaw t= Though a small detachment| day in an area about 240 miles bombers pounded enemy supply northeast of Saigon. sea to Gambier Island, about|tion of space for communica-| WARSAW (AP)--A tense con-|Cardinal Wysznski and Polish) continued the march from Can-| 560 miles southeast of Hao and |tions. about 280 miles east of the test island, Mururao. preparations for the tests are} in the final stages and all avail-| able equipment has been taken|his security services would ac-|0f them young, defiantly go The ovation apparently came r the|hecklers who had whistled nd| streets in front of the cardinal's| shouted 'Bishops stay out of ence of armed highw. |politics'"" during a procession to|men backed by various other | off Mururoa. Countries in the South Pacific, area--New Zealand, Australia, } Peru, Unie, Ecuador, and Co-; lombia--have protested the im-} minent test, but France has as-| sured them, there will be no! danger and pressed ahead with" preparations. frontation between Polish police|bishops from St. John's Cathe-| French sources said only\and-at least 1,000 followers of|dral, about four blocks away. |French Foreign Minister Mau- Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski teet-| J He aba t 4 c Reliable sources here saidirice Couve de Murville, a per-jered on the brink of violence|the most fervent ovation in 10/--first at a tense demonstration | jweeks of Christian millennium in Philadelphia, \Klux Klan stronghold, then in sonal aid to the president, -his| Friday night. doctor and the deputy chief of, Shouting demonstrators, most company de Gaulle today. The) their fists and refused to rest of the party was on an-| motorcycle policemen clear other plane, going directly to| Leningrad. |palace. De Gaulle was accompanied| During the 10 - minute con- by Soviet President Nikolai V. |frontation the crowd chanted Podgorny, Tass said. "pri-mas, pri-mas"' crowded the streets of this|cyclists, who gunned their mo- centre of western Siberia to see | tors. the guests off. The flags of} The demon (primate) | | Tens of thousands of people|and pressed toward the motor-|the crowd of nearly 50,000 who|the demonstration. The crowd gave the primate) celebrations. as a reaction against se St. John's Catnedrai, Cardinal Wyszynski and blessed the few hecklers in jammed the narrow streets of Warsaw's old city. Canton Friday night. turne [pert Orr tere &. Pore |toll to 90 for the last three days. | cursing crowd of whites during} UN Force Nee | France, the Soviet Union andjof a clapping and shoutingjeral recent clashes with police|sive march -- King predicated) For $11 Million | UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) Secretary - General U Thant made an urgent appeal Friday for more than $11,000,000 to meet the costs of the United Nations peacekeeping operation in Cyprus until the end of this} year He said there is already a def- icit of about $3,000,000 for the period since the operation be- gan on March 27, 1964: U Thant repeated his contetc? tion that the. voluntary method of financing the UN force is "uncertain and inadequate and this is not conducive to good planning or to efficient and eco nomic operation." | Canada has had nearly 1,000] troops participating in' the UN Cyprus force. He. said the estimated costs| to the UN from the start of| force to this June 26 totalled $49,800,000, of which $46,778,382 had been paid or pledged. The deficit at present therefore was about $3,022,000. ® the Russian federation adorned|crowd of more than 10,000 Ro- the buildings. 'man Catholics who followed in widely-separated cities. Such|thousands would join in--was|alry Division's Operation Na- lthan Hale went into its sixth incidents are rarely reported.. {planned for Sunday. z areas in the central highlands ton to Tougaloo Friday, most of today as U.S. troops continued the column was busy elsewhere |two separate, large-scale oper- ations against Communist forces Miss., a Ku in South Viet Nam. fantry Division clashed with \North Vietnamese Army regur In Philadelphia, only the pres-|lars in the highlands near the ay patrol-|Cambodian border for the third straight day and reported killing lin the action, begun May 10 and Jackson, state capital and|known as Operation Paul Re- ' |goal of the march, lies eight) vere. 'ators were part, The incident was one of sev-| miles south of Tougaloo. A mas-| Two U.S. Navy planes were shot down by North Vietnamese ground fire. down a U.S. transport helicop- ter, killing six aboard. Two were wounded infantrymen who the four-man crew was trying to evacuate, The battalion was added as the.operation went into its sixth 3. This brought the Communist|44 This amounts to about 8,000 U.S. troops, including artillery and support elements. U.S. troops have reported kill- ing 363 of the enemy in the operation so far. U.S. casualties were reported light in propor- tion to the number of troops in- volved, Elements of the U.S. 25th In- About 800 men are taking part Meanwhile, the U.S. Ist Cav- WHO TAKES OVER... Speculation Over CNR, Air Canada Heads ... WHEN TOP MEN GO? Meanwhile, another 1,000 U.S. paratroopers arrived in Viet Nam today, bringing the total of American forces in Viet Nam to 276,000. On the political front, Premier Nguyen Cao Ky celebrated his first year in office with a four- Communist ground troops shot Isupport 3,093,109 active mili- OTTAWA (CP)--The two big- gest public-service jobs in Can- ada are due to open. up -late this year as Donald Gordon of the CNR and Gordon R. Mc- Gregor of Air Canada reach the normal retirement age of 65. Although iA considered pos- sible that One or both men may >be given an extension, specula- tion already is mounting here about the government's choice of successors. Gordon has been presi- ss Mr walt the CNR since 1950 and Mr. McGregor has headed* Air Canada since 1948. They are considered to be twa of the leading transportation execu- tives on the continent. Norman J. MacMillan, 55- year-old executive vice - presi- dent of the railway, is reported to be. the favorite to step into Mr. Gordon's shoes. He been the CNR's top legal expert since 1945, has. John R. Baldwin, deputy min- ister of transport and the key figure in federal aviation policy since 1949, is considered to have the inside track on the Air Can- ada appointment. He will be 54 in August. There has been published speculation that Eric W. Kier- ans, the economic expert who played a prominent role in Jean Lesage's Quebec Liberal gov- ernment, will get the CNR presidency. But the guessing among qualified experts in Ot- tawa is that a non-political fig- ure will be selected. PREDICTS REVOLT Said. one: "'There'd be a re- volt among CNR management types if somebody connécted with polities was put in charge."' Both the CNR-and Air Canada are heading.into crucial periods of change in- which major de- cisions will be required of the men on top. Experts contend that the whole field" of trans- portation is due for a revolution --perhaps two--in the coming decade. Today's planes . and trains may not be recognizable by, 1975. "It is for this reason that Mr. MacMillan and Mr. Baldwin are considered fo be the logical con- tenders. However, the present office- holders haven't yet been counted out. Word here is that neither is anxious to step out in this critical period and in Mr. Gordon's case there is a feeling that he may be retained as chairman of the railway's board of directors. : The big, blunt-talking Scot now is both chairman and pres- ident drawing a total of $75,000 a year. IT'S ABOUT $50,000 Mr. McGregor's salary is set. by. the CNR board and is not Py oe ; f { made public, It is. believed to be around $50,000. If Mr. Gordon's term is not extended for either office, the government may have some- thing else in mind for the man generally looked upon as Can- ada's most distinguished public servant. He began as a lowly chartered bank clerk and rose to be dep- uty governor of the Bank of Canada: During the Second World War he ran the Wartime Prices and Trade Board, be- coming the wizard of rationing and price controls, and later re- turned to the bank for a few years before stepping into the ENR. Mr. McGregor was a pre-war Bell Telephone executive and joined Air Canada, then Trans- Canada Air Lines, in 1945 after a brilliant wartime record with the RCAF. Under his leadership t¥e airline has grown to one of e world's major carriers. hour visit to Hue, a hotbed of anti-government agitation. Art Dealer Will Appeal Ruling VICTORIA (CP)--Toronto art dealer Dorothy Cameron said Friday she will appeal to the Supreme Court of Cagada a"de- cision Thursday by the, Ontario Court of Appeal that she had exposed seven obscene pictures. Miss Cameron was fined $350 on the charges by Toronto Mag- istrate F. C. Hayes. Her public gallery in Toronto closed Nov. 25, 1965. ' The Ontario Court of Appeal upheld the conviction Thursday in a 4-to-1 decision. Her appeal was backed by the Canadian Civil Liberties. Asso- ciation. funds would give the defence department about $100,000,000,- 000 for the coming year. The huge bundle of funds is to tary personnel, a fleet of 939 ac- tive ships, an active inventory of 31,382 aircraft, 639 major military installations and to buy ore ships, planes, and mis- plete freedom of religion and recognized - "the right of the Holy See in the exercise of its jurisdiction in the Catholie Church in Yugoslavia in spiri- tual, religious and ecclesiastical matters... ." The Vatican said that Roman Catholic clergy in Yugoslavia would abstain. from any_ polit- siles. ical activities. MOSCOW Air Marsh ment announced today, Former Maple Leaf illness. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Pakistani Air Marshal Talks With Reds ters) -- A Pakistan Air Force commander, "Nur Khan, arrived here today for exploratory talks with Soviet defence authorities. Rirway Workers Get Pay Study OTTAWA (CP) -- District Judge J. B. Robinson of Hailey- bury, Ont., has been appointed a one-man commission to study the pay of air traffic controllers, the transport depart- Star Player Dies TORONTO (CP) -- Harvey Busher Jackson, 55, former star left. winger for Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League, died in hospital today following a lengthy Piers Ann Landers--12 Church--14, 15 City News--11 Classified --16, 17, 18, 19 Comics--7 Editorial----4 ... In THE TIMES today... Carless Driving Costs $200. Or 30 Days ----~ P. 11 Whitby St. John's Group Celebrates Birthday -- P. 5 Oshawa Juniors Win Game Under Cerfew-- P. 8 Theatre---2 Obits--19 Sports--8, 9 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajex News----5 Women's--12, 13

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