Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Jun 1966, p. 1

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Home Newspaper | Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. Weather Report Warmer weather tomorrow with light winds. Outlook ville, Ajax, Pickering ond neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. LY VOL. 95 -- NO. 138 10¢ le Copy 55c Per Week? Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1966 She Oshawa Cimes Authorized as Second Closs Mall P: Ottawa ond for poyment of. good. Low tonight 65; high Friday 88. 'ost Office Department Postage in Cash. FORTY-FOUR PAGES U.S. Bombs Again | Oil Dumps § AI GON (AP) -- American;can pilot was paraded through bombers attacked fuel depots in the streets of Hanoi. | the vicinity of Hanoi for the sec-| The flier was identified as air ond straight day today, the U.S. force Capt. Murphy Neal Jones, command announced, 28, of Baton Rouge, La., who The closest raid was 744 miles apparently piloted the lone U.S. from the North Vietnamese cap-|jet reported lost by American ital. Wednesday, in their closest|authorities in the raids. Hanoi penetration to Hanoi, U.S, bomb- radio said seven planes were) -- ers smashed a big fue! depot shot down. | only three miles from the heart The North Vietnamese dis- of the city. played Jones at a press confer- Navy planes attacked a key/ence where, standing under} radar site 38 miles north Of/kleig lights, the Soviet news| the capital in the area of Bac|agency Tass quoted him as say-| Giang, while air force F-105)ing: "I regret very much that Thunderchiefs attacked the Ngu-'| yndertook this criminal action| Li gp et, qa against the Vietnamese people." rin of Panol-and tne viet 1, Jones said he took off from| othe cote MOhwes! Taki airbase in Thailand and) | There was no immediate esti- mood oa saad ne mate of the amount of fuel in North Vietnamese news agency. the depots, | An air force spokesman said). The fuel dumps hit Wednes- no MiG jets were sighted and day stored an estimated 60 per) no surface-to-air missiles were|cent of North Viet Nam's oil fired. |reserves. The raids continued the; Meanwhile, hard fighting was) American strategy designed to|reported 50 to 60 miles north of drprive the North Vietnamese |Saigon today after an estimated army of its vital fuel supplies|2,000 of the enemy swooped and thus hamper its movement/down on an American armored) of men and supplies to the Viet/reconnaissance squadron of| Cong in South Viet Nam. about 770 men in tanks and} U.S. military officials said the armored personnel carriers on) attacks Wednesday on the fuel| Highway 13. Spotter pilots esti- depots at Hanoi and Haiphong! mated that between 200 and 400 -were a spectacular success. [of the enemy were killed by air) ~~ CLAIM A VICTORY "No more pencils, no more books, no more teach- ers'... That is the start of an annual chant by pub- lic school children the day jattacks. North Viet Nam described the HIT TROOP CENTRE House D bombings as a "glorious vic-| B-52 bombers struck two tar-| tory" for itself and vowed toigets in South Viet Nam this} smash any attempt to escalate|morning, a troop concentration) the war. 28 miles southwest of the coastal) Radio Hanoi broadcast angry|city of Quang Ngai and a base| denunciations of the United|camp 50 miles northwest of Sai- States and a captured Ameri-| gon. | BUSY DAYS AHEAD FOR MOTHER school is out for the sum- mer. And yesterday was the day for thousands of city pupils. This crowd of Duke of Edinburgh school pupils eath Bomb Had Six Second Fuse | Army Coup Reported In Iraq WASHINGTON (AP) -- Bagh-; dad radio, monitored here, re-| ported today a revolution ap-| parently ousted the government | lof Iraq Wednesday night. | | The Iraqi radio said "'the} army will assume power" and ithe revolution seeks to estab-| lish security internally." Official announcements on the radio were made in the name of Arif Abdel Razzaq. A man |with that name had been Iraq's| |premier for 11 days in Septem-) |ber, 1965. Razzaq's statements were made in the name of the Coun- cil of the Revolutionary Com- mand. The statements said that the revolutionary command will support the foreign policy of the |United Arab Republic, for non- jalignment and for peaceful co- oa port cards dished out in the afternoon showed. But in f any event, all will likely | existence. make the grade to enjoy | Razzaq imposed a curfew and the summer recess. jclosed all airports in Iraq. More Old - Age Assistance | Predicted Under New Plan fits Plan. poured through doorways as they rushed from class for the last time this school term. Most made their year. Some missed, as re- TORONTO (CP) -- The Star of the Canada Pension jsays the federal government |has decided to increase assist- John Robarts of Ontario Wed- |nesday promised a public in- | quiry into the use of court in-| | junctions to limit picketing dur-| LBJ Men Deny War Buildup WASHINGTON (AP) -- The! But a North Vietnamese army U.S. bombing of oil supply dep-|communique charged the U.S. ots on the outskirts of Hanoi|planes "indiscriminately bomb and Haiphong Wednesday hasjand strafed residential and eco- caused an uproar both in the nomic areas, causing human OTTAWA (CP)--An army ex-| A housewife described Wed-|along with 10 sticks of dynamite plosives expert testified today|nesda ynight how she sold ex-|at 45 cents each and six detona- that Paul Chartier was killed in|posives to Paul Chartier and/tor caps. She told him the fuses the Parliament Buildings May |mistakenly gave him wrong in-| burned a foot a minute but 18 by a crude bomb that had a/|formation about vital fuses. |learned from her husband after two-inch fuse with a burning! Mrs, Norma Lougheed of New-/the blast that the rate is one foot time of only' six seconds, |market, Ont., near Toronto, told/evety 40 seconds. , Capt...T. §, Martin said. he) five-man. coroner's jury of th}, She picked-up;Chartier in Ney concluded that Chartier's bomb'dynamite transaction May 13.\ccur when he lost his way to went off prematurely as the) "A 10 - page prepared speech! Newmarket, gave him a dis- man was about to leave a wash-/found in his pocket said he|carded briefcase to carry the room near the Commons gal-lwanted to "exterminate as|blasting equipment and asked lery. }many members of Parliament|an employee to drive him to a@ "It was done very, very|as possible' and proclaim him-|bus terminal. crudely,' the defence headquar-|self president of Canada. | | TWENTY TESTIFY ters expert said. 'This man in Mrs. Lougheed said she over- ance to the aged to bring their incomes up to $1,260 per year. | It says Health Minister Mac- Eachen is expected to announce the government's intentions when he ends debate on the Canada Assistance' Plan inthe Commtioris' today. "i "It is understood that the Liberal plan will provide up to $30 a month to qualified pen- }sioners on top of the existing old age pension of $75 a month," The Star says. "The intention is to ald peo- ple wlio now are retired, or who my opinion was a rank ama-jestimated the burning time of | Twenty witnesses testi- will not receive the full bene- United States and abroad. Johnson administration spokesmen emphasized the and material losses to our peo- ple." Vice-President Hubert H. teur." isix fuses she sold to Chartier,|fied Wednesday and another 17 "Elderly people whose in- come from all sources exceeds $105 a month will not qualify for assistance under the new program, government sources indicated. "The 'supplementary. benefit, no longer willbe necessary in 10 years when the Canada Pen- sion Plan will provide a mini- mum $104.37 a month for every- one." The Star says the supplemen- tary benefit will be given in ad- dition to aid that will become available under the assistance plan. |were scheduled to be called to- |day. Highlights of the evidence: United States was "'not attempt-| Humphrey said "no civilian ca- ing to escalate the war." sualties resulted." American al- Reaction abroad was mostly lies had been told of the bomb- critical to the bombings which|ing decision in advance. Defence Secretary Robert §S.} Initial reaction from Russia, McNamara said inflicted heavy| Yugoslavia, damage on facilities represent-|United Nations was critical. ing more than 60 per cent of; Russians called the raids "in- North Viet Nam's remaining oil ternational piracy." storage capacity. One American; United Nations Secretary-Gen- plane was downed. eral U Thant expressed regret. McNamara told a news con-\In New Delhi, Indian Foreign ference every effort was made|Minister Swaran Singh ex-! to avoid destruction of non-mili- pressed "'deep concern and dis- tary facilities. 'tress."" } PM Repeats Viet Policy | Favors Air Strike Letup -- OTTAWA (CP) -- The U.S India and the} | } | BUENOS AIRES (AP)--Ar- gentines today expected long began trying to get a |working arrangement with nor- }mally hostile labor unions. Strongman Juan Carlos On- gania swore himself in as presi- dent Wednesday, assuming vir- tually dictatorial power, after a three-man military junta ousted civilian President Arturo Illia Tuesday in a bloodless coup. The military's chief purpose, they said, was to prevent the Peronists--followers of ex-dic- |ment Drastic Reforms Forecast | By Argentina's New Ruler {the coup, many quarters feared that Peronist-led unions would jand possibly lean years of mili-|stage massive protest strikes |tary rule as their new govern-| that would paralyse the country and cause bloodshed. Even. before Ongania took of- fice, the 52 - year - old former} army chief made a bid for sup-| port from the unions but warned | them to get out of politics. | Unconfirmed reports said aj two-year truce between the| military and unions appeared likely. | "Tf the government takes po-| sitive action, the truce will Canada made it clear earlier) tator Juan D. Peron--from win-|CoMe by itself," said Juan Jose bombing of Hanoi and Haiphong) it was sorry to see the resump-jning control at the polls of accone, general secretary of| does not change the Canadian | tion of U.S. air attacks on North) Buenos Aires and other major the 48,000 - policy favoring a letup in air| Viet Nam following the January strikes against North Viet Nam, pause. Prime Minister Pearson told the Commons Wednesday. provinces. Sources in high places said member light and| power union. | The biggest union, the 2,500,-| Mr. Pearson said he wants to| Qngania plans to hold office for|000-man General Workers Con- jsee both the U.S. bombing and|eight to 10 years and reshape|federation, has not yet com-| He said the government has|the North Viet Nam interven-|Argentina's political and eco-| mitted itself but observers be-| always held that "'a letup in the/tion halted and unconditional opel arte rg Ron negotiations for peace to begin. sist settlement" of the Viet Nam - 7 ; py Mr. Douglas opened his series Replying to questions from New Democratic Party Leader T. C. Douglas, Mr. Pearson said he understands from prelimi- nary reports the U.S. does not! regard the air attacks as any| change in its policy of bombing military targets only. the bombing of the North Viet calation of the war that will en- danger peace. ' nomic forms Local face with drastic re- | newspapers said lic services and gross lia's fall, In the first hours following RESULT PLEASES SEAMEN The Liberal leader said there| is no intention to direct the lieve it will side with the light} and power union. The military regime also was Nam cities amounts to an es-| ciency contributed greatly to Il-| gages in political activities. He! ing has been staying at his brother's|waste their time fighting over| \scandals and personalities. house in the capital. "WILSON'S VICTORY HAILED --Chartier sat in the Com- mons gallery a few minutes before the blast, asked for di-| rections to the nearest wash-| room and said he wished to return. He had been drinking but was not intoxicated. --Dr. W. B. Spalding, treated Chartier last Year in Toronto, said his patient was; "A rather psychopathic man"| with a history of chronic anxi- ety and occasional depression dating back at least to 1952, --A CNR worker, Jules Irving McGrail, said he met Chartier on Parliameft Hill early in) March, when stormy debates| were raging over the Gerda} Munsinger and Victor Spencer | security cases, and told him "any nut" could escape detec-} tion and kill half the MPs by} throwing a bomb into the Com-| mons, "I planted the seed,' he said. | coroner, said Chartier's speec was the product of a disturbed| Kielmansegg of West Germany.| ian government offers the best mind but added, "In justice to the memory of the man I} might say itat many of the} things he said are true." The prepared speech said MPs of questions with the comment! chronic deficits in the huge pub- reported to have warned Illia he forget about the plight of the ineffi-| will be exiled or jailed if he en-| poor as soon as they start draw- their $18,000 salary and France Withdraws From NATO Atomic Weapon Control Lost PARIS (AP) -- The United | States formally confirmed today| U.S. Air Force from France. But who|that jointly - controlled atomic) one of the engines of the plane, weapons at the disposal of the French Air Force in West Ger- many will be withdrawn Friday. The U.S. had earlier warned that the tactical weapons would be withdrawn if France leaves the military side of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which she is to do Friday. The confirmation was in a_ note handed to officials at the French foreign ministry by U.S. Ambas- sador Charles E. Bohlen. At the same time in. nearby Fontainebleau, French Gen. Jean Crepin, commander of allied forces in central Europe, reviewed troops from NATO countries in change-of-command| i --Dr. J. S. Cross, an Ottawa ceremonies. He will be replaced| tor Robert F. Kennedy said to-| Friday by Gen. J. A. (Count) Meanwhile, at Evreux Air Force Base, west of Paris, Col. Harold G. Fulmer boarded a |four-engined transport to lead U.S.S.R. Scores Nuclear Treaty { GENEVA (AP) -- The Soviet |Union charge: |U.S. draft treaty to halt the |spread of nuclear weapons "has today that the! the way for the withdrawal of bound for an English base, re-| jfused to start and the colonel} |had to get back out onto French} } Soil while the plane went to the} hangar for repairs. | | The French government has| |demanded that U.S. and Cana- dian air bases in France be withdrawn by next April. RFK Backs Elections WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sena-| | | day the fair election of a civil- |hope of gaining world support for American actions in Viet Nam, | And he said the International |Control Commission of Canada, India and Poland should be jasked to supervise the prepara- jtions and actual voting in the {projected September elections in South Viet Nam. Kennedy, New York Demo- \crat who has contended the |Johnson administration has not gone far enough in trying to get peace talks under way, said the jescalated bombing of North Viet PM Promises Labor Probe Robarts Says Inquiry Will Have Wide Scope TORONTO (CP) -- Premier ing strikes. His announcement came after he met with labor leaders who gathered here earlier Wednes- day to lay plans for province- wide demonstrations against in- junctions. Mr. Robarts told a press con- ference following a meeting with Labor Minister Leslie Rowntree, Attorney-General Ar- thur Wishart and labor officials that the form of the inquiry has not been settled. But, he added, "'perhaps we eventually are going to need a public examination,"' covering the broad field of labor law and not only the matter of injunc- tions, "It would be impossible for the inquiry to be limited to in- junctions alone," he said. PLAN BATTLE Earlier, abo-ut 100 Ontario} labor organization officials agreed on an extensive prov- ince-wide program of demon- strations to press for abolition of the law which allows the use of the injunction as a means of limiting pickets. The controversy over the law, simmering for several months, was brought to a boil Monday with the sentencing of 25 union men here for a mass demonstra- tion last February in defiance of a court order at strikebound Tilco Plastics Ltd. in Peter- borough. The men, five of whom were given two months and the rest 15 dave are on bail pending ap- peal. Dayid Archer, president of the Ontario Federation of Labor, said after Wednesday's meeting that local labor bodies will be vince the public and members of the legislature that injunc- tions should be eliminated. He said publicity money will be sought through c ont ri butions from union members, Wiliam Dodge, executive vice-president of the Canadian Labor Congress who also at- tended the meeting, said the CLC will back efforts in any province to have injunctions wiped out. George Burt, Canadian direc- tor of the United Auto Workers (CLC), and Larry Sefton, dis- trict director of the United Steel- workers of America (CLC), agreed every participant in a Strike should be permitted to picket to show his displeasure with management. EVERYTHING AT STAKE Mr. Sefton said a striker has his job, pension and everything else at stake, It was ridiculous to equate picket lines with vio- lence, Mr. Archer, summing up the labor meeting, said: "There was a tremendous feeling we should not succumb to injunctions. We hope we can | demonstrate legally and peace- fully. If we can't find ways of conforming to the directions of the court we will have to dis- obey the court order." He said labor councils in Tor- onto and Peterborough have set July 7 aside for protest rallies, Meanwhile, the Ontario Fed- eration of Construction Associa- tions expressed opposition Wed- nesday to any change in the pro- cedures relating to injunctions as they apply to the construc. tion industry, The association said that prob» lems which contractors seek to overcome through injune- tions include obstruction, intimi- dation, molestations, trespass- asked to stage demonstrations and take other action to con- ing and preventing free access to a construction site. De Gaulle Sees Red Army Moves MOSCOW (AP) -- President Charles de Gaulle watched ma- noeuvres of Soviet armored and military forces today in a mock battle that included a simulated atomic bomb explosion. The French president and the Soviet defence minister, Mar- shal Rodion Y. Malinovsky, stood on an observation plat- form, shielded from heavy rain by a canvas cover, to watch the mock battle three miles away on a vast plain at an army training centre near Moscow. De Gaulle was also shown some Soviet missiles at another part of the camp. The visit to the army camp | was the first stop on the last full day of de Gaulle's 11-day visit to the Soviet Union. His schedule also included an ap- pearance on Soviet television and the signing of a joint dec- laration with Soviet leaders, French sources reported that de Gaulle and the Russians have agreed to establish a di- rect "hot line" for telex com- munication between the French and Soviet governments, in nor- mal periods as well as during any crises that arise. The line will be similar to that set up between Washington and Mos- cow in August, 1963, as a guard against accidental war. The Moscow-Washington line is re- ported to have been used only for test messages. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Soviet - Franco Agreement Signed MOSCOW (Reuters) -- T the Soviet Union will launch a French space satellite under a 10-year space co-opera- tion agreement signed by the two countries here today. Art Appreciation Move Made TORONTO (CP) -- The government today introduced a bill to change the name of the Art Gallery of Toronto to the Art Gallery of Ontario in a move to expand appre- ciation of the visible arts throughout the province. bombing against populated |hugely gaping holes which could/Nam targets is going to make areas. However, that fact does not change Canadian policy about a letup in air attacks. Polyanski Raps Raids VANCOUVER (CP) -- Dmitri Polyanski, deputy premier of the Soviet Union, said Wednes- day night that intensified- Amer- ican bombing of North Viet Nam is "an act which could have far - reaching conse- quences". He refused to be pinned down at a press conference about pos- sible consequences, but he add- ed: "Who knows what might hap pen? But it is the United States Ship Strike Cost U.K. Millions LONDON (CP)--British ships will sail again Saturday but it will be months, even years, be- fore the cost of 'the seamen's strike known. Shipowners say their losses will be counted in tens of mil- lions of pounds, But only time will tell how much of Britain's export sales has been lost for good in foreign customers who turned to other suppliers during the 47-day strike. The balance of payments suf- fered by an estimated £17,500,- 000 ($52,500,000) through use of foreign shipping during the strike. The general public, however, felt almost no effects. There were no shortages and no major rise in prices settled Wednesday is upon which full responsibility would eventually rest." The stoppage involved more 'than 880 ships and 26,500 sea- men and cost the union £400,000 ($1,200,000) in strike pay of £3 a week to its members. Shipowners were thrown into confusion and changed their plans to get the ships going when the seamen's executive said after the settlement that the strike: would not officially end until midnight Friday night. The seamen won a reduction of the work week to 48 hours from 56 and to 40 hours next year, as proposed by a judicial report June 7 which they abruptly rejected, demanding the 40-hour week immediately. In negotiations which started again last week fhey won 48 days leave a year compared to the 39 the inquiry proposed and the 53 they demanded--in re- turn for a promise of increased | productivity, freely admit whole fleets of| ships equipped with nuclea r| William Hogarth, the sea-; Empress of Canada will sail for Weapons.' men's leader, hailed the settle-| Montreal and Quebec July 5 and, Alexi A. Roshchin, the chief ment as a victory. But militant/the Empress of England July |Soviet delegate to the 17-nation| members charged betrayal. 14. disarmament conference,| Seamen protested the settle-| The settlement was hailed by|attacked what he said was a ment in several large northern) some newspapers here as a vic- loophole in the U.S. draft. ports and the executive of the|tory for Prime Minister Wilson,) The Soviet Union claims this 3,000 - member Irish branch} who Tuesday gave Parliament a} will permit the establishment of, voted to reject it and continue|detailed account of what he!a North Atlantic Treaty Organ-| the strike. called a Communist attempt to jzation nuclear force, including| Cunard Steamship Co., which| take over the union and prolong West Germany. | lost an estimated £4,000,000 on|the strike to destroy the Labor) Roshchin said that assurances the strike, said its services| government's policy of holding|given Tuesday by U.S. delegate | would be back to normal in 14) back wage increases. William C. Foster that the U.S.| days. But union ofiivials insisted the will always retain a veto over| The Queen Elizabeth. is due| Prime minister's charges had/firms that the United States in-| to leave for New York as soon|2Othing to do with it, tends to transfer nuclear weap-| as the strike ends. The Fran-| After the 29-to-16 vote that ons to its non-nuclear allies. conia will sail for Montreal as caevan a se Mlnggared urday or Sunday. "dies ; | NO TIMES ON FRIDAY demning. Wilson's. atlack and EMPRESS WAITING affirming their faith in two Canadian Pacific Steamships|members of the executive he more difficult any attempts to negotiate an end to the fighting. | Wednesday's bombing of oil storage facilities in the Hanoi and Haiphong areas also dims the possibility for major talks| he feels the United States ought} to have with-China, Kennedy! added. He said any Southeas Asia settlement 'would involve! China. He also made these points in ated Press: --President. Johnson send more "high level people should| = wl Barber Drops Appeal Proceedings SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP) -- Appeal proceed- ings for William Dalton Barber, 55, of Sault Ste. Marie, convicted of non-capital murd ler and sentenced to life im- prisonment, were dropped Wednesday. 2utatntnc nt Amalgamation Discussed At Wh to Africa and boost U.S. eco-|= nomic aid to a continent that now gets an annual amount equal to the cost of five days| of fighting in Viet Nam. | --It would be "a major politi- cal mistake"' to reduce the U.S. troop commitment in Europe at this point but he favors explor-| --with two passenger and five icargo ships affected--said the; i | said had been influenced by Communists, } = Ann Landers--18 City News--17 Classified --26 to 30 Comics--31 Editorial--4 Financial--24 ing the possibility with Russia = _ ... In THE TIMES today... an interview with The Associ-|= Rosebank To Get Road, Services--P. 5 Obits--30 Sports--10, 11, 12, 13 Theatre--14 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax News--5, 6 Women's--18, 19, 20 inte sirrreeemeer ithy--P. 17 of reciprocal withdrawals. } PUNTA

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