Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Sep 1966, p. 3

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CUSTER'S FIRST SCALPING This is James Holly Cus- ter TI, getting his first hair- ve boy is Gen, George Custer's great-great -great- great-great nephew. And ROCKET - BORNE SATELLITE ENDS IN SPIN TOKYO (Reuters) -- , Japan' 8 bid to enier ine worka"s each 'sive space ciuD Tara wuay after its rocket-borne satellite went into a spin instead' of an orbit, Japanese scientists were hop: ing their country would join the United States, Russia and Paes in launching a. satellite by a domestically developed rocket, A four-stage, solid-fuel Lamda roeket with a: 55-pound payload was lifted off jis pad this morn- ing at Uchinoura on the Pacific Coast of Japan, It raced across a sky cleared by the winds of a typhoon which passed over southern Japan Sunday. The payload w tied te go inte orblt ules anu ov pecunue UTE, But gece ogg registered a different story less, five minutes later and aftér 30 min- utes scientists of the Univer: sity of ,Tokyo's Institute of Space ahd Aeronautical Science were analysing causes for fail- ure, CHANCES WERE SLIM Officially, however, the scien- tists never gave themselves bet- ter than a 20-per-cent chance of ge the nose cone into or- t, A computer at the Kashima radar tracking station 50 miles sched a of 'Tok Japs Fail In Bid Enter Space Club cones that four f sdeonds after ue uw 'yuan oone © oeyen ates om "ey gan to dip. ' The aig yg es or marily designed to tes atiity le control as part of a series. of experi- ments before the launching of a 155-pound satellite by a 39-ton Mu four-stage rocket probably jin 1968, The 75-foot-long Mu will have a thrust of 200 tons, This is 40 tons less than the U,S, Titan z which put Gemini II into or- Lambda was 55 feet long and weighed 8.5 tons, Japan launched its first rocket 11 years ago, UN Due To Get New Appeal For Truce In Viet Nam the woman taking part of his first stand is Sally Fra- ijo, a fullblood Indian, _ (AP Wirephoto) cut at the age of six months Tan Smith, Bowden Due Meet Today SALISBURY (Reuters)---Com- monwealth Secretary Herbert Bowden and Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith were ex- ed to have their third meet- ig later today, a British spokes- man said, 'Plans for a new round of talks were made here in a mood of carefully guarded optimism that some way could still be found = of the long unresolved prob- of deciding the future of Hadesio's 400M Negroes and 225,000 whites. Bowden came here to spell out Britain's "last chance" of- fer of the breakway Smith re- to negotiate a settlement of the R sian independence dispute before Britain sought ited Nations economic sanc- tions ete comm -- in s@- EMPLOYMENT LONDON (CP)--Britons are lining up in increasing numbers which economic austerity meas- ures are beginning to cause a slump in employment. Canadian immigration author- ities in London say they expect the 1966 total of Britons moving to Canada to reach 53,000 from) a rate of 40,000 last year, ? oe Zealand House reports a compared with the same time EXODUS FROM U.K. GROWS to emigrate from a country in| SLUMP IS SEEN last year, Australia, which took $7,242 Britons in the first six months of this year, expects the 1966 total will be well above last jyear's 73,500, | Two London newspapers at- jtribute the increased interest in emigration to the austerity measures, But Canadian officials believe the domestic situation has less UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- Malaysia's deputy prime minis- ter was expected to appeal in the UN General Assembly today for an Asian settlement of the war in Viet Nam, Tun Abdul Razak, speaking in the assembly's general debate, also was expected to welcome Indonesia's abandonment of her war on his country and her an- nouncement that she is return- ing to the United Nations, Razak, Foreign Minister Tha- nat Khoman of 'Thailand and Foreign Secretary Narciso Ra- mos of the Philippines last month invited 17 Asian countries to make a joint appeal to the warring forces in. Viet Nam for a peaceful and honorable settle- ment reached at an Asian con- ference. South Viet Nam en- dorsed the peace move, North |influence on would-be emigrants}; than reports they receive--often| 50-per-cent increase in inquiries/from relatives. -- about better)? the Philippines, speaking in conditions in other countries, | LONDON (CP) -- An Irish born Canadian wanted in Ot- tawa on charges of armed rob- _jbery and parole violation has lost an appeal against extradi- iva ana will be flown to Ottawa of tight security, Bow- met groups of ot' Rhode: y See popular feelings. pitated the cri- yee hem i edniuing from Britain last Novy, 11 without any guarantee of the right to vote for the ma- jority Negro population, New NATO Set - up Seen By McNamara WASHINGTON (AP) -- De- fence Secretary Robert McNa- mara says the North Atlantic Treaty Organization is close to establishing a permanent group to supervise a common nuclear defence. Arriving here early today from a meeting In Rome with defence ministers of four NATO nations, McNamara said more progress has been made toward sharing nuclear defence respon- sibility in the last five months than in the last five years, But added: "T think the non-nuclear pow- ers should wish for and propose more active roles in nuclear de- fence," The ministers Friday com: jeted arrangements to give the! ATO allies of the United States more responsibility in the nu- clear defence of Western Europe. The arrangements were nol disclosed, but were said to en-| compass a proposed chain of commands across Europe to control the nuclear arsenal made available by the United States. The plans will be submitted te NATO's 10-member special committee for consideration prior to the annual ministerial meeting in December. The Rome meeting brought McNamara together with de- fence ministers Denis Healey of 'Britain, Roberto Tremelioni of Thursday, The case has raised public questions here about a loophole in Britain's Commonwealth Im- migrants Act that enabled the wanted Canadian to enter Eng- land by way of Ireland, Patrick Gerald MacKuhen, 45, is charged with holding up teller Astrid Norgard in the Sparks Street branch of Canada Perma- nent Trust in Ottawa last Oct. 5 and taking $1,326. He pleaded not guilty at an extradition hearing here Aug. 30, but was ordered sent to Canada, He losi an appeal against the order last week, Chief Inspector John A, Me- Combie of Ottawa, here to es- Armed Robbery Suspect Loses Extradition Case cort MacKuhen to Ottawa, said the wanted man ceased making weekly parole reports last Oc- tober. MacKuhen. whoa moaved ta Canada from Ireland as a boy of 10, was sentenced to life im- prisonment. for manslaughter in 1954, paroled in 1962, sent back to Kingston penitentiary, then paroled again in 1963. McCombie said MacKuhen was traced to Montreal, Quebec City, back to Montreal and then to Dublin since last October, **We were unable to touch him in Dublin because Ireland has no Fugitive Offenders Act and we have no extradition treaty with the Irish," McCombie said, MacKuhen was arrested here three months ago while working as a porter for Aer Lingus, the Trish airline, He had entered Ireland on an Irish passport. WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sen- ator Ernest L. Gruening com- pared today U.S, bombings of North Viet Nam to Second World War bombings of Rotter-| dam by Germany and Ethiopia|~ by Italy. "The American position is ut- iterly immoral and inexcusable," said the Alaska Democrat, long a critic of the Johnson admin- istration foreign policy, He dis- puted the contention that ear- jlier presidents guaranteed U.S, support for South Viet Nam, Gruening said the war is cost- ing $2,000,000,000 a month and predicted spending would in- crease after the election. Another critic, Senator Wayne Morse (Dem. Ore.) said Sun- day President Johnson has "got to stop escalating the war if he's going to be.re - elected." Morse blamed foreign policy for part of what he said was John- son's growing loss of public sup- rt, Italy, Kai-Uwe -von. Hassell of West Germany and Ahmet To- paloglu of Turkey. ATOMS AT SCHOOL PEMBROKE, Ont. Champlain Secondary Schoo! will teach its first course in in- dustrial physics this year. It is working with officials of the Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd,|there to strive for "a lasting | to train technicians, technolog- ists and engineers. fo) _| |the statements in separate ra-) dio interviews, TOKYO (AP)--The leaders of Japan and Burma _ expressed jtheir "deep concern" over the [situation in Viet Nam today and called on the forces involved A joint issued by communique President _ Ne ipeace." was Senator Scores U.S. Air Attacks Gruening and Morse made | 23 Athel 20% RINKERS "THE BEST IN TOWN" © Re-Opening SPECIAL! AT OUR DOWNTOWN STORE DISCOUNT OFF REG. PRICE PHONE 725-1191 St. West Win, chairman of Burma's rev- olutionary council, and Japan- ese Premier Eisaku Sato at the end of Ne Win's six-day state Viet Nam and China rejected President Ferdinand Marcos the assembly last Wednesday, asked that the Soviet Union re- peat its peacemaking in the Kashmir war a year ago and call "a new Tashkent for South- east Asia , . . to end this brutal war," Commenting today on recent U.S. peace overtures at the UN, North Viet Nam's official news- paper, Nhan Dan, accused the United States of refusing "to give up their aggressive design against. South Viet Nam and their plan to turn South Viet Nam into an American colony for perpetuating the division of Viet Nam," The Hanol organ repeated North Viet Nam's conditions for an end. to the war: Withdrawal of U.S. forces, recognition of the Viet Cong "as the only genuine representative of the South Viet: namese people, and let the South Vietnamese people settle their own affaits by them- selves," Committee. work for the as- sembly's 2ist session also got under way today, The trustee- ship committee scheduled a morning meeting to organize the first of the seven working committees to get down to busi- ness. How Te Hold FALSE TEETH More Firmly in Place nes dre barraas By alipping, bing when you eat, la Just sprinkle a little your plates, This alkal: powder holds false tee' | and more comfortably, No gooey, Beaty taste or feeling, sour, Ch 'tan odor" (denture breath). Get FASTSETH today at visit to Japan, drug countera everywhere. Y0 MONEY 63 if. 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Besides some committee work, this week's program called for continuation of the general debate in the assembly each morning and 'special as- sembly debate on Southwest Africa each afternoon, Afric an and Asian nations are preparing a 'resolution to have the assembly end South Africa's &« mandate for the territory's ad- ministration and put it under a UN authority to prepare it for independence, South Africa |probably would refuse to com: with authority, was hailed on the eve of his 60th birthday Sunday as a great national gen- jus of the Soviet Union, The press was full of tributes to the famed composer. Pravda, the newspaper of avwssasnsusssos mers -" his own lifetime A had come to be ranked with bers Mozart, Beethoven arid Tchaikovsky, 'Tass announced he had been awarded the title Hero of Social- ist Labor, highest in the Soviet Union, He 48 the first composer to be 60 honored, He also re- ceived the Order of Lenin, his third, Shostakovich, was last re- ported in a country. rest home north of Leningrad, recovering from a heart attack suffered last May, ATTENDS CONCERT In his first public appearance since then, Shostakovich Sun- \Shostakovich, 60, Hailed As Great Genius Of Sovie MOSCOW. (AP)--Dmitri Shos-|day night attended a concert|ing work--the takovich, in trouble-in the past, here pis honor, and received ® cea lids Aluminum Awnings Aluminum Siding Jalousies rf =i 7 ada Il THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, September 26, 19 | tumultuous ovation, His erg are ona chestra in the evening's open-. Symphony. 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