Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario' and Durham Counties. VOL. 96--NO, 134 10¢ Single C S5¢ Per Week Home Delivered » Weather Report Warm, humid air covers all of Southern Ontario. Low to- night 65; high tomorrow 82, Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1967 EN OF Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash TWENTY-TWO PAGES Syria Asks - UN Council For Action UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- The UN Security Council moved up a meeting to morning from mid-afternoon today after Syria called for an emergency 'ses- sion tod hear its charge Israel had launched a large-scale in- vasion of Syria in violation of the ceasefire. Israel also charged Syria had violated the ceasefire. Syria appealed to the United Nations for an immediate Secur- ity Council meeting to stop "large-scale Israeli aggression." Israel charged Syria violated the ceasefire it accepted Thurs- day by opening up with mortars and artillery on Israeli positions in the Sea of Galilee area. From Cairo came word that the Suez Canal front--the main one in the four-day Middle East war--was silent after the Israe- lis had attacked pasitions west of the canal. Egypt accepted the' ceasefire Thursday and Syria followed a few hours later. The United States sought to have the council give: guaran- tees for Israel, while the Soviet Union .insisted Israel give up hundreds of square miles of As the 15-nation council gath- jered, there were mounting indi- cations that Israel has no inten- j tion of being pressed into relin- quishing all its military gains, particularly strategic ones. In a message to UN Security-| Council U Thant, Syria said it was facing attack by Israeli) |tanks, infantry, artillery and) planes all along its 72-mile fron-| tier. It called for the Security| Council meeting "to stop the ag-| gression and punish the aggres-| sors."" | "Despite Is ra eli announce-' ments accepting the ceasefire, Israeli aggression continued) along the whole front, which at} this hour faces an Israeli invas-| ion on a very large scale," the! message said. | The Security Council already| was deadlocked over various proposals to bring peace to the Middle East. Russia wants Israel labellgd an aggressor, attd has called on the council to urge Israel to give up its territorial gains in the war. Ottawa Asked To Boost Aid To Research By 36 Per Cent OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana- dian Association of Physicists urged the government today to boost aid for research in physics at an annual rate of 36 per cent during the next five years. The association published a 385-page report on the extent of physics research, including there is a heavy stress on theo- retical studies at the expense of angled projects. @ report calls for an ex- penditure of $145,000,000 during the next five years to set wu five joint research institutes across Canada, The institutes, specializing in different branches of physical sciences, would acquire costly research equipment and make it available to scientists from in- dustry, universities and govern- ment. The institutes would specialize in astronomy, nuclear physics, sold-state materials and high en- ergy studies. The report says Canada has about 1,700 physicists available for research work and the num- ber would have to be doubled Financial support for physics research from ail sources to- talled $70,000,000 last year. The report says this amount should be increased by an average of 23 per cent annually, Association president John Robson of the University of Ot- tawa said in an interview that 70 per cent of the extra aid should come from the federal government, He said physics research has weak support from industry-- $5,000,000 last year -- because many Canadian subsidiaries rely on research by parent firms in the United States. The report said assistance for physics research should concen- trate on projects with direct ap- plication to Canada's geography and natural resource develop- ment, The report drafted by a com- mittee headed by Dr. D. C. Rose of the national research council, provides detailed information for the Science Council of Canada, which advises the government in five years, on research assistance. 4 Arab territory it overran. | President Zalman Shazar of Israel today leans against the Wailing Wall, remnant of Sob 's second temple, in the Old City of Jerusa- ISRAELI PRESIDENT AT WAILING WALL ' lem. The wall, in Jordanian sector, is one of Jews' holiest shrines. Denied ac- cess to it since 1948, they again gained access when Israeli troops yesterday cap- hs | tured all of Jerusalem. Jor- dan and Egypt now have agreed to cease-fire in war against Israel. (AP Wirephoto by radio from Tel Aviv) ter Pearson pled a review of the long-festering Middle East troubles with suggestions for a cure in a special Commons de- bate Thursday. He renewed his request that a United Nations force be inter- posed between warring Israel and the Arab states and added a new twist -- a demilitarized zone as a buffer area between them. The prime minister warned, however, that such a suggestion is only a temporary measure in PM Suggests Buffer' In Demilitarized Zone OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-|mitted to Israel's cause and|tered the government to "trying Russia to that of the Arab states, any new conflict in the area carries the inherent dan- ger of a head-on collision be- tween the world's two major powers, he added. Conservative Leader Diefen- baker sought the special Middle East debate. It was arranged by jumping the 1967-68 spending estimates of the external affairs department ahead of other de- partments. HITS FENCE STAND | resolving Arab-Israeli hostility. With the United States com- Speaking after Mr. Pearson, | the Conservative leader blis- WASHINGTON (AP) -- The battered Liberty, a U.S. Navy commications ship mis- takenly attacked by Israeli boats and planes off the Sinai Peninsula, steamed today to- ward a mid-Mediterranean ren- dezvous and medical aid for its wounded. The Liberty was to meet two destroyers from the U.S. 6th Fleet, on alert in the Mediter- ranean since the Arab-Israeli war broke out. Pentagon offi- cials said each carried a ship's surgeon. Defence department spokes- men said a revised tally showed 10 sailors were killed in the at- tack--which came without warn- ing--and 100 were wounded, 20 of them severely. AP correspondent Bob Horton cabled from aboard the America with the 6th Fleet that destroy- ers Davis and Massey. were sailing at 30 knots to meet the crippled ship, which was 450 miles to the east at the time of the incident Thursday. ORDERED ALOFT Israeli apologized for the at- Ship Battered By Israelis Carries Wounded For Aid tack, but not before the navy ordered planes from the 6th Fleet's two carriers, the Sara- toga and the America, to scram- ble and head for the scene. | The attack took place in early afternoon shortly after the Lib- erty, which has complicated electronic gear that can pick up and relay messages, moved into position about 15 miles north of the Sinai Peninsula in interna- tional waters, about 90 miles southwest of Tel Aviv. The ves- sel was showing its colors. Pentagon spokesmen gave this picture: The Liberty, a 450-foot con- verted Second World War cargo ship that carried a crew of 297 men, moved into position early Thursday to assure communica- tions for U.S. government posts in the Middle East and to as- sist in relaying information con- cerning the evacuation of U.S. dependents and other citizens from the Arab-Israeli war zone. An unspecified number of Is- raeli jets began a series of six strafing runs and three torpedo boats fired at least two tor- pedoes at the ship. One torpedo passed 25 yards astern of the Liberty but the second struck 1/1956 was diplomatically to be in agree- ment with both sides" in the dispute. Troops Called To Curb Mobs MOSCOW (AP)--The Kremlin | the defence lines as if they called out Red Army troops and! would try to break through but uniformed police in unprece-|were pulled back by student dented numbers today to stave) leaders in a series of small scuf- off an angry mob of 1,000 Arab-|fles. led students from damaging the} After some 20 minutes. of British and U.S, embassies here. chanting Soviet authorities told Soviet authorities stopped the|the demonstrators to leave demonstrators well away from|peacefully. They began to dis- both embassies. Aside from a|perse, few minor scuffles, there were no incidents and no concerted attempts to break through So-| ' viet defence lines. At both embassies the stu- dents waved signs and chanted slogans denouncing President | Johnson and British Prime Min-| ¢ ister Wilson. | 3 The students included Cubans| | and North Vietnamese, They} were spurred on by handmade) signs at Moscow University) claiming that U.S. and British) planes had bombed Cairo. Foreign correspondents who had witnessed numerous demon- strations at embassies here in recent years said they had never before seen such protection as that provided today by some! 1,000 Red Army soldiers and police. ADVANCE LINE In addition to the protective ranks in front of the embassy,| | an advance line of troops and} police was set more than a block away, where the demon- strators formed up. Students were allowed through this iine so they could march in front of the embassy. | A few students headed toward] Arms Curb George Haggar, president of the Arab Community of Canada, has said Pales- tine Liberation Organiza- tion Centres will be opened in Canada early next week. He said the decision to open offices to recruit doctors In almost the same breath he said Canada no longer is re- garded "as a nation without a national interest, unbiased to- wards one side or the other." And he made it clear that he found favor with the Israeli cause, quoting President Nas- ser of the United Arab Repub- lic as saying that his objective was to destroy Israel and "I cannot be neutral" about that. "The Arabs no longer trust us. The Israelis wonder about us. It will take a long time for Canada to have restored to it the respect and regard of Afri- can and Asian races." Mr. Pearson said the fact that tthe UN Emergency Force had kept the peace. between Israel and the Arab states for 10% years since the Suez crisis of evidence that such forces should be continued and made stronger. Mr. Diefenbaker rejected this. "Much is said about the UNEF force and that it main- tained the peace in the Middle East. It maintained nothing of the kind... It was simply an international body with a super- vising capacity but without the ability to direct, order or en- force," HELLYER CRITICIZED Mr. Diefenbaker took a swipe at Defence Minister Hellyer and his bill to unify the armed forces, recently passed by Par- liament. The aim had been to have the unified force play a greater peacekeeping role but the force had been booted out of the Middle East. "He deceived Parliament and now he's trying to' find an alibi," the Conservative leader said of Mr. Hellyer. Mr. Hellyer objected to this and said Mr. Diefenbaker's speech was "'one of the worst" and military volunteers was made by a strategy committee at Ottawa. (CP Wirephoto) Viet Cong Mortars Advocated WORKINGTON, England) |(Reuters)--Prime Minister Wil- son today said Russia, the United States, France and Brit- ain must co-operate to control the flow of arms to the Middle East if a constructive settle- ment is to emerge from the Arab-Israeli ceasefire. Speaking here, he added: "This is not only essential if future conflict is to be averted but, no less important, it could release economic resources for the infinitely more productive purposes of development for which much of the area has cried out for far too long." Wilson warned that without co-operation of the four powers --permanent members of the UN Security Council--there was little hope of a settlement. SNIPER WARS ON VICARAGE EMNETH, England (AP) For the last 10 nights, a nights, a sniper has shat- tered the sleep of Rev. Cecil Peckover and windows in his century-old vicarage. The first two shots came from a .22-calibre rifle, the others from a high-powered air rifle. Police say the shooting is a complete mystery. "T have no enemies in the parish to my knowledge," said the 51-year-old vicar. "My theory is that the sniper is a man disturbed through drink or sex who wants to get even with God --and as the parson typifies God, he starts shooting at my windows." the starboard side. he had heard in the Commons. Flail Hue SAIGON (AP) -- Communist gunners have raked the ancient city of Hue with mortar bar- rages for the second time in 10 days, killing one American. Three South Vietnamese sol- diers were wounded in the shell- ing Thursday night. The ground war in South Vietnam lapsed back into rel- lative quiet, and heavy weather over the Hanoi-Haiphong area limited American pilots to strikes on supply lines. One air force Phantom was shot down and the two airmen are miss- ing. It was the 576th U.S. plane reported downed over the North. The mortar barrage against Hue hit the U.S. compound, a nearby South Vietnamese dis- trict military headquarters and civilian homes. Fifty rounds hit the American compound. All air strikes in North Viet- nam Thursday were on road, rail and river traffic. The air force reported destroying 35 trucks and damaging at least 13 more--the best one-day total against road traffic in four months. In Quang Tin province a com- pany of about 150 guerrillas in- vaded a village, killing village school teacher, wound- ing. eight civilians and kidnap- ping 13. | KOSYGIN TALKS FIRST LB] WELCOMES MESSAGE the) Work Together-Hot Line Suggestion A WAVE FROM BRIDE Danish Crown Princess Margrethe sports a_ brief skirt as she waves to crowds from the steps, of Copen- hagen's City Hall today. Her fiance, Count . Henri Monpezat, greets the Lord | » Mayor, Urban Hansen, left, in the background. The 27- year-old princess will marry the 33-year-old French dip- lomat tomorrow. (AP Wirephoto by cable from Copenhagen) 4 WASHINGTON (AP)--Presi- dent Johnson and Soviet Pre- mier Kosygin made unpreced- ented efforts--even using the "hot line'--to try to: limit the Middle East war and bring the fighting to a quick end. For the first time a U.S. president and a Soviet premier exchanged messages over the hot-line teletype circuit between Moscow and Washington. It was opened four years ago following the confrontation be- tween President John F. Ken- nedy and Nikita Khrushchev in the 1962 Cuban missile crisis. Kosygin sent the first Middle East message to Johnson early Monday after Israeli and Arab armies clashed, the White House disclosed Thursday. The Soviet premier, it was learned, suggested the world's two great powers should work together in the interest of peace. It is understood his mes- sage affirmed what he said in an earlier note to the president --that the Soviet government did not want war in the Middle - East. Johnson replied to Kosygin the same day, also using the hot line, George Christian, White House press officer, re- ported. Christian did not disclose the content of the president's re- sponse, but it was reported\to have welcomed Kosygin's inter- est in limiting the war and bringing it to a quick conclu- sion. Another series of messages were exchanged Thursday after the president learned of an Is- raeli attack on the U.S. naval research ship Liberty off the Egyptian coast, The ship was damaged severely, 10 persons were killed, and planes of the U.S. 6th Fleet were ordered airborne immediately. Knowing that Soviet radar would pick up the takeoff of the aircraft--Soviet ships watch the 6th Fleet--Johnson sent a message to Kosygin over the hot line. The president reported the attack on the Liberty and placed the Soviet leader on the alert to the scrambling of 6th Fleet 'planes in order that he would. know that they were go- ing only to the stricken ship and were not bound for the war zone, ' } NASSER RESIGNS, ADMITS SETBACK | Earlier Charge Reiterated ' Against U.S | BEIRUT, Lebanon (Reuters) | President Gamal Abdel Nasser |of Egypt announced his resigna- |tion in a broadcast in Cairo ra- dio today. Nasser named Vice-President Zakaria Mohieddin to replace | him, In a nationwide broadcast on ____}radio and television, the Egyp- TR | tian leader said 'It has been|he decided to resign from all proved there were aircraft car-! . And Britain lriers near the enemy's shores to help him." He reiterated earlier charges that American and_ British planes helped Israel during the fighting. His resignation follows by less than 24 hours an Egyptian announcement of its acceptance of a ceasefire in its war against Israel. Nasser said in the broadcast public offices. Israel Force Enters Syria From AP-Reuters Israel invaded Syria today, |charging violation of a cease-| fire, but Egypt announced all| the guns had fallen silent on} the main front along the Suez) Canal. | Syria said Israel has launched ja large-scale invasion of its \territory and called for an im- \mediate meeting of the UN 1 |Security Council. | (At the United Nations, the} Security council has agreed to| Syrian demands to reschedule} this an afternoon meeting to morning.) Israeli troops struck into Sy | parently referring to alr at- tacks, the communique said: "Raids are still going on while our forces are undertaking the sacred duty of defending the motherland." The French shipping firm of Messageries Maritimes said one of its freighters halted in the Great Bitter Lake midway through the canal reported | 'military activity" was still go- jing on near the canal. A communique read over Da- mascus radio claimed that | Syrian anti - aircraft fire had downed one Israeli Mirage fighter over the border. ria to a plateau overlooking the} SYRIAN ASSAULT Sea of Galilee after reporting The Israelis said in a com- the Syrians opened fire with ar-| munique that Syrian batteries tillery and mortars from high ridges. Syria, which late Thursday announced it had accepted a ceasefire along with Egypt, said the Israelis had attacked with- out provocation and had been thrown back. | late this morning pounded sev- leral Galilean villages and | Syrian planes raided the city of | Tiberias on the Sea of Galilee. It added Syrian infantry ,sup- ported by armor, attacked a number of Israeli villages. But a second Syrian communi- Heavy artillery fire shook the/ que said two Israeli columns at- front from the Sea of Galilee southward to the Jordan River Valley. Cairo radio, after charging that Israeli troops launched at- tacks on Egyptian positions west of the Suez Canal, some time later announced; "All operations have stopped. The front is quiet now." With their forces trium- phantly established on the east bank of the Suez Canal, the Is-| raeli Army said it also had repulsed an Egyptian attack east of the canal in the Sinai Desert. But Egypt charged the Israelis were attacking its troops along the canal. | The Egyptian high command said Israeli forces were launch- ing new attacks on Egyptian troops that had withdrawn to positions west of the canai. Ap- ~ tempted to advance on Syrian positions at Al Bahriyat and Nasseriya, near the southeast shore of the Sea of Galilee, but both advances were '"'de- stroyed." Israel was jubilant at the overwhelming success of its army and air force in the four- day war. The Arabs were shocked and sullen following the agreement of Egypt and Syria Thursday to a ceasefire, hard on the heels of defiant ra- dio proclamations that they would fight on until Israel was crushed, Early today the commander of Israel's southern command sent a message to the Israeli chief of staff saying: "Our forces are on the banks of the Suez Canal. The whole of Sinal Peninsula is ours." NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Long, Difficult Negotiations Seen OTTAWA (CP) -- Exte said today he expects peac ral Affairs Minister Martin e negotiations in the Middle East will be long and difficult. Mr. Martin said he is not discouraged by the continued fighting on some parts of the Israeli-Arab lines in de cease-fire. fiance of the United Nations Nine Killed, 75 Wounded On U.S. Ship WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. Navy communications s day by Israeli forces, was missing and 75 wounded. Sir Francis Chiches PLYMOUTH, England ( The casualty count from the hip Liberty, torpedoed Thurs- set today by nine dead, 22 ter Makes Progress Reuters) -- Sir Francis Chi- chester has made good progress and will not need more blood transfusion, his doctors at the Royal Naval Hospital here said today. The 65-year-old yachtsman was taken to hospital Tuesday with a duodenal ulcer. = vtuttenamtn .. In THE TIMES Today .. Oshawa Steelers Lose To Orangeville--P. 8 East Whitby May Close GM Recalls 600 Hourly Rated Since Last April 1--P. 11 Ann Landers--12 Ajax News--5 City News--11 Classified--18 to 21 Comics--16 Editorial--4 Financial--17 m7 lenis neces mre Garbage Area--P, 5 Obituaries--21 Pickering News--5 Sports--8, 9, 10 Theatres--14 Weather--2 Whitby News--5 Women's--12, 13