Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Jun 1967, p. 1

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Home Newspaper' Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, neighboring Pickering and centres in Ont- crio and Durham Counties. VOL. 26--NO. 147 10¢ Single Co; She Oshawa Times py 55¢ Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JUNE 26, 1967 Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Departmen? tawa and for payment of Postage in Cosh ' Weather Report * Sunny and warmer today and Tuesday. Low tonight 58; high tomorrow 78, FOURTY PAGES KOSYGIN HOLDS TO FIRM DEMANDS COLORFUL "HALLELUJAH CHORUS" HEARD AT FOLK FESTIVAL The orchestra and chorus of the Oshawa Folk Festi- val are reaching the climax of their concert with the "Hallelujah Chorus" by George Frederick Handel, performed last night at Civic Auditorium: during Folk Festival Week opening ceremonies. The 100-voice choir and orchestra were conducted by F. Alan Ree- sor, M.Mus., director of music at Donevan~ Col- legiate and organist at St. Geeorge's Anglican Church. The chorus was comprised of choir members from sev- eral city churches and the brought thunderous ap- plause from the audience. Guest speaker at the open- ing was McIntyre Hood, former longtime resident of the city who now resides in orchestra from the Oshawa Symphony and other local orchestras. Earlier, "Can- ada," by John. Robertson of Oshawa, performed by the choir and orchestra, Scotland. Folk Festival ac- tivities are scheduled each day this week with a con- cert tonight at the band- shell in Memorial Park. A morning parade, followed la teacher telling his class they | by a wide variety of after- noon activities and a con- cert in the evening will wind-up Festival Week on Saturday. --Oshawa Times Photo 153 US. Hit..Viet From AP-Reuters SAIGON (CP) -- South Viet- namese paratroops and South Korean marines bore the brunt of ground fighting in Vietnam Sunday and reported killing 148 Communist soldiers, Only light and sporadic con- tact was reported by U.S. units conducting 21 major ground sweeps. U.S. headquarters reported 153 U.S. air missions over North Vietnam Sunday, almost all against supply routes. As they have. for almost a month, U.S. pilots avoided the Hanoi-Hai- phong region and the official reason given was bad weather. South Vietnamese paratroops scored the biggest success of the day in the ist Corps area just below the 17th parallel di- viding Vietnam. On a search- and-destroy operation the para- troops jumped a major force and reported they killed 105. Air Missions Supply Lines sonnel carriers and air strikes,jarea stretching from Hanoi to the 17th parallel, hitting randa.| To Moscow rails and truck and barge con- voys. the airborne battalion of about 500 men overpowered what was evidently a company or more. A South Korean patrol ran into a guerrilla band in coastal Phu Yen Province and killed 43 while suffering no casualties, Korean headquarters said. HARASS VIET CONG Troops of the 173rd Airborne Brigade continued to report scattered contact in the central highlands area where Commu- nist forces chopped up a para- troop company last Thursday. Night bivouacs of -the 173rd were harassed by grenade- throwing enemy but no major fights developed. U.S. headquarters said Police Identify Three Fatalities MORRISBURG, Ont. (CP)--|armed forces. Cairo informants Police Sunday identified three|Said, persons killed Saturday when their small foreign car collided with a bus near this eastern|iast week and conferred with} Ontario community. Dead are Movses Guluzian,of Egypt in Cairo for 32, his 28-year-old wife Arpine,| land. Mrs. ie e hoo late|Alice Mikaelian, 24. All three|night stressed "mutual under-|/nS Guluzian's reports showed 106 North Viet-|were from Montreal. namese regulars died in the) Jack Palaloumdian of Mont- battle in which 80 U.S. para-\real, another occupant of the) 130\car which was broken in two} by the impact, and 19 bus pas-| i U.S. Navy and air force pi-isengers were injured, none of; Informed sources in Moscow troops were killed and wounded. Supported by armored per- lots ranged over the panhandle them seriously. sister, | 4. nt a Returns Podgorny . : As I | | United States after a nine - day) MOSCOW (AP) -- President |St@y: said today he will fly to : Cuba from here flight Nikolai V. Podgorny returned Scheduled for 11:50 a.m. EDT. Sunday from his mission to} As Kosygin left the Soviet| Cairo where he is reported to| United Nations Mission for eh |have promised Soviet military|"®4y International Airport, he Cuba His Next Stop-off Kosygin's Visit Ends NEW YORK (AP) -- Soviet} was asked by reporters whether|/both Havana and Gander, Nfid. : ft Gapue, Premier Kosygin, leaving the/it is true that he will fly to| Kennedy International Airport/@8ainst the validity of unsup-;/RESIGNED FROM MINISTRY Cuba. He nodded his head and|officials said the flight plan for/POrted evidence from accom- |Middle East," | of 'still committing aggression|one hour and 17 minutes. Russ Premier Yields Little By ALEXANDER: FARRELL against Vieinam," although the UNITED NATIONS (CP)--/war in Southeast Asia has been The way Premier Alexei Kosy-| condemned "by all progressive gin told it Sunday night, he and forces throughout the world."' President Johnson have discov Kosygin gave perhaps the best ered that they are, indeed, a reading of the temperature of long way apart U.S.-Soviet relations when he After the second round of the was asked whether Johnson, in U.S.-Soviet summit talks ended the event of a visit to the Soviet in the little college town of Union would get the same Glassboro, N.J., the Soviet pre- warn welcome as you have re- mier moved quickly to get his ceived in the United States." version of them on the record In reply, he put the question flying back to New Yovk imme- squarely in the context of the diately by helicopter to give a| Vietnam war. "I believe that if press conference at UN head- the <¢ sssion were ended and quarters a truly peaceful policy pursued, If Kosygin and the U.S. leader the welcome that President achieved any fruitful under-' Johnson would receive in the standing on any issue, other, Soviet Union would be very cor- than a treaty to ban the spread dial indeed," of nuclear weapons, his remarks| CAUSE FOR CONCERN and his manner concealed it ef-- Kosygin seemed _ nervous fectively. The cool, unsmiling) about China, which exploded its Soviet leader was as grave as/first hydrogen bomb June 17, the day the UN General Assem- bly convened in emergency ses- sion on the Middle East at Soviet request. He said China should obey the spirit of the 1963 Moscow treaty banning tests of nuclear weap- ons in the atmosphere, although it didn't sign the treaty. 'We are against all tests by nuclear powers and China is a nuclear power." He was asked about the pos- sibility of China supplying nu- clear arms to Arab countries in jan effort to undermine Soviet influence. Brushing this' ques- The UN General Assembly jtion off in a hurry, he said: "T must condemn Israel for ag-)don't think the question arises gression, he said, and Israel|of China giving nuclear weapons must "pay compensation for the|to the Arab countries." damage it has caused in the! The first formal press confer- jence ever given at the UN by He accused the United States|a Soviet premier, it lasted for have all failed and all deserved to fail He said there can be no im- provement in U.S.-Soviet rela- tions unti] the United . States stops bombing North Vietnam and withdraw its forces from) South Vietnam. He said Israel must immedi ately and unconditionally with- draw its forces from occupied territory in Egypt, Jordan and Syria before any further steps can be taken towards peace in the Middle East. BERATES ISRAELIS 'New Trial Given (Rev. Horsburgh | By BEN WARD OTTAWA (CP) jroboration in order to be ac- Warning | ceptable Five girls and three boys were through an interpreter said:|the four - engine turbine-propel- plices, the Supreme Court of/the main witnesses against "How did you know?" Then he added: "Da," the Russian word for "Yes." jler plane was filed by a Rus- sian pilot at MacArthur Airpor |headquarters of the Air Traffi t,/ | Cc} Canada today ordered a new|Horsburgh, who resigned from rial for former United Church|the United Church ministry in minister Russell Horsburgh on} June of 1965 after the Ontario Earlier today, the crew had|Control Centre that handles At- five charges of contributing to|Supreme Court turned dowra his requested flight information for aid to rebuild Egypt's battered however, the Kremlin |wants a greater voice in the re- building process. } Podgorny left Moscow early} |President Gamal Abdel Nasser} three} eee i Wage | By FRED COLEMAN A communique Saturday|. MOSCOW (AP)--Russia's rul- Communist party issued standing" in the Podgorny-Nas-|Sunday a 25,000-word statement |ser talks, but made no mention/f policy stressing that the main of agreement-on specific issues|S0viet task now is to build eco- and said nothing. about military;nomic strength at home while| jaid. following a policy of peaceful | co-existence abroad. |said the Russians had promised| A Kremlin summation of 50 |to rebuild Egypt's armed forces/years of Communist power in up to their strength before the| Russia said "The domination of crushing defeat by Israel in the imperialism on the world scene Middle East war. jhas ended" because of - the |this Peaceful Co-existence Said Russia's Objective lantie flights. There are. three Russian planes in the Kosygin party, Put the Havana flight plan had been filed for\pnly one aircraft. | Kosygimwill be the first high lranking Sdviet official to v Cuba since First Deputy Pre-| mier Anatas I. Mikoyan travel-| \led there in February, 1960. The document dipped into his- tory to underscore this point. It emphatically rejected Leon Trotsky's demand that world revolution come first, calling an attempt to weaken Communist construction here. The document, spread across 4% pages of all Soviet newspa- pers, was entirely a_ re-state- ment of basic domestic and for- eign policy lines. DEATH LIKENED | TO MISNOMER -- MIAMI, Fla. (AP) --A | Miami rabbi delivered his | own eulogy Sunday by | means of a tape recording | made 18 months ago. | Rabbi Samuel Max Mach- tei, 67, who died Friday, said at the time the record- ing was made he wanted it juvenile delinquency. appeal, In a 4 to 3 decision, the court; They testified about a series said the orignial trial judge er-|of incidents at the Park Street red in treating as independent|United Church in Chatham be- witnesses a group of boys and|tween July of 1963 and June of girls who swore in 1964 that the/1964, The theme of their evi- Chatham clergyman encour-/dence was that Horsburgh on aged them to have sexual inter-/numerous occasions persuaded course in a church apartment.|them to use the vacant apart- r. Justice Ronald Martland,|ment for sexual activity. writing the main majority judg-| A year later one of the young- ment, said the youngsters, who|sters and another witness who were 14 and 15 years old at the} was 19 made out affidavits stat- time, should have been treated | ing that their trial evidence was as accomplices in the offences/false and was part of a con- alleged. Spiracy designed to ruin Hors- As accomplices, their evi-/burgh while taking the blame dence would have required cor-'away from them. myn NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Reports from Yugoslavia said/8tOWth of Soviet military) But the format and emphasis} played at his funeral. "I carty no malice to the | Chinese Down U.S. Airplane grave," the recording said. | "To you who have walked | with me along the way, I have not gone. "You will recall golden hours. "Death is a misnomer. I'm just going out one door and into another: Just like going into another room." WASHINGTON (AP) -- A U.S. Air Force F-4C plane was downed by Chinese aircraft in the South China Sea the | early today after apparently straying into Chinese air space in the vicinity of Hainan Island, the defence depart- ment announced, The announcement attributed the over- flight to apparent failure of the U.S. plane's navigational and communications equipment. Home Of Aged Act Revised TORONTO (CP) -- The Ontario cabinet has approved a 33-page revision of regulations under the Homes for the Aged Act urder which the province will subsidize con- struction of municipal care centres for the chronically it, John Yaremko, social services minister, said in a_ state. ment that several municipalities already have plans for rest homes under way as the result of implementing legise | | The Soviet idea of peacefuljpolicy lines approved for cele: Gvishiani Mrs. Gvishiani {also supporting so - called na- They repeated familiar| The New Jersey governor's wife|0n building domestic strength. kind any mother would be proud of." ai F |might, but the statement was a military pact had been signed| ™8n!, ; jof the re-statement were re- but tags in Cairo indicated|"@latively restrained on cold/garded as significant. The for- jco-existence again was defined/brations of the 50th anniversary broadly -to include peacefuljof the Bolshevik Revolution wt uw Warm Lovely it ional liberation movements charges against oth the] " \against the West. |United States and China, but] GLASSBORO, N.J. (AP) --| deliberately avoided the sting of! says the 38-year-old daughter of| Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosy-| li | Of P ] ti R f | difficulties on the aid issue. |" issues: jmat was the basic theses or |competition with the West while|Nov. 7 and for the years ahead. But the emphasis clearly was) earlier propaganda blasts. . gin is a "warm, lovely girl--the the Middle East he is worried "She's so charming," Mrs. Richard J. Hughes said Sunday after entertaining Kosygin's daughter, Mrs. Ludmilla A. Gvishiani, for more than three hours at nearby Island Beach State Park. From AP-Reuters VATICAN CITY (CP)--Pope| Paul created 27 new cardinals} of the Roman Catholic Church Other guests at what Mrs. Hughes called "a seaside sum- mit" were Mrs. Lyndon B. John- The meeting lasted 23 min- utes. Speaking of the Middle East crisis, the Pope said the fight- by the sad situation in some) countries which challenged the! right of the church to a peace-! ful existence. lation passed last year. 2m AA ing had worsened the problem of Palestine refugees and "made evident the overly pre- carious and inadequate situation of the holy places (in Jerusa- lem), which are dear and sac- red for every Christian heart." MUST BE FREE AREA "The holy city of Jerusalem must be for always what it rep- resents -- a city of God, a free oasis of peace and prayer, a today, deplored the plight of Palestine refugees and ap- pealed for the internationaliza- | tion of Jerusalem. | The Pope also called on all) Vietnamese -- from the North and the South--to '"'once again jlove each other as_ brothers" jand to work to rebuild their) country into a free and inde-| , Security forces closed the|pendent land. Island 2,600-acre state park to incom-| Pope Paul spoke in a closed ing traffic during the visit. Re-|consistory he held with 35 mem-|place of encounter, of elevation porters and photographers were|bers of the Sacred College of|and of concord for all, with its kept behind barriers at the foot|Cardinals to confirm the 27\/own internationally guaranteed) 'Unfortunately, the situation | of a 200-yard long driveway in|prelates he nominated May 29/statute." in the Southeast Asian country front of the house. to join them. The Pope said that apart: fromlis still so troubled," soa and her daughter, Lynda Bird. All spent the afternoon at the Hughes' 10-room summer home on the edge of the Atlantic Ocean while President Johnson and Kosygin discussed world » problems here. RELATIVE PRIVACY .. In THE TIMES Today Legionnaires Split Week-End Games -- P. 14 Folk Festival Opens -- P. 17 Ajax Municipal Complex Opened -- P. 5 He was believed to be refer- ting to Communist countries | and Guinea which was accused| recently by the Vatican news-| L'Osservatore Romano of tak- ing anti-religious measures. ENDANGERS PEACE | On Vietnam, he said the fight-! ing there endangered world) peace. He had increased his} initiatives for peace in Vietnam and encouraged peace moves by others. Ann Landers--14 Financial--7 Obituaries--23 Sports--14, 15 Television--17 Theatres--16 Weather--2 Whitby News--5 Women's--18, 19 5 Ajax News-- Classified --20 to 23 City News--17 Comics--6 Editorial--4 Lynda Bird at Beach State Park as the guest' of Mrs. Richard Hughes, wife of New Jer- sey's governor. (AP Wirephoto) prior to summit talks be- tween the two world lead- ers. Mrs. Gvishiani later spent the afternoon with Mrs. -Lyndon Johnson and MRS. LUDMILLA Gvishi- ani, daughter of Soviet Kosygin, chats .with Presi- dent Lyndon Johnston at Glassboro, N.J., yesterday mn ALUN r AML

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