Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Oct 1967, p. 1

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* won rere enrgenetn . sceananitammimmieteeetint PHILBY SCANDAL ROCKS SECURITY SERVICE IN BRITAIN By CY FOX LONDON (CP)--Fresh stories of a top Briton's tortuous career as a secret agent for the Soviet Union are prompting calls in some quarters here for reassurance about the current state of the British security service, The new accounts also have elite schools. i AL Mn Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 26--NO. 228 revived denunications "Old Boy network"--a tradition involving implicit trust by some administrators in the and fidelity of men who were their classmates in the nation's All the fuss centres on Harold (Kim) Philby, described by one former friend as "an attractive, PMR 5 10¢ Single Co 5c Per Week Sacra Delivered of the energetic man with a painful stutter." A former senior sparkplug in Britain's espionage system, natives of his bizarre career say he fed reports on the sys- tem's doings to his real mas- ters--in Moscow, Philby, 55, is said to have tipped off Donald Maclean and talents ua ASH Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1967 Guy Burgess in 1951 that their doings as Soviet spies inside British officialdom were known to their London superiors. In 1963, Philby--like Burgess and Maclean before him--defected to the Soviet Union. He now works there as a journalist in the Communist cause. Philby's 24-year-old son, just iti back from a Moscow visit with his father, was asked Sunday, wh ether the senior Philby joined the Soviet secret service as far back as 1933-34. "That would appear to be so,"' said John Philby, a photog- rapher whose wife is said by one published account to be in Canada. She works as an ani- conn neegent Yo mator for cartoon films but her Canadian place of residence was not immediately known. The fresh versions of Kim Philby's story, including the 1933-34 starting point, were given splash prominence in two of Britain's' leading weekend newspapers, The Observer and Canadian-born Lord Thomson's Sunday Times. Marcus Lipton, a Labor MP who fruitlessly named Philby in 1955 as "'third man"? in the Bur- gess-Maclean affair, called the new accounts "'a very sad com- mentary on the efficiency of our intelligence service." Cambridge-educated Philby, as portrayed by The Observer, faked a right-wing political position in the 1930s. He worked furiously during the Second World War in Britain's espio- nage efforts against the Soviets while in fact telling Russia all about it. After the war, so the account goes, he kept on spying for Moscow while chief of Brit- ish intelligence in Washington. bli. Weather Report Mostly sunny and warm today and Tuesday. Low tonight 57 High tomorrow 78, Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Departme: Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash ad TWENTY-FOUR PAGES Houdaille general -mana- Auto Workers 1 union local ger and vice - president ' : Cc 4. Bhoke Commtity cheer for victory as com- pany and employee contri- butions to this year's ap- peal are tallied at the Chest chairman Terence Kelly and "Jock" Turner, member of Houdaille United bumper factory. Mr. Kelly said today more than $4,000 had been pledged or collect- ed from hourly-rated em- ployees, with a third of canvassed. rated emp $2,500," the employees still total contribution of hourly- Mr. to be "They "Last year, are loyees was Kelly said. Hopeful BOMBAY (CP)--Prime'Mln-; saIGoN ister Indira Gandhi said' Sundsy|/namese big guns have she hopes the exchange of fire} showering propaganda forces Sunday on the Tibet-Sik-|hard-pressed outpost below the kim border would remain &/demilitarized zone, an Ameri- local incident and not develop)can spokesman disclosed today. | "Hey, hey, LBJ, how many|the Vietnamese." into a big affair. "But if it escalates," she\kids have you killed today?" said, "we must be prepared to/said one of the leaflets scat- (CP)--North Viet- started|shells on the post at Con Thien, A ' leaflets|target of steady bombardment between Chinese and Indian|onty U.S. marines holding aj throughout September. Mrs. Gandhi Big North Vietnam Guns ._ Fire Propaganda Leaflets tered from bursting actillery|fired into Con Thien three times in the last 10 days. The Con Thien base, carved out of a small red mud hill, | A second said: '"Americans--| took 1,000 rounds one day in the steady and children. Leave Vietnam to| pounding last mouth, | North Vietnamese guns above were quiet stop bombing innocent women|course of | The U.S. spokesman saidjthe DMZ |shells stuffed with leaflets were) with only four meet the situation with all our| strength." She called upon Indians to back the troops by increasing production India and China each accused Mystery Man At Dieppe The U.S. B-52 bombers U.S. bases below the zone, the! spokesman said. commanl crippling damage in raids on the demilitarized zone. | -HOUDAILLE COLLECTIONS BOLSTER COMMUNITY CHEST DRIVE ) TORONTO THUGS STEAL $70,000 eration of Home Associations by McLaughlin _ of memory of his w Adelaide 'Louise, the federation fr 1936, it was announced today. FEDERATION GETS $200,000, Brinks Truck Held Up FROM COL. R.S. McLAUGHLIN HAMILTON (C dowment of $200,000 has been presented to the Ontario Fed- P)--An en- ilton, president of the federa- At Yorkdale Shop Plaza pees said the money will J enable Home and School to | TORONTO (CP)--Two armed|sui i = School extend its program, especial- |men with nylon stockings pet a Dr gag = ol. R. Ss. ly in the fields of child study jover their heads today held up| Police warned the men are Oshawa in and leadership training. 'an Eaton's cash office at York-| considered dangerous ife, the late Mrs. McLaughlin was a jdale shopping plaza and : : president of charter member of the fed- lescaped with a reported $70,000 | LARGEST THEFT om 1930 to eration and was active in it | The company's burglar alarm If the loss of between $70,000- from its inception in 1919 |sounded while the hold-up was $75,000 is confirmed, it will be averaging 40 cents per week, which we feel is required if we are to meet our campaign objec- tive of $358,000." (Oshawa Times Photo) | PARIS drink-and-driv Communist | "breath che Sunday, shells falling on eletined! Then at clo have inflicted around the ci BOOZE BUS PLAN PROPOS LIVERPOOL, England (AP)--The city fathers of Liverpool! are thinking about setting up a special bus service for drinkers--to «| keep them from driving. Britain's a | into effect next week, allow- ing police to make random cks"' chemical measuring device. In Liverpool, pub crawl- ers would be encouraged to leave their cars at sing booze bus would pick them up and deliver them to their homes in and |-- ty. strict the other of firing first. Fighting between the two Himalayan border armies Had Special Bodyguard broke out at the Cho La Pass, It said that seven B-52 raids) in four days last week touched} off 110 secondary explosions,| - Big Gains Made By French Reds (AP)--Communists;In the first vote last Sunday,) WwW and less radical leftists counted|when an absolute majority was World War. wide gains today in French|needed for victory, all left-wing| without accents in calm voices. rts, AIT é ners Aaa Ai Mrs. F, H. Keeler, of Ham- until she died in 1958. \taking place. the largest theft in the Toronto The money taken was in two area. lbags of the Brinks security| Largest robberies reported previously was $34,000 in jewel- pulled up to the office just after|"y and gold coins from the the two men fled in what wit-|home of the late Percy R. Gar- nesses said was a blue Valiant|diner in 1965, ar | The thieves are believed to Police said one man was|have overlooked large amounts armed with a Sten gun, a type|of money still in an open safe of submachine gun produced|in the Eaton's office. \for use during the Second| The holdup occurred minutes before the store's weekend They said both oke| receipts were to be picked up. i men spoke\" Police roadblocks were set up In\ One man wearing an exford|in the metropolitan area and firm. A Brinks armored truck r joining forces in against President 'policies at/nomea, nists tripled their ground, but the ele | showed grassroots new aws come Renewing their e lance with a jup 119 seats over \their total | regional councils t time the stop to The voting was \$ seats. from both sides. Gaullists gained The Communists tion with the government's eco-|Social security charges became |nomic and social reforms, and|the key Communist campaign la well-organized campaign by) a | Communists. |working man most. | With Report with France's jparties, the Communists picked|with the Soviet Union and his} ¢, 7 representation home. |Communist leftists won 667| bility. Observers noted, too, the) seats, a gain of five. stage of a two-phase election.| ing their 10 years in power. rh fter a campaign|the runoff, the Communists and 'suit and gloves was about|PTOvineial police cruisers de Gaulle's|leftists agreed on single candi- five feet 10 mene and weighed searched for the wanted car. 'The Commu-jdates with guaranteed support|about 150 pounds. The other, of stout build and weighing about a,s come British PM cam 190 pounds wore ction Sunday/hard and the Goultete ites a dark brown By ARTHUR L. GAVSHON dissatisfac-|The Gaullist regime's new Romney R d eady DETROIT (AP) -- Governor; SCARBOROUGH (AP) -- : porns | ; eorge Romney, who has\Labor party chairman John 1961, raising|recent Te BY Poland were als? warned that internal rebellion/Boyd unleashed an attack today 0 175 'eas units sor cea respecta,| could destroy the United States on Prime Minister Wilson's eco- aie ay : i. |with _ "all the violent means|nomic policies, charging that ' ists' fai stablis imaginable," will report today the government | used boxing the oud tat eae ae the New Detroit Committee|gloves when dealing with work- : ss on his tour of U.S, slum areas. jers and kid gloves with busi- Romney, a top contender for|nessmen. ltarget. They said it hurt the lectoral alli-| GRASSROOTS REBEL Socialist} De Gaulle's policy of detente 3% miles from Nathu La, where fierce clashes took place in mid-September. PX A defence ministry spokes- LONDON (CP)--Air Vice the mysterious British expert who accompanied the Chinese claimed. fe radio business SOLDIERS ATTACKED | South Africa. : A few soldiers from both) "I was in touch th Y sides then attacked each other|about 15 months ago," Sir Tai and there were a few casual-|Said i y ties, the spokesman said. |"His own family wouldn Following this, and | fired on Indian troops with|write a letter, confirming tha recoilless guns and mortars. what he said was true." Indian forces "gave adequate] Stories have been told ove reply," the spokesman said. in Pretoria nnn tesunununn tne cS aa MRS. WARD MRS, NEWMAN - DISTAFF SIDE OF ELECTION FEATURED IN THE TIMES The Times today presents the first i on , sents st of a special series of features giving the distaff side of the ti campaign in the Oshawa and Ontario South ridings. The articles are based on interviews with the wives of the candidates seeking seats at Queen's Park : The articles are being written b ' winckle, women's editor of The 'Times vigekegeghaes Mrs. Tom Edwards, the wife i : , ; of the NDP ci in Ontario South, was interviewed for the gio peti today, On Wednesday, Mrs. William Newman wife of the Conservative candidate, will be interviewed and on wc Friday, the Liberal contender's wife, Mrs, Alban Interviews with the wives of ¢ awa riding will be published next a os baal ines MRS. EDWARDS -|persons in Canadia |Marshal Sir Victor Tait saysjin the tragic 1942 rai radar) Canadians, the Chinese| believe his exploits and I had to} paper tlinstructions to kill him if neces-| GROUND LULL the years that a few mysterious) , paper side. t! But he was given a_body- says they were unde |sary if it appeared that he riwourd be caught by the enemy.|tinued, with "40th, Robert Thrussell of Moose name of the man he might have ince, at the) killed. last) | ts jran. across' Nissenthal 25th Dieppe reunion August. who was director of radar for the RAF during World War, said in his inter-| |that those who guarded Nissen-|nam's the enemy alive." 'Saturday. ; lindicating successful bomb bits] n uniforms on ammunition stores and fuel. d were not) 'The propaganda barrage was the| Tt bearue afi ane oat believed to be the first time i i i he observer RAY' ® O!/North Vietnamese gunners tried ee La incident! Canadians in the Dieppe raid them was N h ¢ | & le over a disputed Ane which| during the Second World War is ed to break a 25-year silence], ws base, though Viet Cong 5! yack Nissenthal now operating and t'l his story. The newS-|cuerrillas often leave similar] ppj as arold|ane. Sorged through city streets Nissenthal was on a h |Philby, described by a British f J , nese ss . jleaflets for American troopS|newspaper as "'the re aOR mission to get as much e€neMy) sweeping through the country- Dales Mag ects A hc hailed Sa with 'him! radar information as possible. |, tant spy that the Russians ever ' s American in an interview Sunday. guard of 10 South Saskatchewan | aronned millions of leaflets onlreports i t|Regiment soldiers. The neWs-| north and South Vietnam. jreports in r Nine of the 10 died under|reported. American troops and| withering German fire and thelair strikes killed 28 North Viet-|i, the 1930s namese in that one, in the ceN-| cined Brash intelileente Jaw, Sask., did not know the|tral highlands of Pleiku PrOV- |r oge Rocce omen | n A the geapegrenre =. Pe Philby's closest friend here|the possibility of a playoff, the \been forced to execute, until he|A meric an Infanin N WAS| now is reported to be Donaldjfrustrations of 21 years were) diplomat|loosed as fans began a rev lview with The Canadian Press\day of strikes at North Viet-jread the Pilots raided|come." Both. the Sunday Times thal "were under orders not to both Kep and a field at Kien|and The Observer in London| helpless and two let him fall into the hands of|An, near the port of Haiphong, 'published airfields. | had in the Wes planes have/ment on the ifriend said. Philby, Soviet Union only one Maclean, a arti 'Sunday. On Reports issenthal who decid-|t9 yse psychological warfare on| MOSCOW (AP) t," will not com- weekend London, a 55, defected to the|Sunday four A lull in ground fighting fient| His son confirmed Sunday that! BM\| Philby had been recruited by|the pennant. the Soviet secre ae U.S. pilots again struck Sun-| who fled here dg I i ue day a MiG air base 38 " to have tipped him and the Jate/hours of today. Tait, 75, a native of Winnipeginorth of Hanoi at Kep. "SeiGuy Burgess that they were halted traffic in) spokesman said they put sevet-|ynder suspicion of spving. the. Second' al craters' in the field. cles t service early| years befor2 he) | Red Sox Philby Mum First Pennant Since 1946 BOSTON (AP)--Firecrackers;chanted, 'We're No, Il! across Square, strangers shook hands| Boston University police were .- ¥Harolajand some kissed, and Red Sox flashed to celebrate the news | Sox' Fenway When word came lof a doubleheader crowd square and The |the eid | Maclean was quoted today asiarea. It was the second straight|saying he was "sure Philby will papers when they} Boston mounied about himifingers in a V-for-Victory 'salute. The crowd American League pennant since! sixteen members of the A crowd of about 4,000 began|cjyub were arrested for cnlawtil close gathering in the equare, the night shortly after the year team defeated Minnesota Twins years Ag0.|,">"to clinch at least a tie for|,\. rched up Commonwealth nia Angels had defeated Detroit and/Tigers 8-5 in the second game| oq of 3,000 were dispersed {by was|that continued into the early) POLICE FRUSTRATED the 1968 Republican presidential) Boyd, one of the leaders of nomination, meets today with|the big Amalgamated Engineer- civic, business and labor Jead- ing Union, made his charge in ers appointed to the committee'a speech opening the Labor by Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh.|party's annual convention in This group was charged by|this Yorkshire resort town. Cavanagh to begin a massive| Boyd expressed the baffle. We're|effort of reconstruction in the|ment of the 6,000 delegates over |wake of the July 23-30 riot that) the government's policy of \killed 43 persons in Detroit andideflation, which has sent unem- ldid an estimated $500,000,000| ployment soaring to a 27-year 'peak. Fans Run Rampant Kenmore|No, 1!" /summoned to heip disperse the| fans, many of them students | damage. team's first/from the nearby university. same Sa | NEWS HIGHLIGHTS | Council To Study Land Offer Oshawa City council tonight will consider a Simpsons- Sears offer to buy five acres of land in the city's industrial park for $20,000 on which a central warehousing and distribution centre will be constructed, J. P. Williams, Oshawa business and 'industrial development commissioner told board of control today the commission is recommend- ing the sale of the land, Initial employment may be 50 to 75 persons, he said. An option to develop an adjoining five acres of land will also be under consideration. Mr, Williams said the total capital outlay may involve $500, 000. Chief Gets Anonymous Threat PRESTON, Ont. (CP) -- Police Chief Arthur Woods said today an anonymous threat against his life has been made in connection with his role in the forcible removal last Thursday of two foster children from the home of Mrs. Arthur Timbrell of Preston. "T received a threaten- ing telephone call," the chief said in an interview today. surement nt Devil's Discipies motorcycle neat|assembly when they began Park home,| gathering near the square. About 500 of the crowd Avenue, tearing down street 'signs before dispersing. that Califor-/ , mie away at the State House atop Beacon Hill, a to eliminate by police. Ninety miles away at the Uni- elry versity of Massaciusetts cam- pus in Amherst, thousands of students spilled out of dormito- ries and across the campus, yelling and setting off fire- works. The next adventure for fol- e lowers of the Red Sox will be Lope Yherrithe World «Series, opening Wednesday at Fenway Park against St. Louis Cardinals. surrounding clapped and HOUSING POLICY KEY ISSUE OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minise ter Pearson's Liberal govern- ment faces its first test of con- fidence today since the Com- mons resumed sittings last Monday. The Conservatives have indi- cated they will move a non-con- fidence motion based on the government's housing policy. It will be voted on before the House rises Tuesday night. Opposition spokesmen of all parties were critical of the. gov- ernment's decision to raise the mortgage rate under the National Housing Act a full per centage point to 8% per cent. The business before the House when it resumes sitting at 2:30 p.m. today will be a money supply motion, one of six periods during each session when the opposition can discuss any subject it wishes and vote lack of confidence in the gov- ernment by an amendment to the supply motion, There is a two-day time limit on the debate. With four vacancies in the Commons, three of them from the Conservative benches, the Liberals have a one-seat edge. In the past they have always LIBERALS HAVE ONE-SEAT EDGE annum mentee Pearson Faces Vote Of Confidence been able to count on support from at least one of the three independents and some of the Creditiste and Social Credit members. Bert Leboe, Social Credit MP for Cariboo, said Sunday he didn't see how he could support a Conservative move to defeat the government when the new Conservative leader hadn't had a chance to prove himself in the Commons. Robert Stanfield, the new Tory leader, will seek. a Com- mons seat in a Nov. 6 byelece tion in Nova Scotia's Colches+ ter-Hants riding. Meanwhile, he _.In THE TIMES Today .. Social Credit In Race--P. 13 Ajax Arena Opens--P, 5 Jaycees Win Title--P, 10. watches proceedings from @ Ann Landers--14 gallery seat. 2 Ajax News--5 cog Mg prepay oohy City News--13 ouse leader and acting Oppo- : sition leader, will probably Clossified--18, 19, 20 open today's debate and move Comics--23 the no-confidence amendment. Editorial--4 On Wednesday the House Financiol--22 picks up the budget debate, left Obituaries --20 unfinished in the spring, and Sporte----10, 11 will continue with it to the end Television---23 of the week. An interested spectator in the gallery Thursday will be Hor- ace King, speaker of the British House of Commons. = The Senate stands adjourned 3 until Oct. 31. \ : > é Theatres--8 Weather--2 Whitby News--5 Women's--14, 15, 16 ial

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