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Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Aug 1964, p. 1

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Thought For Today The man who travels in cir. cles eventually finds out he doesn't know which way to turn, Price Not Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1964 ~ VOL. 93 -- NO. 180 10 Cents per Copy * he Oshawa Cine 'horized os Second Class Mail swa and for payment o Weather Report | Sunny and warmer with a few cloudy periods, winds, Post Office Department f Postage in Cash, S unday. Light EIGHTEEN "PAGES c ~ Photos Of Moon Raise U.S. Hopes | Of Landing Man By RALPH DIGHTON | not be determined from photo-, photographed by Ranger 7 -- a PASADENA, Calif. (AP) --|staphs alone. a eerie mg bq pend 'Historic pictures tak .| To these conclusions, an-|C/ouds southwest of the centre ger? on aetiy bocery ona nounced after several hours'/of the face of the moon--would study Friday, additional evalu-!|be unsuitable for landing be- men can land on the moon) ations will be added today at aj¢ause of the large number of ~~ SaaS pain de Presidential press conference. | Small craters, Kuiper said. r The thousands of tiny pock signed GOEs TO WASHINGTON _| marks, he said, seemed to clus- That's the consensus of a' Dr. William H. Pickering, di-|ter at some distance from large board of scientists who Friday) rector of Jet Propulsion Labor-| primary craters such as Coper- night released 10 of the 4,316|atory which made Ranger 7 and|nicus, about 200 miles north of sensational photographs Ranger released the first pictures, left/target zone. He said this indi-' 7 snapped in the final 16 min-| Friday night to be present at a/ cates the big craters were cre- utes and 40 seconds before it| White House session today. ated by meteors and meteorites crashed on the moon at 9:25) President Johnson earlier|which exploded on impact and a.m. EDT Friday morning. \télep honed congratulations to/threw out fragments of many The first close - up pictures) Pickering ig ge at es sizes, ever taken of the moon --j|laboratory, which was much) ' 7 AND " termed 1,000 times better than| criticized in recent months for got any RAGAT any made heretofore from spac| six straight previous failures in ; e a ci ae perp ses craft or with earth telescopes--| the $200,000,000 Ranger moon re- i an hs e clus righ ae - showed that even its vast, ap-/Search program. i Rghe ool saintives acy pee parently smooth "seas" are) At a press conference, where} areas which could ned 'ood land- pocked with craters, some as|slides of the historic Ranger| i, aites: he sald 8 small as dishpans, |moon pictures were shown Fri-|'"& S!€S, Re sare. There may be some dust on|day night, Dr. Gerard Kuiper| Dr. Eugene Shoemaker of the 7 | lanetary lab-| U.S. Geological Survey at Flag- the moon, in layers up to a foot| of the lunar and planetary | atath Ari ther ofthe ff thick, but not deep enough tojoratory of the University ofl ey Lari tet) prey vt a phe bury a landing vehicle, the scien-| Arizona said the most signifi- eh . ay -- t a tent ta tists concluded. And, underneath|cant thing about them is that|P20tosraphs, suggested that fu- the dust, evidence indicates, is|they reveal no unanticipated -- of th pct rig raft veg tex- a hard primary layer, Whether|problems to be met in the de-/ (Ure Of te surlace in the cen- it would support the weight of/ sign of moon landing craft MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Brit- ain and Russia gave joint back- ing to the idea of an interna- tional treaty to halt the spread of nuclear weapons in a joint communique issued here today. The communique was signed by British Foreign Secretary R. A. Butler at the end of a visit to Moscow during which he haq talks with Premier Khrushchev and other Soviet leaders, the Soviet news agency Tass reported, Britain and Russia also an- nounced agreement on talks to draw up a consular convention and increase cultural ex- changes. But the communique showed little agreement on other world issues such as Laos, Germany and European security. The communique said the two sides exchanged views on the subject of Laos, which played an important part in their talks. Informed sources said Friday night the Soviet Union rejected British conditions for a 14-na- tion Laos conference, as pro- i common aim should be "patient and constructive negotiations" on preserving world peace, add- should be done to widen areas of agreement, about 2.3 seconds before im- pact on the face of the moon. An area nearly 'two - miles across is visible. Smallest craters are about 30 feet across and some 10 feet deep. ~AP Wirephotos eter are visible. Part of the outlying ray of the. crater Copernicus is shown near the centre. The lower picture is one of the last photographs made by Ranger Seven at an altitude of three miles and UPPER PICTURE shows moon from 85 miles up. This picture, made yesterday by the Ranger Seven shows an area 45 miles across. Craters as small as 500 feet in diam- tres of large craters. a larger manned spaceship can-! At least part of the area en Ge ae He feet, seemed to resolve an old e controversy over whether dust Ottawa Outlines [iichih si. swallow a landing craft. The s ; fact that rocks thrown from the e big craters often were still vis- It ible' in the bottoms of the shal- Oy inerary low craters they created indi- jcated, the scientists said, that) , the dust layer ranges from: a} By JAMES NELSON --an exchange of addresses in|few inches to. no more than a! OTTAWA (CP) -- While all|the legislative building, a mili-| foot in depth. | the colorful details are still to|tary ceremony in the Citadel,} One of the surprising things| be filled in, the program for the| state dinners, luncheons and re-|the photographs showed, Kui- Queen's visit to Charlottetown) ceptions. per said, was that the smaller and Quebec*City in October is} Friday's announcement said|craters were all r ded andj one of contrasts between the two/the program for the Queen's|S0ft-looking, completely lacking provincial capitals. subsequent visit to Ottawa will] the sharp jaggedness of the big . The outline announced by|be made public later '"'when|Craters. One - explanation, he Prime Minister Pearson's office| planning is further advanced." |S#id, would be that they were TO e qd & e ore F indicates the Chariotte-'" 1, Q and Prince Phill made in dust, not in the hard) town visit will be largely infor-| ¥in gy 'by BOAC Seas te nec enalerte whic seems to) mal, aly ce mes! Summerside, P.E.I., arrivng i ge atid she ~ oar Soames. x , PELL, g in| Shoemaker said the actual t be setypeeii 5 rally at the €x-| i. early evening of Monday,| material of the hard layer and| Ine toc P. A unge ebec will be| Oct. 5- : | the dust could not be deter-| S After an official welcome if}/mined by photographic analy- Sea conditions permit, the Royal| sis, He said the light-reflecting) TORONTO (CP) -- Windfally The stock, which had closedjin authorized capital of 2,000,000 The visit to Qu mostly indoors and more formal) posed by Russia. The communique said the ing that everything possible PEACE ESSENTIAL The communique said both sides again confirmed their con- viction that the safeguarding of peace in 'the nuclear age is of primary interest for all states regardless of distinction in their political and social systems. The common goal, therefore, should be patient and construc- tive. talks, aimed 'at seeking a peaceful and mutually accept- able solution ofdisputed inter- national problems. The communique said a broad exchange of views on interna- tional problems took place. The sides discussed questions on which exchanges of views now are under way in respect of the consolidation of the United Nations mechanism for maintaining peace. They expressed readiness to cl t f 5 n INSULT ALLEGED Two Canadi By PETER BUCKLEY NICOSIA (CP) -- Two Cana- dian UN soldiers were in Cana- dian custody today and facing charges, one after allegedly tell- ing a group of Greek-Cypriots that Cypriot President Makarios should be assassinated and the other after being fired upon by Greek-Cypriots -when he wand- ered in front of their position. This disclosure came several hours after the 1,100-man Cana- dian force suffered its first fatal Locked Up In Cyprus be Makarios, a Greek Orthodox' tific research, archbishop, was dead and also insulted Greek-Cypriots. an Soldiers he The Canadian Provost Corps investigated with the help of the Makhi correspondent in Fama- gusta and Greek-Cypriot police. Fortin was arrested Friday by the Provost Corps and brought te Nicosia for detention, pend- ing further investigation and probable disciplinary actioz. TROOPER LOST "that maintain contacts when ever there isa chance for this." TALKS 'FRIENDLY' the talks as UK, Russians Both Back A-Bomb Ban take part in further exchange of views on these questions. Both sides evplained their views on questions of European security, includ ing questions connected with a German peace settlement. The sides exchanged views, in general on the state of Brit- ish + Soviet relations, and dis- us8ed steps for the achieve- ment of further progress. The communique said Russia and Britain agreed the talks, held in a spirit of co-operation and cordiality, offered a valu- able opportunity to discuss ques- ions of mutual interest and it would be useful to The communique described "frank and riendly." The ministers agreed negotia- tions on a consular convention hould begin in Moscow "'in the ear future." The United States signed such an agreement earl- ier this year in Moscow. They also agreed talks sched- uled for early next year would provide an opportunity for ex- tending and improving cultural exchanges. The minister noted 'with sat- isfaction" the extension of ex- change visits by Russian and British ministers and technical experts and said consid- ered icular attention should in the sphere of scien- UAW And GM Set Contract End Deadline DETROIT (AP)--The United Auto..Workers. union and Gen- eral Motors Corp, served con- Red Rebels Strike Near Viet Capital miles of Saigon today in the guerrilla war. Only faddyfields separ as an estimated battalion Viet Cong attack>1. from west and mortar fire. The Communist guerrillas got as close to Saigon as possible without actually en- tering the suburbs. lyacht Britannia in Summerside} cated, ' Harbor and sail for Charlotte-| quite porous and pulverized into! town. If the sea is too rough, they will drive to Charlottetown| |and go aboard the yacht in that/tion that much of the moon's! Couple will go aboard the royal more sheltered harbor. {WILL OPEN BUILDING The federation Memorial the evening the Queen the Quecn Wednesday | Fathers of Confederaton held |their first but unofficial meeting in September, 1864. : : Charlottetown program VINH LOC, South Viet Nam for Tuesday starts with cere-| (AP) -- Communist Viet Cong}monies marking the formal forces struck boldly within three| opening of the Fathers of. Con- Building closest heavy engagement to ihe and unveiling of.a commemora- capital in the history of the|tive plaque, followed by tea. In and ted| Prince Philip will attend a spe- suburban Vinh Loc from the|Cial royal performance in the Saigon airport three miles away|hew memorial theatre. of, and the| Prince Philip will visit the old south with heavy|Confederation chamber in the legislative building where the The second incident occurred Friday night when a member of the Royal Canadian Dragoons ot lost and wandered into a eld between the headquarters of Turkey's military contingent and armed Greek-Cypriot posi- tions just north of Nicosia. A United Nations report said the Greeks 'saw his shadow moving in the distance" and opened fire, apparentiy believ- ing him to be a Turk advane- ing on their position. Some 45 rounds were fired from automatic weapons and members of the Turkish contin- gent said later several shots hit their -headquarters building. There were no casualties or serious damage reported. room Oils and Mines Ltd.; suffered a|at $4.15 Thursday before the as-|shares to 7,000,000 shares and a say results were released,|change 'in the company's name|casualty since it began UN opened at 80 cents Friday after|to Glenn Explorations Ltd. °|peace operations in Cyprus in a 40-minute delay and later ral- Company President P. C. A.|March. lied to a $1.20 before slumping) Gijardine said the second drill) A soldier in the Royal Cana- to $1.04 at market closing. A to-\hole at the Timmins-area prop-|dian Dragoons, identified by tal of 1,324,487 shares changed! arty should be completed injarmy headquarters in Ottawa gre a ' ' three or four days, but no re-|as Tpr. ' _ bao yd F ae vada cc .|nouncement by. Ontario Attor- SPeculators have often gam-|ports have been received so far.) Waterford, N.S., was killed in oe ae a cy eae Arthur Wishart that;bled more than $1,000,000 a day) Mr. Wishart said he hadjan accident Friday night when crust. and that some of thelan investigation into trading of|im Windfall since a rumor July|asked fyor the investigation be-|his armed scout car overturned steeper craters might be ex-/the stock had been ordered July|® that a valuable base metal)/cause Windfall seemed slow injon-a dirt road 10 miles west tinct volcanos, not the result of|28, two days before the assay|S'Tike had been made on its) making known the results of its)of Kyrenia on the north coast. impacts. , findings were released. claims four miles from the $2,-| drilling. One of the soldiers in custody _ ws -- ~ | 000,600,000 copper - silver - zinc} He said: "It would be inter-|was identified as Pte. W. J. For- 0 =o,8 Filib jstrixe by Texas Gulf Sulphurjesting to know whether some-|tin of Ottawa. The other was Goes On Next Week * | counted Thursday night when|and who was purchasing i." , Jeav company President George A.| John Campbell, director of the|centre. A report in the Nicosia |Co., near Timmins .last April.|one was manipulating it (the/not identified. Friday's main targets for op--MacMillan announced that the,OSC, said Friday the commis-|daily newspaper Makhi said "a qualities of the dust layer indi- however, that it was tract termination notices on each other Friday. This means--barring agree- ment on a new. pact or mutual extension of the current one be- yond its Aug. 31 expiration-- that the union either will have to strike or work without a con- tract. GM. and 'the UAW swapped termination notices in 1961, but twice mutually extended the old contract. In 1958, a poor auto year, GM made its termination notice stick, and the UAW worked for weeks without a con- tract rather than strike. The UAW has notified both Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. of "'intent to serve" ter- mination notices. spectacular collapse on the Tor- onto Stock Exchange Friday q-\following news of a worthless |assay on the first drill hole at its crust is lava, hardened while|Timmins-area holdings. : still in a foamy state. Sharing the spotlight with the Kuiper said there were many|Collapse Friday was an an- tiny bits. The porosity was one indic: 5 But the rumors were dis-|to know what stock. was sold|town of Famagusta which Ca- jnadian troops use as a leave By RONALD LEBEL OTTAWA (CP) -- The opposi- Position criticism were t tion's monologue on a money|and the immigration |The rumors sent the stock from| stock), I don't say.Windfall has) The Makarios incident was| ja March low of 31 cents to aldone anything wrong. But. [\alleged to have taken place high of $5.60 this month, ithink it would be worth while/Thursday in the eastern resort he CBC|first drill hole had failed to find|sion will give. priority. to the|Canadian officer" told a group depart-|any commercial ore values. Windfall investigaton. wh chjof Greek-Cypriots in. a Fama-|" "will last between one and two) gusta bar that the Cyprus prob-|,, bill completed a one-week stand/ment Liberals broke their! CONTINUE DRILLING in the Commons Friday and is|Week-long silence briefly to dis-)" neining is continuing at expected to run well into next|CUss Toronto's taxi problems,|p.\.<o- township site week but it remained to opposition) The tt ee i iat The measure would give the|MPs to do most of the talking.|, "1° Auomnéy-genera' sal rad| government $700,000,000 in in- Arnold Peters (NDP -- 'Timis-|98 1 two other stocks, Bunker > aha : A ded acd bh tal - 2) blasted C i Hill Extension Mines Ltd., and} terim spending authority for|kaming) blasted C. M. Isbister,| 1. To. i Mi : August and September pending|"eWly-named deputy minister of) wenn Vranium Mines Ltd., will approval of 1964-65 spending es-| Citizenship and immigration, as|be included in the investigation timates an autocratic, unqualified offi-/by the Otario Securities Com- |cial and hinted broadly that he; mission. The roar of exploding mortar) 'The Royal Couple will sail for shlels resounded throughout. Sai-|Quebee City Wednesday night gon, touching off fears of an at- aboard the Britannia. : tempt to overthrow the regime On arrival Saturday morning, of Premier Kguyen Khanh. Oct, 10; they will go to the Que- U.S. airmen based at Saigon,bec legislature buildings for Airport said buildings there speeches commemora t ing the shook under the barrage and/first formal meeting of the Fath- tracer bullets were seen head- ers of Confederation in Quebec ing towards the airport. Oct. 10, 1864. months if we're lucky." Bobby May Run ae ome Sento L BJ's Campaign Andrew Brewin (NDP -- Tor-jestablish a trading pattern in) WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi-|draw from vice - presidential) onto Greenwood), Justice Min-|the companies' shares and then| dent Johnson has asked At-| considerations -- perhaps by} ister Favreau and Hubert Bad-|\track down rumors. Norman) torney-General Robert F. Ken-|'leaking" such a decision to a an ai, parliamentary secretary) Cox, chief OSC investigator, will) nedy to manage his presidential) newspaper columnist. to Immigration Minister Trem-|head the inquiry, | campaign, informed sources jblay immediately rushed to Mr.! Both Bunker Hill and Glenn|said today. jout that as attorney-general he Isbister's defence. Uranium also recorded losses| They said the offer. was made) shouldn't be and wasn't running | bal , Friday as other companies with} Wednesday at the same time} for the vice-presidency and that \ he Do saga gag compe-| Properties in the Van area|Johnson told Kennedy he was/|to announce a 'withdrawal' ltent, conscientious and objec-fell with Windfall although| eliminating him from consider-| would seem ridiculous. SMOKES NO PEACE PIPE Indian Beauty Loses Bid To Lead Council me Racy cy ee me te ee Pcie RS WE te Quit Magazine Over Policy the Stal Adinaie 7 on * , ; " } un Both had traded insults at the, "Vicious attack," saying it was|Cents to 27 cents on a turnover ny te t' to get int is-|what we c it in the! sday (uncalled for and .contrary tof 232,400 shares, while Glenn|,,1,,don't- want to get into ee cecat conte Mr. Wuttunee was re-elected 294 Chief Pine were among the Mr. Peters stuck to his guns| Shares. Giter before hk left for Hyasnis ' the National Indian/chief of the council by a 45-to-/11 unsuccessful candidates for and warned he would have more} One odd note was struck when! port, Mass., for the weekend, polly ie ulus 43. vote margin. His closest op: the council seats. to Say -- the fgg when some stockholders affected by| 'This sketchy atcount of But the peace pipes were left|Ponent was Chief John Tootoo Nese Tle poe he hens pel cage aig eg ag alled. poo panic selling apparently got the White House meeting has aside following the rout of Mo.-|sis, a dark-horse candidate from|the Saskatchewan Federation of r ere' one 2 ae {or their geography mixed up. Rag-|come to 'light' 'from: several hawk fashion model Kahn-tineta|Cutknife, Sask. ndians, was elected sachem, Pp 3 {Ir} 9'lan Nickel, with property in La-|sources in a position to know t In : Horn in her bid. to oust the| Chief Richard Pine the lng with Freq Belleau of Gar-| the whole department. ,| brador's Ungava area, was sold about it: . of | y : present leadership headed by|Garden River reserve near down to $2.05 at one point. But} Johnson summoned GARDEN RIVER, Ont. (CP)|what happeneq here and see, an ial staff members, remember jpresident John F. Kennedy, in PHONE NUMBERS CITY EMERGENCY POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 den River and Philip, Thompson,|. He accused Mr. Isbister the 38-|/editor Ken Lefolii, resigned Fri- Calgary lawyer William Wut-|Sault Ste. Marie, who was sup- | Miss Horn' said that 'although conversation about a ritpetween |e and it closed at $2.95, a was not being considered for the| ment interference in the publi- aid' ithe second tive she would still participate Mr. Peters had: declared in|... ' ji | - ers have approved an -increase| suggested that Kennedy : con- dent in charge of the magazine lections -- : no part in, a contest which| | ete| jelections for three sachems | the Commons who had complete} handled for his brother, the late| LAST. 1N VOTE dnt from Saskatoon, as her|cajled him the following day to 1960. |cepted, The Oshawa Times will | Later, presidential adviser|ski, managing. editor, Harry executive director of the Ed-| °Ver-stepping the bounds of his) when traders realized what was| R ; A J t : es Bs | r | year-old attorney-general to the|day from Maclean's Magazin tunee. ported by Miss Hom, had only|™0ntom Native Centre. position in a recent telephone | happening, they snapped up the| White House and told him he i In a final volley of fire atjli votes in the first of three} case in Timiskaming between! civ pont oni : PMY Racha the windup party, Miss Horn|ballots and slipped to eight in|She was no longer on the execu-|fimself and Mr. Isbister gg "ame og fling dotabialnnne po 'Sin' the present editorial independence. "I hope we will Miss Horn and her supporters/ #54 Member of the council. an earlier debate 'that Mr.| ; j baect tn. charge of the 'mapeinng |were also shut out in two other, She later attended, but took/ Tremblay was the only one in| rev -reine- Pibg pod elle - vue ae | (assistants to the president) and pte Irene Seesequasis, @/confidence in his senior offi- NO TIMES |that only Mr. Lefolii's resigna- 12 council seats. 20-year-old Cree secretarial stu-|¢jals. He said Mr Isbister| ON MONDAY tion had definitely been ac- successor to the title of Indian| protest the statement. | LLE SE The other four, Peter Gzow- In her bid for a sachems post|Princess of Canada. 'ss He quoted the official as say-| {CA D- BY ADVISER not be published 'Monday, |McGeorge Bundy, a carryover|Bruce. reports and. reviews edi- August 3, in observance of |from the Kennedy: administra-\tor, David Lewis Stein, assist- she finished last in a six-candi-| Miss Seeseequasis, originally|ing: "You had a problem and date field, tied with another|from the Duck Lake reserve in| you asked me to do something! rival, Alanis Obomsawin,|Saskatchewan. won out over| about it You can forget about Abes ket folksinger from the'seven othr girls in a contest\it now because I have no inten- jdanak reserve near Sorel,| judged on beauty, character and| tion' of answering your requests iQue, 'appearance in native costume. jin the future." i | tion, called the attorney-general, |ant editor, and Robert Fulford, | }presumably at Johnson's be-| staff writer, met with Mr. Mc-| |hest. He wondered whether Ken-|Eachern Friday to discuss ad |nedy shouldn't voluntarily with-Iresignations, Civic Holiday. Normal pub- lication will resume on Tuesday, August 4, Nem would not be solved until)" Kennedy declined, p oint ing|* TORONTO (CP)--Five editor-| # including} § for what they termeq manage-| ® division of-Maclean-Hunter Pub-| ; lishing Company Limited, said] + if . ; 'gic sete babii FLEE THROU Bank employees check the loss under a window smashed earlier in the day by hooded, masked bandits who smashed their way out with lead pipes to escape with more than si Ee oe | & GH WINDOW $91,000. The men arrived just after cash had been distri- buted to tellers' cages, min- utes before the north - end Montreal branch of the To- ronto-Dominion Bank opened.

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