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Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Oct 1964, p. 1

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f tat she ie stele ae, Sadi Rea a Aer ae ins 2 Dot ht he ee. eco ee The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, VOL. 93 -- NO. 252 The Oshawa Times Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1964 Authorized @s Second Closs Mail Ottawa end for payment Weather Report Continuing Sunny And Warm Today. Turning Colder Late Tomorrow. High-72. Low-50, EIGHTEEN PAGES ag Office of Postage in Cash. "NERVES SHATTERED' Oakley Says _ Mishandled Mex Oakley returned home Monday fromthe 1964 Tokyo Olympics with mixed emotions. He isn't sure he ever. wants to 'pace again. The S-year-old marathon walker has only-one explanation for his 14th-place finish in the 50-kilometer event. "I was over-trained," he said in an interview. : Oakley's advisor, Joe Mahon of Toronto, had him walk some 120 miles during the week prior to the Olympic Games. "All I needed when I went there was sharpening up," he said. "'"My nerves got bad after all that training." IN GOOD SHAPE Oakley was in perfect physi-| sical shape, carrying 157 pounds on his five-foot, 914-inch frame, but his mental outlook toward the race had been shattered. Although he is a long-distance walker, Oakley attempted the 2-kilometer race, but when he saw he was getting nowhere he dropped out. This was a plan he had prearranged with his coach, Barclay Law, before leaving for Japan with the Ca- nadian Olympic team. He would save himself for the big one Oakley's tactics apparently displeased Mahon. It was cold and wet on the day of the big race. It rained during the entire event. But, despite all that was going against him, Oakley managed to come within 90 sec- onds of the former Olympic mark. His time in Tokyo would have given him a silver medal at the 1060 Rome Olympics. Abdel Pamich of Italy knock- ed 14 minutes off the Olympic record winning the race in four hours, 11 minutes, 10 seconds. Oakley has performed in three Olympic Games -- Melbourne, Australia; Rome, Italy and Tokyo, Japan. He figures he could compete in two more Olympic Games 1968 and 1972 -- if he gets back the de- sire to race again. His only plan for the immediate future is to stay in shape. He never lost a race on native soil this year winning the Cana- dian championship in the 20-kilo- meter, 50-kilometer and 20-mile events. He was a gold medallist in the Pan-American Games in 1963 'in Brazil. Law hopes to revive Oakley's "competitive spirit" before the 1966 British Empire Games in Jamaica. E. P. MeDonaid, a former marathon walker and member }of the Amateur Athletic Union jof Canada, told an AAU meet- jing in Toronto recently: "Oak- ley's performance proved he is the finest walker ever produced 'in Canada." CBC IN HOT WATER Rockwell Interview Glorified Nazism' OTTAWA (CP) -- While wait- ing tensely for the flag commit- tee's report, MPs on both sides o the Commons spent most of londay hurling acid epithets at the CBC. The publicly - owned broad- casting system, getting $88,000,- 000 from the federal treasury this year, touched off one of its worst parliamentary "pan" re- views with a Sunday. interview with George Lincoln Rockwell,| Privy Council self - admitted American Nazi\Traith pleaded for quick pas- and racist. |sage of the bill, but political in- "I ean see no reason .. . why)formants said the Conservatives Nazism should be glorified in/likely will keep the debate go- this way," complained Opposi-|ing at least until Thursday when tion Leader Diefenbaker. the 15 ber flag c ' He and Social Credit andjis due to submit its report. Gilles Gregoire: (Creditiste--La- pointe). They argued that the corporation would be useless if it studiously avoided producing controversial and challenging day of a wide-ranging debate on a $740,000,000 supply bill intended to cover the gov- ernment's ondinary expenses i Creditiste spokesmen again de- a parliamentary in- quiry where MPs could grill CBC officiais. State Secretary Lamontagne again refused flatly, saying this might "completely paralyse the} corporation in its work.' ' As the question period and the ensuing debate wore on, the blasts broadened and covered a wide array of CBC policies. Mr. Diefenbaker referred to wif the: Conservatives object to the recommended design, they undoubtedly will resume their flag blockade, which lasted sev- eral weeks last summer. frequent changes that Commu- nists have infiltrated the CBC} French network and asked for an investigation. | ACCUSATIONS VARY TORONTO (CP) -- The Ca- nadian Broadcasting Corpora- tion is under fire in a strongly | worded petition signed by prom-|day that the corporation is! inent women who claim the CBC Promoting Perversion, Dope ALEX OAKLEY SPORTING OLYMPIC TOWEL Student Says Would Lay Down Life To Kill LB] of threatening to kill President Johnson, "even if I-had to give where the president. appeared for. a speech, Back, a slender air force vet- eran, did not testify at his*pre- Himinary heaving and U.S. Com- my own life,"has been held for) missioner Roger.Davis held that federal grand jury action. this was sufficient cause to hold At the same time Monday, @)him under $25,000 bond. former navy man, allegedly), Reid Trencher, 19, testified armed, was arrested in Jack-|that about Oct. 12 Back told sonville, three blocks from/pim "jf Lyndon Baines Johnson ------------=lever came to Miami, I would |kil him, even if I had to give my own hife:" Trencher, 'also' a junior col- lege student' who said he "works the coffee house cir- cuit' at night, reported that he was shocked by the statement and asked Back if he really meant it. But Trencher kept the remark to himself, he said, until jast Saturday when he heard on the "concerned about the extreme|radio that President Johnson free love, blasphemy, dope, vio- lence and crime." A CBC spokesman said Mon- Other speakers accused the | CBC is spreading immoral pro-|and negative reaction by. this|,ould anrive in Florida the fol- CBC of being irresponsible, im-| moral, contemptuous of relig-| ion and Parliament, unfair to} opposition parties, pro - Lib-| éral, un-Canadian_ pro-separa-} tist, pornographic and extrava- gant with the taxpayers' money. paganda. | The Declaration by Canadian) Women, circulated among wom-! en's and church groups and |door-to-door in some communi-| owned corporation is Miss Ethel | "to eid the domina-| ties, aims i The CBC found only two de-|tion of a minority who misuse} fenders, Stanley Knowles (NDP|the CBC to spread propaganda 'group'," but adds that no wom-| jqw; on campai en's organization in Canada has gag ~ . endorsed the declaration. i a The secretary of the move- A-Fallout Will Kill 2,000,000 ment attacking the Crown-| Gordon, chief supervisor of| nursing counsellors in the food) department of national health aid wallace: Goaus. SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -- :Dr. Linus Pauling, twice win- --Winnipeg North Centre) and for perversion, pornography, Signers include Senator Josie D. Quart of Quebec City; Ethel S. Wilson, minister without port- iner of the Nobel Prize, claimed {today that 2,000,000 people now RADIO-EQUIPPED A radio transmitter strapp: Council's biosciences division |white dispute folio in the Alberta cabinet; |tiving will die from cancer in- Mrs. A. D. Keith of Winnipeg,|@ced by nuclear bomb tests. president of the Women's Chris-, = \ticipants are paid out of a UN "|voluntary fund to which #|contributed most of the money. | MOSCOW ASKS FOR UNITY, SOLIDARI Canada Again Pays For UN Force OTTAWA (CP) -- "We would | Mr. Martin said voluntary do it again,' External Affairs; contributions are the wrong way Minister Martin declared Mon-|to finance a UN force. The right day. way was out of the UN treasury Canada, he said, would again United Nations peacekeeping|/or General Assémbly. force even if no other contribut-| put the UN didn't have 'that ing country did, |kind of 'money." There would "It we didn't, there would be|have been a "cataclysmic" cri- a deterioration of international) <i, over Cyprus if the UN force relations none of us would want) hadn't been established and sent to contemplate," he told a press/there last March. conference. + » ' aces : We decided that this great Canada is paying for its 1,130-| oncent should not flounder" man contingent in Cyprus and 3 the bill by Dec. 26, when the| because the UN itself would not UN force's mandate is sched-|finance it, Mr. Martin said. uled to expire, will amount to) Mr. Martin amplified at the about $10,000,000. press conference his Commons Among the other contributing|statement that 17 of 27 coun- countries, only Ireland is pay-|tries approached by Canada ing its own way. The other par-|have agreed to attend a Nov. 2-6 meeting here to exchange technical information and ex- periences on UN peacekeeping operations, the United States and Britain have INDIAN ASTROLOGERS PUT LB] ON CLOUD 7 on the basis of assessments im-" pay for its own contingent in a|posed by the Security Council aid, EXTERNAL AFFAIRS MINISTER PAUL MARTIN costal NEW DELHI (AP)--Indian astrologers have consulted the heavenly bodies and say President Johnson will win the U.S, election big next Tuesday. The latest reading of the stars from India also indi- cates yictory for Democratic Senate hopefuls Pierre Salin- ger in Califotiia, Edward Kennedy" in Massachusetts, and Robert Kennedy in New York. But some of Johnson's top aides--State Secretary Dean Rusk, Defence Secretary Rob- ert S. McNamara and UN Ambassador Adlai Stevenson --will be out looking for jobs next year, according to the astrologers. The star-reading fraternity has made a good living off this sort of thing for centuries in India. Many Indian govern- ment officials' consult them frequently. One astrologer says Johnson was born under a star group- ing that assures "kingship" so he doesn't have to worry about Republican challenger Batry Goldwater. An astrologer - priest, a Hindu who believes in rein- Red China Left Out MOSCOW (AP)--The Krem- lin's. new leaders pressed their 'campaign today to restore un- ity in the European Communist world in the aftermath of Ni- kita Khrushchev's ouster. The government. newspaper Izvestia. aimed an appeal iat Russia's East European allies, warning in a front-page editor- ial that further economic pro- gress in the bloc will require stronger unity. Izvestia made no mention of Red China and: the bitter dis- pute which split it from the So- viet Union. The appeal appar- ently sought to quiet unrest that has swept the East European nations since Khrushchey was dumped Oct. 14 as premier and first secretary of the Commu- nist party, - Igvestia did not name Khrush- chev, but it repeated assurances that his policies of deStaliniza- tion and economic progress would be continued by party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev and Premier Alexei N. Kosygin. STRENGTH IN UNITY "In the present moment," it "the cause of peace and progress in an increasing degree depends on strengthen- | OTTAWA (CR) -- vexecu~ tive council of the' Cubation Chamber of Commerce « today d enactment of federal carnation, says Joh in one of his former lives, was a Hindu holy man who wan- dered the, woods of northern India. On Tuesday, the priest says, Johnson will collect his just reward for this hard tour of duty. |Commons-Senate committee om iconsuls in Stanleyville said the legislation which would require granters of credit to disclose an- nual rates of interest in con- tracts: The couneil' told' the. joint consumer credit that a recom- Two Missionaries Killed In Congo LEOPOLDVHLE (Reuters)-- Two Belgian missionaries a U.S. Citizens Arrested By nd widely, practised policy. of dis- mendation to this effect .by. the! royal commission on banking and finance "will lead to ob- securing rather than clarifying credit changes." "We support .the presently six other Europeans were killed by rebels in two widely-scat- tered areas of the strife-torn Congo, it was learned Monday Congolese (LEOPOLDVILLE (AP) -- Aj night. radio message from rebel-held| Six men were killed at B A ing the dollar amount: of fi- nance charges,'"'. the cauncil said in a brief to the commit- tee... "Any legislation calling for:in- terest - rate. disclosure. would Stanleyville reports all foreign|in the northwest Congo before residents ofthat city in good) the town was recaptured by health and -- aside from five} troops and white members of the U.S. consulate| S°vernment staff--are able to pursue their) Mercenaries Saturday. Four normal occupations. |were Belgians, one Portuguese | and the other an Italian-doctor. A telegram signed by £ the| American consul, Michael P. E.| Hoyt, 34, of Chicago, and his| staff are under house arrest. | The telegram was radioed in| French from Stanleyville, which the rebels call the capital of "the Congolese people's repub- To lic,"" to the foreign diplomatic colony in Bujumbura, capital of) the meighboring kingdom of Bur-| Shaky undi. tian Temperance Union of Can- ada; Mrs. Ward Markle of Tor-| onto, president 'of the Ontario section of the Catholic Women's NEWS HIGHLIGHTS League. The CBC said the declaration was rejected. by the Catholic! Women's League at its annual meeting last August in Char- lottetown, by the Consumers' | Association of Canada and by) Mrs. D. W. McGibbon 'of Tor- onto, president of the Imperial Order daughters of the Empire, among others Among programs criticized by the declaration is the film One} More River, an award-winning documentary on the Negro- in the United | States produced by Douglas | Tanjug said today. Montreal. 70,000 Evacuated From Flood BELGRADE (Reuters) -- An estimated 70,000 of the 600,000 population have been evacuated from flood-stricken Zagreb in northwest Yugoslavia, the Yugoslav news agency Policeman Wounded In Holdup VICTORIAVILLE, Que. (CP) -- Const. Raymond Col- jard, 37, was severely wounded early today in a gun-battle with three holdup men near this town, 110 miles east of ed to the back of this pigeon transmits the bird's heart rate, wing beats and frequen- cy of breathing to, scientists at the National Research in Ottawa. The bird flies at the end of a fishing line while the scientists learn more about the mystery of its flight. (CP Wirephoto) Leiterman and hailed by a} British critic as the best of any | film produced for Intertel, a five-country TV exchange pro-| gram, | Loan Companies Should Reveal Interest TORONTO (CP) -- A law professor from the University of Saskatchewan Monday told the Ontario legislature's com- mittee on consumer credit that credit companies should be required by iaw to disclose interest rates. 'Start | | DETROIT (AP)--General Mo- | tors Corp. edged forward today 'in resuming production of its |1965. model automobiles after |its month-long crippling strike. | Progress at best was slow, |however. Local plant strikes | limited the production rate to a | trickle compared to GM's fast potential, greatest of the auto industry. GM's factories in Flint, Mich., apparently led the way. Buick in Flint anticipated full produc- tion today. Flint plants, where Chevrolet cars also are made, recalled an estimated 35,000 employees |made idle in the United Auto | Workers' strike that began Sept. 25 GM officials declined to spec- ulate when all 360,000 workers | would be back on the job. More |than 300,000 were left idle by | the strike. tend to ¢ ite, impede and retard: the extension of credit Chamber Opposes Loan Legislation ing the unity,of all anti - imper- ialist forces and first of all the unity of the socialist countries, the world Communist move- ment."" : ey The key step,: it said, was the ments a 'So con- Sn eta a a an ~ Dipiomstic informants in Vi and for |e success of; Seas of mer-jenna' said gy ng ths chants in. Canada,..particulagly|Kremlin was pressure the thousands of small dealers|on East European Communist and retailers.... * '|parties © t speak out against weal cue ewe, Sf to convert dollar charges ' to,a rate of interest per annum committee issued a statement is.a. ted and in gome| Sunday saying Khrushchev's re- cases impractical procedure." |8ime made "regrettable mis- Interest was only one ele-|'#Kes. mént in 'the cost of extension| Hung ary,» Czechoslovakia, of- credit-on merchandise sales, East Germany and Poland have The other costs, including in-|@!l praised Khrushchev since his vestigation, settling of accounts,| ouster. The diplomats in Vienna handling of payments, collec-|said the Kremlin has told its al- tions and reserve for lossesilies it was time they realized could be greater than the ele-|that Khrushchev had outlived ment. of .interest. or the price|his usefulness. ge Se rc rape use in- " ND EXP. '1 ATION volved so many variables that ane en enone sh th rend to convert these credit changes|ers of the West European Com- to a simple annual interest rate|munist parties, many of whom was impossible without substan-|have demanded an explanation of at the, retail, level and it could GM With the resumption of pro- duction at General Motors, tial additional: cost. hev's ouster. STARTS PRODUCING one of the first cars off the _ home plant of Pontiac Motor line at the Pontiac, Mich.," Division is shown above. On The Road To GREATER OSHAWA COMMUN ITY CHEST Quota Of $275,900 siohoss 1 | Isra$ cco! | 1 | srstoool | | | srzZocol: | | szofoool | | | sz2Moool | | | 2580001 | | | s27F 00

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