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Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Jan 1965, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, Januory 4, 1965 RIOTING STUDENTS in Saigon raise anti-American demands that U.S. government and Ambassador Maxwell D. banner during five-hour de- monstration today. Banner Taylor "stop interfering in the Students, Buddhist Mob Demonstrate In Saigon In Saigon, steel - helmeted troops followed the demon- strators today in an attempt to forestall violence. Squads of armed marines made no attempt to stop the demonstrators, but the rioters manhandled photographers and any police who got in the way. Fights broke out repeatedly as the crowd charged about the city. At one point, the mob un- furled a banner denouncing "in- volvement of the American gov- ernment and Ambassador (Maxwell D.) Taylor in Viet- namese affairs." SCORE INJURED At least 20 persons were be- SAIGON (CP) -- A mob of 1,000 Buddhists and students to- day surged through the streets of Saigon shouting anti-Ameri- can and anti-government slo- ins, The demonstration was the first step in a new all-out drive by Buddhists to oust the regime of Premier Tran Van Huong. Riots and widespread unrest accompanied an earlier such campaign in November. The latest political disarray followed a major military de- feat last week for government forces and their American ad- visers by. the Communist Viet Cong at the town of Binh Gia, 40 miles southeast of the capital. In the six-day battle--longest lieved to have been injured and 30 were arrested. Among those KUALA LUMPUR (CP)--The Malaysian government an- nounced today it is prepared to retaliate against Indonesia "un- der the rule of hot pursuit when and if forced to." Rahman met with his cabinet in emergency session following Indonesia's announcement that it is withdrawing from the United Nations, Rahman announced that in view of the 'mounting threat" from Indonesia, the cabinet also decided to: 1, Ask Malaysia's allies in the British Commonwealth to send Prime Minister Tunku Abdul| Se SCTE ae So ties ies ina ces Se el 'ton the seriousness of the threat of more intensive Indonesian attack and request the United Nations to assist us in defence lof our nation in the event of 'such a happening." 3. Establish more training centres to expedite the expan- sion of Malaysian armed forces. LATEST OF SERIES "The withdrawal from the United Nations of Indonesia," said Rahman, "follows a series of actions by that country in defiance of world opinion, the rule of law and the United Na- tions. | "The existence of small in- ened by aggressive bullying and expansionist tactics of our neighbor (Indonesia)." For this reason, Rahman said, Malaysia is "'prepared to take retaliatory action under the rule of hot pursuit when and if forced to do so for its own ex- istence, Malaysian and British Com- monwealth forces have hereto- fore confined their operations to Malaysian territory and waters and have not pursued attackers from Indonesia back across In- donesia's border, A British-aided military build- up already is under way in Malaysia, reinforcements if ry. 2. Inform the United Nations ld dent sovereign nations Meanwhile,' in Singapore a Malaysia May Retaliate Against Indonesia: PM spokesman said the British coastal minesweeper Wilkieston today arrested four Indonesian infiltrators aboard a sampan in- side Malaysian waters. The spokesman said the 360- ton ship fired warning shots across the sampan's bows to force it to stop, It was the ninth known infiltration attempt against the federation. At the same time in Kuala Lumpur, an Indonesian para- trooper sergeant and a marine corporal appeared with seven infiltrators before a press con- ference. They said their mission was to blow up bridges and roads and then make their way back |like Malaysia is being threat- Mitch Fer Ban Cot mand "End US RAWALPINDI (AP) -- Presi- dent Mohammed Ayub Khan held out little hope Sunday for improvement in U.S.-Pakistani relations as long as the United States supplies arms to Pakis- tan's arch-enemy, India, He also said China will not attack India. But Ayub denied rumors that Pakistan, once a close U.S. ally but now drawing closer to China, might pull out of two U.S, - supported military alli- ances, the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) jand the Central Treaty Organi- headquarters, stopping for an|zation (CENTO). hour at the central market. "T would like to see our rela- Along the way they scrawled|tions with the United States as anti-U.S. and 'anti-Huong slo-|friendly as they once were," gans on cars. Ayub said, "but the United They rallied outside the Budd- States giving military ald to In- hist headquarters swinging ban- dia will continue to remain a ners which read "Americans go|°#use for our grave concern." Home" and "Stop edetieting The Pakistani strongman dis- with Vietnamese. affairs." cussed his country's deteriorat- The ostensible reason for the]; nt restinns wits Oe Se oe hid whe th. Gall for the te: interview the day after winning five-year term in Pakistan's lease of about 20 students ar- " a taated recently. first presidential election Satur. day. Last night top political monk) The bitter campaign for lead- Thich Tam Chau demanded the/ership of this country, a stra- ouster of the Huong government tegic buffer between Commu- before some 2,000 Buddhists at/nist China and the middle east, a prayer meeting. es phe a affairs of South Viet Nam." (AP Wirephoto via radio from Saigon) Aid To India' to Indonesia. . Arms THROUGH "BROTHERLY HELP' was marked by the most pointed anti-Americanism ever expressed in Pakistan. SPELLS POLITICAL DEATH Ayub and Miss Fatima Jin- HAVANA (AP)-Cuba's Pre- mier Fidel Castro nas displayed Soviet "land - to - land mis- New Jets, Missiles Displayed By Castro brotherly help of the Soviet Union." American p arrived Sunday after battling through a violent North Atlantic storm which brought it to a standstill off the Grand Banks of Newfoundland for 40 hours. Sixteen - persons amid some terrifying incidents. was slammed with 60 - foot waves which smashed windows on upper decks and ripped open a weather door on a lower deck. as the liner wallowed in. the mountainous waves. Many were gripped by seasickness. and took to napping fully- clothed in the public lounge after hearing of an incident in which a gigantic wave smashed a window of an upper - deck cabin and hurled a half-ton of icy water upon a couple asleep. bs fl Biotin, Mees Dea, . Terrifying' Passage Injures 16 Passengers © (AP) -- The A Capt. Charles Reilly, skipper of the Independ described the rough water as the worst he had encountered in more than 40 years at sea. REACH 60 FEET "The waves rose to a height of 60 feet and spilled over the bridge deck," he related. '"'It was like riding a roller coaster,"'. The liner was returning from a 22-day Mediterranean cruise with 807 passengers. Passengers and crew were preparing for a New Year's Eve celebration when the storm struck about 10 p.m. Reilly said nothing could be done to avoid it, because the storm stretched out over a dis- tance of about 1,100 miles. The best that could be done was to reduce speed radically, he said, from the 22-knot cruis- ing speed to a 2% knots, The Independence held vir- NEW YORK liner Ind were injured The 26,000-ton passenger ship Passengers were flung about Some became apprehensive sands of West Berliners re- turned home today as the Com- munist-built Berlin border wall closed behind them, bringing to quired by Cuba "through the tually the same position in the ocean until 2 p.m. Saturday, and was a day late arriving here. One crew member suf- fered a broken ankle and 15 passengers were treated for bruises during the storm. The most. harrowing exper- ience of all befell Lt.-Col. Hugh K. Rhodes of the U.S. Air Force and his wife, Opal. They were asleep in their cabin on the starboard side of Berlin Wall Closes Again BERLIN (Reuters) -- Thou- nah, the 71-year-old woman he defeated, made plain their view that to be labelled a friend of the U.S. spells political death in Pakistan. The U.S. gave arms aid to In- dia after the start of the 1962 India-China border war. About $100,000,000 in American mili- tary assistance was given to In- dia in the first year after the brief border conflict. Total U.S. economic and mili- tary aid to the two impover- ished south Asian giants has reached about $6,000,000,000 to India and. almost $5,000,000,000 to Pakistan. They have re- ceived more American foreign aid since 1951 than any other countries. siles' and swift new reconnais- sance jet planes which have been added to the array of So- viet military hardware which has made his army the strong- est in Latin America. The slender, grey rockets, about 24 feet long, rolled through Havana's streets Satur- day in the military parade marking the sixth anniversary of the Castro revolution. The new jets, of an un- announced type, screamed low overhead as announcers said they were capable of guarding the Cuban coasts day and night. A Cuban television announcer | declared ask anybody to loan us their brains, their heroism or their revolutionary colors." STATES INDEPENDENCE said Cuba will keep its political independence, regardless of the price, even to the point of sub- sisting without economic aid from any country. But at the same time, Castro "we do not need tojvisiting period. In his annual speech, Castro largely to economic|for them again. including the assur- In East Berlin, an end the 16-day holiday pass A total. of 47,000 West Berlin- ers. crossed into East Berlin Sunday, following an estimated 750,000 who began visiting their' friends and relatives from Dec-|them awake. With the Christmas and New Year passes agreement period over, West Berliners be- gan looking forward to Easter \when the five border crossing Castro's 24-hour speech WaSinoints were scheduled to open) devoted matters, ance that production will in- crease in the tightly - rationed said the missiles had been ac-!country. | The atmosphere in East Ber- lin Sunday was said to be happy jand relaxed as West Berliners lsought out friends and relations. satisfaction India, under Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri, appears WEATHER FORECAST as non-aligned as ever and gets as much military aid as possi- ble from. the Soviet Union. Pakistan has taken a' more neutral tack in world affairs, but snuggled up to China with border and air agreements and aid and trade deals. Slightly TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts Cloudy Periods, Warmer |St. Thomas..+eees {London .... was expressed by the West and East Berliners alike at the smoothness and consideration with which the East Berlin au- the promenade deck, 40 to 50 feet above the water line, when a wave thundered upward and shattered the heavy glass in their square window. Suddenly frigid ocean water deluged the couple and shocked Mrs. Rhodes said she and her husband were hurled about the cabin and finally struggled out. Mrs. Rhodes was treated by a ship's doctor but apparently suffered no serious injury. if you're tired all the time Now and then svt a "tired- it" feeli: 4 by ou hea and may thorities, army and police con- bes ducted the huge operation. TURKEY GIANT A British turkey producer be- lieves world's largest--63 pounds 12 he has produced the Ri ounces. FUR FLIES OVER VETERANS' BEATING OUT CAT SOCIETY | DETROIT (AP)--The De- troit Persian Society has got its fur up because its cat show has been booted out of a Detroit hotel in favor of a issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: |Kitchener ... Synopsis: Some cloudiness is|Mount Forest. expected to persist during the)Wingham ... day across the southern half of|Hamilton .... \the province while in the north|St, Catharines..... lit will be mainly sunny. Tem-/Toronto . ... peratures today should be close/ peterborough .... to or a little higher than those/prenton ..,. reported Sunday. Pleasant) Kijjaloe a pose is forecast to continue) Muskoka Tuesday. | Lake St. Clair, Windso nine" \Sunny with a few cloudy periods} o? Beatles Going "Hairy" Over Tax | LONDON (Reuters) -- The Beatles, involved in a million- dollar tax dispute with the United States government, have eee te plans for further ours of North America, British ' ; | veteran's group. gyorg reported Sunday. \{ Manager Hubert Warneke world's richest singing! of the Embassy Hotel blamed quartet received more than! a conflict of convention dates. battle of the war--the guerrillas inflicted rye' 2 losses on the government side, cap- tured a large amount of weap- ons and ammunition and proved their ability to stand and fight = a conventional military engage- = ment. Guerrillas ambushed another ~ South Vietnamese ranger bat- = talion near Binh Gla and killed a. US. adviser, Nine rangers were killed and 30 or 40 are hurt was Associated Press Pho- tographer Huynh Cong La. The demonstrators first as- sembled at the waterfront and marched three miles to the barricaded national Buddhist Pay all your bills now! Get an HFC Bill Payer Loan Got bills you just'can't meet? Gather them all up and come ifornia, Canada, Florida and New York." Mrs. Daley said other De- troit hotels are booked solid for the Feb. 20-21 weekend of the 42nd ,annual show. 'She said 500 cats are entered. The highlight of the show | was to be Mrs. Daly's Egypt- > - - 7 " = = ~ ~ Do-It-Yourselfer Killed In Plane BRAMPTON, Ont. (CP) -- A = missing. lfather of five was killed Sun- £1,000,000 ($3,000,000 ) from) "Naturally," he said, '"'vet- a 7 . been around Binh Gia, which ; SIX AMERICANS KILLED jday when the engine of his So far six Americans have|home-assembled biplane appar- killed in the fighting/ently failed as he was coming started|in to land at the Brampton Fly- ing Club. The aircraft crashed. Don Wooley, 34, a Brampton last Tuesday. Another two are missing Pa presumed ao. tured. vwernment cas machinist, bought the single-en- are estimated at about 500. igine Smith mini-plane as a kit their 1964 tour of the U.S. and| Canada and sales of products| carrying their name, ports said. the re- Because this money was be- ing held in the U.S., Beatles) manager Brian Epstein decided} The losses brought American|and assembled and modified it) to call a halt to negotiations for| a tour next summer until the * casualties in Viet Nam sincejhimself. The aircraft was given|wrangle was settled. = the beginning of 1961 to nearly/its first flight on Good Friday,) The Sunday Times says the erans have some precedence over cats." : The manager of the cat show, Mrs. Virginia Daly of suburban Berkley isn't so sure. "We have filed suit to en- force our contract to hold the show there," she said. 'We've | had reservations for the finest cats in America . . . fro Cal- = 2.000--247 killed in action, 107 _. dead in other incidents, 23 miss- « ing and 1,524 wounded 1962. The department of transport|the Beatles' earnings were so ian Spotted Fishing Cat, an animal long thought to be ex- tinct. Mrs, Daly says she crossed an Abyssinian and a Sia- mese. One of the kittens looks exactly like the Egyptian Spotted. Fishing Cat pictured in museums. Mrs. Daly said the Detroit club could lose its charter if it doesn't hold the show. Tuesday. Not much change in temperature. Light winds. Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niag- ara, Lake Ontario, Killaloe, Haliburton, Southern Georgian Bay, London, Hamilton, Tor- onto: Variable cloudiness clear- much change in temperature. Light winds. Western Georgian Bay, problem was caused by the fact) is investigating the crash. _ivast that the U.S. government WINDBLOWN Mrs. John F. Kennedy holds the hand of her son, John Jr as they leave plane at New York's J, F. Kennedy Airport last night on their return from a skiing vacation in the Colo- rado Rockies. Wind of a cold, blustery night, whips through |became uneasy over the exist- jing tax treaty under which Brit- jish and U.S. performers are al- |lowed to keep all their earnings in both countries, and pay tax jonly in their home countries. | e Sunday Telegraph says) jthe sale of Beatles' products last year was estimated at jmore than £17,000,000, with the | singers receiving royalties ' Bolivian Junta | Quells Conspiracy LA PA (AP)--Bolivia's gov- jerning military junta announced |Sunday it had quashed an at- #\tempt to overthrow it, led by jthe federal gendarmerie, | A communique said the plot was country - wide and there -4.\was an outbreak Saturday night Fiat the National Police Acad _ \emy +| The communique said troops had been rapidly mobilized Sithrough the night and the conspiracy was promptly squelched, The country now Is quiet and everything is normal, the com *imunique added The interior ministry said about 20 persons have heen detained, including the com mander of the federal police and the commanders of two police regiments | Education In Democracy Cure To End TORONTO (CP) -- The best way to handle hate movements is to know what democracy is jabout and correct existing so- cial evils, says Rev. J. R. Hord, jassociate secretary of the |United Church's Board of evan- |gelism and social service. | In a radio address on CFRB there Sunday night, Mr. Hord isaid: } "Our should have such an appreciation of |biblical teachings and sense of values that they would have absolutely nothing to do with such a movement." Inadequate housing and broken homes are among the social evils which foster "dicta tors and their henchmen, black jacketed teen-aged gangs and right-wing hatists The best way to handle dis semination of hate literature is "not by repression, not even by censorship, but by education in democracy; not by passive ac ceptance of a bad situation, but by active defence of groups which are falsely maligned; nol by Deo hate groups bul by exposing them to the public, shaming them, quarantining them; not by hatred but by neighborly trust and love; by filling our freedom with reapon --_--s eennmen young people Householders! Save On FUEL OIL 16 PHONE @ OIL BURNER SE AND CAREFREE Jacqueline's hair. She wears a white coat. The return of | Mrs, Kennedy and her child- | ren to New York spelled the end of the first vacation since her period of mourning ended. (AP Wirephoto) | PER GAL. 668-3341 RVICE DEPARTMENT @ PREMIUM QUALITY FUEL OIL @AUTOMATIC DELIVERY DX FUEL OIL agami, North Bay, {Becoming mainly afternoon. Sunny cloudy periods much change Light winds. White River, sunny with a few in temperature. Algoma, Hate Groups sibility for others and fostering that climate of confidence and} good will in which true democ-| Low tonight, high racy alone can flourish." 'Windsor TUESDAY AND ALL DAY day. Little change ature. Light winds. Forecast Temperatures Tuesday: 28 40 ing by evening. Tuesday sunny with a few cloudy periods. Not Coch- rane: Variable cloudiness Tues- in temper- |Earlton ...+++. |Sault Ste. Marie |Kapuskasing «+++.» White River.. Moosonee .. |Timmins .. |Kingston ... to HFC for the money you | Tuesday. Not) City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simcoe N. 723-3431 Open Evenings Till: 9 P.M. need to pay them. Then you" can drop your bill problems in the nearest mailbox and repay HFC conveniently. See Household now--borrow with confidence, ASK ABOUT CREDIT | LIFE INSURANCE ON LOANS AJAX: 66 Herwoed Avenve South... . AT LOW GROUP RATES , Suite 208, Oshawa Shopping Cir.--Ph. 725-1138 (northwest corner, over Fairweather's) 64 King Street East--Telephone 725-6526 (next te the Genoshe Hotel) (ever The Advertiser) WEDNESDAY PECIALS i rm RIB PORK CHOPS SHOULDER LAMB $9 FREEZER SPECIAL HIND QUARTER OF CHOPS BEEF DL CUT AND WRAPPED FREE" lb 12 KING STREET EAST -- 723-3633 THE NEXT RED CROSS BLOOD DONOR CLINIC WILL BE HELD THURSDAY, JANUARY 7th, 1965 from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. and from 6:00 to 9:00 p.m. ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM SIMCOE STREET NORTH NEW DONORS ARE URGENTLY NEEDED @ Every day operations are being postponed for the lack of blood. @ Donating Blood is painless. @ Type O" Negative is very short. @ You will be helping to save a life. ' OUR QUOTA FOR THIS CLINIC I$ 450 BOTTLES of BLOOD

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