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Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Apr 1965, p. 1

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Weather Report The Hometown Newspaper Sunny, cloudy periods today. Clearing Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres. overnight. Sunny, warmer Thursday. Low tonight, 38. High tomorrow, 60. Ghe Oshawa Cime VOL. 94 -- NO. 99 0¢ Per! West Teme "Belivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1965 Ontows and "tor \povment'" of Pessase in Can, THIRTY PAGES we eT oe en RENN HERAT RN OF PEACE easter npnisty PEKING SPURNS ANY A IE By VERGIL BERGER PEKING (Reuters)----China to- day spurned the possibility of peace in South Viet Nam, branded the United States as "utterly vicious" and said the Vietnamese 'have no alterna- tive but to resist them to the end, fo resist until they have completely defeated them," The blunt statements came in an "explanatory publisher's note' to the fifth volume of speeches and statemen's hy for- mer Russian premier Khrush- chev, It appeared as a major statement in today's press. The "explanatory note' also yan met ng tne of the leaders with accused Russian aligning themselves U.S. over Viet Nam, It said Sino-Soviet differences were' daily becoming deeper. By upholding policies adopted at the 20th congress of the Soviet Communist party in 1956, at which Khrushchey denounced Stalin, the note said Khrush- chev"s successors were being revisionist and great - nation chauvinists. It accused them of using "flowery talk about anti-impe- rialism, revolution and unity" to deceive people while in fact they pursued the bankrupt poli- : cies of "peaceful coexistence" tle stg CHANCE and "United States-Soviet c. '- Jaboration for the solution of the problems of the world." MUST RESIST On Viet Nam, the "explana- tory note" said: "The Vietnamese people in dealing with utterly vicious United States aggressors have no alternative but to resist them to the end, to resist until they have completely defeated them and there can be no ques: tion whatever of 'peaceful co- existence' with them. "However much they collab- orate, the Soviet Union and the United States can never stamp DOL out the just struggles of the great Vietnamese people." The note said Russia's cur- rent leaders were 'aligning: themselves with the chief en- emy of the people of the whole world while directing the sword- edge against the revolutionary peoples." Observers saw the attack on Russian leaders as a new bid by the Chinese to present them- selves to Afro-Asian nations as the most loyal supporters of Viet Nam's "'liberation strug gle' and thus to reduce Rus- sian influence and the impact of Moscow's support for the Vietnamese Communists. 4h (iA AMAT AAA PUPILS TB-TESTED: HURT? - NOT A BIT Mrs. Ardie Roe gave Drew Webster the needle today -- and drew a laugh from Debbie Riehl--next in line for a tuberculosis test. The two seven - year - olds were among students from Grades Two to Eight who Budget Criticisms E With Non-Confidence Moves By MICHAEL GILLAN OTTAWA (CP) -- The oppo- sition parties are expected to unleash detailed criticism and) test the government with no-) confidence motions today as the Commons opens a six-day debate on Finance Minister Gordon's federal budget. Conservative financial critic! George Nowlan will continue the assault he began Monday night following its delivery gesture. Other opposition parties, all ment was for urban no indication when took part in a mass tuber- culosis survey, organized by the Ontario County TB and Health association at ing prepared, MPs took on twojwould come before the Com- other government measures --|/mons again. giving first reading to a bill to i nbs 1 retire senators at age 75 andijeader, charged the Senate's|was prime minister were also news agency said South Vietna- starting debate on amendments|main use is to reward "'bag-| party hacks and bagmen. to provide greater lending) men" authority to the federal govern party in power and as a place/would retire future senators atiarea at Phu Yen, about 15 renewa lifor schemes and low - rental and| prime minister wants to "'bootision. Present senators, ap- university housing projects, | Opposition parties -- led by} He said seven of nine sena-|paid $15,000 annually, would be the New Democrats who favor] tors appointed by Prime Minis- abolition of the upper chamber |--were critical of the govern- rani Genter 48! 8iment bill on the Senate, There (fund raisers) for ministers and MPs the jupstairs."' ter Pearson were Liberal party fund-raisers or organizers while two were former MPs who it'were removed to make way for critical of the budget despite the proposed 10-per-cent cut in the ic income tax, are ex- pected to follow suit. Commons rules provide for possible votes on the even- numbered days of the debate-- Thursday, Monday and Wed- nesday in this case. A Thursday opening for the budget debate had been sched- uled to allow opposition spokes- men time to digest its contents. But Privy Council Randall, and development minister, _ of ambitious goals for the prov-|/The government must provide |of appointing senators. Ontario Sets Rugged Goals TORONTO .(CP) -- Stanleyjof labor, particularly economics|three fields and in material set| processing, Ontario's President|ince's economy in the next five Mellraith said Tuesday the op-|years. as the legislature re- With 5-Year Economy Plan in these Mr. Randall said. /opportunities for workers to ob- ltain education and new skills. position parties had expressed|sumed sitting Tuesday after a} The economics minister said no objection to starting the dis-|! cussion sooner. 3-day Easter recess. He also laid out an extensive|adequate to meet industry's de-|!awyers appearing before that) While the criticisms were be-|program of work for the goy-|mands. Manufacturing did not commission to tie Senator Gel-| paiders supported by eight U.S. | ----|ernment to help the province|reach its full potential last year|!nas. in with the so-called bribe|,jr Force F-100 jets hit two reach the goals, (Mr, Randall described a five- !@bor. = Wreck Kil \year plan by which the govern- ment-aims to create at least 75,000 new jobs a year and re-| Ontario's labor market is in- }because of a shortage of skilled Mr. Randall set other targets for the province: --An increase of at least 5.5 per cent a year in the gross xpected, Douglas Fisher, NDP deputy} the! 100 Animal {duce hose dasa to two per NORTH BAY (CP) -- About 100 head of livestock phuric acid lost Tuesday when b 38 cars of a CPR freight train were derailed near Bonfield, 20 © miles east of here. t Dead and injured cattle lined the track after the pileup, b which ripped up about a half- mile of rails. About 75 head of cattle more than 20 horses were killed pared to or destroyed by police and bur- were| Population € killed and 8,500 gallons of sul-|7,600,000 and employment will! By 1970, he said, will have e about 3,000,000. He said the main stimulus..to conomic growth will come in he field factured goods, whose output will have increased 50 per cent! of durable y 1970, Employment in ied in a large pit dug near the WILL PROVIDE JOBS tracks by bulldozers, The acid spilled from tank cars and drained into aa nearby swamp. All main line traffic betweenia rerouted over CNR .tracks. e An investigation by CPR offi- Most new jobs, he said, will twoibe in service occupations such s transportation, trade, nance, publte administration services. -Em- North Bay and Pembroke was ployment would decline in for- mining. encour- cials began Tuesday afternoon.'aged to economize on the use NO INDICATION OF 'ONE-MODEL' C nd community Stry, agriculture and Industry should be Ontario's reached manufactur: ing would be reduced to 26 per andicent of the labor force com- 29 per cent in 1961, provincial product; An average increase in productivity of 2.5 per cent a year; --A 10-per-cent increase in exports of manufactured goods, SET BY COUNCIL Mr. Randall said the goals for Ontario were first set out in the January report of the Economic Council of Canada, Last year the- province's econ- omy grew faster than these target rates Employment was up 89,000 in 1964, while exports of manu- factured goods increased by 42 per cent "The high rate of economic growth last year was not con- centrated in a few metropolitan centres,' the minister said, "but was spread across the whole province." manu- fi- ito nominate some or making it jbusiness are represented there.itial area," the agency said. ONCENTRATION Dr. §S. J.° Phillips Public Schoo!. More than 550 pupils took the. test administered by Ontario Department of Health Workers, 80 U.S. Jets Pound Roads From Reuters-AP SAIGON (CP)--More than 80 U.S. and South Vietnamese air- § craft raided North Vietnamese roads and bridges today and also sank or damaged patrol F jnew ministers, Almost all sen poats and coastal shipping, ators appointed by Opposition) (1 Tokyo a monitored dis- |Leader Diefenbaker when he/natch by the South Vietnamese |mese, planes today strafed and The government proposal|set fire to a large residential lage 75 on an $8,000 annual pen-|miles southeast of Dong Hol. (In the first official announce- i : ment that a population area had ' y * been struck in North Viet Nam, ° the agency said the planes launched the attack after "re- ceiving hostile ground fire."' It said many: anti-aircraft- posi- tions were destroyed in thev area.) : In a separate mission, four F-100s dropped 1,000,000 leaflets over four cities, a U.S. spokes- man said, U.S. and South Vietnamese planes made seven raids on the |North. | pointed for life and currently free to stay on or retire, NAMES GELINAS | Mr. Fisher said the "prize |specimen"' among Pearson ap- pointees was Stnator Louis Gel- inas, chief Liberal fund raiser in Quebec and a figure in the Dorion judicial inquiry into the Lucien Rivard narcotics case. Senator Gelinas spoke "sheer nonsense"' when he testified at the Dorion inquiry that he di not know Liberal organizer Guy! iy south Vietnamese sky- Masson, ; 2 lraider pilots claimed the de- Mr. Fisher said testimony at/struction of six military bar- "The very fact references |were made to Mr, Gelinas dur- ling the Rivard inquiry, and that attempts were made by Auto Industry Will Burgeon: Drury Indust said Tuesd OTTAWA. (CP) Minister Drury Canadian automobile manufac- turers are making plans to in- sub- crease production "very stantially" and he knows of plans by the major concentrate only on one Opposition Leader baker comment on statements, plants mod whi he said were made in a Wash- ington com mittee, that t three biggest auto of a small plants while rest of their U.S Mr. car in concentrating t production in t Drury said he knows no such plans. Under the Can- Diefen- asked for the minister's firms planned to build only one model Canadian ry ay no to el, sult in only He gle been discussed, said the ch he Meanwhile, he met Canada conn he he earlier ton of from plant, Ford's ada-U.S. auto parts agreement, Canadian manufacturers increase their production and, on the basis of existing infor- mation, this is not likely to re- one mode! produced at the major plants question of sin- model production had not MEETS FORD CHIEF Labor MacEachen told the Commons with . President Scott of the Ford Motor Co.-of in with layoff of some 1.600 employees Windsor, When the viewed in it its was not must first 500 to being employment problem In reply to questions by 'T. C, leader of Douglas, Minister Democratic Karl establishing the the day in planned tigated Prime the opportunity Ow. > i indicated. He expected that the next two months will find other area and the National Enploy- ment Service is working on the Fachen said the possibility: of gram for auto workers has been discussed and it will be further Minister Commons situation was s entirety, he said, as serious as first agreement when the budget de- bate opens Thursday. The agreement itself would be brought before Parliament later for ratification but he could not estimate a date for this. Mr. MacEachen, External Af- fairs Minister Martin and Mr. Drury headed the government delegation meeting with thé be laid off in the in the Windsor the New | Party, Mr. Mac- | a retraining pro- juse nuclear weapons in the As-|ment. Provisional President Ra- ian theatre fael Molina Urena, installed by 2, Justified. his postponementithe rebels, took asylum in the the Dorion inquiry showed the|racks in one area, eight smaller dangers of the present method/pyildings in a second target zone and 10 other military structures in a third. |GEN, NGUYEN CAO KY; 'LET'S. INVADE NORTH' | They also said they sank 15 junks and hit three smaii | wooden bridges. ° Other South Vietnamese sky- LBJ Still Hopeful offer, are indications of hoW|ferry areas, causing "severe e dangerous the present setup is damage" to the My Ly River| Of Pp I A Many senators were involved ferry eight miles southwest of eace n s1a in a "conflict of interest," he|nong Hoi and 'moderate dam- said, citing the stalling of legis-/ace" to the ferry complex at By ARCH MacKENZIE and Prime Minister Lal Baha- lation for two new banks by the/ Huu Hung. The latter had been' WASHINGTON (CP) -- Presi-|dur Shastri of India, Johnson Senate banking committee|yit eariier , " said i 1 1 b hi saga . dent Johnson says he is "very|said in a prolonged reply, re which has four members wn) All planes returned safely, /hopeful" that some method can|flecting his awareness of and are directors of existing banks lhe: found 46 bring about peace|sensitivity to subsequent criti- FAVOR: REFORMS es jtalks on Viet Nam, but the|cism, that he still thinks it was Several MPs favored differ- Viet Planes |United States desire for peace|® 800d idea because he would ent reform measures, such as| |is coupled with a "refusal to re-|have hoped later to have more permitting the provinces treat." jauthority from congress to meet » The U.S. is in Viet Nam tothe needs of the two countries. an elective body. Others| it omes jresist aggression, the president! The president began by read- wanted committee studies to told a White House press con-|Ing a statement on Viet Nam recommend reform steps. TOKYO (Reuters) South|ference Tuesday, "and as long\in which he said: ; | Eldon Woolliams (PC -- Bow|Vietnamese Air Force planes/&s the aggressors attack we'll I say again that J will talk) River) said reform is neededjtoday strafed a large residen-Stay there and resist them/{o any government, anywhere, but defended the upper cham-|tial area in North Viet Nam,|whether we make friends or/@d without any conditions, If) ber as a protector of minor-jaccording to the (South) Viet-|lose friends." any doubt our sincerity, let) ities, Provinces should have alnamese Press news agency in| He said the moment that ag- them test it. Each time we have} say in appointments so mem-/Saigon as monitored here bers of minority parties--such; In the first official announce i as Alberta's Premier Manning|ment that a population area had) The clearest lesson from Mu-| oe --would have an opportunity to}been struck in North Viet Nam,|nich to the present, Johnson| become senators the agency said the strike oc-/Said, is that to yield to aggres-| unta Holds Mr. Fisher, challenging Mr.jcurred at Phy Yen, some 15|sion brings only '"'greater| Woolliams claim that the Sen-|miles southeast of Dong Hoi. fain egy brings even more ate defended minorities, said) The planes strafed the area destructive war." | few minorities aside from big|"setting fire to a large residen-| 'To stand firm is the only) D alae . Share| ' Zuarantee of a lasting peace,'"| an omingo ~jhe sald, SANTO DOMINGO (AP)--A /DOMINATES CONFERENCE military junta dominated by The air-jungle war in South-|Brig,-Gen, Elias Wessin y Wes- jeast Asia dominated Johnson's|sin appeared in prospect for the! |34-minute press conference be-|Dominican Republic today fol- jfore 300 reporters around television and radio mi-|day-old army revolt to bring! |crophones in the East Room of|back former president Juan! the White House, Bosch, | His comments were the lat- Wessin, an air force officer, jest in a round of government; entered the capital city of Santo messages seemingly designed to} Domingo Tuesday night and im- |drive home to the American|posed martial law. The rebel! jpublic a determination to con-|leaders negotiated for jtinue the expanding U.S. mili-/through officials of the United tary role in Southeast Asia States embassy. They followed signs of some| Donald Reid Cabral, head of broadening in public doubt the former civilian junta, was about the course of the war. reported to be safe after taking In other matters, the presi-|refuge in the Israeli Embassy Ford officials. dent also: \during the four days of straf- "It was a useful meeting," | t. Denied ever having re-|ing, naval shelling and small said Mr. Martin, who repre- ceived from "a single official|arms fire. sents the Windsor constituency jof the government or employee! During the night the country of Essex East. Mr. Seott declined comment. Ford says the layoff-is for a retooling of the company's en- Pearson said gine and standard transmission more than a week ago of sched-| Colombian Embassy would have an plants, to increase production juled visits by Pakistani Presi-| Formation of a military gov- to discuss the aute facilities. !dent Mohammed Ayub Khanlernment was expected today. mves- , 7 if a peace _ of the government" proposals to| was without a central govern-|~ RAID NORTH VIET NAM, SOUTH GENERAL SAYS General Wants Escalation; 'Sick Of Bombing Bridges' By MALCOLM W. BROWNE SAIGON (AP) :-- Air strikes against North Vietnamese roads, bridges and railways are not choking off aid to the Viet Cong, and a land invasion of the North should begin immedi- ately, says the commander of South Viet Nam's air force. "If we are just going to bomb communications lines, the Viet Cong will be able to stand up for a long time, I'm afraid," Brig.-Gen. Nguyen Cao Ky told The' Associated Press in an ex- clusive interview today. "So the next step must be big--either a big escalation of the war or ne- gotiations."' While the bulk of the raids against North Viet Nam have been flown by U.S. Air Force and navy planes, Ky's propel- ler + driven Skyraider bombers also have been over North Viet Nam nearly every day. cations are not really effec tive," said the 34-year-old gen- eral. "'The Communists can al- ways find ways of moving through the jungle. SUGGESTS PLAN "But if we were to set up a kind of 'National Liberation Front' in the North, we could do the same things to the Com- munists that they've been doing us here. We have superiority in the air over North Viet Nam's central area from the 17th to the 20th parallels, and we could easily supply guerrillas af our own there. "For that matter, what's wrong with sending up tegular troops now? Our intelligence proves that North Vietnamese regular units are already in our highlands, so there can be no bar to sending troops north." Ky is against U.S. participa- tion in ground operations "The raids against communi- against North Viet Nam. West Fans Flames Of War, Threatens World: Russian MOSCOW (AP)--Soviet Mar- shal Ivan Konev warned today that Western "provocations" may "at any moment ger off a military conflict a url mankind into the abyss. an- other world war." "The flames of war fanned by the imperialists in Viet Nam are threatening to spread to other areas, thereby creating tension alf over the world," Ko- ney said. "The Soviet Union cannot re- main indifferent to the Gestiny) of the Fraternal Vietnamese people." Konev spoke at a press con- ference marking 20th anniver- sary celebrations of the end of the Second World War. Konev spoke of fhe strength and hitting-power of the Soviet Union's strategic missile forces and said: | "The main lesson of World SSE RR AO canoes email mdse SS WETS HIGHLIGHTS North Viet Nam will stop. sound of guns." , War II is that military ventures of the imperialist forces against socialism inevitably lead to the complete route of the aggres- sor." HITS AT GERMANY The Soviet marshal also hit out against the arming of West Germany with nuclear weap- ons. "If the West German militar- ists lay their hands on nuclear weapons," he declared, "the So- viet Union and the other coun- tries of the Warsaw. Treaty Or- ganization will take the neces- sary measures to insure the peace and security of the peo- ples of the socialist countries." Konev said West Germany was increasingly becoming "NATO's shock force in Europe, a force whose purpose, accord- ing to the imperialist plans is to go eastward again, against the countries of socialism, ge Mental Patient Escapes, Suicider TORONTO (CP) -- <A 27-year-old mental patient who escaped from the Ontario Hospital here and then shot himself to death Monday night apparently slipped un- noticed from the hospital as Minister Matthew Dymond sa ing the hospital Monday morning the man went home, threatened his mother, he left a dining hall, Health id Tuesday night. After leav- to his wife and young son with a shotgun, and finally turned the gun on himself. gathered| lowing the collapse of a four-| Turkey Wants NATO Out Of Cyprus ANKARA (AP) -- Premier Suat Hayri Urguplu con- firmed Tuesday that Turkey will ask for the removal of all North Atlantic Alliance weapons from Cyprus at a meeting of NATO's foreign ministers in London next month. Turkey has charged Greece, a fellow NATO member, has armed 10,000 Greek Army regular troops on Cyprus. STAR ite 'Try To Understand Quiet WREAASS THE TIMES today... ' BS, BSS Revolution'; Sauve--P, 13 A Youth Gets 12 Months For Dangerous Driving--P. 5 hs For D Youth Sentenced To 12 A ; Driving--P. 5 s Hebs Humiliate Hawks W: Ann Landers--17 City News--13 Classified--26, 27, 28 Comics--23 Editorial--4 Financiol--29 Obits--29 | ] SSSR ith 6-0 Pounding--P. 10 Sports--~10; 11 Television--23 Theatre---22 Whitby News--5 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17 Weather--2 su

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