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Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 May 1965, p. 1

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scale as aman a 4 " "Home Newspaper' Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94--NO. 113 he Oshawa Cimes Ie Single Copy + SOc Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1965 Authorized as Second Class Moll Ottawa and for paymen it « Weather Report Sunny and warm today. Mild- er tonight. Cloudy. Showers Saturday. Low tonight, 50, High tomorrow, 68. pow Office Department of Postage in Cash, TWENTY-FOUR PAGES " 'Security Council | Calls For Truce | | UNITED NATIONS (CP)--| The secretary-general said hey |The United Nations Security intended to move quickly to |Council called unanimously to- out thi: mandate. He jday for a ceasefire in the Do- |minican Republic and asked|added that he expects full co- UN Secretary-General U Thant/Operation from all concerned to send a personal representa- and that he will keep the coun- tive to the strife-torn country. |Cil fully informed, carry The session was called at the PEKING EXP TO 'HANDLE The vote came immediately) after Jordan, Ivory Coast and)request of the rebel Dominican Malaysia laid the proposal be-|regime, which declared that fore the 11 - country council,|Santo Domingo faced immedi- which had been called into ur-jate risk of destruction. The gent session to deal with the/rebel regime asked for the per- Po QUEEN ELIZABETH It welcomes Mrs. John F, Ken- nedy to Runnymede, En- gland, today where a me- morial to the late President Kennedy was dedicated. With Mrs. Kennedy are John, 4, and Caroline, 7. --AP Wirephoto Britain Pays Homage To President Kennedy By EDDY GILMORE mediately around it, became RUNNYMEDE, England (AP)/american property. The Queen with Mrs, John F.) a ' Ruistyiat hecaldatntay dedi) T0Cy Were the gift of the Bri eated Britain's memorial to the| s late American president. \Kennedy was a revered figure, Tt was a sultry, sunny 4ay,)symbolizing a young and vigor-| the hottest May day since 1953./oug America. ? in white Poked ele yond : ATTEND CEREMONY fooked elegant and cool. The solemn ceremonies un-| The president's widow and his folded only a short distance|two children, Caroline, 7, and from the spot where the Magna\John, 4, came to Britain to} Carta, with its precious liber-jattend the ceremony (at 9 a.m. tles, was signed 750 years ago.|EDT). So did his brothers, Sen- With the Queen's dedication,|ators Robert and Edward Ken-) the rectangular, seven - ton|nedy, and two of his sisters, | memorial of Portland stone, and|Mrs. Stephen Smith and Mrs.| some of the historic ground im-|Peter Lawford. | Medicare Free To Indians Judge Rules From '76 Pact BATTLEFORD, Sask. (CP)--jcounsel for Johnson, contended A Saskatchewan judge hasithe fe deral government is ee lobliged by the 1876 treaty to ruled that an 1876 treaty means)..." a1) medical costs for In- all Indians in the province, dians. whether on or off reserves,| Regulations of the hospital in- should receive free hospital and syrance plan, set up in 1947,| tnedical care from the federal!and the' medical care plan, set government. up in 1962, state that Indians t- The memorial is beside the Thames River, 21 miles south- west of London. Carved on the face of the ish people, to millions of WhoOM memorial block are these|"? army, 20 policemen. words: "This acre of English ground was given to the United States of America by the people of Britain in memory of John F. Ken- nedy, pres ident of the United States 1961-63, died by an assassin's hand, 22 November 1963." Then follows this quotation from Kennedy's inaugural ad- dress: "Let every nation know whether it wishes us well or ill that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend or oppose any foe in order to assure the survival and success of lib- erty." The caretaker at Runnymede reported earlier this week that hundreds of sightseers had visited the memorial in advance of its dedication and "a lot of them were disappointed -- they expected something bigger." Runnymede is about 100 acres There was no definite word Thursday on whether the deci- sion would be appealed, but pro- vincial Health Minister D. G. who live on a reserve or whOlof Jush green meadow sloping, have lived off a reserve for less|qown to the Thames. than 12 months are exempt) To the west can be seen the| from paying the compulsory|grey towers of Windsor Castle.| Steuart said it likely will be premiums, or head taxes, for June 15, 215, King John came| "Jooked at in higher courts." Mr, Steuart said clarification appears necessary on how far the decision is meant to extend. the two plans. to Runnymede to put his seal] The federal government injto the Magna Carta, The sign- [these cases pays the premiumsjing took place on Magna Cart for the Indians. Island, 34 acres of gardens and |trees in the Thames. On the is-| The treaty, signed between the Crown and the Plain, Wood JUDGE RULES _ and Cree Indians, provided that; But the regulations say In-| the Indians would be cared for dians must pay their own pre-| by. each Indian agent keeping a miums, once they have been off) land is a 13-room house built in} 1834 by a former high sheriff of Buckinghamshire. | The stone on which the king latest violence in the Dominican!|sonal intervention of the secre- Republic. |tary-general. OAS Contingents Arrive To Help Maintain Peace From Reuters-AP \civilian-military junta opposing SANTO DOMINGO (CP)--The/ the rebels, nor Brig.-Gen. Elias first contingents of the inter-|Wessin y Wessin, commander of American force whose task willl the junta's San Isidro air base, be to keep the peace in the Do- : minican Republic were to ar-|Were available for comment. rive here today. Ai least one person, the five- A spokesman for the Organi-|Yeat-old son of Mrs. Carlita zation of American States said|/Jacaues, was killed in the air in Washington Thursday night attacks. The boy, Jose Ivan, Honduras would send 250 sol-|WaS Playing outside his home diers and Costa Rica, which has "¢ar the transmitter of Radio |Sante Domingo. The 22,000 U.S. troops here PEOPLE ANGERED | will be progressively withdrawn) Residents of the 20-block area jas the OAS force takes over. [of downtown Santo Domingo Other countries expected tojheld by the rebels responded send men here for:the force are| With an angry cry against U.S. Paraguay, Venezuela, Guate-) forces. mala, Brazil, Colombia, Argen-| "The gringos are responsible tina and Nicaragua. As it builds), . . let's declare war on the up, the force will be placed un-| Americans," people shouted. |der @ unified command. | U.S. marines fired back at | PLANES ATTACK jone strafing P-51. Capt. Charles | The shaky ceasefire in the re-/B. Hennessey of Fort Lauder- |yolt, in effect since May 5, was|dale, Fla. a member of the |badly jolted Thursday when Do- 82nd Airborne Division, said he |minican air force planes, pro-|S@W one of the planes disabled lyided by the U.S. long before |and the pilot bail out safely, It the present civil strife, bombed|WaS not known whose fire the rebel radio off the air and brougit down the fighter. strafed near the U.S. Embassy, In Washington, the state de-| forcing the American ambassa-|partment said the planes '"'lett dor to dive under his desk for|the San Isidro base on the loy- | cover, alist Dominican order and with- | The rebels and the U.S, both|out our knowledge." "Loyalist" lcharged that the so-called loy-|is the designation U.S. officials |alists had violated the cease-/aPply to the junta forces. fire. Richard Phillips, state depart- US. officials were investigat-;ment press officer, said the at- ing whether the planes used/tack "could affect the U.S. at- American - supplied machine -|\titude toward" Imbert. But it gun ammunition and rockets. |was not known if go or- Neither Brig. - Gen. Antonio/@ered the attacks or had any Imbert Barreras, head of the knowledge of them. | Wessin was in command when) |the air force planes attacked : rebel-held portions of the cap- uto-Chec Compulsory *: . The total of Americans killed TORONTO (CP)--Police will|im the Dominican crisis rose to ital early in the conflict, caus- 7 sday. use their discretion when t Beisaplouys jing ieavy casualties. There jhave been persistent reports he} : cata 4 U.S. soldiers were killed checking vehicles under a new third escaped unhurt| jand Imbert do not see eye to) and a "medicine chest" at his house, {he reserve for more than Alsigned the charter is in the|program of compulsory auto-\from a skirmish deep inside year. Johnson was prosecuted/charter Room of the house.|mobile inspection announced rebel territory, while a marine BOUND NOT GUILTY for not doing so. Judge J. M. Policha ruled on, Judge Policha said in his de- the basis of the treaty that Wal- cision that clauses in the 1876) ter Johnson of Battleford, a'treaty, which reflected impres- treaty Indian who lives off his)sive concern by Indian chiefs of home reserve, is not guilty of/that day for their people, charges of failing to pay com- 'should properly be interpreted|State Secretary Dean Rusk to!authorized the|to mean that Indians ar: enti-/accept the memorial on behalf|cence plates on vehicles badly;Wednesday a rebel spokesman pulsory premiums under Saskatchewan hospital and tied to receive all medical serv- medical care insurance plans. jices including medicines, drugs, Around the walls of the room| are the shields of the barons present at the signing. RUSK ACCEPTS | President Johnson asked} of the American people "I do so with the joy and sad-| Thursday in the leg'slature, a/Was Slain by rebel sniper fire transport department -- official near the Hotel Embajador Wed- : nesday night. said later. , Under provisions of the High-| NO SETTLEMENT way 'Traffic Act, police are; Peace negotiations had stalled) to remove the J'-\even before the air attack, On in need of repair and have the indicated a settlement with the vehicle towed away, instruct|junta might be near. But in- Johnson was the first of three}tedical supplies and hospital/ness which shall forever mark|the driver to have repairs|formants said the rebels did not non-reserve Indians to be tried care free of charge," on charges lodged by the prov- Ince's attorney-general. Dave Newsham of Saskatoon,|katchewan. j those of us who served with} There are about 31,000 per-|John Fitzgerald Kennedy," said) and report back, or merely ad-|meet sons of Indian descent in Sas-|Rusk, who also was Kennedy's vise the motorist a minor re-|the junta in the residence of state secretary. | "IN CANADA WE'LL DO AS WE PLEASE' made within a specified period|send an emissary Thursday to with representatives of pair or adjustment is indicated. the papal nuncio. Pioneers Trek To B.C. Freedom DODGE CITY, Kan. (AP)--A tattered group of modern-day ney, Tex., om Feb, dell, Okla., they we them betwee more, Kan, 17. At Cor- sre joined by ningham said he didn't send his kids to school because he didn't n Dwight and Jet- | LODES A-BOMB .S. THREATS' , |ment "BOOM' -- RED CHINA'S' SECOND A-BOMB Viet Cong Of From Top Co DA NANG (CP)--The defec- tion of one of the highest rank- ing Viet Cong officers control- ling guerrilla operations in South Viet Nam was disclosed here today. Provincial Commissar Nguyen Thuy, a North Vietnam- ese who controlled the area sur- rounding Hue, third largest city in the country, gave himself up to authorities there eight days ago. It is the first time that one of the Viet Cong's 34 provincial military chiefs has defected) From Reuters-AP | ficer Defects mmand Post A U.S. military spokesman confirmed the Communist losses. He said 18 South Viet- namese were killed and 77 wounded in the two-stage battle {which began at dawn 135 miles southwest of Saigon and contin- ued until late Thursday night. Four Americans were among the wounded. The operation netted a big haul of Viet Cong supplies and weapons including 28 Russian- jmade rifles and five machine- jguns, some from China. | The fighting began at 6 a.m. when a government battalion PEKING (Reuters)--China to-| day exploded its second atom} bomb, seven months after the! first one in October, the New China news agency reported. The agency gave no details on} how the bomb was detonated. An official communique quoted by the agency said: Peking's Second A-Test May Have Blown In Air for the purpose of abolishing all nuclear weapons." China's first atomic bomb was exploded Oct. 16 last year. Western spokesmen described it as "a crude device of low yield." China said then it was forced to conduct nuclear tests and de- "China exploded another atom|velop nuclear weapons because bomb over its western area at of '"'the ever increasing threat 10:00 hours (Peking time) (10) posed by the United States." p.m. EDT Thursday) on May 14,, The U.S. state department 1965 and thus successfully con-| said Feb. 16 this year that the cluded its second nuclear test." U.S. believed China. was pre- '\was conducting nuclear tests The communique said the bomb was for the purpose of "coping with the nuclear black- mail and threats of the United| States." The communique said: "Following on the explosion of China's first atom bomb on Oct. 16, 1964, this nuclear test is another important achieve- scored by the Chinese people in strengthening their national defence and safeguard- ing the security of their mother- land and world peace." The communique said China within defined limits "and is developing the nuclear weapon for the purpose of coping with the nuclear blackmail and threats of the United States and paring another nuclear test. It added: "The U.S. govern- ment deplores this indication that the leaders of Communist China are, in the face of world- wide condemnation of atmos- pheric nuclear testing, continu- ing such tests," The word "over" was not ex- plained. The first Chinese test last year was believed to have been detonated on a tower. In March, Dr. Ralph Lapp, an American atomic physicist, speculated that China's second nuclear device might be dropped from a plane. (In reporting the Chinese blast from Moscow, the Soviet mews agency Tass said the bomb was exploded "in the air,"") From AP-Reuters OSLO (CP) -- Newspaper re- ports in Oslo and Stockholm say neo-Nazi groups operating throughout Scandinavia have links with the Ku Klux Klan in Alabama and Texas. The Norwegian government organ Arbeiderbladet said today that a Scandinavian group called Nordiski Rikspartiet (Nordic Reich party) has a 'fuehrer" in each of the Nor- dic countries. Citing Swedish informants, the newspaper said the Swedish fuehrer is Goeran Assar Ored- sson and his Norwegian col- league is Hallvard N. Paasche, 25, of Meloey, in northern Nor-! way. | | Arbeiderblaet said Oredsson sent a threatening letter to Swedish lecturer Joachim Is- rael last Oct, 1. The paper said the letter was accompanied by a Klan brochure containing pic- tures of German concentration jcamps with anti-Semitic cap- | tions. it Nazis Linked With Klan By Swedish Police Find action group in Stockholm also held membership in the Klan. Expressen handed over docu- ments and photographs to state and security police. Among them was a picture of a Klan membership card it said was issued to Bjoern Lundahl, the neo-Nazi leader. It bore the sig. nature of "imperial wizard Sherman Miller of Waco, Tex. According to notes on the card, Lundahl had been ap- pointed 'grand dragon" of the "Aryan Knights" in the "realm of Sweden." Swedish police have been in- vestigating allegations that a secret Nazi organization plotted joverthrow of the Swedish gov- ernment, Today, police hurried to the royal palace in Stockholm after an anonymous telephone caller told them it would be attacked. No attack materialized. Expressen gave police a sheaf |of documents on an organiza- \tion called the Carl Ernfrid since the guerrillas began their|SCouting the swampy area near) war against the South Vietnam-/Bac Lieu ran into a guerrilla Sweden's largest newspaper,|/Carlsbergs Foundation. Police |Expressen, said the leader of ajhave detained seven men and ese government 11 years ago. Thuy was immediately placed under top security and sub-| mitted to intensive interroga- |foree, A reconnaissance com- |pany was flown in by helicopter and by 11:30 a.m. the Viet Cong |were routed, leaving 39 dead. Half an hour later a scout recently discovered neo - Nazi'were questioning 100 others. mn |tions in the Hue province--one|PbY armed helicopters and lof the 34 into which the Viet| fighter-bombers, By late after- tion by senior South Vietnam- A ese military intelligence offi-|Plane spotted a concentration of vere. Viet Cong about 30 miles north Brig.-Gen. Nguyen Chanh Thi,|of the Bac Lieu area. Two commander of South Viet|South Vietnamese companies Nam's northern sector, said the|Were quickly flown to the spot. commissar had been in charge|, The Communists put up a of political and military opera-|hard fight despite heavy strikes Cong have divided South Viet,200n the government flew in a Nam. |battalion of reinforcements. Under the South Vietnamese/COUNT 139 BODIES | administration the country is) 'After fighting finally broke; divided in 45 provinces. |off, 139 Viet Cong bodies were} |counted. KILLED 178 CONGS | A U.S, spokesman said during Thursday, government forces) the week of May 2-8 govern- killed 178 Viet Cong guerrillas}ment forces lost 195 killed, 385 and captured 53 in a major vic-jwounded and 120 missing or tory over two Communist bat-|captured. Four Americans were talions in the Meking. Delta. 'killed and 22 wounded. Protests Besiege Bissell On Degree To Stevenson TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Claudejsaid. But it is unlikely the de- Bissell, president of the Univer-| cision will be reversed, he NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Whatever Happened To 'Bombed' Ship? MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- The U.S. Coast Guard failed to find any evidence of an attack on a freighter reported on the Cuban short wave radio Thursday night. The report, which said the freighter sank, came from a man speaking American-accented Spanish. He said he saw the skirmish from his ship off the Cuban coast and took aboard three dead and two wounded. Arab Opposition Builds Against Bonn CAIRO (Reuters) -- Arab opposition built up today to West Germany's new diplomatic link with Israel. Seven countries -- the United Arab Republic, Iraq, Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Algeria and the Lebanon -- have already broken off relations with the Bonn government. Police Seek 'Cunning Deviate' Killer VICTORIA (CP) -- RCMP continues the search today for the '"'cunning deviate' they believe murdered 14-year+ old Susan Freschi on Tuesday. As they check out "hun- dreds of leads', the girl's. grief-stricken mother sits in a shaded room, convinced her daughter was killed by a car. "Whatever we do, we must keep her from knowing the horrible way Susan died," said Mrs. Raymond Freschi's sister, Mrs, Gladys Earnshaw, on Thursday. cng Hi ey czteocr tatters si pioneers--five adults and eight children--are making their way north across the United States determined to find a better life in British Columbia Their trip is fraught with r , such as juvenile officers who. wonder why the children aren't in school, townspeople who consider them panhandlers, and youngsters who find them t game for mischief. on master and originator of the trek is Don Cunningham. Cunningham, his wife and their two children started from Ol- Mr. and Mrs, C, L. Freeman of Iowa Park, Tex. and their six children. And at Lone Wolf, Okla., a bachelor named Nor- man Dougherty hitched on They are travelling in two covered wagons, makeshift af- fairs with autémobile wheels, With them is a small menace-- two teams of horses, a mule, some goats, chickens and dogs. They hope the animals will qualify them to homestead near McBride, B.C. 'They travel @bout 20 miles a day A reporter caught up. with } WON'T TALK "I'm mad at the whole slate of Kansas,"' said Cunningham. "I've been mistreated all the time I've been in Kansas, I'm not going to talk to anyone here any more." And he wouldn't. At Dodge City Wednesday, the travellers were, interviewed by Norman J. Abbey, a juve- nile officer. "LT jumped them about kids not being in school," Ab- bey said. "They were kind of rude and said the children didn't have to go to school, Cun- the believe in it. "He said they were going to Canada where they could do as they damned pleased; that they were getting tired of being pushed around." "The men are in their 30s, wearing full, bushy beards, western hats and blue jeans," Abbey said, He added that Cun- ningham said' he was getting touchy aboui his treatment in Kansas "Tl told him I'm touchy too about parents who won't send their kids to school,' said Ab- bey. sity of Toronto, has received separate letters from a group of senior faculty members and a national students' union, pro- testing the university's decision to award an honorary degree to Adlai Stevenson. Both letters claim that by granting the degree to the United States ambassador to the United Nations May 28, the university would be endorsing U.S. policy in Sout Viet Nam. The university senate will consider the representations at a@ meeting tonight, Dr. Bissell added. Such a decision would not be reversed unless an_ intended recipient has been guilty of an extremely serious mis- demeanor, Dr, Bissell said. \Professor J. and five professors and two as- May 10. The second letter, received May 5, was from the Student Union for Peace Action which claims about 150 students at the university. The faculty letter, signed by|~ M. §. Careless, |< head of the history department, | = sistant professors, was dated|-- ...In THE TIMES t 13 Record UAW Vote Sloping Up--P. 13 Whitby Theatre Guild Opening Night--P, 5 Hull Wins Lady Byng Trophy--P. 12 Obits---23 Sports--10, 11, 12 Television--18 Theatre--7 Whitby News--5 Women's--14, 15, Weather--3 oday... Ann Landers--15 City News--13 |= Classified--20, 21, 22 Comics--18 Editorial--4 Financial---23 16 i RU

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