{ { i { : | tow, Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94 -- NO, 154 She Oshawa Cimes i tag: 'OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JULY 3, 1965 Weather Report Sunny and cool today. Cloud- ing in afternoon with rain possible. Clear tonight. Cloudy Sunday. Low tonight, 58. High tomorrow, 80. Autrestind as Second Class peat Post Office Department Ottawa for payment Postage in Cash. TWENTY PAGES OSHAWA'S "LADY OF THE ROSES' Prety. Sharon. Hurst of 134 Rossland road east yoose in _ the centre of some the home of Mrs. Bennett, 53 Oshawa pes. vard north, to call attention to a happy upcoming event -- the annual Rose Show of 0 'Horticultural Soci- orieter tre X. A. Lov- » ell i¢ School from 5. to : p.m. As Miss Oshawa for , Sharon has had a jot © de oeeee at tase as she makes appearances at various public functions. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. B, Hurst. The rose show will also feature other seasonable flowers. Oshawa Times" Photo Quebec Still With Other 9 PORTAGE DU FORT, Que. (CP) -- Quebec Premier Le- sage said today that his prov- ince's desire for economic self-assertion in no way affected its "sincere desire" to collabor- ate with Ottawa and the other provinces. Mr. Lesage was speaking at a ceremony marking the begin- ning of construction of a $50,-| 000,000 Consolidated Paper Co, kraft pulp mill at Portage du Fort, Pontiac County, in the Ot- tawa Valley region of Quebec. It is scheduled to have a daily capacity of 500 tons of pulp. Referring to a Quebec-On- tario-federal government agree- ment to construct. a bridge over the Ottawa River between the A MARCH ON IGNORANCE Johnson 'Teacher NEW YORK (AP)--President Johnson told widely cheering ed- ucationists Friday he will pro- pose "within a few days' a na- tional teachers corps to work jwith teachers in city slums and \depressed rural areas of the The president flew from| annual convention of the Na- tional Education Association. | Some 7,000 delegates beamed and applauded as Johnson said: "In the next few days I will] propose a national teachers corps to enlist thousands of ded- Pontiac mill and Chenoux in Ontario,« the premier said it showed an understanding that! exploitation of the new mill would favor economic. expan-|tional equivalent of the U.S./League, termed Johnson's call ity. sion for both sides of the Ot-| tawa_Valley. "The bridge, he added, would) greatly facilitate. transport of} pulpwood: from Ontario to the Quebec mill. - Text of the premier's address was provided to thé press be- fore delivery. icated Americans to work along- \side local teachers in city slums |and areas of rural poverty. Begins Corps OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- {ster Pearson said Friday he hopes to announce cabinet changes next week, He made it clear the changes will include appointment of a new justice minister to replace the resigned Guy Favreau. Beyond that, it was not cer- tain how far they might go. Th prime minister outlined his hope in regard to minister- ial appointments after a three- hour cabinet meeting that dealt mainly with the forthcoming federal - provincial conference. He told reporters the question of political appointments, in- cluding cabinet changes, was not discussed at the East Block meeting. Did he plan to announce some cabinet "re - adjustments" he was asked. Yes, very shortly, he replied. There now is a vacancy in the justice portfolio and it should be filled, Would the announcement be made next week? "IT hope so, yes," was the re- y. The prime minister's brief comments set off immediate speculation on the scope of the forthcoming ministe- rial changes. There were two schools of thought among par- liamentary observers. One group suggested the changés would be minor, lim- ited possibly to appointment of a new justice minister, selection of a new portfolio for Mr, Fav- reau and possibly one or two other minor shifts necessitated by the first two objectives. Ohers speculated that a fairly large - scale revision might be in the offing. In this connection, it was recalled that, when Mr. Pearson last made ministerial changes in Febru- ary, he said he had even more changes in mind, but was awaiting the: Dorion report. The justice portfolio is the lone real vacancy of the mo- ment, although the prime minis- ter has not named another min- ister without portfolio since the resignation of Yvon Dupuis. Observers. who have been speculating on a fairly wide- scale cabinet shuffle suggest more openings may be created, There are suggestions, for ex- ample, that Mines Minister Benidickson, in indifferent health for some time, may be named to the Senate and Solici- tor - General MacNaught to the bench in his home province of Prince Edward Island. CENTRES ON McILRAITH Current speculation on a new justice minister centres primar- ily around Privy Council Pres- ident Mcllraith, who has been CABINET REVAMP SET FOR NEXT WEEK handling the portfolio on an acting basis, and Works Minis- ter Cardin. If Mr, Mellraith gets the post, most observers believe Mr. Favreau will merely take over the Privy Council pres- idency. ssignment of Mr, Car- din to justice would mean & more far - reaching shuffle. Mr. Pearson said following the cabinet meeting--the first since Parliament recessed Wednesday -- that some decis- ions were. made and announce- ments will follow shortly. He indicated, however, that prep- arations for the federal - pro- vincial conference were the main item on the agenda. Summer Sets Grit Future, Starr Feels The life of the Liberal gov- ernment hinges on what action the government takes during the summer recess, says Mi- chael Starr, Ontario riding mem- ber of parliament. He said today the outcome of the non-confidence motion, planned by Opposition Leader John Diefenbaker when parlia- ment resumes Sept. 27; "'all de- pends on circumstances at that time and the actions of the government between now and then. "The government has three months to act and if it doesn't, it will have to face parliment,"' said Mr. ° Starr. He said the Dorion report, which so far has resulted in the resignation of Justice Minister Guy Favreau and Prime Min- ister Pearson's statement that cabinet changes will be made next week, "speaks for itself'. Mr. Starr said the Conserva- tive Party has been criticized for not criticizing the Liberals. But, he added, the Conserva- tives would also have been open to criticism if they had moved a non-confidence motion before the parliamentary session end- -jed, without giving the govern: ment time to make changes. j Mr. Starr. said ..he....p! td stay in his riding mist Of this summer. He said there is a possibility that a 14-man (including Mr.| Starr) , all-party, three-week! tour of Russia and Czechslo- vakia may be held later this month, although it is not official jyet. The trip, he said, was originally scheduled last fall, but was cancelled. Peace Effort Of PM Feted DETROIT (CP) -- A purely| military solution to the conflict in Viet Nam is considered by Canada to be "neither practi- cable nor desirable," External Affairs Minister Paul Martin told' an international freedom festival Friday. Mr. Martin made the com- Civil Rights worker Prathia Hall was in Oshawa last night and spoke to a small but en- thusiastic audience at the St, George's Anglican Church Hall. A native of Philadelphia, ase Hall is an executive mem- |ber of the Student Non-Violent Co-ordinating Committee which was formed five years ago fol- lowing the lunch counfer sit-ins at Greensboro, North Carolina. She has worked as a field secretary for SNCC in Georgia land Mississippi helping sae to register their votes. A charming and articulate speaker, Miss Hall described in an hour-long speech the long and patient fight of. her people lover the last few years. There of jhumor and were moments tales of against any pattern of teacher|ment when accepting. the 1965/brutality. dismissal based on race or na- \tional origin." Johnson also said a program ito help Negro teachers dis- jPlaced by the desegregation of} International Freedom Award| on: behalf of Prime Minister' Lester Pearson, the second re- cipient of the award since it was instituted last year. 1964 award was. presénted post- The}: opened with a William White, The evening reminder from lof Toronto, "The people who need this sort of thing,' he said in intro- |ducing the speaker, "are not lall- -Negro schools is under way. [Sumously to President John F.|/here this evening.' In Durham, N.C., James Far-| |Congress of Racial Equality, jtermed the teachers corps an- jnouncement "a very construc- jtive idea,"' but added: | "One central . question that| jneeds now to be answered is the content of what the teach- ers corps teachers will teach in the slums and rural areas." Whitney Young Jr., executive Kennedy The prime minister was un- Washington to address the 103rd)mer, executive director of the|able to be present to accept the| jaward--a plaque--for his ef- |forts on behalf of world peace} land freedom, Mr. Martin told 1,000 persons |representing government, indus- jtry and commerce in Windsor) !Viet Nam is the concern of the whole international community, and involves the right of free choice and the larger issues of he group will be-the educa-|director of the National Urban|international peace and eee Peace Corps. PROTECT TEACHERS | Johnson further told the clos- jing session; "I have directed the commis-|deal a tremendous blow to the that has led to |for a national lan teachers "excellent" proposal. corps Young said the plan will bene- | spirit of hostility and anti-Amer-| fit slum children, and termed it a "wise investment that could Gov. George Romney of Mich- igan said Mr. Pearson and Mr.| Martin 'have replaced the! ican feeling that was growing among Canadians" with action "strengthening cial attention, in reviewing de-jing in human lives and dol-/an almost ideal relationship be- leat of education to pay spe- dropout problem at a vast sav-|and improving what has been Segregation plans to guard lars." SOVIET PAPER LAMPOONS RUSSIAN BUREAUCRACY 'tween the two countries,' Red Tape: Even Reds Hate It MOSCOW (AP) -- A Soviet youth newspaper, complaining of nightmarish government red tape, suggests the coun- try must be run by a '"'min- istry of inconveniences,"' The report of "mounting in- conveniences" came in a bit- ing satire on Soviet bureauc- racy which appeared in Fri- day's edition of Komsomols- kaya Pravda. The writer, Ilya Zverev, pro- posed that those responsible for idiétic regulations should pe punished as criminals. Zverey described his attempts to get two new lenses for his eyeglass frames. This is what he said happened: He went first to the optical department at a drug store, There a saleswoman told him she could only sell him one lense. . "Two lenses are strictly for- bidden," she said. "Only two drug stores in Moscow have this right (to sell two lerises)." HAS ANOTHER TRY bee non ha to one of em. and this conversation en- sued, i oT Salesman: "We cannot ac- cept your frames because they are in a soft case. According to the rules they should be in a crush-proof case." Zverey: "'Why?" Salesmah: 'To protect your glasses better." Zverev: "Okay, put my frames in a crush-proof case." Salesman: "But we are not given them." Zyerey: 'Okay, then I'll buy such a case myself," Salesman "But we have soft ones on sale." The writer did mot say only whether pe eventually got his lenses. Zverey said Soviet newspa- prs had received letters from throughout the country com- plaining of a preponderance of silly regulations covering ev- erything from placing bus stops in inconvenient locations , to buying a wedding dress. The complaints, he said, came from all kinds of people "except cosmonauts and gov- ernment ministers" -- imply- ing that-only these two groups have easy access to goods and | and Detroit that the problem in| Opening her address Miss |Hali said: 'There is no time jto rest on platitudes. You have jto find the answers. "T can remember my own jhigh school days when I was jafraid to ask questions. One lwas supposed to listen and jaccept, "Now it is different. Hundreds SAIGON (AP)--The Commu- |nisi Viet Cong continued for the third day today their latest ser- ies of mortar attacks on U.S.- |South Vietnamese airfields, They shelled the base at Can |The, South Viet Nam's third largest city. | Government troops countered with mortar fire of their own and war planes were sent to the area 80. miles southwest. of Sai- gon to engage the guerrillas under the glare of flares. A small government force searched the area after dawn, {but did not find any guerrillas, | the spokesmen said. The Viet Cong began their jmortar: attacks 'Thursday, kill- ine one American, wounding twe ethers and causing an esti- mated $5,000,000 in damage. Before dawn Friday, a mortar attack damaged three helicopters 220 miles northeast 'lof Saigon. Chung. Hee Park's cabinet de- cided in Seoul, meanwhile, to send a combat division and. sup- porting units, totalling as many as 15,000 soldiers, to South Viet Nam, a terrible} South Korean President} Oshawa Hosts Rights Worker of young people are learning to live the question. This is a source of great dismay to some of their teachers. "In some places now people are pausing to listen to the ques- tions | young people are put- ting. Miss Hall described the be- ginnings of SNCC. | "It started with three south- tern student men going into a restaurant. They sat down. and waited for service. They were. told they would not be served. "Their reply; she said, 'was |*then we will ¥ait'. x "Those men," she. said, "were arrested. They ended up in jail for asking the question. "By the tofoming day, how- ever, hundreds: more were ask- ing the same) question. Lunch counter sit-ing were going on all over the south. "Demonstrations," she said later in her speech, "are noisy and disturbing, People don't like them. They like a steady tran- quil life. "But a demonstration brings the issue right on to the street. It is right there before every- one. People have to deal with it. "We are all involved. | "Tt am deeply troubled," con- cludd Miss Hall. "It is a ter- rible challenge. We have all become so comfortable. It is hard . but people are learn- jing" to live the question." Lie Charg Denounce MONTREAL (CP) -- Former|of his assistant, Montreal MP justice minister Favreau saidjGuy Rouleau, on Sept. 2. Friday night any implication or! insinuafion that Prime Minister Pearson "would have lied, in-| my directly or directly, to the|R, House of Commons is prepos-) terous.' Mr. Favreau also said in a) radio interview that he feels] the references to him in the Dorion report have not weak- ened his political position. t one point, he remarked, "next week I will be in a dif- ferent cabinet post." He did not elaborate. be : Scie He said that if the opposition) hi } |had been led by Davie Fulton, CIVIL RIGHTS WORKER SPEAKS IN OSHAWA | Leon Balcer of Premier Roblin of Manitoba, the controversy over the case of Raymond Denis would not have been "personal as a way of destroy- ing'a man." His reference to the prime minister touches on differences, between Mr, Pearson and Chief Justice'. of Su- ud ge reau's 'testimony 'to mean that the justice minister told Mr. Pearson about the involvement Future Ambitions Not Thwarted By Dorion Case, Favreau Says He said he didn't feel it was necessary to consult with the other experts in his department before making his decision. "I have no regrets,'"' he said, concerning his decision two years ago to enter federal pol- itics. But he added, "there are things that I should much pre- fer had not happened." He said he does not fee] that recent events have "'cut me off from anything I was headed for in the past." But he added that rising higher in political life "has not been the prime object of my political career.' "T have a clear feeling that my position both in Quebec and elsewhere in Canada is more firm now than before the re- port." He said.that in the days last November before Mr, Nielsen) brought the Denis-Rivard mat-| ter before the House, he. (Mr. Favreau) did not realize how important the matter was to the government. As a result he gave all his ~~ |time to preparing the estimates Viet Cong Keeps Shelling Luci Johnson 'American-South Air Bases Baptized RC Reliable U.S. Navy sources| reported that a Soviet trawler is cruising off the South Vietna- mese coast in the vicinity of U.S. 7th Fleet carriers which launch daily air strikes against) North Viet Nam. U.S. officials in Saigon de- clined immediate comment. In Saigon the Viet Cong took advantage of the government imposed, one month blackout of private Vietnamese - language newspapers to sell its own clan- j\destine newspaper. The Viet Cong newspaper is said to be selling for less than one cent a copy. It is competing with an official government newspaper issued by the psych-| ological warfare ministry. The government also has ord- ered the closing of the Saigon Post, one of the city's two Eng- lish - language newspapers, for the period July 3-7. No explana- tion was given for the closing. {gn another Communist propa- Ganda effort, the Viet Cong warned the South Vietnamese} and foreign residents to keep| away from places frequented by American soldiers 'to avoid ie incidents." WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- ident Johnson's younger daugh- ter Luci received her first com- munion as a Roman Catholic today. Luci became 18 Friday aed was baptized as a Catholic in a private rite at St. Matthew's Cathedral, attended by the pres- ident and Mrs. Johnson, her older sister Lynda, 21, and a few close friends. Luci has been "headed in this direction a long time," one of her friends said, "so it had nothing to do with her boy friends."" Some of the boys Luci has dated-have been Catholics Rey, James Montgomery has been instructing Luci in the Ro man Catholic religion since Sep: tember. She had been an Epis copalian (Anglican) like her mother and sister. President Johnson is a member of the Disciples of Christ, as the Christian Church. The religious rites. were in contrast to a gay birthday party]: at the White House Friday night. were invited for dancing under ; |called also known|= About 0 of Luci's friends |= | |DIDN'T KNOW | 4 Pearson told the Com-; ns he did not know of Mr.| Rouleta's implication in the jcase until Nov. 23. The prime minister has writ- iten Mr. Justice Dorion asking for a public correction in the report. The judge said he would not change '"'one iota" of the document. Mr. Favreau _him- self issued a statement Thurs- day night denying he had said Mr, Pearson was informed of the Rouleau matter on Sept. 2. The former justice minister said that the MP who first broached the Denis the Commons, Erik Nielse could have come to see M Favreau with the facts he h gathered and he could have "been given the minister's views or the minister could even have revised these ister of justice "can and make decisions upon his own responsibilities," of his department for Commons attention even though he had learned "that Nielsen was con- versant with the Denis file." Mr. Favreau said he still feels his position in the matter was justified. He said the 'image' of Que- bec politics has not been dam- aged by the disclosures of the report. Mr, Favreau declined to com- ment on whether or not Lib- eral MP Guy. Rouleau, whose actions in the Rivard case were "reprehensible" by the report, should resign from the Commons. The former minister said this was an internal mat- ter to be decided by Mr. Rou- leau, the prime minister, Mr. affair in b iF GORDON CHURCHILL PM Requests *=/A Dangerous Change: Tory OTTAWA (CP)--Conservative ffontbencher Gordon Chu said Friday night that Prime Minister Pearson' has set @ dangerous precedent in asking Chief Justice Dorion to make a change in his report on the Lucien Rivard affair, Governments in the past haven't always been 'pleased with reports of. royal commis- ' sions and special inquiries, said Mr. Churchill, <0 held several cabinet posts in the former Diefenbaker administra- tion. But the Pearson government, as far as he can remember, is the first to ask for a correction in such, reports. This might make it difficult for govern- ments of the future to recruit prominent Canadians to serve Favreau and the party. on commissions. came on the heels of the d rainmaking machines hired Maria Bueno of Brazil 6-4, 7- in the all-England lawn tenni Germans Edge U.S. Club of Philadelphia by a half . Challenge Cup of the Henley HENLEY-ON-THAMES, England (GP) Ratzeburg eight upset the Olympic Champion Vesper Boat NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Rain Partly Relieves Ottawa Valley OTTAWA (CP) -- The Ottawa Valley, suffering the worst drought in its history, received temporary relief today from scattered overnight showers that dropped about three- fifths of an inch of rain on the area. The showers, which riest June on record, nearly equalled the month's entire .72 inch rainfall. An average of 3.02 inches has fallen in previous Junes. declined. to comment whether the rain. was brought on by Weather officials by the Ontario government. The machines were set up earlier in the week. Margaret Smith All-England Champ LONDON (Reuters) -- Margaret Smith of Australia beat 5 in the women's singles final is championships today. Eight At Henley -- West Germany's length today to win the bi Royal Regatta after Americ Don Spero captured the Diamond Sculls. 'UNG mn Oshawe Ukrainians Film War Col ' bus Schoo! Promotions A ..In THE TIMES today... me With Russians -- PL o --P.5 Ann Landers --- 20. City News -- 9. Classified -- 16, Comics -- 1}, Editorial -- 4, Financial -- 19. 17, 18, lantern lights on the terrace, Colavito Paces Tribe. Win; Streak Sahih: =P. 7. Obits'-- 19. Sports -- 6, 7, 8. Theatre -- 20, Whitby News -- 5. Women's -- 10, Weother:-- 2.