Home Newspaper : Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- maniville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties. VOL. 94 -- NO. 226 Boe Per' Wesk Tome "Dallvered --6 She ' OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1965 shawna Sunes Pifiorinss ap Secend Close Malt Pont, Office Dapertnent "Weather Report Cloudy, cool with occasional drizzle ending tonight. Wed-. - nésday cool, Low tonight, 45. High tomorrow, 58, of Pestage in Cash. TWENTY PAGES shh MRM Ui FATE OF 2,000 STILL A MYSTERY Volcano Blows Sky-High MANILA (AP) -- The Taal volcano, dormant for 50 years, erupted early today with an earth-shattering roar and pul- sated throughout the day with blasts every five minutes. ; The 12.5 - square - mile island * around the volcano was more than half covered with lava, ash and steaming mud. The fate of its 2,000 inhabitants was un- known 15 hours after the initial blast sent flames and smoke towering 15,000 feet in the air. - The Philippine constabulary said it had not been able to_es- tablish contact with the island --a scenic beauty spot in the middie of a lake on the tip of gg 40 miles south of Man- a. A handful of refugees trom the island were known to have CAN'T DICTATE: BENSON No Pressures On Car-Prices made it to safety across the lake. Others were reported to have drowned in boats that cap- sized as they frantically tried to flee. Still others may be alive on that section of the island which appeared from the air to be relatively untouched. However, a plane which man- aged to fly low vver the island i today reported no signs of le. Between 4,000 and 7,000 ref- ugees were being cared 'for in camps set up along Tagaytay ridge, which borders the inland lake, but most of these were from areas surrounding the lake. By late afternoon the periodic blasts from the volcano ap- peared to be subsiding. How- ever, authorities said it was still far too dangerous to send boats from the outer shores of lake Taal to determine the fate of the islanders. The volcano is a tourist at- traction 40 miles north of Ma- nila -- a volcanic island sur-| rounded by a 500 - foot - deep! mountain Jake that is itself of volcanic origin. It was across this lake that the refugees fled. to the shores five to 10 miles! away. | The voleano had been mak-| The last eruption, in 1911, ing ominous noises for s0me| caught the population virtually ev otligy a aan a P unaware. According to local es- ports from the scene said they) timates, 1,335 persons died, al- began flee the island during) though the exact figure never the night when their dogs be-i was known. gan to bark, cats. to ery and! The eruption. today came at pigs to squeal. |2:30 a.m, and was seen by a SMOKE AND VOLCANIC ash billow high into the air above the 984-foot-high Taal\ Volcano 40 miles north of Manilla, The Philippines, Leads Probe Of Millbrook BY Pakistan Or India TORONTO (CP) -- Andrew| Gen, Bruce Macdonald of Can- Thompson, leader of the On-/ada arrived here by plane to- tario Liberal party, will lead) qay from Cyprus to begin the an inspection of Millbrook max-| task of helping bring peace be- imum security prison near Pet-| tween Pakistan and India. erborough Oct. 7. . | Macdonald, commander of He said Monday night heithe new United Nations India- planned to check a report that! pakistan observer mission, said sex perverts are forced to run}his first 'duty wil! be to sit about in baby-doll pyjamas as|down and learn all about the part of their punishment. | situation." He will be accompanied by| hTere was no indication that George Ben and James: Trot- ter, both Liberal members of the legislature in Toronto rid-) Kashmir, had heeded the latest ings. |directive of the UN Security "The suggestion is that if a|Council ordering them to honor man is a pervert, they put him/their ceasefire agreements and a 22-day undeclared war over LY Gu aa eA Liberal Chie! Truce Still Unheeded NEW DELHI (CP) -- Maj.-| India and Pakistan, who fought} LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Rev- enue Minister Benson indicated Monday night that the Liberal government will not exert any pressure to force Canadian manufacturers to lower their car prices as a result of the pending free trade automotive agreement with the U.S. "We shouldn't be telling peo- ple what they should charge for their products," he told a crowd of about 350 at a Middle- sex East Liberal nominating meeting. He suggested govern- ment intervention would be a dangerous precedent that would invite other price con- trols and their corollary wage controls. James G. Lind, a_ business- man who lives in London and operates a lumber company in nearby Dorchester, was the Li- berals' choice as their candi- date in the riding held since 1945 by the Conservatives. living on its slopes had made it to safety. Confirmed cas- ualty reports were sketchy after it erupted early Tues- day, The volcano last erupt- ed in 1911. Officials hoped most of the 2,000 Filipinos but light. (AP) * J passing airliner which flashed] Thousands watching from the Minority Re word to the nation. By dawn) outer shore of Lake Taal were) : lrescue and relief measures! covered in mud. | WASHINGTON (CP)--A_ mi- |were under way. Throughout the morning the|nority of the U.S. Senate fi- | The eruption set off a tower-| volcano belched fire and smoke.| nance committee charged Mon- ling electrical storm which apec-| About 12 hours after the initial|day the new auto trade agree- ltators described as terrifying.| blast it appeared to be settling; ment with Canada will cost the Ash. and laya rained for miles|down to an earth-shaken roar| United States. many jobs and | around. jevery five minutes or s0. cause trouble with ofher coun- tries. The findings were signed by Democratic Senators Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut, and Al- bert Gore and Vance Hartke, both of Tennessee, and made available to reporters on the eve of tentatively -scheduled Senate dehate on a bill.to make |the agreement operative. The committee's major- jity findings will be made public |today, defending the agreement TOMA a a ee ers he did not know how longjtine Voice of Kashmir radio, \he will stay in New Delhi be-| mouthpiece of the egg 2 fore visiting the ceasefire line.|fighters" operating in the In-| 17 C d With the arrival here Mon-|dian part of Kashmir, said "pa-| ana la day of seven Ethiopian officers] tri0ts had Fg pt dl 4 joi serve ission,| Sualties on Indian troop: Off F I d Dg clases: (ate taken| Series of raids in the last 24 or n la up--positions along the Indian' hours. 4 side of the truce line. Voice of Kashmir--radio--said/toon Canadian soldiers and _air- By early next month Macdon-) ald's command in the India-) Pakistan border area is ex- pected to total about 135 Cana- dian miiitary personnel. | A Canadian Army officer with previous UN service under) his belt, Macdonald served for six months as commander of the Nicosia zone headquarters} down and 90 troops were killedinight to boost the United Na- rebel forces. |\Rawalpindi, Pakistan. | Mr. Benson said the Canada-| Treaty Costs Jobs In U.S. U.S. auto pact will be a source of added strength to the Cana- dian economy by encouraging capital expansion of the coun- try's automotive industry and creating 50,000 new jobs. The anticipated $50,000,000-a-/ iyear loss in duties will be more than compensated for by in- creased tax revenue resulting from expansion of employment and productivity, he added. Mr. Benson's suggestion that the federal government should not attempt to influence car manufacturers to lower their prices was contrary to the stand taken last week by Con- jservative Leader Diefenbaker jwho said that if his party is jelected Nov. 8 it will see that {prices to consumers are re- duced. | The main campaign issue, |Mr. Benson said, is whether Ca- |nadians want more Pearson prosperity or a return to "the Diefenbaker doldrums." port Charges jand urging the bill's enactment. | The agreement, signed. last |January between the two gov- ernments, calls for suspension of the 17.5 per cent tariffs on new jAutomobiles.and smaller manufacturers' tariffs on new- car auto parts shipped either | way across the border. | The Ribicoff-Gore-Hartke mi- Ereiged report denounced both | the agreement and the bill. | Main beneficiaries, the report | said, are the big four auto ma- nufacturers -- General Motors, Ford, Chrysler and American| |Motors -- and their Canadian | subsidiaries. | | Predicting a migration of U.S.| parts manufacturing plants to) |Canada, the minority report! said: "The agreement clearly con-| templates the exportation of! American jobs to Canada." | Describing Canadian wage) LONDON (Reuters) -- Seven-| rates as 50 cents to 70 cents an| employees belonging to the Syn- |hour below U.S. rates, the re- an Indian helicopter was shot|men flew from here Monda_y|port predicted U.S, car makers) couagan-walked-off their jobs | would have every reason to in-| during the last 24 hours by/|tions mijitary observer group in|/crease their purchase of parts|jonger lunch hour and trans- from Canada. By SIDNEY WEILAND MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Sweep- ing changes aimed at strength- ening Russia's economy in an attempt to catch up with the United States were announced Monday by Premier Kosygin. He said the planned reforms resulted from centralized plan- ning and would buttress the po- sition of communism '"'in the economic competition between the two different states." An entire planning network set up by ousted Premier Khrushchev is to be dismantled and capitalist-style profit mo- tives introduced under a blue- print for "economic rejuvena- tion." The changes were presented to top members of the Soviet Communist party at a central committee meeting. They were regarded by observers as pos- sibly the most far - reaching economic measures since the} Bolshevik revolution of 1917. For the first time since then, Russian factories will face com- petition among themselves. Details of Kosygin's address to the 174-man committee were released in a summary by the Soviet news agency Tass, Kosygin said there have been "errors of planning in the re- cent past" that resulted in a lag in consumer goods produc- tion, behind the development of heavy industry. Existing forms of manage- ment planning and incentives in the Soviet Union are outmoded, he said. Kosygin declared that na- tional income, industrial output and labor productivity all have sagged recently. Ren The first steps In 'the eco- BIG ECONOMIC SHIFT, CAPITALISM IN U.S.S.R Greatest Economic Move Since Bolsheviks' Revolt PM SCOFFS 'Draft' -- nomic reform will be the dis- solution of Khrushchev's elabor- ate network of 50 regional eco- nomic councils, the Supreme National Economic Council and the Moscow-based Council of! Charge OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson Monday de- scribed. as 'wildly inaccurate" a report that the goverament would conscript Canadians te fight in Viet Nam if the Lib- erals win the Nov. 8 general election, Mr. Pearson was comment- ing on CBC radio newscasts heard Sunday night in Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia and Monday morning in those provinces and Manitoba. The Sunday commentary said Creditiste Leader Real Caou- ette told a political rally at Val D'Or, Que., the Liberals need a majority government to enact compulsory military service for 100,000 Canadians to serve in Viet Nam. Monday, the CBC broadcast the tape-recorded voice of Mr. Caouette saying the country "definitely will be... faced with the point of conscription by the Liberal party sending people from Canada to Viet Nam" in event of a Liberal election victory. CALLS REMARK 'ABSURD' Mr. Pearson. said. Mr. Caou- ette's remark was "'one of the most absurd yp Sagem that has been made in campaign so. far." Canada is serving on the In- © National Economy. | working toward production Abs T quotas ordered by planners, So- a profit basis. | He said this will safeguard trol and will allow them to adopt the most economic deci- concrete conditions of produc- tion." tories will be put on a cost ac- counting system in some ways tories. Under the new program a fac- not only by its quota produc- tion, but on whether what it goods herea.ter will. count against the factory's quota. ent are filled with billions of rubles worth of unsaleable Workers are to be paid incen- tive bonuses and end-of-the-year lowed to keep more of their profits to develop new tech- terial incentives" and improved living and working conditions. the reforms, which have been the subject of rumors for nearly return to capitalism. He said such talk "only attests to wish- Kosygin said that instead of viet factories now will work on! them from "unnecessary con- sions with proper regard for Under the new system fac- similar to that in Western fac- tory's success will be gauged makes can be sold. Unsold Stores and warehouses at pres- goods and unusable equipment. bonuses. Factories will be al- niques and to help pay for "ma- Kosygin denied, however, that a year, amounted to a gradual ful thinking." Labor Minister Kidnapped, Held Hostage By Strikers BAIE COMEAU, Que. (CP)-- Carrier Fortin, Quebec labor minister, was held prisoner for two hours Monday by striking workers on the site of Manic 5, a part of the: mammoth Mani- couagan power development project north of Baie Comeau. Fortin, on a tour of northeastern Quebec, was visit- ing the power site when 1,600 dicat Interprofessional de Mani- to baek up demands for a portation from job to job on the dam site. A delegation of workers led by Union President Gilbert Bourgoing approached the min- ister and his party while they were eating lunch. in baby-doll pyjamas and make) pull back their troops to the po- him run in the corridors," Mr. sitions they occupied Aug. 5. | of the UN peace mission on the} Thompson said. The Security Council made island of Cyprus. He occasion- Reforms Minister Allan\the demand in a unanimous| ally was acting commander for the entire UN Cyprus mission, Grossman termed the pyjama| resolution at an emergency ses- report fantastic. sion in New York late Monday However, he added, while night. sexual deviates are often trans- Macdonald, 48 - year - old na-, ferred to Millbrook to "protect| tive of Edmonton, told report-'meanwhile, irom rioner oot swters TN Makes New Demand For End To Hostilities from prisoners not suffering sexual problems. The only explanation for the baby-doll pyjamas report was that prisoners considered dis- turbed wear a short nightgown SS aman" of Se UNITED NATIONS (CP)--jgovernments of India and Paki- man said : Riese st "~~ |The UN Security Council issued|stan is not holding.' Base an urgent demand Monday night) The Indian delegate said the for India and Pakistan to honor|resolution should be directed at the ceasefire both agreed to and| Pakistan alone, insisting it was pull their forces back from po-|to blame for ceasefire viola- sitions seized during the unde- tions. clared war. Pakistani Foreign Minister There was no reaction imme-|Z. A. Bhutto countered that In- diately from New Delhi or Ra-jdian forces had breached the jwalpindi. But following the! ceasefire repeatedly. Family 0k Y council's unanimous approval) Bhutto conferred earlier Mon- SIMCOE (CP)--A family ofjof the resolution, Indian and day with State Secretary Dean eight are home safe today after;Pakistan representatives at the|Rusk and appealed for U.S. sup- being marooned for two nights| UN each blamed the other'siport on a permanent settlement on an island about 30 miles'government for breaches in thelof the Kashmir dispute that south of here. ceasefire. itouched off the shooting war, Robert Simon, 33, of RR2.) Since the truce agreement; Bhutto told reporters that, if Waterford, his wife Joyce, 27,last Wednesday, major clashes|the council achieves a workable during absences of the: com- mander. | On the subcontinent _itself,| the clandes-! Lost 2 Days. and their six children, Robert,|have been reported at twolceasefire and withdrawal agree- 9, Jeffrey, 8, Bradley, 7, andipoints along the ceasefire line ment, Pakistan will give. suffi- twins Denise and Jimmy, 6, and No withdrawal of forces hasicient time for it to be carried John, 4, were fishing on Longibeen reported on either side, lout. Point Bay Sunday when roughiand a member of the Indian water forced them to land. cabinet said India' should man- Monday, the water was stillinfacture nuclear weapons for too rough and they spent thejits defence. day and night in a fish shanty) The Security Council's new on the island. jceasefire demand was_intro- They were discovered thisiduced by U.S. 'Ambassador morning by Mr. Simon's\Arthur J. Goldberg, the coun brother, Ronald, Who took ajcil's president for September boat out to the island after The resolution expressed "zrave|curity Council: on the ceasefire finding their car at a Turkeyicconcern that the ceasefireland the over-all India-Pakistan Point marina. lagreed to unconditionally by the/dispute. | But he warned that his gov-| ernment's threat to withdraw from the United Nations. still) stands if a permanent settle- ment is not reached on Kash-| mir within a reasonable time. | U.S. officials said Rusk re- minded Bhutto that the U.S, in jtends to work through the Se- reunite after Carpenter and A meeting was arranged be- tween representatives of the union and Hydro-Quebec. After- wards, about 30 men decided to hold Mr. Fortin prisoner pend- ing a decision on their griey- ances. The group of construction workers blocked off the road leading to the nearby airport and his party, who were leav- ing the site in automobiles, had to come to a halt. The men said they would not let the labor minister go until their grievances were com- pletely settled. They said that all the other roads leading away from the power development project were also blocked. The men did not physically restrain Mr: For- tin but told him he would not be allowed to pass. The labor minister And his party then returned to the Hy- dro Quebec barracks. Mr. Fortin said the strikers' WELCOME RETURN FROM THE DEPTHS Astro-Aquanaut M. Scott nine Sealab 2 teammates Carpenter and wife, Rene, emerged from decompres- sion chamber. Carpenter spent more than 29 days on ocean bottom. Decompres- sion ended Monday. (AP) WHERE THE LEADERS ARE TUESDAY Pearson--In Ottawa. Diefenbaker -- Travels by car from Montreal to Que- bec communities of St Adolphe, Harrington, La chute and Ayersville. Douglas -- In Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., and Kapuskas- ing, Ont. Thompson In south- western Ontario visiting Grimsby, Guelph, London and St. Thomas, Caouette--In Rouyn, Que., area. ternational Control Commission in Viet Nam and, with other United Nations members, hopes to expand economic aid. "That is the extent of our in- volvement in this unhappy situ- ation," said Mr. Pearson. "There is not a word of truth in any reference to military aid." Boat Disabled, Children Saved SUTTON, Ont. (CP)--Three Sutton youths were found today after spending the night on Lake Simcoe in a disabled boat. Police had begun a search for Michael Burrows, 15, Peter Charpentier, 16, and Richard Osborne, 15, who had gone duck hunting Monday in a _ boat owned by the Burrows' boy's father, actions were against the law and that he intended to speak to the justice minister about the affair, It will be up to the justice minister to decide whether le- gal measures will be taken, he said, He: was released two hours later. The differences now are under arbitration. Hydro-Quebec said it. would not take reprisals against the men but refused to pay them for the three hours they had taken off work. Mr. Bourgoing said the action by the workers was beyond his control. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Surtees Should Race Again: Doctor TORONTO (CP) -- D. Paul McGoey, chief surgeon of Scarborough General Hospital, today said there is no reason why John Surtees, 1964 world champion racing driver who was seriously injured Friday, will not race again. Hospital officials said Surtees is in excellent condi- tion today following a minor operation Monday to improve the position of his dislocated pelvis. Castro May Visit UN 'With' Pope WASHINGTON (AP) Cuban refugee sources said Monday they have reports from Cuba that Fidel Castro plans to attend the United Nations meeting in New York next week during Pope Paul's visit. The pontiff is to pay a one-day visit to New York next Monday to speak to the UN assembly and celebrate a mass in Yankee Stadium. Nothing Wrong With Handouts: BBG OTTAWA (CP) -- Dr. Andrew Stewart, chairman of the Board of Broadcast Governors, said Monday he sees nothing wrong with political parties distributing film clips to television stations. "There is nothing to prohibit it," Dr. Stewart said in an interview. "It seems to me each party is going to devise means of getting its side on the air." nin mn DUTT Huntsman tanitingiega Mt cst _..In THE TIMES today... 'Mystery Man' Will Seek NDP Nomination---P, 9 Ajax Council Approves Community Centre--P. 5 Tony's Eliminated 6-3--P, 6 Ann Landers--11 Obits--19 City News--9 Sports--6, 7, 8 Classified--16, 17, 18 Theatre--13 Whitby News--5 Women's--10, 11 Weather--2 Comics--15 Editorial--4 Financial--19 IL wht MTTGRUTUTATN