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Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Oct 1965, p. 1

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-Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, ® VOL, 94 -- NO. 232 Per' Weak Home 'Belivered x ti The Oshawa Simes Authorized as Second Ciass ici OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1965 ~---Ottawa and for payment 'Weather Report ~Warming trend moves in. Clear tonight. Sunny and s warmer Wedgesday. Low to- night, 30. High tomorrow, 55. i Post Grnee Sapartment Cash. of Postage in TWENTY FIVE GOLDEN SMILES FROM FIVE GOLD-CORD WINNERS Linda Duncanson, 17, left; Anne Deegan, 17; Cathy Keeler, 16; Janet Orr, 16; and Jane Manning, 16, are shown above at a party It's smiles all round for five of the top guides from the 16th Oshawa Guide Company who have reached the- Gold Cord standard. celebrating the awards pres- entation. Twelve members of the 40-strorig company are now Gold Cord bearers, It is the top award in the Girl Silence With Murders MONTREAL (CP)--Five menjwith his department or the po- have been killed and othersilice immediately "'before they The report said there were | pankreaieey rings connected may have been slain in an un-jget the same treatment as the|with the underworld. The derworld attempt to blockjothers." crime investigations, Quebec's justice minister said Monday. first said to be that of a woman, | Claude Wagner said two of but there was no indication of| three bodies found in recent dis-|that from Mr. Wagner, who) coveries already made public by|Monday made reference only to| police are those of persons)men. Re | "who were probably witnesses| In August, Revenue Minister} to or implicated in fradulent|Eric Kierans of Quebec re- bankruptcies." jleased a report which.said fraud-| sight julent bankruptcies in the prov-} Bi on Misti A dap has gushed ince had cost his department : as much as $1,500,000 a year"| sl pamety q and related |i, lost taxes since 1959. "It is very possible that wer shall find six or bodies in the Peco gly 84 Negroes Die In Wreck, bec City regions." | He added: | "The nurnase of these mur- ders is to suppress proof or to ensure silence." TWO MORE FOUND DURBAN (Reuters) -- Res-| He told a specially-summoned,cue workers digging in the press conference in his Mont- grim wreckage of. South Afri-|derailment occurred. The ne- real office that two other bodies}ca's worst train crash' found| now are being unearthed in the the bodies of 84 dead and more same general vicinity as that in}than 100 injured--all Negroes-- which #he first three were found|by dawn today, and expected --the region south of Quebec' the final death toll to be more City. than - 100. | Four men are being held, said. The disaster, swiftly followed) the minister, in connection with| bY the knife-and-club murder the killings but no charges have|f a white railway signalman,| been pressed joccurred when the last ahi The three bodies already. un- ©47S of a train jammed. with) earthed were found, covered) More than 1,500 Negroes were) with caustic lime, in wooded derajled 10 miles northwest of swamp land near St. Gilles, 30 here Monday night. miles south of the provin- _ Negroes enraged by the crash cial capital. They were discov- turned on two white signalmen, | ing and injured mingled with volérs across Canada will repu- stabbing and battering one to|the wails of those in mourning|diate 'great demolishers of-con- |death" and badly injuring the|as police and volunteer work-|federation."' ered Sept. 24, 28 and Oct. 2. Mr. Wagner said the fourt and fifth bodies are hear St.| Nicholas, 20 miles from the ; : 3 capital, and near Thetford Junction, two miles from its Mines, 50 miles out Mr. Wagner declined to iden- tify the slain men. He invited those who might be involved. in any way in fraydulent bankruptcies or cases of arson to get in touch! other. SAIGON (Reutersy Viet Cong . guerrillas today am- bushed a U.S. Army. patrol in South Viet Nam 15 miles north- east of Saigon, killing or wound- ing every man in the unit. | The patrol, consisting of less | than 12 men, was hit early this | morning, and within a few min- utes all lay either dead or wounded, | 'The men were from the U.S Army Ist Infantry Division based at the Bien Hoa air base, 12 miles autside Saigon. A U.S. military spokesman "said they were ambushed as they were moving through jun- gle terrain within their area of defence responsibility around the air base The spokesman officially de- scribed the American casualties as heavy, but noted that all had \either been killed or wounded. CLAUDE WAGNER fenue department. No Americans Left Alive In Ambush By Viet Cong {method was to form a company,! One of the bodies involved at|bu¥ goods. on credit, sell the goods and then dissolve the firm, though the process varied with different rings. an One ring had a string of 60 companies in its operations, the report said. The, report was based on in- formation gathered in months of closed hearings by a commission under Lucien Mer- cier, internal auditor of the rev- rs cee Oe OO NUIVIVOIS Dlay d1GNaiiman destination at the native town- ship of Kwa Mashu, when the groes were returning home from work in Durban. The national radio network broadcast an appeal for aid from all available doctors and nurses. Local hospitals were soon crowded, Bodies lay scattered along the track for 350 yards, along with suitcases, raincoats, jackets, parcels, shoes and newspapers. Rescue operations continued through the night with the aid of car headlights and are lamps. The screams of the dy- ers scrambled through, the The train was at Effingham! wreckage searching for surviy-|cratic Party leader, said at Ha- ors. Guide movement and is the goal towards which the lasses strive. It is worn around the girls' necks as shown above. * --Oshawa Times Photo Guide movement and is given in recognition of char- acter and skills. The Gold Cord is the topmost profici- ency award in the Girl Trade Long-Range Pokes By THE CANADIAN PRESS jstart. of a Creditiste meeting Two long - time antagonists and took none when the hall argued at long range in the fed-|Was filled to bursting. jeral election campaign Monday. | At Simcoe, Ont., Opposition|/S0n Plans to send 100,000 Ca- |Leader Diefenbaker said a vote|Nadian soldiers to aid the for the Liberals in the Nov. 8|United States in the war in election wil! be a vote for a{Viet Nam. : |divided Canada for the next| Mr. Pearson this week makes |generation. | At Montreal, Privy Council): president Guy Favreau, head of jthe Quebec Liberals, said Eng- lish-speaking \ and: newly-immi- grated Canadians. should "not allow Diefenbaker and his co-) jhorts to poison your hearts and} |thoughts."' ' Mr. Diefenbaker, speaking in a crowded, 1,000-seat audito- rium, accused the Liberals of "tinkering away at our herit-|= age': 4 Mr. Favreau, speaking at al Syn nomination meeting for State| Secretary Lamontagne, said)the Mr. Diefenbaker has attacked|Ppaign. He flies to Kirkland Lake the Liberals for "wanting to de-| Timmins today and goes on to Stroy the Union Jack and other| Winnipeg Wednesday and Wink- symbols of the British crown in|!et and Dauphin, Man., Thurs- behalf of a Canadian fiag which|4@y- __ ; John Diefenbaker has never ac-| Mr. Diefenbaker is at Hamll- cepted deep down in his heart." {on tonight for a rally, Mr, Mr. Diefenbaker said Prime/DOuUglas at St. Joseph de Minister Pearson had declared|Beauce, Que., and Mr. Caou- that Canada contains two na-|¢tte in Montreal. Social Credit \tions. The Conservative party| Leader Robert Thompson is in lrecognized the constitutional| #dmonton. rights of all "but there will] never be a Canada if we ac-| cept the principle that within al jnation there are a number of| ji |nations."' bs WILL REJECT. ° Mr. Favreau said Leena ELECTI REPORT Coouette, Diefenbaker, Douglas --- P. 12; Pearson -- P. 20, longest foray af the cam. he feels T. C. Douglas, New Demo- 'lifax that jurisdiction over off- shore minerals belongs to the | provinces, Real Caouette, leader of Le Ralliement des Creditistes, ac- cused "certain newspapers" and the CBC of "being unfair to the Ralliement, the only peo- ple's force in Quebec." | Addressing some 450 persons Underworld E nsuring Diefenbaker And Favreau He repeated that Mr. Pear-| Ejof =|press conference afterwards, two heavy This is the first time in the|@t Montreal, Mr. Caouette said war in Viet Nam that American|the CBC took pictures of an al- troops casualties have been de-|™0st empty hall well. before the scribed as heavy. The spokes-| -- ' a man added two Viet Cong 'bo- dies weré found at the scene| of the fighting. STRIKE TWO "OINTS Viet Cong units' also struck blows against govy- ernment forces~Monday, over- running-a mountain village and mauling a river assault group in the Mekong delta. An estimated communist bat- talion overwhelmed a hamlet in the mountains 110 miles north-| east of Saigon, and another Viet SEOUL .(Reuters) Four- teen persons, including 12 6ld women and a two-year-old boy, were killed and 54 others seri- ously injured today in a stam- | pede outside a sports stadium at Kwangju, South Korea. | It happened when a crowd of} about 30,000, packed round the 5 , : stadium where the annual na- Cong force of battalion sizé am-| tional games are being held, bushed a river assault group of| tried to force its way in after five boats on the Co Luong|the gates were closed. A capac-| river, 55 miles southwest of Sai-|ity 25,000 persons were inside| gon inflicting heavy Casualties. | the stadium. 14 Die, 54 Hurt;| Mob Stampedes | PRESIDENT gestures as he talks, with JOHNSON furrowed brow, to Pope NEW YORK (CP) -- With a "God bless you all!" Pope Paul returned to Rome today, leav- ing behind him eloquent pleas and prayers for peace that were heard by the envoys of nearly all the powers and do- minions of this earth, and by a multitude of humbler citizens who cheered themselves hoarse at the sight of him, liner bore the Pope aloft from Kennedy airport here at 11:30 p.m. EDT Monday night, 14 hours and three minutes after he had landed at the sanre air- port on an Alitalia flight. "We shall never forget this extraordinary hour," he said in farewell. An estimated 3,800,- 000, the greatest outpouring in New York City annals, had ac- A Trans-World Airlines jet- Pope I UNITED NATIONS (CP) --| Pope Paul called on the United) Nations Monday to bring an end| to war and said disarmament The peoples of the world turn to the United Nations "as the last hope of concord and) peace," the pontiff told the 117-| nation General Assembly, with only the Albanian delegation absent from the crowded blue} and gold hall. } "If you wish to be brothers, let the arms fall from your hands," he said after thanking Secretary-General U Thant for the invitation to address the world organization. 'One can- not love while holding offensive weapons."' The leader of the half-billion Roman Catholics. around the world was escorted into the as- sembly hall by Thant, a Bud- jdhist, and by Foreign Minister Amintore Fanfani of Italy, the lassembly president. The sécretary-general said in \welcoming the pontiff that "'it was the cause of peace--univer- sal peace, for all men on earth, without distinction as to race, religion, nationality or political |belief--which led me" to make ithe invitation. HISTORIC TIME "That historic occasion has now arrived," said Thant: "It is taking place at a time when there is a renewal of confidence in our organization, It is a time, also, of grave dangers to the peace of the world." External Affairs Minister Paul Martin, who was in New [York to head Canada's delega- |tion to the UN on this historic loccasion, said after the address that it 'could well mark the be- >|ginning in a new turn in world = |affairs."' "The Pope spoke not only as a head of a particular church but as a man Of peace ...a representative of the conscience' mankind," Martin told a Martin quoted Soviet Foreign {Minister Andrei Gromyko as cer desciibed Pope Paul's speech as "one of the most im- portant statements ever deliy- ered in the General Assembly." U.S. Ambassador Arthur Goldberg said' "the American people are deeply gratified that the Pope, by his visit and his strong appeal for peace, has strengthened the efforts of the United Nations in this vital work." The Pope said '"'we might call Paul VE in New York's Wal- dorf Astoria hotel. Monday. The Pope appeared before claimed his to-and-fro passage, Let Arms Fall ells UN our message a ratification, a solemn moral ratification of this lofty institution,' and then he added:~"Allow us to congrat- is the key to world peace. julate you for having had the wisdom to open this hall to the younger peoples, to those states which have recently attained in- dependence and national free- dom." | "Their presence is the proof) ofthe universality and magnan- imity which inspire the princi- ples of this institution," he added. "So it must be." | Some took this to mean that the Pope indicated he envis- aged the eventual admission of Communist China to the world organization as well as such countries as North Korea and {North Viet Nam. Speaking on the subject of birth control, the pontiff told the delegations: 'Respect for life, even with regard to the great problem of birth, must find here in your assembly its highest affirmation and its most reasoned defence. "You must strive to 'multiply bread so that it suffices for the tables of mankind, and not ra- ther favor an artificial control jorbirth, which would be irra* tional, in order to dominish the number of guests at the ban- quet of life,"' Referring to the UN's efforts to bring peace to the world, Pope .Paul said '"'many words are not needed to proclaim this Joftiest aim of your institution." He added: "It suffices to remember that the blood of 'millions of men, that numberless and unheard of sufferings, useless slaughter and frightful ruin, are the sanc- tion of the pact which unites you, with an oath which must changé the future history.of the world: No more war, war never again! Peace, it is peace which must guide the destinies of peo- ples and of all mankind." Today as never beofre, 'in our ear so marked by human progress," said the pontiff, "there is need for an appeal to-the-moeral canscionce of man For the danger comes, not from progress, nor from science, in- deed, if properly utilized, these could rather resolve many of the grave problems which as- sail mankind." The real danger comes from man _ himself, wielding ever more powerful arms, which can be employed equally well for destruction or for the "'loftiest conquests," the Pope said. the United Nations in his plea for world peace. (AP) |world's 500,000,000 Roman Ca-| Pope Paul Wo Heart Of A Cit from one stirring scene to ano-|of peace," he pleaded," . . 4 ther. and not make use of it . . .a& a cover for cowardice or sel- In the chancelleries of the|@ 3 nations, powerful men weighed|fishness, which refuses to make sacrifices for the common the impact of -this white-clad wayfarer's impassioned sum-|S00d.... mons to quit war and lay. down| Addressing the UN assembly their arms. So did plain citi-/Monday afternoon -- his main zens. reason for coming here--the Pope told the envoys from 116 "We must make our own the 7 : " countries--Albania did not at- CAUSE: OF Dears, . pe Oba vant tend--they must find a more host of them, massed undegsthe certain way of keeping peace slars at Yankee Stadium.!. the world than that of pills "Serve it!'"" He quoted his Lord, "blessed are the peacemak.|UP huge stocks of armaments. ers." In a swift, day - long round of unpreced e n t.e d_confronta- tions, with the great and the| many, with President Johnson, and before the United Nations. he pressed that same urgent exhortation. LONGEST TRIP It was the first visit of a} reigning pontiff to the Western Hemisphere. The 8,560 - mile round trip was the longest pa- pal journey ever taken. The 68-year-old leader of the (Boyes etavattaveseraesge More Coverage Of Papal Visit On Pages 3, 14, 20 Tei eHE ASE EA OO The pope urged the audience of diplomats to find ways to guarantee international secur- ity "without having recourse to arms." "This is a most noble aim," He said. "This the people ex- pect of you, this must be ob- tained. Reaffirming his support of the United Nations, the pontiff, who spoke in French, told the delegates: "You have performed and you continue to perform a great work: The education of mankind in the ways of peace. The UN is a great school where that education is imparted, and we are today in the assembly hall of that school... ." The Pope's only moments of respite during the day came when he stopped for lunch and supper at the residence of Francis Cardinal Spellman, next to St. Patrick's Cathedral jin the heart of Manhattan. Lunch, a bowl of vegetable SEE POPE'S tholics brought his visit to a solemn and emotional climax Monday night when he celebra- ted mass in the cold open air at Yankee Stadium. Some 90,000 persons were present. He told the huge gathering: "This is the day which the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad today! This is the day which we have desired for centuries. . . ." In a brief sermon during the mass, the Pope told the throng he wished to leave in their hearts a stronger desire for peace among men. | "Peace be to this house, to this continent, and to all those who inhabit it," he declared. "You must. serve the cause! What World Needs -- LBJ NEW YORK (AP)--President|.: The president said "we dis Johnson says Pope Paul's visit|cussed.. . . the great progress to New York "may be just)made by the United Nations in what the world needs to get us|trying to provide help in these thinking of how ta achieve|trouble spots. peace ahd getting us to make; The two men, who conferred progress in that area," prior to the Pope's address to The Pope said he was ex-|the United Nations, also dis- tremely happy that his 50-min-| cussed efforts to fight illiteracy ute private conference with|and disease throughout the Johnson Monday "revolved| world, the president said. about a mutual desire to work! , Johnson said: "His holiness for peace." exptessed his pleasure at our After the first meeting of ainot only talking about educa- president and pope in the/tion and health but our acting United States, the two world/on it in this country." leaders invited five newspaper} Pope Paul's interpreter re- men to the living room of the|layed this statement to report- presidential suite at the Wal-|ers: "His holiness says he has 2 A 2 Hotel te-view.-alcome here to-nay his respects formal picture-taking session. |to the president. of tie United Johnson said he and Pope) States... and also to thank the Paul discussed possible routes] president for having made this to peace and talked "in some|trip from Washington to New detail" about current trouble| York to meet his holiness. He spots in the world--India andlis very happy that this discus- Pakistan, Viet Nam, the Dom-|sion has revolved about a mu+ inican Republic and others. tual'desire to work for peace." NEWS HIGHLIGHTS $40,000,000 Scholarship Fund In '66 OTTAWA (CP) -- The Liberal government plans to introduce a» $40,000,000 scholarship progranr for university students next year, Prime Minister Pearson announced today. Under the program, he said, the federal government ° will allow $10,000,000 a year for four years "to help pay the way of young men and women who start at university in the fall of 1966." Pakistan Breaks Off With Malaysia RAWALPINDI (Reuters) -- Pakistan broke off diplo-~ 'matic relations with Malaysia today, Pakistani Foreign Minister Zulficar Ali Bhutto told a press conference here. Federal-Provincial Parley In Offing OTTAWA (CP) Prime Minister Pearson. today promised to call a federal - provincial conference soon to work out a program of increased federal aid to univer- sities. The Liberal leader said at a press conference he will call the meeting after receiving a brief from the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada based on the findings of the Bladen report on financing. ...In THE TIMES today... Wildcat Hits GM Cer Line --P. 9 Multifamily Units Favored In West Whitby -- P. 5 Genosha Aces Down Jaycees; Deadlock Series -- P.6 Ann Landers -- 11 City News -- 9 Classified -- 16, 17, 18 Comics -- 15 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 19 Obits -- 19 Sports --- 6, 7, 8 Theatre -- 12 Whitby News -- 5 Women's -- 10, 11 Weather -- 2 . (Continued On Page 2) "rs 4 i "Pope's Visit May Be Just }

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