_~ Home Newspaper Ul Usnawa, Whitoy, Bows } 'manville, Ajax, Pickering and > peighboring centres in On-« _tario and Durham "Counties, 50 Per' Week Tome Delivered i VOL. 94 -- NO. 283 j OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1965 EE, Weather Report Covier; rain or snow teaaye. Sunday cloudy, chance of snow. Low tonight, 20. High tomorrow, 40. Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Deportment Ottowa and for payment of Postage in Cash. THIRTY-TWO PAGES -_ /MACHINE-GUNS BLAZING SAIGON (AP)--A small band of Viet Cong terrorists with ma- chine-guns blazing stormed and blasted a billet for American soldiers before dawn today, leaving nine dead and scores in- jured. Phe raiders escaped without a thee The bomb they used to Dlast the eight-storey Metropole hotel, ripping its front off in downtown Saigon, took the lives of an American marine, a New Zealand trooper and seven South Vietnamese. Americans number the high- est casualties with 72-wounded. Others were three New Zealand- ers and 62 South Vietnamese, mostly civilians. The Viet Cong also broke a three - day lull in the war to- day with attacks on government outposts from. the South China Sea to the central plains of the north. U.S. Navy Seabees were clearing the rubble left by the blast at the hotel. Ordnance disposal men be- lieve that the terrorists ex- ploded a 250-pound device. The blast came after an un- known number of Viet Cong opened fire on U.S. military po- lice and guards and South Viet- namese police with machine- guns. The terrorists then drove a truck loaded with the explosive to the front dodr and detonated it. They escaped in the dark- ness. Y: The blast shattered the facade of the hotel and blew out the fronts of other nearby build- ings. The hotel did not collapse, The explosion has been com- pared to the blasts that wrecked the U.S. Embassy and Saigon police headquarters ear- lier this year. Specialist William Seippel, a military policeman, was on SAIGON HOTEL BOMBED duty at the Metropole's front door. He and Vietnamese guards ducked for cover. when the light, explosive - laden truck stopped about 20 feet from them. They evaded the Viet Cong machine-gun bursts and Seippel blasted away with a 12-gauge shotgun and .45-calibre pistol. Three girls rushed to the doors of bars opposite the ho- tel to see what was going on. They were ripped to pieces when fhe truck blew up. A Vietnamese pedicab driver, cycling past the scene, just _ Cong Butcher 9 In Lightning Raid > disappeared into the air, a navy officer walking a block away re- ported. The Viet Cong left a mine be- hind, timed to go off 15 min- utes after the truck blew up. But it didn't.go off. Demolition men said its battery was too weak, The street was a scene of smashed buildings, broken glass and bloodied clothing. Order was restored after the first few minutes of panic and the wounded were taken to a U.S. -- hospital across from the hotel. iAP AGRA ad 8 GLAU CRUSH SMITH OR ELSE BLACK AFRICA WARNS Ministers Mull Warfare, ° And A Split From Britain ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia Britain they would stand to lose (Reuters) -- 'African ministers) tra and other Common- today discussed propsects of|wealth benefits. marshalling a joint military). Other leading OAU members force. against white-ruled Rho-|not in the Commonwealth in- desia, following their threat Fri-|clude the United Arab Repub- day night of a mass diplomaticilic, Algeria, Tunisia, Guinea split from Britain. and Ethiopia, Military advisers. were| There was no official immedi- brought in with the foreign min-|ate reaction from the British isters attending today's session|government in London to the here of the 36-nation Organiza-|OAU threat .to...cut..off diplo- tion of African Unity. matic relations. | Conference sources said dis-| Britain continued to balk at cussions were likely to centre|using military force. 'on the composition and size of SQUEEZE TIGHTENS a joint military forcé and the The British economic squeeze timing of its operation. against Rhodesia, whose govs : All Appears To Favor Blastoff' To 14 Days Around The Earth By HOWARD 'BENEDICT erman that we shouldn't have CAPE KENNEDY, Fila. (AP)/any rain at 2:30," the space The final countdown began un-| agency spokesman said, "and if der a threatening, overcast sky| the clouds don't drop any lower today for man's longest space/than 2,000 feet we probably can voyage, the 14 - day flight of] 99 Gemini 7 astronauts Frank Bor-|" The afternoon ELICITS TEARS OF JOY year-old Cuban refugee who her legs in a fall in Cuba arrived with a group of 93 several weeks ago, cried as eee ee she was wheeled from the Mrs. Cevedo, who injured airplane. (AP) a FREEDOM U.S. Immigration recep- tionist Marlene Vitanza bends over wheelchair to comfort a crying Altagracia Martinez Acevedo, a 71- launch _con- U.S: Can Take Heart a 6 ° a? man and JamesA. Lovell Jt.i¢rasted with previous U.S. man- T nvicti al | _ The weather'sta little qiies-/inspace shots when the astro-- | \tionable," a SPACE AgeNCY|nanis were up at dawn for spokesman said, "but our! early-morning launchings. weatherman tells us it should) jt js hoped the Gemini 7 flight be okay at the time of the wil) crack all existing world shot. records--most of them MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)----|sign, but King added he felt new;Johnson they were hopelessly President Johnson says the| legislation still is needed to pro-| deadlocked. However, the judge whole United States can take|tect Negroes and civil-rights|orderef them to continue over heart from the conviction of] workers. the protests of Defence Counsel three Ku Klux Klansmen in| The klansmen were sentenced| Arthur Hanes. Montgomery on criminal con-|by U.S. District Judge Frank BAIL SET spiracy charges in the death of/M. Johnson Jr. to 10 years in Hanes told Judge Johnson an a civil-rights worker, prison in the shooting death of A - ; : Y | . appeal will be filed, and bond Dr. Martin Luther King and| Viola Gregg Liuzzo, a white De- for thé three men was ect at other civil-rights leaders said/|troit housewife. $10,000 each the verdict by the all-white jury} The jury, which deliberated 11 The klaniinen es Billie Le Friday was an encouraging!hours, at one time told Judge roy Wilkins Jr., 22, of Fairfield UN A VOCAL BATTLEGROUND Russ Support For Hanoi from Washington to inform him| U.S.-China Clash Feared 'iti: seosny so ' seph Laitin said: | UNITED NATIONS (CP)--jtween the United States and| 'The president told the attor-| The Soviet Union attacked the|North Viet Nam, blamed by|"€y-seneral the whole nation | United States in the United Na-|Washington for the success of|/C@ take heart from the fact tions Friday and promised mili-|the rebel Viet Cong activities in| that there are those in the South tary and political support to|/South Viet Nam. who believe in justice in racial| North Viet Nam amid specula-} At the same time, reports tion about increased Communi.tifrom Washington indicated 1 Hf Chinese intervention in the Viet-|fresh concern over a possible) "°° : namese crisis. clash between Communist China rar Phage wy gis ac- i F and the United States as ten-|Cused the trio of conspiring to Oe yeied States mein neg tightens. in Southeast Asia.| Violate the rights of Americans. the Soviet charges in the Gen- Addressing the assembly, So-|2"¢ Charge grew out of the his-| eral Assembly's main political viet delegate Nikokai Fedo- toric Selma - to - Montgomery committee by describing them|renko virtually ruled out any march, which had been allowed as "outrageous" and reaffirmed|Soviet efforts to bring about|/" 2 court order by Judge John- American willingness to take| Peace negotiations in Viet Nam. son. | both of Bessemer, Ala. Kaizenvach ieiepioned ine pres- ident at Johnson City, Tex.,| ; ; baie ; eee Mrs. Liuzzo, a mother of five, part in unconditional negotia-|. pn Pant ead Union' expresses) was ferrying the marchers back tions for a peaceful settlement | '6 re sie _ te ps. a \to Selma March 25 when a car i te war ine vietnamese patriotsrsned past her automobile and| se jagainst American aggression," fatal shots tore through her} The Vietnamese war wasj)said Fedorenko. "It has been| windshield brought up in the assembly atjrendering and will render full i | a time when all signs pointed! political support and the neces- toward increased hostilities be-| sary economic and military as- jSistance to the fraternal Viet- namese people." MAN MISSING | Fedorenko's attack against \U.S. policy in Viet Nam came OUT IN LAKE jas Britain's foreign secretary,| Michael Stewart, returried to An unidentified mas was |London from what appears to a ager in 7 On- \be an unsuccessful mission to rio off the property of 'The /Moscow in search of a solution Lake Ontario Steel Co. this jto the Vietnamese crisis, on miter a small boat | ccowart said on afrival--in some aes : jLondon he felt no optimism Deputy Fire Chief Ernest |about chances for a peace con-| Stacey of the Oshawa Fire | ference at this time, saw no evi- Department said that the man |dence that a halt to U.S. bomb- was in a boat also occupied |ings of North Viet Nam would by Fred Marshall, 31 Duke |improve the situation. street, Brooklin. Fedorenko made no reference Details of the accident were |j9 the possibility of holding unavailable at press time, but | peace talks on Viet Nam or to the Deputy Chief said that the |Britain's call for the convening ; Whitby detachment of the OPP |of a new Geneva conference on! "i | was searching for the hody of [Viet Nam. ; the man, first reported miss- Instead, he said th ' a | s , e Soviet 3 | ing after 9 a.m. Union supported fully the de : City firemen were unable to |mands of President Ho Chi | furnish a boat for the search |Minh of North Viet Nam. e | as their craft was in winter |These demands include the | quarters, but it is understood a | withdrawal of all U.S. troops rescue was obtained else- from South Viet Nam, as well where. as the dismantling of U.S, bases 'in the country. JOHN DOAR He Got Conviction space A Titan II rocket was to thun-|held by the Gemini 5 crew der to life at 2:30 p.m. EST to which «stayed aloft for eight | hurl U.S, Air Force Lt-Col.| days--and provide the most ex- | Borman and navy Cmdr. Lovell! tensive information yet on away from the earth on the} man's ability to physically and start of their epic voyage. If all goes well, they will ren-jure to the space environment. dezvous nine days with the two pilois of Gemini) ACCENT MEDICAL TESTS 6 and go hurtling around the Ala., and Eugene Thomas, 42,|svorld together, possibly only|Gemini and William Orville Eaton, 41,| inches apart. mentally withstand long expos- | from now Dr. Charles A. Berry, the flight surgeon, said }medical experiments have top The ministers voted Friday to ernment declared the colony in- break diplomatic relations with the British government unless Britain manages by Dec. 15 to crush the white-minority regime of Prime Minister Ian Smith, jwho seized independence for | Rhodesia, Noy. 11. Other decisions made at Fri- day's session of the OAU coun- cil were to stop all trade and jcommunications with Rhodesia dependent of Britain Noy. 11, has been tightening notch by notch almost daily, Britain hopes to squeeze the govern- ment of Ian Smith out of power. In Zambia, which depends on Rhodesian electricity, coal and railroad transport, British jet fighter planes and transports arrived and took control of aire ports at the request of Presi- matters and were determined! not to stand for acts of vio-| | | trolman, looking down at Jim | was less than thundering. | ternational registration," said | Parkinson, with all the dignily . and block Rhodesian accounts!dent Kenneth Kaunda. loading} priority. and added, "the fligh ; 3 in African banks. British ground troops of the Technicians Attorney General Nicholas | a : Isnecial RAF Ragiment arrived |by air from "Kenya. They will Th PS A ges oy iy ge yr ey a at-bat ton e went without a or this period of time. An OAU spokesman said the 7 hitch and the countdown began} In a tuneup for the rendez- darisiots -- binding on all guard a squadron of British right on schedule at 8:30 a.m.| vous, Borman and Lovell today member. states because the cur heir a a fighters now lined : solid but high overcast| were to try to maintain a for- rent special session of the coun- ned aalcevais 4 a "i hid the rising sun as the big/mation flight with the orbiting cil has the full mandate of the}, 14 'winged, all-weather day began for Borman and|second stage of their Titan II. OAU summit conference. fighters arrived Friday to aid Lovell, and forecasters said/They planned to keep within 100 A British etticial, commenting in Zambia's air defence. there was a possibility of show-|to 300 feet for about 25 minutes Elon tha 'threat' to cut diplomatic Bhhey 6 ae a ers during the day. | just after achieving orbit. ties, said it was one thing to|brought the total British ton decide on this "'but it's some-|tingent in the industrial town of Daring Orbit Rendezvous ing gl ret 1 Koi eas 'Te. Gaeta In Schedule For Monday OAU members belonging to} The buildup of equipment and the British Commonwealth in-|technicians from Kenya to clude Ghana, Nigeria, Tanzania,|Ndola and, Lusaka, Zambia's Kenya and. Zambia. If they |capital, is expected to last a broke diplomatic relations with|few days more. The Gemini 6 astronauts,|the Gemini 6 rocket and space- Capt. Walter M. Schirra Jr. and/craft will be hoisted into place Maj. Thomas P. Stafford, are|within 28 hours. scheduled to take off in pursuit! Then will begin a furious nine- on Dec. 13. The pian is to fly|day period in which the launch | V V the two spacecraft in formation|team will attempt to conduct a --perhaps only inches apart--| checkout that normally requires Pope May Create 150 New Cardinals for nearly six hours as they/29 days. whip 185 miles above the earth; Flight Director Chris Kraft VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pope Paul was reported Friday at 17,500 miles an hour. | said Gemini 6 could be launched considering a plan to give a new dimension to the College Most space agency experts|aS late as the 12th day after of Cardinals possibly creating as many as 150 new car- believe they have a 50-50 chance | the Gemini 7 lift-off without dit. | dinals. The report came from an European Roman Catholic Church source who indicated details' of the idea were still or better to accomplish the ren-|ficulty. He said a launching) dezvous. could be tried on the 13th day, vague. There was no comment from Vatican officials. Lt.-Col. Jack Albert, Titan 11/but this would depend on launch director, placed the odds| Whether Borman and Lovell and at 50-50 and said another major their spacecraft are in good factor will be the amount of | enough shape to remain in orbit scheduled to catch up with 'Bor-|front of the other, practicing, blast and fire damage caused/an extra day. |man and Lovell five hours and| moving apart and coming back} on Launch Pad 19 by the Gem-| If it comes to that, we'll/40 minutes after Gemini 6 takes| close together. Most of the for-| ini 7 blastoff. make the decision at the time,"! off. Initially, the two spacecraft! mation manoeuvring will be| If there is only the usual| Kraft said. will be nose to nose. Then 'they|done by Gemini 6, which will} burned wires and charred paint, Schirra and Stafford are| will fly side by side or one in|carry more fuel. | IT'S DEATHLY SLOW, UNELEGANT AND UNCOMFORTABLE But It Gets You From A To 5B while manipulating the hand throttle. It lacks such refinements as sealed-beam headlights, brake lights and a windshield wiper. ¥ Parkinson says the prime Ann Landers--14 Obits--23 reason for his world meander- Gity News--13 Sports--8, 9, 10 ings is to inspect collections of Classified --20, 21, 22 Theatre--16 antique cars. Comics--19 Whitby News--5, 6 "I found quite a few of fhem Editorial--4 Women's--14, 15 in East Germany," he said. In Financial--23 Weather--2 fact, that's about all they drive-on the road." roe GEMINI James Lovell, left, and Frank Borman exhibit wide grins as they go through an- other check at Cape Ken- iy | Russia Tries 4th Soft Moon-Shot nedy, Fla., Friday in prep- aration for their blast-off on a projected 14-day orbital flight today. (AP). 7 ~~ Astronauts MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet Union has started its fourth attempt this year to land an instrument package softly on the moon and take a major stride ahead of the United States in the race to put a man there. If all goes well the first softlunar landing in history should take place around midnight Moscow time 4 p.m. EST Monday night when American astronauts are scheduled to be orbiting the earth in the Gemini 7 capsule. A Look At Crosswalks In Oshawa--P. 17 Saturday Showcase--Second Section Whitby Elections--Monday's The Day--P. 5 seven-foot, 250-pound car, 8,000 miles through Western Eu- rope, the U.S.S.R., Japan and California. He plans~-barring arrest--to drive it 7,000 miles more, He hasn't received a ticket yet, despite deficiencies re- peatedly noted by patrolmen during his drive from San Francisco to Los Angeles. His car will go only 12 m.p.h. Going up hills he has to get out and run alongside, seated in{an amusement-park automobil'. "It thus has a right to go any place Ameri- can cars go." Parkinson, an antique - car buff, found the tiny vehicle in Britain. The car, of the sort designed to be driven around amusement-park tracks, was a wreck. Parkinson restored "My car has British and in- it. LOS ANGELES (AP)--'"I'm sorry," said the highway pa- Parkinson's car, "but pedal- powered cars aren't allowed on freeways in this state." Parkinson gunned the one- horsepower motor of his 1935 Rytecraft Scotta-car. The roar Since last May, Parkinson, an aircraft engineer from Sur- rey, England, has driven the allowed a bearded man of 32