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Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Jul 1966, p. 1

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Weather Report Thundershowers tonight and early Tuesday. Cooler. Low tonight 65; High Tomor- row 85. Home Newspaper ' Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- orio and VOL. 95 -- NO. 152 Durham Counties. 10¢ le Copy 55c Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JULY 18, 1966 She Oshawa Cimes Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Department -- Office Ottgwa and for payment of Postage in Cash, TWENTY-TWO PAGES , CHICAGO POLICE Supt. 0. W. Wilson holds aloft a photograph of a man he id- entified as Richard B, Ex-Convict Held In U.S. Massacre CHICAGO (AP) -- Richard Speck, the most wanted man in the United States for 15 hours, lay in a prison hospital bed charged with murder today "early Thursday. U.S. BOMBER FLOTILLA RIPS OIL DEPOTS SAIGON (AP)--Fifteen waves of U.S. bombers pounded a major oil depot in North Viet Nam Sunday and touched off 35 fires and 51 explosions, the U.S, military command said today. U.S. Air Force jets struck the "Badon fuel depot 20 'miles northwest of Dong Hoi whil¢ other air force planes hit an- other oil storage area one mile In South Viet Nam, fighting eased in the combined U.S. Marine-South Vietnamese drive against an estimated 2,000 North Vistnamese regulars eight miles south of the demili- tarized_zone._separating-North and South Viet Nam. U.S. headquarters reported two -small-scale attacks by the North Vietnamese today. The South Vietnamese said their force had no action against the enemy. Earlier in the opera- tion 167 Communists were re- ported killed, Combined forces _ casualties were reported light, but 13 mar- ines were killed when the Com- munists shot down a CH-46 troop - carrying helicopter. En- emy fire also brought down an ¥-4 Phantom jet, but the two crew members bailed out safely, Four other helicopters were destroyed or damaged. U.S. Air Force B-52_ Strato- times last week and the big bombers. struck again Sunday while a thousand marines landed on the beaches just south of the border as a block+ ing force. No fighting of any size was reported elsewhere in South Viet Nam. ~---However,~ Vietnamese "head- quarters reported an upsurge in Viet Cong terrorism and har- assment, including one attack three miles south of Saigon and another 18 miles east of the capital, Speck, 25, who was to ap- pear in court today in Chi- cago on a charge of mur- dering Gloria Jean Davey, while police pieced together the story behind the massacre of eight student nurses. Speck, a 25-year-old ex-con- | vict, spent his last hours drink- jing and carousing before at- tempting to end his life Sunday. In an ironic twist, the fugi- tive whose name and picture were flashed around the world was taken to a hospital by po- licemen who didn't recognize him. State's Attorney Daniel Ward said Speck would appear in east of Badon, " City Police At Sudbury SUDBURY (CP)--More than 290 additional provincial police- men are in the Sudbury area to- day, aiding local police in the explosive wildcat strike that has paralysed district operations of the giant International Nickel Co. of Canada Ltd. Superintendent Sam _ White- house of the OPP said the extra officers assigned from across Ontario will be used to relieve local OPP who have been on overtime since the strike by 16,- 000 members of the United Steelworkers of America (Cc) began Thursday. The additional men, accompa- nied by Staff Superintendent William Gilling, began arriving Sunday and are being billeted in district motels. They are us- ing Sudbury armories as their central headquarters. "I saw a B. I rubbed some CHECK VIOLENCE more and saw B-O-R-N."' Supt. Whitehouse said that It was the first word of a ,apart from relieving local offic- tattoo reading "Born to raise|ers, the reinforcements are for hell."" |standby duty in case of vio- Dr, Smith recalled the news-|lence, paper article and quickly} Police reported' no violence washed the blood off the arm. | overnight but outbreaks of van- The tattoo was one of the iden-|dalism were reported Sunday. flashed across} Supt. Gilling today met with 15 hours pre-'police at Copper Cliff, just out- jside Sudbury, and _ representa- "What's your name?" Dr.|tives of the Steelworkers' Local Smith asked the man. |6500, which represents the strik- "Richard, Richard Speck," hejers. one of eight student nurs- es massacred in their re- sidence early Thursday. (AP Wirephoto) tifying marks the continent viously. court today on a charge of mur- dering Gloria Jean Davy, 22, one of the eight student nurses massacred in their residence Ward said he anticipates filing multiple murder charges answered weakly. He said the main concern of "This is the fellow police are|the special OPP detachment is looking for," Dr. Smith told alto maintain Jaw and order. He nurse, 'Get hold of the police|said there would be no attempt right now." {by police to break picket lines At one point, Dr. Smith said,|unless there are incidents in- Speck looked up and asked; volving violation of the law. against Speck and that he prob- ably will present the case to the grand jury this week. GUARD IS HEAVY Speck has been under seda-| tion in the city jail hospital and reported in good condition. Ward said Speck had not been questioned and had made no Statements. He was under heavy guard. The nationwide hunt for Speck ' ended in a skid road flophouse| when a tenant saw Speck stag.| VIET RED LIGHT DISTRICT f gering down a hallway, covered) j with blood. The tenant called o> eee DR. LE ROY SMITH, re- sident intern at Cook Coun- ty Hospital, explains at nross---conierence "how "he identified Richard Speck, Suspect sought in connect- jon with slaying of eight nurses in Chicago. (AP Wirephoto) Court Rejects Claims Of Two THE ternational Court of Justice by HAGUE (CP)--The In- a single vote, rejected today a suit aimed at ending South Af- rica's control on neighboring South-West Africa. The court ruled that the two suing powers Liberia and Ethiopia -- had established no legal right to bring the suit to break the old League of Nations mandate und which white- ruled South Africa administers the territory Sir Percy Spender, the tralian president of the who cast the deciding said "For president's votes being equal, the court de- cides to reject the cla Ethiopia and Liberiz The court's jud nt did not deal with the merits of South Africa's ad istration of territory there of (race se; It disc eR tion of Ethiopia's and I, legal rights or interests in ques- tioning South Africa's adminis- tration, Aus court vote the the these reasor cas ote the icy of apartheid ques beria's the desk clerk and he sum- moned police. Police placed a tourniquet on the profusely bleeding left arm and took the man, reeking from alcohol and partly unconscious, to Cook County Hospital. But a young surgeon who had just réad a newspaper recog- nized a tattoo and summoned police. It came less than 15 hours after a murder warrant jhad been issued for Speck. Detectives theorized that Speck drank himself into a Stupor and tried te commit-sui- cide after he saw a drinking | buddy in the back seat of a po- lice car. ADVANCES THEORY Detective John Mitchell said) Speck may have spotted Robert Gerrald in the back of a squad car as police toured skid road in a systematic search for -- Friday night and Satur- day. Mitchell said Speck may have 'Will you get the $10,000?" lour COMMUNICATIONS The reference was to the $10,-| Area police forces reported no | 000 reward offered by the South) such incidents overnight but pri- |Chicago Community Hospital,|yate hydro lines to several Inco where the student nurses!properties were reported cut trained, and crews from the department As details of the police investi-|of lands and forests fought two gation were revealed, it showed|small fires on Inco property that Speck might be tied to the|Sunday. The firefighters passed }Mass murder partly by his de-|through picket lines without in- |sire to reach New Orleans. \terference. MAY SET UP A NEW TREND | SAIGON (AP) -- The old | French resort of. Cap St Jacques will be the site for an experimental 'government red light district. If the ex- periment works, similar facil- ities for U.S, troops may be set up on the outskirts of South Viet Nam's major cit- ies, the government an- | nounced today, | Cap St. Jacques, once a playground for French colo- nists, -is-4¢-imiles east of Sai- gon on the South China Sea and now is known by the Viet- namese name of Vung Tau It is a rest and recreation centre for U.S. soldiers. Social Affairs Secretary Tran Ngoc Lien said the dist- rict will have its own shop- ping facilities and will be un- der strict medical control to reduce the incidence of ve- nereal disease. Gambling will * be forbidden, The growth of the U.S. mil- itary establishment in South Viet Nam to 280,000 men has been accompanied by a boom in bars, cabarets and prosti- tution, especially in Saigon. OPP Bolster FIRED Rear +- admiral William Landymore is to be fired as chief of the integrated At- lantic command and com- mander of the Atlantic fleet within 24 hours, a defence spokesman in Ottawa said today. | (CP Wirephoto) | (See story page three.) "BABY IS HOME WRONG MUSIC | MILDENHALL, England | (Reuters)--Bride and groom stood before the altar, the church organist prepared to strike up wedding music, and the organ said: "Clear to land, contact « . » Baby-Baby is home." A technician at nearby Mildenhall U.S. Air Force Base said "audio - reso- nances" in the newly - in- stalled electronic organ must have relayed an ex- change between pilot and control tower. Treasury Board Has Shuffle OTTAWA (CP)--D. W. Frank- in, 47, has been appointed di- rector of the finance, com- merce and government division of the program. branch of the jtreasury board, it was an- jnounced today. | Mr, Franklin formerly was \director of the defence division of the board, a committee of |cabine t | R. J. Grenier, 50, of Ottawa, jformer head of the operating |policy division, takes over Mr. |Franklin's defence division post. | The board also announced that D. R. Taylor, 49, has been appointed director of the plan- jning and co-ordination division and R. M. Adams, 37, has been appointed director of the com- pensation division; Mr. Taylor is a Regina native and Mr, Ad- jams was born in London, Ont. | The announcement noted that the tréasury board Will be ex- pected to act as the principal jagent of the government in col- jlective bargaining with civil |servants under legislation now 'before Parliament. 'etres Set For Take - Off vel Farthest Yet ms. of} application} May Tra reasoned "'he had run out of time" himeelt t Sttempted to kill Cape KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) Authorities~said he used Two U.S. astronauts were ready jeither a broken bottle or knife|'® ride the Gemini 10 spacecraft to slash his arm and wrist, He today on a bold dual-rendezvous lost 144 pints of blood. and spacewalk adventure that Police picked Gerrald up Fri-/CUld take them farther from day after witnesses reported earth than man has yet ven- seeing Gerrald with Speck in a tured : rooming house Thursday after-- Cmdr. John W. Young, vet- noon eran of last year's Gemini 3 Police said Gerrald told them flight, and Maj. Michael Col- he and Speck discussed the lins had most: of the day to nurses' massacre while drink-|PrePare for ig yor ol - day ein: re journey among the stars hotlice ee the Their Titan Il was scheduled Gerrald said Speck told him: ee wl wei oe price fo "It must have bee -ny An Atlas was to vz kV We vie esa 4:40 p.m., -EDT-- maniac who did that crime." earlier--at ; The story unfolded Sunday as '® hurl an Agena space vehicle details of police activity were iMto orbit as a chase target for made public. af the astronauts With all preparations pro | SPOTTED MARK ceeding smoothly, Young and . The young surgeon, Dr. Leroy|Collins took a day off Sunday Smith, 26, worked on the blood-|and went fishing in the Atlantic ied man, registered in the Starr off Cape Kennedy, Hote! as B Brain, in the emer- Adjusting to a sleep schedule gency room as just another|that will keep them up late Slashing. case until he sawleach night in space, they re- something under the coat of/tired about 3 a.m. EDT today blood. and space officials hoped they'd "I moistened my finger tips sleep until after noon. 'and rubbed," Dr. Smith said.} The late afternoon launch was Pa " dictated by the position of an-;a sextant to make star and hor- other Agena left in space last|izon readings and a spacecraft March by the Gemini 8 pilots.|computer, they'll plot the ma- SHOOT FOR- RECORD noeuvres needed to pursue After catching and linking up/Agena 10 over a_ 103,000-mile with their Agena late tonight, | course, catching it after a five- Young and Collins plan to fire/hour chase during their fourth the target satellite's powerful) orbit 185 miles above the earth, engine to shoot to a record al-; On earlier Gemini rendezvous titude of perhaps 468 miles to flights calculation was done position themselves for a tricky, mainly by computers on the rendezvous with the Gemini 8! ground, which will be a backup Agena Wednesday. this time. Collins is to take a space; An hour after catching the walk over to the old Agena--|Agena -10--shortly before mid- which he has dubbed a "dead/night--Young is to insert the bird" because it has no battery nose of Gemini 10 into a dock- power ing collar on one end of the 26- This is one of two 55-minute /foot. Agena, clamping the two work periods he plans outside! vehicles firmly together. the Gemini 10 spacecraft. The} Two repeat dockings are first is to be a simple stand up| slated the next day -- one by manoeuvre Tuesday durin gieach astronaut. which he'll open his hatch, After the first docking poke the upper half of his body! Young and Collins, both 35, plan into space and conduct scienti-|another space first -- igniting fic and photographic experi-|!the powerful 16,000-pound thrust China Balks At Aid TOKYO (AP) -- North Viet Nam made an unusual appeal today for more material and moral support from its Commu- nist allies and other countries, describing its war situation as "extremely serious." But China indicated it is not ready to send its soldiers into the fight. The plea came from North Viet Nam's Fatherland Front. It followed President Ho Chi Minh's decree Sunday of' par- tial mobilization of North Viet- namese reserves. The decree touched off spec- ulation that North Viet Nam plans to send more regular troops into the South in reply to the intensified U.S. air war, using the reserves to fill gaps at home. China reacted. by, offering again "to take all necessary ac- tions" in support of the North Vietnamese, but implied it thought they could win with their own forces. An editorial in the official Pe- king People's Daily dangled the threat of Chinese intervention, saying "we will take action any time we consider it neces- sary."' But it emphasized that China regards its role now as a supporting one--"the vast ex- panse of country is the rear area of the Vietnamese peo- ple." The Fatherland Front's ap- peal suggested North Viet Nam would like to see more co-oper- ation between China and the So- viet Union to help the Hanoi re- gime. But Peking replied with a new swipe at the Kremlin. Chinese Premier Chou En-lai told the North Vietnamese am- bassador after he brought word of the mobilization decree that Peking will not join with the Kremlin to help Hanoi, but will assist North Viet Nam indepen- dently, the New China news agency reported. itive American airmen on trial} EEL EAD CLL SAMIDE: "Disaster Consequences" Goldberg Tells Geneva GENEVA (AP)--The United,outside, the building. This was States told the International/to avoid any Communist Red Cross committee todayjcharges that the committee is there will be "disastrous conse-|in any way favoring the Ameri- quences" if North Viet Nam/can side in the dispute over carries out threats to put cap-| prisoners. A committee official stressed as war criminals. to correspondents: "We are Ambassador Arthur J, Gold-|deeply concerned with all pris- berg, permanent U.S. represen-|oners in Viet Nam," with em- tative to the United Nations de-| phasis on the word "'all,"' livered the warning from the} Goldberg said the Red Cross United States in a 35-minute|has agreed to a second meeting meeting with Roger Gallopin,| Wednesday with the committee, executive director of the neu-| which will this time be repre- tral, all-Swiss committee. Gold-|sented by its chairman, Samuel berg told reporters after the|Gonard. meeting: | Last May the International "I informed the Red Cross| Red Cross told roving Ambassa- that in the view of the U.S, gov-|dor W. Averell Harriman there ernment there can be no doubt) was little it could do to protect that the Geneva conventions on/U.S, prisoners in the Viet Nam the treatment of prisoners-of-| war. war fully apply to the Viet Nam; The Hanoi conflict." \refused to allow the Red Cross North Viet Nam's position is|access to North Viet Nam or to that the convention does not|any areas controlled by the Viet apply since there has been no|Cong. UN Secretary - General declaration of war. U Thant appealed Saturday to After today's meeting, Gallo-|North Viet Nam. not to carry pin tersely told correspondgnts: | out threats to put captured U.S. "There will be no statement/|fliers on trial and urged "'all U.S. Warns Hanoi government has) Don't Try Airmen Strikes By NFS Spread MONTREAL (CP) -- Another 101 hospitals in the province today were hit by a strike of non-medical employees, bring ing the total to 139, slightly more than 70 per cent of Que- bec's 189 hospitals. Strike director Raymond Couture said 4,000 pickets were parading before various hospi- tals throughout the province and some 32,500 hospital workers now are on strike. | Workers in the 50 unaffected hospitals are not members of the striking union. The walkout began Friday and already had involved 38 hospitals prior :to the Sunday announcement of its extension to all institutions represented by the Quebec Hospitals Asso- ciation, ; ; _ Meantime, .. mediation. . efforts continued in Montreal. Most hos from the Red Cross." sides" to comply with the Ge- He then asked Goldberg 8 sta convention concerning war | make his statement to the press! prisoners. Both Meat And Newsprint Cost More At Wholesale OTTAWA (CP) -- Meat. and|dex for animal products to 296.1 newsprint cost more at the/from 293.2 in May. wholesale level in June but} With lower prices for grains, most other wholesale prices|sugar, livestock and poultry were steady or fractionally|feeds, the vegetable products lower, the Dominion Bureau of|index dropped to 225.4 from Statistics reported today. | 226.9 A general index of wholesale| Newsprint drove prices for June settled at 259,4/Products index to 339.5 from by preliminary figures, , com- : ' Wholesale prices were slightly pared with 258.8 a month earl- lower in four other categories-- ier and 252.1 in June, 1965. The] textile and iron products and index is based on 1935-39 prices /poth ferrous and non-ferrous as 100. | metals, Fresh and cured meats, live-/ Chemical products were up stock and dress fowl all experi-| imperceptibly, as were non-me- enced higher prices during the|tajlic minerals such as coal, pe- troleum and asbestos. ments, ;Agena 10 engine while linked At' the outset of their flight,|with it to send. both vehicles | Young and Collins will try|soaring together into an orbit} something new -- do-it-yourself/ranging from 185 to 468 miles./ |mavigation. Using the space-| The altitude record is 307.5/ 'craft inertial guidance system,|miles, held by Russia. Margareta Arvidson of Gothenburg, Sweden, wears the crown of Miss Universe after winning the annual contest Saturday night on Miami Beach. She has brown the wood} pitals reported plans for tack- ling strike-caused emergencies were working well, but one in a suburb of Quebec City ree ported hardship among its 107 chronically-ill patients, The 32,500 employees are members of the National Federe ation of Services, which is af- filiated with the Quebec-based Confederation of National Trade Unions. They want salary increases and a number of new work ar- rangements, such as improves ments in the system for judging worker competence. The eme ployees are dietary, laundry, housekeeping and maintenance workers and ward orderlies. All was reported peaceful on picket lines during the weekend, but five pickets outsitie the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal were arrested after a dispute about who should be al- lowed into the hospital. The pickets carried signs with such inscriptions as The Era of Unfair Services is Finished and We Protest against Contempt for Workers, CTT RL AR MUANESAERE RUNNY uiiarne eine oteeeretgeert eat NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 98 Forest Fires Reported TORONTO (CP) -- Ninety-eight forest fires are re- ported burning in Ontario today by the lands and forests department, Located by districts they are: 26; Sudbury, 17; Parry Sound and Tweed, 11 each; Pem- broke, 9; Lindsay and Gogama, and Sioux Lookout, three each; Port Arthur, Swastika, Chapleau and Sault Ste. Marie, two each; Kenora and Lake Simcoe, one each. During the 24-hour period ending North Bay, four 'each; Kemptville MISS UNIVERSE at 11 a.m. today, 51 new fires were reported and 41 extinguished. Canadians Place Far Down WIESBADEN, West Germany (CP-AP) -- Canadians placed far down the list in official results announced today of the 10-day world shooting championships' rapid- fire pistol event, won Sunday by Romania. Virgil Atana- siu of Romania won the event with 596 points out of a. possible 600. Josef Kapetzki of Poland, placed second with 594, followed by Renart Suleimanoy of the Soviet Union in third place, also with 594, hair and blue-gray eyes, is 18 years old and measures 35-25-34. She stands five feet, eight inches and weighs 121 pounds, | (AP Wirephoto) '5 ...In THE TIMES today ... Manor Employees Seek New Pact--P, 11 Ajax Mother of 3 Dies--P. 5 Gaels Top Junior All-Stars--P. 8 ObitsJ--19 Sports--8, 9, Theatre--6 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajox Women's--12, Ann Landers--12 City News--11 Classified--16, 17, 18, 19 Comics--21 Editorial--4 Financial--15 10 News--5 13, 14 ce Ss Sea Sai ees = Se eT TE santa Rea. FIM

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