Weather Report Cooler air moving south brings thunder and some rain. Low tonight 55, high Wed- nesday 75. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL, 95 -- NO, 153 10¢ Single C SS5e Per Week Flome Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1966 She Oshawa Times Class Mail Post Office Department nd -fer-ssyment--of LIBERAL LEADER BECOMES INDIAN CHIEF Prime Minister Pearson smokes the peace pipe after Pearson, Wilson Talks On LONDON (Reuters) -- British Prime Minister 'Wilson will have two hours of talks with Cana- dian Minister Pearson July 29, it was officially an-| nounced today, | A government statement said) the meeting would take place on Wilson's return flight to Britain)and from Washington epoesiets binze when they were fired upon. ; The statement did not specify; Store windows were smashed, when irate patrons tore up Althen began throwing rock s|mitted to establish a logistics with U.S. President Johnson. whether the meeting would be in Ottawa, and government of- ficials said the venue has yet to be. settled. Wilson, who has just returned} from Moscow, is to leave here} July 28 for the U.S. Hospitals Give Pay Increases NEW YORK (AP)--Five non- profit hospitals and a union o non - medical employees have announced agreement on a wage increase after a week of sporadic work sioppages. An agreement covering four hospitals was announced Mon- day night--Montefiore Hospital, in the Bronx; Mount Sinai and Beth Israel hospitals, both in Manhattan; and Long Isiand Jewish Hospital, in Queens. Brooklyn Jewish Hospital had) agreed to the pay increase ear- lier Monday. The agreement, which incor- porated almost all the demands by Local 1199, provides a total wage and benefit package of 24 per cent over two years, The/ union says employees covered! by the agreement have been getting an average of $80 week. Ulster Radical Faces Jail Term BELFAST (AP) -- Rev. lan Paisley, leader of Northern Ire-} land's Protestant extremists, was found guilty today of un- lawful assembly. He refused to} post a good-behavior bond and was faced with three months'} imprisonment The magistrate hearing the ease against Paisley and six; eo - defendants on charges of} taking part in an unlawful as-| sembly gave him' 24 hours to think it over } Paisley told reporters later! the defendants would take next 24 hours to decide "whether to appeal or to go to Crumlin Road Jail for three months." The case against Hercules' V Mallon, one of the seven defend ants, was dismissed. The other six were found guilty of the] charge. the Says Ambassador PARIS (AP)--Agence France- The correspondent quoted the The correspondent, citing un- |Presse said in a dispatch from|ambassador as saying that the|named observers, said that the mese ambassador to China de- clared today captured U.S, pilots will be tried as war crim- inals, The agency's correspond- ent quoted Ambassador Tran Du Vinh as making the state- ment at a press conference. ambassador told correspondents | that the American pilots have) never been considered' by North Viet Nam as prisoners of war. | Therefore they do not come un-| der the Geneva Convention) which would prevent their being} put on trial, he was quoted as saying. : The ambassador gave no indi- cation as to when the trials | would begin, the agency re- ported, but he added that the the North Vietnamese people. France has diplomatic rela- tions with China and Agence France - Presse of the blood Indians Mon- Alberta, day, during his tour of Fort Macleod ceremony at : which he was made a. chief UE Photo king. Racial Violence Breaks : eM 2 Reds Offer , | In Two American Cities or ae Sanctuary men were injured, none seri-| . ously, when the crowd pelted) LONDON (AP) -- China has lthem with bricks and rocks. offered territorial sanctuary to | The violence in Jacksonville|North Vietnamese forces fight. ing the Americans, it was stated in reports reaching British au- thorities Monday. As understood here Peking's offer would allow North Viet- than 300 police moved into the area on Cleveland's east side, Jacksonville, Fla., and New|sealing off an eight-block area. York City Monday night, leav-| The disturbance, sparked by ing a young Negro woman dead |roving bands of teen-agers, was} and scores of persons injured. |marked by sniper fire at police|came after about 200 Negros The worst outbreak was here/and »firemen. Police shot outjhad staged an orderly march where, police said, J oy ce|some street lights and ordered on city hall to protest alleged Arnett. 26. a mother of gabon || coorgrongiid ~ nerd gree racial ns eye in tty it nok ii , \lights to keep from making tar-|ing practices. Police said the cyber a: ae as shot in the head, ---- vats of the Gincart. trouble began when the group] namese ait ous to use gp od left city hall and headed into|territory as a base area from a: STARTED AT TAVERN lthe business district in violation) Which presumably they could Policeman Bill Alexan-jo¢ their permit to march attack American raiders. jder said the trouble started! Roving bands of Negroes Ground units also would be per- CLEVELAND (AP) -- Racial violence. flared in Cleveland, w suffered minor bullet firemen had to leave some stores were looted and at|tavern after they learned they|through store windows and set/base free from attacks by least eight fires were set--some could no longer get free ice wa- fire to a small grocery store American bombers, by fire bombs -- before morelter with a fire bomb, officials said Diplomats said Hanoi's ac- he ; ase ' ceptance of the offer could Police said an elderly whiteljring Chinese involvement in 4 s d ;woman was cut on the leg by a the conflict significantly. nearer. rovincla a eover rge thrown ior ms a. vert en This is because it could free the was pulled from a_ telephone vicun Fata F S ik B d H it ] booth and struck by Negroes. non og so ge or tri e- oun Ospl a S |WHITE MAN ARRESTED the North Vietnamese in cer- PRS ea tot lar. s ions, MONTREAL (CP)--Quebec's, From some areas, families Bg gg Bong ---- pe tain ituat x harassed hospitals tackled to-| forces to accommodate relatives 'she deecribnd hiviaalt ab a ter: day a mounting mass of strike-| discharges from the hospitals a5! vevationist when iy t > led tol generated problems against al "non-urgent cases" told of the bedi . Ku Klux Klan warrant| urc background of increased public] resulting a pa and on Rutsane P '. a is 0 hit uth discomfort and continued ex-) sometimes, anguish ha : mim 2 fan aban the National Waderaila p|President of the National Asso- -_-- oe sen Bervives at vickots abs al- ciation for the Advancement of | ppea S Colored People, and organizer A call for the provincial gov-jlow urgent cases and supplies, { the march * bed ernment to take the hospitals|through their lines but not 'in-| '© Maren ees ---s under temporary trusteeship|dividuals who call themselves! The warrant ordered Pearson t P | t was sounded Monday by Mar-! volunteers.' ' surrender to "'a Florida klan or | 0 S cel Pepin, president of the labor! The union, affiliated with the °!e" organization with which the 32,- Quebec-based eon seh ol ' Folks was charged with dis-- GENEVA (Reuters)--Top of- 500 non ~ medical workers on| National Trade Unions, wants|turbing an assembly and re-/ficials of the World Council of strike against the 139 hospitals) higher wages among other bene-|leased on $50 bail, A $100 bail|Churches have appealed to are affiliated. fits |was set for another white man,| North Viet Nam not to put on A strike by 2,924 of Quebec's., Mr. Pepin, CNTU. president,|Lothern Cooper, 45, who was trial U 8, pilots shot down over 21,000 registered nurses at 538 }ola a Monday press conference|Charged with disorderly con-| its territory, a spokesman said hospitals, added to une weow that negotiations so far had not/@uct--throwing a rock, today. inee's public-health woes. produced tangible results Some shots were fired in New| He said the appeal was con- From the institutions them-| The first of the non-medical York City, police said, as dis-|tained in a cable to North Viet selves came reports of emer-| workers struck Friday and the! order was reported in East Har- Nam's foreign minister from gency staffs trying to deal with'strike against the 139-member- lem laundry, meal and medical! institutions of the Quebec Hos- section of Brooklyn chores that ordinarily are per-|pitals Association became total/of a special riot-trained police and the director of its commis- formed by the non - medical | Monday. There are 189 Quebec unit quickly brought both situa- sion on international affairs,; Next item on the planned) workers or nurses. thospitals in all, Dr, 0, Frederick Nolde, The news agency said the| maintains aj} ( ag ~ | permanent correspondent in Pe-|North Vietnamese about 500 |by the North Vietnamese peo- ple, conforming to North Viet- namese laws, | The press conference |held on the occasion of the an- niversary of the 1954 Geneva ac- cords which ended the French- Indochina war, Peking that the North Vietna- | captured pilots will be judged! captured U.S, pilots were being endangered by recent warnings from Washington about conse- |quences to Hanoi if the pilots was|are put on trial, The observers were said to feel that Hanoi would seem to be giving way under threats if it decided not Ito try the pilots, U.S. Marines Stem irine platoons held out for four lhours against waves of North pilots' fate would be left up to| Vietnamese troops just south of the 17th parallel] Monday while covering the withdrawal of the jrest of their battalion. The bloody fight cost the dead or wounded, one marine officer estimated, The 90 or so marines took heavy casualties but held out until air and artil- lery strikes drove off the North Vietnamese, The fight was the bitterest ac- tion yet in Operation Hastings, which last weekend brought Vietnamese troops into the northeast of Saigon in search of a North Vietnamese division which intelligence says recently crossed the demilitarized zone division between the two Viet Nams. Despite the heavy losses to the two platoons, U.S. head- quarters jbined forces casualties re- }mained light over-all since the |sweep began Friday. In the central highlands, units of the U.S, 25th Infantry Divi- sion's 3rd Brigade battled a North Vietnamese battalion for three hours Monday less than a |mile from the Cambodian bor- thousands of marines and South mountains more than 400 miles in Saigon said com-| Viet Shock Troops SAIGON (AP)--Two U.S, Ma- der and 37 miles southwest of Pleiku. A spokesman said the infantrymen killed seven Com- munists, U.S. pilots, meanwhile, kept up their attacks on North Viet Nam's oil reserves, hitting 11 petroleum storage areas Mon- day and eluding 13 surface-to- air missiles thrown up at them, a spokesman reported, The spokesman said the oil depots hit were scattered from 44 miles north of Hanoi to the Badon depot 65 miles across the border from South Viet Nam, U.S. Marines fought two other engagements with the North Vietnamese Monday. Two rearguard platoons took fheavy casualties and were nearly overrun when the North Vietnamese struck the marine battalion, U.S, headquarters re- ported in Saigon, The North Vietnamese were repelled by napalm dropped as close as 50 feet to the marine positions, Survivors who waded through rivers and creeks from the bat- tle scene also spoke of heavy losses, The Communists attacked as the battalion moved to a new position, It had been under con- cinualharassment since it camped about 2,000 yards from the six-mile-wide demilitarized zone Friday, Gemini 10 Fuel Shortage CAPE KENNEDY, Fla, (AP) Space scientists shuffled priori- \ties today to salvage the most docking path to provide a sec-| significant phases of the Gem- ini 10 mission, beset by a short- jage of spacecraft fuel, | Astronauts and Michael Collins, mean- while, slept through a record- shattering orbit after a success- ful docking with their Agena rocket target and hitchhike ride under Agena's power toward the next assignments of their daring mission, A National Aeronautics and Space Administration spokes- man said there would be some and. the east New York/the world council's general sec-|revision of the program, but minutes Monday afternoon, Members retary, Dr. W. A. Visser't Hooft, |Clung to the belief. major proj-| ects would be saved, 'schedule was a descent to a tions under control, SURVIVOR'S ACCOUNT .. . Filipino Nurse Tells CHICAGO (AP)--She tried to persuade the others to resist but they felt it would be safer and prayed as he took the other eight out of the room one at a time and strangled or Stabbed them. the man accused of committing the slaughter--Richard Speck, 24.--was under treatment after attempting suicide ity tions to protect Speck's secur- would not be relaxed. "We are cognizant of the sit- John W. Young | to go along, As the quiet-spoken intruder led each of her friends to their deaths, she crouched under a bed and prayed The consul - general of the Philippines said Corazon Amu- rao gave him this account Mon- day night of the massacre: of eight student nurses. Miss Amus rao, 23, was the only survivor. It_was the first account of the night of horror. Miss Amurao has given, apart from: largely- confidential reports to police Consu!-General Generoso P, Provido visited Miss Amurao, an exchange student from his country; in the hospital where the girl has been confined since the slayings Thursday The only time she has left the room was for a brief visit Mon- day to the jail hospital where AGAINST MEETING Speck was under sedation and forbade .a_ face-to-face They said neither he Amurao could stand doctors meeting Miss strain rovido said the girl told him she and the other two Filipino nurses tried to convince others that should gang up on the intruder and try to escape "but the American girls cautioned them not to do anything." It was the American girls' opinion, Provido reported the girl as Saying, that since the man told them he meant them no harm "let's not start any- thing that will make this one do something crazy." Miss Amurao hid under a bed "She said the man-did not ap- pear violent and did not talk violently,' Provido said. The American girls, therefore, felt that "maybe if we are quiet and calm, he will remain quiet and calm." Miss Amurao has not been al- lowed to see or talk with any but official visitors on orders of State Attorney Daniel P. Ward. It was one of a number of strict precautions police ob- served so as not to mar the prosecution of Speck by 'any act which might conceivably con- flict with recent Supreme Court rulings regarding questioning of Suspects, right to counsel and pre-trial publicity Ward said extreme precau- uation in Dallas after President Kennedy's death," he said, re- ferring to the killing of Lee Harvey Oswald. Speck was arrested Sunday after a doctor treating him for a slashed arm recognized him as the man for whom a murder warrant had been issued 15 hours earlier Investigators say they found Speck's fingerprints at the scene of the massacre. Five of the eight murder vic- tims were buried Monday in separate funerals in Chicago, One had been buried previously. Bodies of the two Filipino vic- tims were to be flown to their homeland today after a requiem mass celebrated. by Catholic Archbishop John Patrick Cody, ~| Forces Manoeuvres Halt lower orbit to intercept the Agena 8 rocket carcass, left in a jond target in the skies, | Rendezvous would be a fuel- jconsuming manoeuvre. a perfect' beginning, command pilot Young and pilot Collins jachieved three spectacular space achievements including jan altitude record of 476 miles, | For some reason neither the astronauts nor the ground con- jtrollecs could explain, they used an excess of fuel in catching up with the Agena 10 which pre- ceded them into orbit by 100 Court Ruling .. . KILLER WAS CALM | Jolts London Of Murder Night | | | LONDON (CP) -- The world court's judgment Monday on the Southwest Africa case was so limited as to be sensational, _ That was the initial reaction jin legal and diplomatic circles | here to the court ruling in The |Hague -- a ruling that shied | away from any sort of judg- ment on South Africa's apart-! |heid racial separation, One legal source saw signifi- jcance in the way the 14 world court judges divided '8-to-7 on | the ruling, the Australian pres |dent, Sir Percy Spender, using his right to vote twice to break a deadlock. | Roughly speaking, the judges | from western Europe were on |the "winning" side, with dis-| | senting Jnion and the United' States plus Africa, Latin Ameriva and Asia, The expert said this reflects | the traditional and conservative joutlook of European judges, | who generally do not see their] > \; or/= changing laws. & function as making laws le Ocean Fleets Lose Posts In OTTAWA (CP)--Defence Min- ister Hellyer relieved the Atlan- tie fleet commander today and prepared similar action for the Pacific fleet chief. in a top-eche- lon defence shake-up over planned unification of the armed forces into a single serv- ice, | Rear-Admiral William Landy- more, 50, was dismissed for publicly criticizing government policy on unification. He was chief of the integrated Maritime Command as well as Atlantic fleet commander. Rear-Admiral M, C, Stirling, 51, deputy commander of Mari- jtime Command and Pacific jfleet commander, notified Mr, |Hellyer he could no longer sup- |port policy if it led to complete [unification of the services, | Mr, Hellyer's office said the |minister considered Rear-Admi- jral Stirling had done "the hon- orable thing" and had asked to be relieved, He would be "in due course," At Halifax, Air Commodore Ralph Gordon, 48, became Rear - Admiral Landymore's temporary replacement as chief of Maritime Command which includes the Atlantic fleet and RCAF maritime units, TO NAME SUCCESSOR Mr, Hellyer was expected to name the permanent com- mander of Maritime Command later today, Meanwhile, he conferred with Lawson, judge advocate gen- eral, on findings of the judge advocate general's branch about public criticisms by Rear- Admiral Lanfymore, Mr, Hellyer's office has said Rear-Admiral Landymore con- travened service regulations and laid himself open to dis- ciplinary action, A department spokesman said a number of regulations cover public pronouncements by serv- ing officers, They include a pro- hibition on discussion of or writ- ing on military matters or con: troversial matters relating to policy without permission from the chief of defence staff or his deputy, Another section of Queen's regulations permits command- ing officers to talk directly to the press so long as they neither defend nor criticize departmen- tal or government policy, VOICED CRITICISM Rear - Admiral Landymore voiced his criticisms of unifica- tion in newspaper interviews last Friday and Saturday, He said he considers unification no more efficient nor economical |than three services, In the first eight hours after] Rear-Admiral Stirling, son of Grote Stirling, minister of na- tional defence in the Conserva- tive cabinet of R, B. Bennett in 1934-35, met Mr. Hellyer here last week to discuss unification plans, He issued a prepared statement Monday saying he had asked to be relieved. As Rear - Admiral Landy- more's standard came down at Top Naval Officers Sacked By Hellyer Pilots Will Be Tried Commanders Defence Row defence staff and Brig, W, J, Rear-Admiral Landymore ters, the out-going chief sent a message to the fleet proposing a method of setting the inte- gration problem, Rear + Admiral Landymore's message said unification ; hould be studied thoroughly before it is implemented, Each officer and men should be given a choice, after the plan is ex- plained fully, to join or leave the services, DIEFENBAKER CRITICAL The command shake-up prom- ised to be a major political issue when Parliament reconvenes Oct. 5, In Invermere, B.C., Opposition Leader Diefenbaker said 'the way the government is handling the integration of the forces is a striking revelation of 'its ar- rogance,"" "The armed forces have be+ come the private puppetry of a cabinet minister and this has caused irreparable harm to their morale," Mr. Diefenbaker said, "Civilian authorities must be in charge, but the way the gov- ernment is going about it shows a complete disregard for the men who have given their lives Maritime Command headquar- in the armed forces." | hasta neta NEW U.S. Warns Russia aii Russia today it would destro France Explodes Se PARIS (AP) -- France c atmospheric nuclear tests in GENEVA (Reuters) -- The ae ice rN eN BY HIGHLIGHTS Against Talks United States warned y any chance of a treaty to prevent spread of nuclear weapons if it tried to ban con- sultations among NATO allies on nuclear strategy, cond Nuclear Bomb ontinued its current series of the South Pacific today by exploding its second atomic bomb in 17 days, the defence ministry announced, ... In THE TIMES today ... Oshawa To Study Whitby Amel: Highway Earth-Moving 70 Percent Completed--P. 5 = Green Geels Defeat Hestings--P, 6 judges from the Soviet/= Ann Landers--10 City News--9 Classified--14 to. 17 Comics---12 Editorial----4 Financiet--13 Obits---18 Sports--6, 7 Theatre-- 00 Weother---2 Whitby, Ajox News--5 Women's--10, 11 ARLE. RN AAMT. RINE IT igamation--P. 9 URGE