Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. 10€ Single Copy | B5c Per Week Home Delivered VOL. 95 -- NO. 171 She Oshawa Times ST 10, 1966 Weather Report Sunny and cool with a few clouds and showers Thurs- day. Low tonight, 52; high tomorrow, 75. Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Department Giiawe and for payment of Postage it Cosh THIRTY-TWO PAGES District Diver, Is Third y ED SIMON KINGSTON, Jamaica (CP)-- Beverley Boys, 15 - year - old Pickering, Ont., school- girl whose lead in the tower idiving competition was wiped out in British Empire Games committee rooms, today stood third after four dives of the rescheduled: event. After four dives today, Miss Boys was spotting the leader, Western Australia's Robyn Bradshaw, 19, 13.5 points and | was 3.45 points behind Joy New- man of England. Coach Irene MacDonald of Vancouver was_ enthusiastic about the Canadian girl's chances. "Bev couldn't be in a better position,"' she said. ae "The other girls have used up most of their difficult dives and & @ Bev still has hers to go. She's going to nail them." MPH Miss Boys, who beat out de- fending champion Sue Knight of | Australia for second place in | last week's springboard compe- jtition, with a superb last-round) PATIENT THWARTED IN SUICIDE hospital in Madrid, Spain, as other patients watch from windows. A _ nurse, Sister Consuelo, grabbed the man's legs and held on until the others to her assistance. A doctor and a_ nurse came cling to the legs of an un- identified male patient who attempted to leap from the eighth floor of the general (AP Wirephoto) Via Cable from Madrid Four Men Injured TORONTO (CP) Sudden; wind storms with gusts up to 60) miles an hour whipped along the northwestern end of Lake Ontario Tuesday, collapsing a partially constructed building in, Hamilton and toppling trees and} power lines. | Four construction workers were injured, two of them seri-; ously, when a one-storey build-) ing buckled at a Dominion Foundry and Steel Co. site in Hamilton. About 100 workers dive, performed solidly today. | The statuesque Miss Knight, | SILENCE KEPT Russ Force Probe Opens 020.000 In Montreal 'Near Canada**~ * | MONTREAL (CP) -- Mont-jheld as a material witness for OTTAWA (CP)--Russia has a|real police said today an inves-|a coroner's inquest, expected potential reserve force of 29,000 /Hgstion into gear of alnext week. within easy reach of Canadian} sang of hired killers in Quebec] ishores aboard 1,100 fishin g|has been launched in Montreal| WITNESSED SLAYING ltrawlers in the Atlantic and|and may spread to other prov-| QPP officials declined further Pacific oceans, Rear-Admiral|inces as well as Quebec centres.|Comment on the affair. William Landymore told the 'We know this ring exists in| Montreal police said Mrs, Commons, defence committee|the east end of Montreal," said| Lauziere bite gdiey witness to the last June 23. A transcript of the|Det.-Lieut. Jacques Parizeau of jk 1965, slaying of Roland |proceedings was made public|the Montreal police. 'A few|penen at the All Nations Cafe Tuesday. guys belong to a big gang and *iegse: 1S eee : Admiral Landymore, fired as\if they're not satisfied with a fod Veo was cut down by chief of the Armed Forces Mar-| person they arrange for him to @ paeeeee Fue itime command at Halifax in| disappear." runic ang said wey are look- July for publicly criticizing de-| The investigation was ot weit L wacrnig Mad Se | jfence department policy, de-|jaunched after the body of Mrs. driver Ra a oy Bellohuy te |scribed 'trawler fleets operating| Jean-Guy Lauziere was found in| and the end a bl 4 ' vine of in Canadian coastal waters aS|a_lime-filled grave 75 | DA hataee ad ; S$ as) miles|two east-end men, Rej - a well-organized, para-military| north of Montreal. She had been| mond and Athene Malet ~ | force. reported missing in ea : January,| Lieut. Pariz i Mie said crews aboard the a0 ibe sees hee rate tlantic and 300 Pacific-based | hitinial ' idl "ma thave ag ray lita amie Wer & Ly. bike! A man provincial police said|"may /have leaders in other jled them to the grave i ingl provirices:"' jtroiled from within the Soviet) = s en being ae ein }Union and organized along the! Same lines as the Soviet navy. 'When I use the expression} mM 'a para-military force, I think| Oop O i Ke ki ? that-is the accurate description | I can give. I think it is perfectly reasonable to assume that the manpower would be reservists, and therefore trained to a cer- tain - extent in naval - opera- tions." Shuttle Ends |150 feet away. Power was cut ON MURDER TANANARIVE (Reuters) Police 'have arrested all 60 adult inhabitants of a Mala- gasy Republic village that kept a pact of silence over a murder committed four years ago. Police said today they charged three of the villag- ers with murder and the rest with complicity -for "ot reporting the killing. The village,' Ambohimil- anja, lies on an_ isolated part of the northern coast who also won the tower event) in the 1962 Games, was lying Western Ontario centres ex-|tially-completed building's steel fourth as the divers prepared perienced rain and thunder but skeleton. for the last three rounds, set no wind damage was reported! Andrew Skye, 29, of RR 2 for Thursday morning. in the Windsor, Chatham and, Ohsweken, was reported in seri-| After today's four rounds. the, London areas. ous condition in hospital with |Scores were: Bradshaw 2° 6; i Oakville, & gust of wind head injuries and a broken san eee Boys 252.1; cville, s : i cap 5 #1. | Knig' lifted the roof off a house and|2"™- Ted Daszko, 45, of Hamil-| : hurled it at a hydro transformer |'0": WS als: Jn RECURS. CpOEy nih | Top US. Pilot On Casualty List Manford Miller, 26, alsé of RR MOSCOW The off in part of the city for about 45 'minutes. 2 Ohsweken, was in good con- The men at Hamilion were dition with possible head in- working on girders about 55 feet|juries. A fourth man was (Reuters) : i -| OTTAWA. (CP) Appoint-| Of the 13 most senior officers Eh gestae 6 et ee ment of two veteran combat afin the armed forces, only two a ddisitrat fanivalore said \ecee to senior posts overseas, |have held their present appoint- i pe onde, ine trawler [anounced today, completes a|ments for more than a month. ad fe uae. at least | esale change in the top They are Lt.-Gen. Robert Roths- : W ter Secttities Oe iratal command of the armed forces|child, chief of Material Com- 0 coastal facilities om within the last month. mand, and Air Commodore G. lations. Brig. E. A. C. (Ned) Amy, ajG. 'Diamond, chief of Transport "I find no reason to be com-jcocond World War. t * . 4 placent about their presence."| i . ar tank officer, ic Jem were appointed jwill take command of the 4th Defence Minister Hellyer fired Two Bridge CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) The U.S. Space Agency planned to try again today to launch a} flying laboratory into orbit around the moon to take. clear} pictures of the hidden side and nine potential astronaut landing Sites. |Canadian Infantry Brigade in West Germany in September. 'He is a native of Newcastle, N.B., and will succeed Brig. A. Rear - Admiral William Landy- more, former chief of Maritime Command, and demanded--and J. Tedlie, who will become dep-|got--the resignation of at least juty chief of Training Command |three other senior officers. They 'at Winnipeg. |were Lt.-Gen. Frank Fleury, P h DEATH-DEALING RING IN QUEBEC MAY SPREAD INTO PROVINCES 4 a had gone on a coffee break|above the ground when a blast|treated and released from hos- United States embassy here is of this Indian Ocean island The spacecraft, called Lunar| shortly before the storm struck.! of wind ripped through the par- Ky Sheds Reluctance As Vote One SAIGON reluctant no longer, Nguyen Cao Ky is warming up now only a month away. fidence, the 35-year-old military boss is playing a hard game of Charlie Dressen, Detroit Tigers manager, died today in a Detroit hospital. Dres- sen had to give up active management of the Tigers following a second heart attack last May. The heart attack was his second in a span of 14 months. He is survived by his wife, Ruth. (See AP Wire Story). (AP Wirephoto) Witness, 18, Urgently Needs Added Blood optimism about the elections. |large followings. WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--An 18- year-old Pembroke youth, so badly injured witnesses said they were amazed he was still alive, is in critical condition in a Detroit hospital in urgent need of a blood transfusion de- nied: him by his faith as a Jehovah's Witness Larry Leith was injured in aj cat motoreycle accident 22] miles southeast of here Tues-| day. His condition is critical from 'loss of blood and a par- tially severed right leg. | Doctors. at Hotel Dieu Hospi-| tal in Windsor and Ford Hos-} pital in Detroit have not given| him a transfusion because of his religious beliefs The youth was taken to hos-| pital here about 2 p.m., andj treated until 5:15 p.m. without} a transfusion. Then he was transferred to the Detroit hos pital, domestic politics. Even his cri- \tics agree the dapper air vice- |marshal is promoting the Sept. 11 elections now, although he jonly grudgingly accepted the jidea last April, at the height of ja Buddhist crisis. | Ky recently placed his senior colleagues before the press for ja comprehensive, rose - tinted |state-of-the-nation report -- mil- jitary, political and economic. He followed up with speeches and public appearances. He has seen a stream of callers, for- jeign and Vietnamese. He has or- dered the military governors of the nation's 43 provinces to call in local notables and ex- plain what the elections are about. HELD ELECTION TALKS Ky also summoned all prov- jince chiefs to Saigon for a three - day election conference. attended by military and civil- ian leaders. Ky opened the meetings by pledging honest voling, supervised by candi- dates, civil servants, students and military cadets This has given rise to some pital, Month Off (AP) -- Apparently;The optimism is most noticeable Premierjat the U.S embassy. | On the other side of the ledger, doors, iron bars are being set|tioned at Picton, Ont., to South Viet Nam's elections|is the skeptical view of some of-! in across ground-floor windows, a for a constitutional assembly,|ficials that the premier is en-| and other windows on the three|ters team from Ottawa gated primarily in an jitary rule and retain power | Ky's statement that he would not be a president candidate in lany future election has not dis- jpelled the idea he will be. As jlong as Ky remains air: force the aloof little man with the well - trimmed moustache will be a power'in Saigon. Some facts of Vietnamese life cloud the prospects for civilian jrule. It is difficult to imagine an anti-Communist government in South Viet Nam, which would not be under profound military influence. POLITICAL FORCES WEAK "Apart from the Viet Cong, the military forces are the only nation - wide politica] force of any effectiveness, with the pos- |sible exception of the minority Roman Catholics. Buddhists, Confucianists and other sects making up the majority are fragmented and have yet to produce either positive pro- grams or appealing leadership The labor movement is_politi- cally feeble. So - called inde- pendent politicians have not ignited any significant section of public opinion, even in cities where some have relatively being transformed into a minia-| ture fortress to enable it to with- stand attacks from any future anti-American demonstrators The nine-floor building has been beseiged by demonstrators) at least seven times since 1956, | and last year hundreds of its} windows were broken in two at-| tacks in February and March. | All entrances are being furn- ished with quarter - inch steel are being fitted with steel shutters. yepublic, formerly Mada- gascar. Picton Marksmen Defeat Ottawa SOUTH MARCH, Ont. (CP)-- A three-man team from the Ist Battalion Canadian Guards sta defeated headquar- Canadian Forces which marksmen had to race 50 yards before firing BARBER, 36, WEDS FIVE WOMEN: tl SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--"I married these girls because I had a longing to be wanted." That was the explanation of Robert Swartz, 36 - year - old Oakland, Calif., barber, of why he is in jail charged with marrying five women and di- vorcing only one, Two accused him of big- amy. The divorced wife filed for child support. Another wife posted $11,000 bail when he was first arrested for big- amy last April. He first married when he was 17 in his home town of Hettinger, N.D. His wife, Pau- | line, bore him a son, Robert, now 20. She is seeking child support. Swartz said he divorced Pauline in San Diego, Calif., in the early 50s. He married Maria Rami- rez, 45, of San Francisco in ; Mareh 1963. But "one day | he wil TIT MIR ATTON TA Dr WAN a WANILD 10 DL WANTED when I left the house she hol- lered after me, 'don't come back'."' He didn't, But she is the one who posted bail when he got into trouble. He married Lydia Guzman in Reno, Nev., Nov. 30, 1964. She's the one who filed the first bigamy charge. That was last April when he went back to her house to get some od his clothes. Next was Amada Swartz. They married May 24, 1965, and have a six-month-old son named Robert, But when Amada pregnant, Swartz became said, she mm ai astute sides of the building which look|pistoi match Tuesday evening in With an air of increasing con-| Manoeuvre to sugarcoat his mil-/out on the. street went to live with her parents. | So he married Mary Sosa in | Reno May 22. She filed the second complaint, Swartz said he stayed with her only a month then re- turned to Amada. Amada is still standing by him, Swartz said. lt | Orbiter, was scheduled to vault into space under the thrust of an Allas-Agena rocket in a fav-| orable period between 4:11 and: 7:02 p.m. EDT. The launching was postponed Tuesday because of unintelligi-| ble radio signals from a fuel- measuring system in the Atlas! tanks. The 850-pound Lunar Orbiter was to zip across its 250,000- mile course in 90 hours, reach- ing the vicinity of the moon Sunday morning. About 550 miles from the moon, after two tricky mid-/ course manoeuvres, ground con-| trollers were to send a signal} ignite a spacecraft motor, | slowing the speed so the pay-| load would be caught by lunar! activity and enter an orbit of} tne moon Yanging trom' 110. 'to 1,100 miles | In the high orbit, Lunar Or- biter was to snap pictures of general interest, including a} portion of the moon which al-} ways faces away from earth. | Pictures of nine possible as-| tronaut landing areas were to wait until the spacecraft) dropped into a lower orbit, starting about Aug. 23 Players Split Up LONDON (AP)--The 25-year partnership of British bridge champions Terence Reese and Boris Schapiro was at an end Air Commodore R. J. (Reg)| Lane of Victoria, a . Second World War bomber pilot, will be comptroller - General, Vice-Ad- miral Kenneth Dyer, chief of personnel, and Lt.-Gen. Robert promoted to air vice-marshal and take immediate command} of the RCAF air division in Eu- rope, succeeding D. A. R.| Moncel, vice-chief of staff, OPPOSE UNIFICATION Four recently retired senior (Bomber) Bradshaw of Ottawa, O'ficers have criticized Mr. Hell- who is retiring. | | today, even though they were|_ ED CYPRUS FORCE cleared by the British Bridge League of cheating in the world | ger of Brig. Amy was first comman-| the Canadian contingent} championships at Buenos Aires|jn the United Nations force in 15 months ago. "T am disgusted. with bridge and I will never play in an in- ternational tournament again," said Schapiro, 53, after hearing the not-guilty verdict Tuesday night. Reese, 51, told reporters. he Cyprus. He now is commander| of Ist Brigade at Calgary. | Air Vice-Marshal Lane is a} former chief of Transport Com- mand and until today was chief of staff to Air Vice - Marshal Bradshaw. | will look for another partner but | added bitterly: "There is very little trust be- tween international bridge piay- ers and this whole canard shows up the ghastly envy and hos- tility of the game." The British league exoner- ated Reese and Schapiro, world champions in 1955, from charges by U.S. team members at Bue- nos Aires that they signalled contents of their hands to each other by a code of finger mes- sages. ATTUTS Via VV w yer for his unification policy-- Air Marshal Clare Annis, former chief of technical services, Ai ice-Marshal Max Hendrick and Air Vice-Marshal James Har- vey, both former chiefs of Air Defence Command, and Rear- Admiral Landymore. The new armed forces council met here today for' the first time under the new chief of de- fence staff, Gen. Jean V. Al- lard, To HIGHLIGHTS Rail Conciliation Report In OTTAWA (CP) -- A conciliation board report in the wage dispute between the Canadian Brotherhood of Rail- way, Transport and General Workers and the CNR was received by the labor department today. The department said it will be made public after 10 a.m, EDT Thursday. Receipt of the report from Mr. Justice C. A. Cameron of Ottawa, board chairman, CBRT's 22,000 members to s would make it legal for the trike at midnight next Wed- nesday night. It is expected, however, that the CBRT will delay strike action until it can walk out jointly with 18 other unions. North Viet Makes New Charges | TOKYO (AP) -- North V U.S. and South Vietnamese boats and 22 fishermen in it Vietnamese said Tuesday US. iet Nam charged today that warships seized four fishing s waters Aug. 1. The North and South Vietnamese ships seized 13 fishing boats July 30 and July 31. | Voluntary Arbitration Starts WASHINGTON (AP) -- Negotiators for striking me- chanics and the five grounded U.S. airlines agreed today te try to settle the dispute by voluntary arbitration and thus avoid legislation by Congress. But the question will have to be submitted to the union members for a vote be- attempted Associat fore arbitration is of the International House of Representatives commerce this would take 34 days. , President P. L. ion of Machinists committee. Siemiller told the He said YANKS KILL 15 VIETNAMESE SAIGON (CP) --WU.S._ jets bombed and strafed a village in the Mekong Delta Tuesday night killing 15 Vietnamese and wounding 182 A U.S. spokesman said the at- tack was ordered by a province chief after a U.S. spotter plane was fired on by Viet Cong carry- ing out propaganda activities in the village. The spokesman said an ac- count from an American in the area said the Viet Cong helt vil- lagers at gunpoint while two F-100 super sabre jets hit with bombs and 20-millimetre can- non fire. Three of the victims of the at- 4 tack were identified as Viet Cong. Reports indicated that a)- most all the rest of the dead and wounded were Vietnamese villagers The atlack took place on a hamlet by a canal eight miles from Can Tho, largest town in the Mekong Delta and headquar- ters of the Vietnamese army 4th corps In the central outnumbered company of the Korean 'Tiger Division deci- mated a North Vietnamese bat- talion of about 600 men in a bit- ter all-night battle lit by flares from circling American planes, The Koreans killed 170 sol< highlands, an diers and held the jungle battle- field when dawn came, raking in an unusually high total of 78 Communist weapons. WERE AFTER VCs The U.S. spokesman said the Mekong Delta air strike was made on the basis of intelli- gence reports that a Viet Cong company of about 150 mén had been sighted there. It was not yet known how many women or children were among the casuallies or how many of the survivors wete seriously injured, but a full in- vestigation is under way, the épokesmMaa aid, MAJ. PAUL P. CURTIS, 36, of Great Falls, Mont., alights from a rescue helie- copter that brought him back safely after 27 hours of hiding in a: thick jungle near a village deep in North Viet Nam, some 100 miles. north of Hanoi. His RF101 Voodoo lost power Sunday while he was on @ - Ajex Appoints New Clerk--P. 5 Gale's Lumber Win First Game of Series--P, 8 photo reconnaisance mis- sion and he bailed out. American planes. picked up a faint signal Monday from his "beeper" radio and re- layed his position to the rescue helicopter. The U.S. Air Force released this pic- ture today in Saigon (AP. Wirephoto by radio from Saigon) Ann Landers--14 City News--13 Classified --26 to 29 Comics--24 Editorial--4 Financial--25 Obits--29 Sports--8, 9, 10 Theotre--I1 Weather-----2 Whitby, Ajax News--5, 6 16; 17 15, Women's--14, i i FMM eee ae NT MN ~