The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Pickering and neighboring centres, _ VOL, 93 -- NO. 223 | Ajax, Bowmanville, Priee Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1964 The Oshawa Times Authorized as Second Class Moll Post for P "Ottawa ond poyment 6 Weather Report Variable cloud and overnight fog patches expected to continue, Winds light. High 70, low 60. Office Department of lostage =in Cash, EIGHTEEN PAGES Friendship Day was staged HANDS OF FRIENDSHIP and Tibor Gregor, district governor. 'Mir, Sam' entertain- ed Rotarians from southern and central Ontario at a re- by the Oshawa Rotary Club. He is' shown above, centre, in a friendly pose with, left, Stanley Lovell, club president, ception held at Parkwood. of the Parkwood gardens a The reception followed a day dinner was held at a local of lawn bowling and golfing hotel. for the visitors After a tour --Oshawa Times Photo Saigon Strike Ends In Deal By JOHN T. WHEELER Ships Leave Tonkin Area port of them but produced WASHINGTON (AP)--Ameri- U.S, sources said investiga- From AP-Reuters VATICAN CITY (CP) -- The Vatican ecumenical council voted overwhelming approval today of the idea that the Pope and all Roman Catholic bishops form a single body--a major step toward shared papal-epis- copal authority. The approval came in a se- ries of eight votes on aspects giallity, the sharing of Pope and bishops in. the governing of the church. 'With today's action the coun- cil fathers in St. Peter's Basil- ica have cleared the first 12 of 40 sections of a schema capter establishing the collegiality principle. Four. sections were approved Monday. of the crucial concept of colle-|. Prelates 'Aye' Curia Change "Just as b The draft decree "expresses the hope that a council of bish- GMC Receives Double Threat Strike Warnings Given On Overall, Plant Pacts | DETROIT (AP) -- Negotia- tors for General Motors Corpo- ration and the United Auto Workers Union stepped up their bangaining efforts today to pre- walkout. and next to thrash out both a new contract for some 354,000 y Simultaneously, 5 advised GM that even wit i tional contract, there walkouts one week later if no settlement forthcoming on more than 18,000 local at-the- plant demands. Once the detailed voting is enicted, the chaphes. must be Such a strike would affect 129 GM plants in 71 cities, HAS NEW OFFER The UAW made its move as GM came up with a new eco- matchin can destroyers were reported out of the Gulf of Tonkin today but what they hit there--if any- thing--remained a mystery. Informed sources said the two vessels which fired on radar- spotted targets Friday have been pulled out of the gulf be- tween the Chinese and North Viet Namese coastlines after finishing their patrol on sched- ule. When another destroyer pa- trol will sail in was left indefin- ite, but--government sources said U.S. vessels will continue to exercise the right to roam in.vernational waters. The navy craft have been going into the gulf a ~~ three inc! since Aug. 2. Pa Shooting' eccurréd lin the dark Friday when' the |two U.S. destroyers opened fire Blasts LBJ On Vietnam i: Samira TULSA, Okla. (AP)--Senator|dar 'screens. Authorities said (Banry Goldwater said today|the radar definitely locked onto President Johnson has "hun-/solid objects. According to the dreds of lives and hundreds of|U.S. account, there was no re- lies to answer for" as a resultturn fire and the objects disap- of tis policy for South Viet|peared from the radar screens. The candidate in the Nov. 3 general/ bet V aim accitea me fee' PUPPICANe Veers flict without end | and without | mie oan vet en TOWards Coast tion so far has produced no evi- dence of hits, such as debris bed hoctind or floating bodies. A navy team | 2¢ceP ngshee awe wal has gone to the Far East to : oo 5 make an inquiry. | One provision says: /SAYS SHIPS SUNK Meanwhile, Tass news agency said Monday that the Ameri- Peace Force cans fired at five ships, sinking} . ines of dem, | Extension This seemed to come as a Hits Snags surprise to Washington officials, UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- including President Johnson. He said he knew nothing about the Renewal of the mandate of the United i SAIGON (AP)--Union leaders|®her, more sweeping demands. called off a general strike to-| Government negotiators ap- day in the Saigon metropolitan|Parently held the line against a area after reaching a com-|!abor gage Blew age ay romise agreement with the|State - of - a rian tey Activity was ex-|tion barring strikes, Instead bev pected to return to normal|0vermment was reported ready Wednesday in the South Viet-|to sign a decree banning lock- namese capital. outs. It also offered a decree claimed vic-|Prohibiting employers from fir- tory and told workers the 48-|i7g workers during the state of hour "warning" strike would emergency. not end technically until 6 a.m.| About 2,000 strikers met this Wednesday as scheduled, but ; in front of Saigon's all workers were free to returnjmain labor headquarters mm an to their jobs. ugly mood. annou! t ended aj Mobs have run wild in sev- lunes ee demon-|etal cities in South Viet Nam stration a ga@inst the govern- ops will be organized, a|members from different na- il press office says. It calls for the offices of th Roman curia, the central gY-lmonth with Ford and Ohrysler. Louis Seaton, GM vice-presi- BARRY GOLDWATER Goldwater The 2,200 bishops at the coun- cil also are going by agraph Tass report. State. Secretary Dean Rusk told a Los Angeles press con- ference the United States "'i not going to be pushed. out of the Gulf of Totikin." He said the. United States will insist that the Communists or North Viet Nam and China realize that the gulf is an international body of. water--not e '"'Commu- nist lake." A Tass official said in Mos- cow the information on the The council is neported di- vided on whether a resolution to keep the force on the island another three months should specifically mention requests' by sinking of the ships tame from|Secretary -Genera 1 U Thant to American sources 'but did not|Ve i wider powersm specify them, | The Cypriot government, Russia and Czechoslovakia, wants the force nenewed on the same terms that have applied since it was set up im. March. Some Wester sources pre- dicted a resolution on these lines would emenge, possibly to- £38 if i il CALISTOGA, Calif. (AP)--A/sion, but the blaze: then monster: forest fire that/toward the 150 - Z g 7 : ae : gaite wiF i Nam. | Republican presidential} election described the fighting ty : i seems to have deteriorated) .|from confusion to chaos in the! about 50 miles, mainly to the WASHINGTON (AP)--A ma- jor United States railway strike was postponed indefinitely with announcement of a_ tentative settlement over the main issue of job security. There appeared little likeli- hood of a renewal of the strike threat by 150,000 shop workers after negotiators announced the settlement Monday about 14 hours before the scheduled . strike deadline this morning. "We have reached an agree- ment on four of the major is- sues involved and feel certain we will be able to complete the agreement very soon," said Michael Fox, spokesman for six shop craft unions. The unions had called the strike against most of the U S, railways except the Pennsylva- nia and Long Island railroads, the the possibility that Communist North Viet Nam had for the first time sent full battalions into the south to help the Viet . Kihanh's gov- ernment claimed its forces had ambushed two enemy batval- ions just south of the demilitar- ized zone Sunday, killing 64 men. Quints Survive In Indonesia JAKARTA (Reuters)--An In- donesian farmer's wife in South Sumatra has given birth to quintuplets, the newspaper Bin- tang Timur (Eastern Star) re- ported today. It said the 33-year-old mother, her son and four daughters all were in good health. .jwestern United last 24 hours," Goldwater said, in a speech prepared for the first stop of a two-day cam- paign swing through the south- States. He added: "Reports of collapse and crisis along the fighting front, in the government, in the cities - in the villages have poured More than 12,000 cheered and applauded in the Charlotte Col- iseum as Goldwater challenged President Johnson to a televi- sion debate. ISSUES CHALLENGE "I chal | ge my opp t, the interim president Lyndon Baines Johnson, to face the is- sues," he said. "I dare him to face me before the world. I ask of him--debate." In the prepared text, it said, "I demand of him -- debate." Goldwater changed 'demand' to "ask" in delivering the speech. Last Jan. 31, Goldwater said that if he were i he would not debate an opponent on television. He said that a NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Bahamas Fight Cuba Airline Service NASSAU (AP) -- A Havana-Nassau scheduled airline service opened by the Fidel Castro government ran into increased Bahamas opposition today, as the government, with British approval, was reported planning measures they believed would result in abandonment of the flights. Three Children Thought Kidnapped MARNAY, France (AP) -- Police believe three small French children had been kidnapped for ransom, They are Joel Biet, 5; Patrick Guillon, 5, and Patrick's sister Chris- tine, 10. Soviets Shadow NATO Navy Exercise LONDON (AP) -- Soviet planes, surface ships and sub- marines are shadowing North Atlantic alliance naval manoeuvres between Iceland and Norway, allied naval sources said today. 1 : Bolivia Exiles 34 After Coup Attempt LA PAZ (AP): --- The Bolivian government sent former president Hernan Siles Zuazo and 33 other politicians into exile in Paraguay today... The government charged they tried to overthrow President Victor Paz Estenssoro in a weekend coup. Z ja television debate which could |be costly to U.S. security. But in recent weeks, Goldwa- ter has needled Johnson about his reluctance to debate, com- ing closer week by week to the flat challenge he issued Mon- day night.. ' Angry Words . Shock Council OTTAWA (CP)--City council was thrown into confusion late |Monday night when an alder- |man told- Mayor Charlotte Whit- jton "'to shut your mouth for a | while." Alderman Lionel O'Connor's remark came when the mayor sought council approval for a $3,000,000 extension to the City Hall Building on Sussex Drive. "You talk, talk, talk until we're so tired we're sick of it." Ald. O'Connor said to the |mayor. "Why don't you shut your mouth for a while." | The mayor said other council members should not allow their presiding officer to be insulted. president might make a slip in| MANTEO, N.C. (AP)--Hurri- leane Gladys switched course early today and began brush- ing the Atlantic Coast with wind |gusts up 60 65 miles an hour jand tides three feet above nor- mal. | A. hurricane watch was or- |dered from Cape Hatteras, N.C. to Sandy Hook, N.J., as the big storm shifted from its north- ward course during the night and posed a threat to the U.S. mainland. Gale warnings were up from Wilmington, N.C., to Provincetown, Mass.' At 9 a.m. EDT, Gladys was 225 miles east southeast of Cape' Hatteras, her centre near lati- tude 34.5 north, longitude 71.8 west. Highest winds of near 109 miles an hour extended outward area 650 miles in Gladys gusts 65 m.p.h. at Manteo, N.C., as it moved north-northwest up the North Carolina coast. north of the centre. Pushing gale winds across an up to High tides and sustained winds of 35 to 45 m.p.h. pushed six to eight inches of water on to' the sandy banks along North Carolina's coast, flooding noad- ways and forcing cancellations of schools. Beach erosion was expected to be heavy ass the hurricane moved up the coast. The weather bureau warned that tides three to four feet above normal could be expected from Cape Hatteras to the New} York City area. day. They said there might be a bare mention of Thant's rec- |ommendations, but anything stronger was unlikely. i tj The first strike by workers at Oshawa's oldest established plant, The Pediar People Léd., is threatened for Friday. Keith Ross, international rep- resentative for the United Steel- workers, said today that mem- bers of Local. 2784, USW, voted Monday in favor of strike. ac- tion at the plant. He said that almost 70 per NEWFIE OFFERS REMINDER ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) -- Prime Minister Pearson was in friendly territory Sunday and Monday but the general enthu- bron over his visit also car- i re! of iNewfound- land's sttartiens to the Red Ensign and Union Jack. Although he was buoyantly responsive to the warmth of his welcome, Mr. Pearson took pains to stress thai his cam- paign for a. distinctive Cana- dian flag does not reflect @ re- treat from historica! ties and symbols. He spoke at functions Monday following a special con- vocation at Memorial Univer- sity where he and the Princess Royal, who is in Newfoundland on a nine-day visit, received honorary doctorates of law. The two visits also coincided with celebrations of the 50th anniversary of the formation of the Royal Newfoundland Regi- ment. Princess Mary, the regi- ment's colonel-in-chief, arrived Friday aboard the royal yacht Britannia which is docked in the harbor here; Mr. Pearson drew large happy crowds at functions whéther alone or with. the prin- cess. Bunting ornamented most ty buildings and there literally thousands of \Jacks and Red Ensigns every- where. Ensigns Out For PM PEARSON,-PRINCESS ROYAL AT CONVOCATION were Union | 'At a roast venison lunchedn for Mr. Pearson and Princess Mary. the prime minister said bh ee than six months. He gave finan- cial demands as the reason for ment which were later turned down by a local membership meeting. The company's offer included @ 3 cents hourly increase as of Sept. 1, 1964; and additional : : ! : 38 i uf gisaies citer alk if i aH Canada's need was national taneous in war "but it's so dif- ficult when we lems of peacetime." Mr. Pearson returned to Ot- SRINIGAR (Reuters) -- For- mer prime minister Bakshi Ghulam Mohammed and face the prob-|rested tawa Monday night, Steelworkers At Pedlar a Set Deadline For Strike cent of the 200-strong local re- j follow- TORONTO (CP Po- restaurant i )--Geonge 50 homes and wut-jletes, a owner to} suburban : uf &8 Ld Bishop Protests Satire On Queen smeared with cream and an old teapot and a bottle of catsup in front of her, "Cheerio for noew and God bless me," saya the "Queen." 2