Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Nov 1964, p. 2

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3 ie eye Rema, w~s sesasst * President Johnson gets a big welcome by members of the White House staff and ' their families as he arrives at ne ee Me the Executive Mansion night. Johnson, accompanied by the First Lady, returned to the White House for the Israel, Syria To © WHITE HOUSE WELCOME to- first time since his Nov. 3 election victory. He has been staying at his LBJ ranch for the last 12 days. --(AP Wirephoto) 28 ABOARD thee me ante LAS VEGAS, Ney. (AP)---A propjet airliner with 28 persons 'aboard disappeared Sunday night in a desert snowstorm south of Las Vegas. An airline official said "we vmust assume the plane is » A motorist told sheriff's of- ficers he saw the twin-engined 'plane skimming the ground in "ja whirl of snow eight miles the. city. 6 units concentrated a for the missing plane in . The witness said the one wheel down, as e to land. airchild F-27, Bonanza e's'6'a'0' 2 6 OO EHS FO OOO OO OOSS OOED i Tee eee eee ee 2 hate a Uhh TH as SS ge ' aaa se Seat its aes s es eB = os direction: north. Airliner Disappears In Desert Snow Storm Las Vegas valley for an instru- ment landing. Sheriff's officers said Bol) Ba- ker, a Las Vegas man, told them: "T was driving on Highway 91 between 8 and 8:30 when I saw a Bonanza plane, 70 to 100 feet off the ground, heading southeast. There were no landing lights on. One land- ing gear was down." Baker's location was about where the plane was last sighted on radar. But his sight- ing gave the plane a different south instead of The season's first snow was $350,000 Fire Hits Downtown Stratford STRATFORD (CP)--A fire in a former hotel opposite city hall here burned out five stores and at least a dozen apartments early today. Three firemen were slightly injured. Damage may amount to more than p.m. | $350,000 The fire in the old three- Storey Royal Hotel burned out the interior of the building that occupied a business block in downtown Stratford. The ground floor was occupied by Bata Shoes, Maher Shoes, Edward Shoe Repair, a pickup office for Burtol Drycleaners, and Dianna Restaurant. The upper two sto- reys of the building were apart- ments. | Air Beefs Today | UNITED NATIONS (AP) ~ 'Israel and Syria go before the UN Security Council today to charge each other with aggres- sion and ask for action to stop it. The urgent council meeting resulted from artillery and air battles Friday and Saturday in which 10 persons were reported killed and 37 were wounded. It was the mo;t serious /outbreak along the border in years. U.S. Chief Delegate Adlai E. Stev , the il presid for November, called the 3 p.m. EST meeting at the request of Syrian chief delegate Rafik Asha, Later he got a counter request from Israeli Chief Dele- gate Michael S, Comay. A Syrian spokesman said his government was asking the 11- nation council "to condemn Is- rael and to stop her from com- Israel was understood to want the council to call on Syria to' hold its fire and settle any fu- ture grievances peacefully. ADJOURNMENT EXPECTED After hearing both nations, the council was expected to ad- journ until members could study a report on the clashes from the head cf the UN's Pal- estine truce organization, Lt.- Gen. Odd Bull of Norway. A Syrian army communique t| Friday charged that Israeli ar- tillery that day shelled the Arab villages of Tel Hamra and Azy- ziat in the demilitarized zone between the two countries. It said Syrian forces hit back at five Israeli settlements and mil- itary positions and UN observ- ers finally got a cease-fire. It said seven Syrians were killed mitting aggression." and 26 were hurt. Comay in a letter to Steven- son said Israeli planes brought about the cease-fire by attack- ing hilltop Syrian gun positions at Tel Hamra, Azyziat and Ni- kheila that had been bombard: ing the Israeli valley settle- ments of Dan and Shaar Hyi- shuv for two hours. He said three Israelis were killed and 1 were hurt. Another Syrian army commu- nique said Israeli planes vio- lated Syrian air space Satur- day and, in a series of battles, Syrian planes hit one that was "seen exploding in mid-air."' An Israeli military spokes- men in Tel Aviv denied any Is- raeli plane exploded. He éaid four Soviet-built Syrian jets vio- lated Israeli air space and Is- raeli planes hit one of them, but its fate was unknown, France Boosts UN Sous, U.S. Says Aprez Vous UNITED NATIONS (AP)-- France will boost its pledge of money for UN technical aid to- day while the United States de- lays action because of a stale- mate over peace-keeping costs. Informed sources said Sunday the increase would Se an- nounced at the annual pledging conference for the UN special fund and expanded program of technical ass'stance. They said France would pledge about $505,000 more to the special fund than the $1,122,- 066 it pledged last year and would pledge about the same as MacArthur Wanted To Be President By BERNIE GOULD . NEW YORK (AP) -- Former President Harry S Truman says the late Gen. Douglas MacAr- thur, whom he fired as far east commander in 1951, was aim- ing at becoming presideat. "He didn't fool anybody," Truman said, "and least of ail did he fool me." Truman's observations came in the second of a series of tele- vision programs, 'Decision; the Conflict of Harry § Truman." The copyrighted text by Screen Gems Incorporated, was re- -- Truman "to limit the war to Korea. . to prevent a third world war," 'Time after time, MacArthur went his own way in national politics," Truman said on the television program. "And he didn't seem to care whether he upset the national policy of the government of the United States or not. And this was just an exampte of how he per- formed. (Representative) Joe Martin (Rep. Mass.) and former House Speaker) was quoted as having said that the views of MacAr- thur had become accepted Re- last year's $1,852,°°- to the ex- panded program. UN officials had hoped the United States would make its usual pledges of 40 per cent of the fund-raising tanget of $150,- 000,000 to finance 1965 projects of the two agencies--which util- ize foreign experts, fellowships, surveys and training to pro- mote economic development in backward countries. WANTS SETTLEMENT But the U.S, made known last weekend that it wanted to wait until settlement of the dispute over, whether the Soviet Union and others should lose their |General Assembly votes for re- fusing to pay the- assembly's peace-keeping assessments, So the bigger French pledge is expected to make an even stronger impact than it other- wise would on the African, Asian and = Latin - American countries that receive the bulk of the aid. France will not pay Congo peace-keeping assessments and the Soviet Union will not pay either Congo or Middle East as- sessments. Both say the levies are not binding. Split 'Cited WINNIPEG (CP) -- Through failure to attend to divisions in Canada, the two major political ies are in of ture elections a lines racial origin, Senator M, Wal- lace McCutcheon said Saturday. In a speech to the Manitoba P: ssive Conservative Asso- ciation, the former Conservative) cabinet minister said: "The ret of a Liberal party wi strength centred almost exclusively in Quebec is as disturbing as a Conservative party representative of only English-speaking Canada. "I do not want the word Lib- eral to mean French. And I do not want the word Conservative to mean English." He criticized the Liberal gov- ernment for a lack of over-all policy, ".,, It is the absence of a stated and coherent set of prin- ciples and objectives that has brought the present federal Lib- eral government to grief in many areas, Whether it is do- minion-provincial relations, fis- cal and economic decisions, so- cial policy or flags, one is left with the, impression that there is no government position that cannot be bargained with or re- negotiated, that there are no limits that cannot be adjusted upwards or downwards, that there is in fact nothing perma- nent or inviolable and that everything is flexible." NEED FIRMNESS Flexibility is needed in some situations, he said, but there also is a time for firmness. A prime task for a Conserva- tive government he said, would ibe to "reassert the legitimate authority of the government of Canada," "By this I mean first of all its moral authority, its right and duty when dealing with the governments of 10 provinces, or with business or labor or agri- culture or any other segment of the country, to insist'on its role as spokesman for all of the country."' Brain Drain Just Ain't So TORONTO (CP) -- Quebec called on English-speaking Ca- nadians to assist the cause of Canadian unity by tien | his province attain its objective. "Otherwise,"' he said, "if we are forced to act alone, we shall be inclined to assume attitudes --and it would be quite human to do so--which will be less and less understood and which would only succeed in pushing us into an isolation that truly we do not want," Mr, Lesage told a joint meet- ing of the Empire Club and the Premier Jean Lesage today] Aid Us Or Push Us Into Isolation -- Lesage cial status t sh end ap the s of. the: : ition, which system. P ought not. to assume," "One to the other provinces. _. Text of Mr. Lesage's address was released to the press in Canadian .Club exactly what modern Quebec wants--to de- velop fully, not to be independ- ent of the rest of Canada. "Quebec of today is seeking, for the present and the future, the economic, social and politi- cal conditions of an interde- vance of delivery. F romenecnconmmnrmnsacm WAYHE'S 78 Simcoe N: TV and STEREO ° Telephone 723-1411 pendence which will be conduc- ive to its full. development and which will be more worthwhile than an independence which would risk being no more than an illusion," he said, The federal government was recognized as the government of all Canadians, but French- speaking Quebecers felt much more closely attached to their COSENS & MARTIN Insurance Alt Lines of SEE provincie' government. TWO POSSIBILITIES Mr. Lesage rejected two ex- treme possibilities--that Quebec would be swallowed up in a common melting pot, or that it would separate completely from the rest of Canada. The first possibility was "completely unrealistic and in- admissable," "As to the other, I would say that it would set Quebec upon a course that is opposite to the course I have just noticed in Europe and according to which different countries, at the price of how many trials an¢ errors, attempt to unite what. history has made separate." It was reasonable, however, for Quebec to aspire to a spe- PLANNING A... © BANQUET © CONVERTION NEED Mortgage Money? CALL Real Estate Broker Day or Night - 728-4285 © MEETING First Class Facilities For 20 to 400 Guests Quality Service Experienced Staff RESERVE YOUR FUNCTION NOW! NEED A NEW... OIL FURNACE? 723-4641 Call PERRY Day or night 723-3443 ay Says Scholar CHATHAM (CP)--Dr. G, Ed- ward Hall, president of the University of Western Ontario, says the so-called "brain drain" on Canada is an exaggeration and eight of every 10 Canadian The tire, which broke out at|!eased Sunday, with the pro- 1:20 a.m., was first noticed by|@t@m scheduled for broadcast an apartment tenant. He and|Starting Tuesday on television police roused other tenants,|Stations across the U.S. all of whom escaped uninjured,| Truman fired MacArthur dur- More than four hours after|ing the Korean War over a pol- the fire was discovered, two|icy conflict. He said the gen- firemen were injured. in an ex-|¢ral wanted to carry the war falling heavily as the search was launched. Soon after the F-27 disappeared, McCar- ran Field was closed to traffic. The line said the list of pas- sengers' names won't be re- leased until word is received of the plane's fate. i publican policy. I was sure of that. I was sure that that's (what) MacArthur was aiming for. He was trying to get him- self in good with one of the big parties of the government of the United States, so that he Flight 114 from Pi .» was three minutes landing. at McCarran when it vanished from the r screen at 8:27 p.m. PST. At the time the plane was heading northeast, dropping] dows into the mountain-rimmed 5 | a 8 ¥ Fe ae Dubin To Ret For Horsburgh E ae WEATHER FORECAST eee eeeere Cooler T TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts fasued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: i aes, Siok Synopsis: gr wi «shift to the west. or northwest is expected to take place today, bringing slowly clearing and ey cooler and drier wee « ther. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni- agara, Lake Huron regions, « Windsor, London: Variable «cloudiness and a little cooler "tonight and Tuesday. Winds * hight. eee bee eeeeees ae * . « "Lake Ontario region, Toronto, "Hamilton: Variable cloudiness * and a little cooler tonight and + Tuesday. Winds light. * Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Ti- , magami, North Bay, Sudbury: "s Mainly cloudy this, afternoon to- "night and Tuesday. Turning a *, little cooler tonight and. Tues- . day. Winds west 10 to 15. «periods today and Tuesday. Not "much change in temperature, | © " Winds westerly 10 to 20. : Forecast Temperatures « Low tonight, high Tuesday: 32 = St. Thoma: 32 *. London ..... *- Kitchener .. © Mount Forest.. * Wingham ... |. Hamilton ... , St. Catharines. * Sault Ste. Marie... 4 kasing ..... * Kapus » White River... onight | | Light Winds Observed Temperatures Low overnight, High Monday DAWSON .sesoseees -2 Victoria .. 37 Edmonton . Regina . Winnipeg . Lakehead ..++.++5+ White River....... Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing ...... Earlton ... a North Bay... Sudbury .. Muskoka Windsor London . Toronto Kingston .... Trenton Peterborough . Ottawa Montreal .. 45 4 29 * Algoma, White River, Coch-} ) "rane: Cloudy with a few sunny] © NEW LIBERAL LEADER RODERICK M. ROGERS, 37, of Bedford, N.S., was elected president of the Nova Scotia Liberal Association Saturday. He succeeds Eric W. Balcom. SERVICE STATION FOR LEASE High potential modern major oil co, on busy assistance available to s 2 bay service station of horoughfare. Financial rty. uitabl ae APPLY IN WRITING FOR INTERVIEW BOX A6 plosion in the Bata Shoe store. Fireman Alf Taylor was thrown back by overheated gases ex- ploding, suffering a broken rib, toe and back injuries. Another fireman was cut. The third fire- ag received cuts earlier in the fire. Two drugstores adjacent to the hold building were heavily damaged by smoke and water. It was not known how the fire| started, and there was no offi- cial estimate of damage, al- though a group of insurance ad- justers at the fire said caused a damage. Blame PC's . 'For Delayed | Water Report OAKVILLE (CP) -- Liberal Leader Andrew Thompson of |Ontario said Saturday the Pro- gressive Conservative provin- cial government was irrespon- sible and undemocratic in with- holding for two years a report showing that Elliot Lake-area lakes contained radioactive con- tamination, Mr. Thompson told the Halton County Liberal Association that the government waited until newspapers had printed stories on the situation before they acted, "The residents up there have been drinking that water for two years while this was known," he said. "They should have been told so they could have questioned what was being done about it and have. used other water if they wanted to." The Ontario Water Resources Commission reported that waste materials from uranium mines have polluted lakes and rivers in the northern Elliot Lake and eastern Haliburton areas. The contamination could prove a longterm radiation hazard, it said. ae it}fram Pope Paul that important minimum $350,000) church doctrines must be issued j}monial closing Saturday. across the Yalu River into Man- churia while Truman wanted could be president of the United States. Vatican Council . VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The current session of the Vatican ecumenical council entered its final week today with word before the session ends. It promised to be: the most hectic week for the 2,000 coun- cil fathers since they started this third gession Sept. 14. The cardinals, archbisinops, bishops and patriarchs may have to meet in the afternoons as well/as the mornings to get documents ready for the cere- It seemed virtually certain that Pope Paul would be able to issue two council schemata as full church decrees next Sat- urday. One blazes a new path for Roman Catholic relations with other Christians. The other es- tablishes the principle thai, all In Final Week in public meeting before pro- mulgation. For the other schema, De Ec- clesia (on the church); final voting on a series of minor changes will take place' Tues- day and Wednesday. These two schemata are of outstanding significance to the Christian world. Christian unity is a major goal of the ecumen- ical council. And Pope Paul has termed the issue of shared papal-episcopal power the coun- cil's weightiest task. The Pontiff was. obviously al- luding to the two schemata when he told the crowd in St. Peter's Square Sunday: "In this week; God willing, we must conclude discussions very important on themes and arguments, and there must be promulgated doctrines import- ant to Christian life." CHATHAM (CP) -- Toronto lawyer Charles Dubin will han- die the appeal of Russell D. Horsburgh, 45-year-old Chatham United Church minister con- victed last week on five charges of contributing to juvenile de- linquency. Chatham lawyer C. E. Perk- ins, who defended Mr. Hors- burgh during his 14-day trial, said Sunday that he expects a motion for appeal will be heard Thursday at Osgoode Hall in Toronto. Mr. Horsburgh has been in custody since his conviction last Tuesday and will be sentenced today by Juvenile Court Judge W. H. Fox. Mr. Horsburgh was acquitted of three charges. Mr. Perkins said a transcript of evidence during the trial has been ordered and he expects it might take a month to prepare the appeal. The acts described in the charges were alleged to have been committed between July 1963, and June of this year. Witnesses during the trial said the acts took place in a vacant janitor's apartment in the Park Street United Church building, often while the minister was in the building. bishops share collectively with the Pope in governing the church, Final voting on the first schema (draft decree) titled De- Oecumenismo (on unity) was completed last Saturday, leav- amen return to the coun- Try. He told about 500 persons at- tending the annual Kent County warden's banquet Saturday that professional personnel return. ing to Canada constitute a 2 to 1 ratio to those leaving. And for every Canadian pro- fessional to leave the country, he said, three foreign profes- sionals arrive. "So it is safe to say the five old universities in the province and the 11 new ones will be well staffed with teachers, . , ."' Complete with Indoor: Parking ~ 723-1712 728-2911. The Ultimate in Luxury Living Dr. Hall said there will be 900 teachers at Western this year, 500 on the full-time fac- ulty. The target for 1970 is 1,400 teachers for 12,000 students. 124 PARK ROAD t Ge@ORGIAaN mansions NORTH; OSHAWA ing only the formality of a vote 7 Saw. tree PAUL RISTOW LTD. REALTOR 187 King East 728-9474 ef L. "Pete" MeMURTRY with Murdoch, McMurtry & Turney/ Ltd. 37 King East -- 728-5137 One of the 50 Members belonging to the Oshawe Sep Ind, 4 Agents Association. for your insurance needs DEAL with the MAN who displays the BIG "I" SYMBOL ONTARIO HYDRO NOTICE TO CUSTOMERS IN TOWNSHIPS WHITBY, EAST WHITBY, DARLINGTON AND CLARKE We wish to inform you that ALL ONTARIO HYDRO EMPLOYEES ARE SUPPLIED WITH IDENTIFICA- TION CARDS and that you should feel free to re- quest identification from any person representing Li: " ras on ployee of this organization. PLEASE CALL OUR OFFICE IN BOWMANVILLE IF WE CAN ASSIST YOU IN ANY MATTER RE- LATED TO YOUR HYDRO SERVICE. W. R. WALTERS, Manager ' Telephone or write Box 1060, Bowmanville Bowmanville R.O.A. 623-2561 J. phe HOWTO BE WELCOME WHEREVERYOU GO Phone first! Family or friends, doctor, dentist, hairdresser, gar rage-you lighten the load of a when you know you're because you've called before. (And there are so many things you can settle over the phone without even having to go out!) It's hard to believe, isn't it, that there was didn't have a atime when phone! "-- BELL &) BUILT, MANAGED AND OWNED BY CANADIANS

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