Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Jan 1965, p. 1

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Weather Report Occasional Light Snow Or Snowflurries Today And Tomorrow. Cold. High-28, Low-15. The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, She Oshawa Fines Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Qttewa and for payment of Postage in Cash. VOL. 94 -- NO. 9 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1965 SIXTEEN PAGES EXTRA TAX ON AUTO PARTS? Canadian Industry Threatened scheme will be urged to take a matter while a replacement WASHINGTON (CP)--A dou- ble-barrelled threat against ex- panding imports of Canadian auto parts was signalled today by American competitors. Legal action is being taken today in federal district court here to force the United States treasury department to impose higher duties on Canadian im- ~ ports, said an American indus-' try statement. This is aimed at a system of Canadian tariff in- centives inaugurated in Novem- ber, 1962. ; The statement also warned of intent to oppose through Congress an alternative. Cana- dian-U.S. agreement now close to being signed. Negotiations started after American indus- try concern was expressed about the first arrangement. The arrangement would es- tablish, over a period of sev- eral years, a free-trade formula and original parts, Signing is expected any day now, The statement issued today was from the Automotive Ser'v- ice Industry Association in Chi- cago. Four companies joined the association in backing the legal suit. One upshot of this might be a court declaration forcing the U.S. treasury department to impose retroactive countervail- ing duties on Canadian parts imports, even though the orig- inal scheme is being replaced. Such duties could go back to the time of the first complaints last summer, The treasury de- partment ordered an investiga- tion but has been sitting on the US.- Soviet formula was negotiated. The U.S, industry statement said independent parts manu- facturers "see advantage only to the vehicle manufacturers and the Canadian government." Tariffs would be removed on vehicles and their component parts in North America but re- main on "parts for the vast au- tomotive after - market (re- placement parts), thus denying U.S. independents free access to the Canadian market." (U.S. officials have said that replacement parts may be added to the free-trade for- mula after a year or two if everything works well). The American statement said resentatives and Senate during committee examination of the "searching look at the proposal to determine just who benefits . . . the committees might also be interested in any commit- ments U.S. vehicle manufactur- ers have made to the Canadian government with' respect to the purchase in Canada of parts." Canada, which wants to re- duce the huge trade deficit with the U.S. in parts and vehicles, can implement the free trade plan by cabinet decree. Con- gressional action is needed in the U.S, Discussions between the Ca- nadian government and Gen- eral Motors of Canada on mar- ket allocation for North Amer- members of the House of Rep- ica have caused some delay. The American statement said The legal move was fort to force the hand export expansion--is illegal un- der U.S. tariff law. -- RCMP MAN SAYS TOLD OF BRIBE Thaw Today? budget 1964 assess- UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- regular Secretary-General U Thant|ments. : launched a final effort today to| Three other Communist break the U.S.-Soviet deadlock|states, Dyelorussia, Hungary, over United Nations peace-|and the Ukraine, also made keeping dues before the Gen-|payments on regular budget eral Assembly returns to work|assessments at that time. But Monday. none of them has paid anything for the, peace-keeping opera- tions and al) four are still more than two years behind in total i assessments. WILSON GOES TO JURY TRIAL They are more than two years behind on their UN assess- ments as a result of their re- fusal to pay peace - keeping Bill Robertson - Aikman, of Glasgow, Scotland, has d expression as he "gives the broom" in costs. a challenge to its voting rights); & as a dues delinquent but gave Thant a cheque for $4,990,500 erick Edward Wilson, | of Hanmer, Ontario, on an attempted murder charge. garia paid $160,000 on its reg- ailar budget and under UN book- ng in a curling Monday night. The Canadian tour in defeating Glasgow rink won the first Ted Miller's rink from Olds, Nationalist China also faced| y. Recently Communist Bulga- ping practices escaped be-| 4 arrears for two years on its assessments. | Ontario a true bill before Mr. Justice Edson L, Haines, was to start this Oshawa {oll |..,dust, before.the. end of the) 22, age ing year, UN records show, 'the! Kloster, Ounbee Soviet Union paid about $1,300,-| 000 in partial fulfilment of its the Queen's Hotel. was seriously wounded. WHITBY (Staff) -- The Supreme Court rand jury today brought in against Fred- 38, The jury-trial, to be heard fternoon, Wilson was pet ged in 'une Joseph 'street, in Kloster game of the Scots' current Alta. 16-5. (CP Wirephoto) 4 AIRCRAFT CARRIER ARRIVES UK. Fleet Poised To Repel Attack SINGAPORE (AP)--Britain's| Any major: Indonesian thrust} Commonwealth Secretary Ar Starr, former labor minister in the Corservative government, said Monday night that Leon ative caucus and made public) Balcer, the party's Quebec leader, with his public statements. Balcer Is Hurting Party: 'Mike' Starr TORONTO (CP) -- Michael| hel me sta is harming the party|the In an address to the Scarbor-| the to procedure, the Quebec leader A ae | SOMEBODY'S WATCHING large portrait of Sir night. Mr. Diefenbaker and John A. Macdonald, Can- the wife of the Ontario ada's first prime minister, premier were attending a looks down on Opposition reception in a downtown Leader John Diefenbaker as Kingston hotel. (See story he talks with Mrs. John on Page 2.) Robarts in Kingston last --CP Wirephoto da caucus of his 10 Quebec mbers before each Conserv- tements of what happened at| Quebec group's meetings. | say to Mr. Balcer that is|_° wrong way to do it," said| biggest fleet is protecting Ma-jis expected on Borneo, where|thur Bottomley said in London:|o9ugh West Conservative Asso-/Mr. Starr. "If you want to| laysia against the threat of any intelligence sources reported a|'It would be fatal to peace in| ciation, Mr. Starr said: Indonesian attack. The aircraft carrier Eagle, Britain's most formidable war- ship, arrived Monday to join the Far East fleet of more than 70) ships. It includes the carrier Victorious, the commando ship Bulwark, guided missile de- stroyers and frigates. Defence preparations were be- ing rushed ashore. The current goal is about 9,000 troops in North Borneo, where Indonesia] shares a 900-mile jungle border with Malaysia. The troops are to include 500 hardfighting Ne- lin Borneo and assured Malay heavy build-up along the bor-|the Far East if we permitted der. The fleet serves as a Safe-|will by big nations.' guard against a major invasion mainland. contending that "If they come across the wa-|is a British scheme to keep a ter in any force, they'll be sit-|colonialist hold on the area, | i s," said a Malaysian} | oe ¥S!2" HUNT GUERRILLAS : Indonesian guerrilla groups can, and do, én slip across the Strait of Ma-| lacea. British Army Minister Fred Mulley toured the defence lines} the Malaysian of 24. The others were captured In line with its full withdrawal from sian officials of Britain's support. the United} small nations to be crushed at' pig rang ..__|are--whether they are selfish] b Indonesia's President Sukarno | ohiectives, whether perhaps|statements made by Remi| of Singapore or the Malaysian has vowed to crush Malaysia, | they are personal objectives or|Paul, Conservative member of| the federation | i¢ he is just frightened that his| Parliament for Berthier-Maski-| seat might. be in jeopardy." nonge - Delanaudiere, for his} LONDON (CP)--One in every In reference to news reports|public criticism of Opposition|seyen London births is illegiti- P guerrillas hav e|Quebec Conservatives plan to} But he pointed out that small|;con Janding in small numbers|sit in the next session as inde-|should bring his ideas for aland for the first time 12-year- mainland | pendents, since August. Security forces|feels it is his duty as chair-|tive causus rather than quit the are still hunting 11 gurerillas|man of the caucus to set the/party to sit as an fndependent who landed Friday in a party|facts straight. ° annouriced | -- str jdo objectives} ow "I wonder. sometimes what (Mr. Balcer's) |that Mr. Balcer and three other|Leader Diefenbaker. Mr. Mr. as Mr. Starr said that, contrary/in Mr. Starr said he!party program to the Conserva-/old schoolgirls figure among the iinet eas! One In Seven London Births Illegitimate; Rate Soars off the Midland trains at Pad- dington Station. Another reason for the con- stant influx of unmarried moth- ers can be found in the efficient unmarried mothers. welfare services run by. the a There wre 9,035 illegitimate;London County council and he has said he plans to do/births in 1963, the year under|other organizations. nexi session, review in the report prepared Pes " ~|by the London County council's In 1961 the council set up a | medical officer of health, Dr. A.|SPecial home in south London for pregnant schoolgirls. It is B. Stewart. T th - sat we ot De aner staffed by church workers and Starr also criticized |mate, says a report on the cap- Starr said Mr. Payliital's health published today, MONTREAL (CP) -- RCMP Constable Gilles Poissant testi- fied at the Dorion inquiry today that he heard about a bribe of- fer on or about July 3, 11 days before an alleged bribe offer to Montreal lawyer Pierre Lamon- itagne. e 29-yer-old constable said about what Constable Poissant had heard concerning the source of the alleged bribe of- fer to Mr' Lamontagne. ASKS REGARDING NAME Chief Justice Dorion asked, "was a name mentioned who made 'the offer?" Constable 'Lucien Ri- vard, wanted in the United|was most important that the States on narcotics-smuggling|jname be revealed now but the charges. Constable Poissant said this first bribe offer also concerned but the Rivard case. He also testified that he knew about'a bribe offer to Mr. La- montagne on or about July 20 and that this matter had been discussed freely among mem- bers of the RCMP Montreal narcotics squad. RCMP counsel Norman Mathews pleaded. that Con- stable Poissant not be obliged to give details about the bribe offer he had heard about around July 3. |'A DEATH SENTENCE' | Mr. Mathews said that if |names were revealed "it would jimpose a death sentence" on a certain person. From previous statements by Mr. Mathews, it was believed that the RCMP counsel was re- ferring to Constable Poissant's informer concerning an initial bribe offer. Mr. Mathews said he was not on to a Crown prosecu- or. Earlier there had _ been RCMP testimony that Mr. La- montagne, a Crown prosecutor in narcotics cases, had feared he might end up on "the bot- tom of the river." Chief Justice Dorion ruled out questions concerning the source of Constable Poissant's infor- led that the question not be put at this time later when. the in- Mr. Lamontagne to get bail for Rivard. Mr. Lamontagne is counsel for the United States govern- ment which is seeking to ex- tradite Rivard to face narcotics smuggling charges in Laredo, Tex. He has testified that his good friend Raymond Denis, former executive assistant to Immigra- tion Minister Tremblay, offered him $20,000 in Ottawa July 14 to drop opposition to bail for Rivard. Rivard has been in Montrea?'s Bordeaux Jail since last June. Constable Poissant said the information about a $10,000 of- fer to Mr. Lamontagne was talked about and was well known to members of the RCMP narcotics squad. He also testified that he made two written and signed state- ments Dec. 9 during an internal RCMP investigation, appar- ently inquiring into a leak through which word of the al- legation against Mr, Denis came before Parliament last |ried mothers were aged 12, four {ed @ ager 33; fou at present accommodates 12 jwere aged 13 and 19 were 14/*: Resa ; ;: years old. Among 15-year-olds girls. The girls' education is lthe figure soared to 93. jcontinued and arrangements The London illegitimacy rate made shed Adoption of Tie Dantes: jis more than double the national) _ average, maihly because there is a high proportion of single} ; girls from the provinces, the re-| ° public of Ireland and abroad,} : jseeking the tolerant anonymity lof the big city. In Paddington, a sleazy west London district, the illegitimacy rate rises sharply to one in four births. This area of crumbling, once elegant apartment houses is also a natural destination for many . of London's pregnant "temporary residents" coming Noy. 23. See -- RCMP Man (Continued on Page 2) mation. The judge also disallowed a question 'from Yves Fortier, counsel for Mr. Lamontagne, PEMBROKE (CP) -- Frank |Ryan, owner of Ottawa radio Station CFRA, suggested Mon- |day night that nuclear power |could be used to create a tem- |perate zone in the Ottawa: Val- THIS MIGHT HURT. ly for tuberculin .skin tests. budsman might "ennoble the {dialogue of citizens and state jwith a. new climate of shared jresponsibility'"' as Well as iquickly correcting grievances. palese Gurkhas being flown! - from Hong Kong, beginning Wednesday. : Nations and its specialize . . Helicopters are to shuttle half} Gen. Sir James Cassels,| a oencies. Taduneeid oteer GI To less Bathin Suits the Gurkha battalion to the/scheduled to take over shortly | cession in New York Monday| border as soon as it arrives injas Britain's chief of the gen-| o¢ the yn special fund's 24-ng | Borneo: The rest will move upjeral staff, is arriving today for tion governing council, 'But nol by truck and on foot a week's tour. attempt was made to replace Add Bands Of Modesty the Indonesian second vice- president of the council. 7 ; A P The United Nations takes the) NEW YORK (AP) -- Rudilgreenish, purplish or bluish HLIGHTS position that Indonesia's with-|Gernreich of topless bathing|light on the face. Legs are hid- | drawal js not official because no| suit fame Monday introduced|den under shiny vinyl surf- written notice has been filed. |mew beachwear which oye casting boots hig hip ee 4 S sep -lingly retreats within the!possibly to protect from shar Seaway Traffic Hits Record | "bands" of modesty. bite, surely not to swim in. OTTAWA (CP) -- Traffic on the St. Lawrence Seaway IF OK Like a vga: oy black penicl) The avant garde California peel Montreal and Lake Ontario reached a record of avréau § these bands--hardly two inches | designer has created sweater 39,300,000 cargo tons in the 1964 shipping season, an in- wide--stretch across the areal it} with so much top to them crease of 27 per cert from 1963, the seaway authority re- Ont aa, jer a so contro- they tickle the chin. orted today. It was almost double 20,593,000 tons Vere sae gage eile ; ee a ie i handled in the seaway's opening year of 1959. Cargo traffic Ombudsmen Worn with these _ modesty De ig ee re through the Welland Canal, meanwhile, reached. 51,300,000 bands are belted co Aggy te pn elae aie cudter tons, up 24 per cent from 1963. Welland tonnage was more TORONTO (CP)--Justice i aeons much Wer, 80 Ronitecs sacléia and nearly eee laieht slanbiona dh erewte ane These patches of fabric criss-|frontless dresses, his own . * 9 "gravely endangered" by the |cToss could result in a plaidjspring collection of dresses, TV Show Is Nightmarish : growing inthilevente of the [bowy tan. Accessories for ha sults and loungewear cover his Li B WINNIPEG (CP) -- A hospital spokesman said here |State and the citizen's CN cane aeaee SNR coelmammnles. | ee etter Monday three children in an overwrought state were brought |'9 defend himself. le i : : ; in during a single week after watching the television show, Mr. Favreau was discussing, WW mit "Outer Limits'. Dr. Kenneth McRae, assistant director: of before the Lawyers Club of N ] ] the hospital's child development clinic, told a Home and to4 nme Or ide seta: THE TIMES t d uc eal y | School meeting such shows serve no useful purpose. igité complaints. bY the public) @) ay ces | 3 15 Months Jail For Arson, Bankruptcies p~ an gia government admin-| Board of Education Discisses 5-Year Building Plan--Page 9 . The justice minister said /he East Whitby Township Holds Inaugural -- Page 5 ST. JOSEPH DE BEAUCE, Que. (CP) -- Armand Be- finds proposals for a Canadian , : " cotte, 50, of Montreal, was sentenced here Monday to con- |ombudsman "strikingly attrac: Scorer Lawrence Wins Bowler-of-the-Week Award -- Page 7 current sentences of 12 and 15 months when he pleaded j|tiye" and the government is Ann Landers -- 10 Obits -- 14 | guilty to multiple charges involving $300,000 worth. of {giving the matter sympathetic City News -- 9 Sports -- 6, 7 ley by warming the water of bankruptcies and plotting to commit arson causing $100,000 | consideration. : Ho Teen Talk -- 11 jthe Ottawa River. in damages. In addition Becotte received $3,000 in fines or Mr. Favreau said that an om- Classified ~~ 12,18 Television -- 15 | He told the Pembroke Rotary five months in jail on an arson count. He admitted connec- Comics -- 15 Theatre -- 14 |Club his proposal has been dis- tion with a $60,000 house fire in St: Felix de Kingsey and District Reports -- 5 Whitby News -- 5 cussed with scientists at Editorial -- 4 Women's -- 19 ;Queen"s University, Kingston, Financial -- 14 Weather-- 2 |who said "it could be done if ithe people wanted it done." Sanatorium this week. Last year, an outbreak of tuber. culosis was discovered in a London separate school, They're not happy about it, but these lads from Clara Brenton public school in London, Ont., line up brave- a store fire in St. Victor in Beauce County which cause $40,000 damage. About 9,000 | elementary pupils in the city. are to be tested by Beck Memorial © t

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