Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Feb 1965, p. 1

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@ Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, VOL. 94 -- NO, 27 ¢ Oshawa Zines Suthortee ep Second: Class: Aen OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1965 Se ai cath cal aCe ol ll came el aa eae cat aah cats eis anit la ais ea ANE Os a Post Office of dl ag Weather Report Sunny, some cloudiness, cold. Low to- night, 9; High Wednesday, 15. TWENTY PAGES A GOLD - PAINTED, heavy-duty, tilt-cab truck drove off the General Motors of Canada assembly line in the city yesterday to become the 5,000,000th vehicle built in Oshawa. The eight and one-half foot high vehicle came down the line 57 years after the first McLaughlin - Buick was built here. E. H. Walker, president and general man- ager, General Motors of Canada, is handed the truck keys by Victor Ireland, of the truck department, who has exactly 50 years' service with General Motors. Mr. Ireland drove the vehicle from the end of the assem- bly line. George Lomax (left) truck plant superin- tendent, admires the new truck. --General Motors Photos Peace-Debts 'Showdown Put Off Again By UN -UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- The long debate on United Na- tions peace - keeping debts reached 'a turning point Monday as the General Assembly again put off a showdown. The assembly recessed for a week, but diplomats: said they expect an indefinite adjourn- ment to follow after. several "house-keeping" problems have been settled. The new delay, following American and British insistence that the issue be brought to a head, raised doubts about whether the assembly would ever act to remove the vote of the Soviet Union and 12 other debtor countries. It also appeared to rule out any chance that the assembly, already. four months behind "schedule, would be. able to hold a normal session. Any adjournment until late spring or summer would prob- ably mean that most: problems would be put over to assem- bly's 20th session in the autumn. ISN'T ALL BLACK But some Western diplomats black. They conceded that a high price had been paid to avoid a showdown, but felt it was a price that had to be paid. They said both the United States and Russia had pulled back from the. brink of con- frontation and -tacitly ad- mitted that they did not want one, They hoped that the pull- back would give new impetus to negotiations. Informants also said there was general agreement that the negotiations now will be broad- ened to include all aspects of the peace - keeping problem, and not just the back debts. They indicated that talks on the back debts had failed be- cause of the Soviet Union, while agreeing to make a voluntary payment, was not prepared to put up enough money to bring her "over the hump of Article 19.7 This is the charter article which removes the assembly vote of a country whose debts equal two years' assessments. The Soviet Union has also in- sisted that it would make no said the picture was not all payment until the assembly 115, Don GALE..NT GLADIATOR George Chuvalo, thd 'eat Canadian heavyweight, ho lost his decision to foynity heavyweight champ oney Floyd Patterson in . York last night, gasps 4 breath at the end of the 12- round match. His right eye | is rapidly closing. For more | details on the fight, see sport pages. * & | puts aside all thought of en- forcing Article 19. The United States has promised to invoke the article the first time as as- sembly vote arises. The Soviet Union and France insist that the assessments in question were illegal because they were yoted by the: assem- bly instead of the Security Coun- cil, The decision to put off a showdown was announced by Secretary-General U Thant as a consensus, to which no one objected. AGREEMENT SEEN Thant said there appeared to be common agreement on these points: 1. That all members want to put aside their differences in order to get the United Nations out of its present difficulties. | 2. That a confrontation over japplication of Article 19 should be avoided at this session, That voluntary financial contributions should be made to to save the organization from bankruptcy, without prejudice as to views of individual mem- bers as to the legality of peace- Reaping. Stee. ' 4. at the contrifations should be made as early as possible with the highly - de- veloped countries contributing the most to wipe out about $133,000,000: in unpaid assess- ments. | §. That a comprehensive re- .. And The Men On The Job... ak P. J. PROBY POPS PANTS LONDON (Reuters) -- Two performances scheduled for Monday night by American pop singer P. J. Proby, whose pants split. on stage again Sunday night, have been can- celled by his British promo- ters. The curtain was lowered on Preby Sunday when his pants came apart at the seams dur- ing a performance in Luton, north of London. Proby's pants popped Sat- urday night and the night be- fore that during performances in South London. He denied it was a stunt. 'Are you out of your mind? This incident could easily kill my career." Proby's manager said & chain of movie theatres has and that various theatre own- ers were considering a simi- lar move. He suggested Proby appear Monday night in coveralls and stand still onstage. However, Proby suggested that henceforth his costumes be made of plastic. decided to bar the performer |x= view of the whole question of peace-keeping operations should be undertaken, possibly by a 21- nation working group now |studying. the problem, and a jreport made to the assembly as/ jsoon as possible. : | LONDON (CP)--Many Brit- ons are clearly puzzled by the fact that President Johnson, un- able to attend himself the state funeral for Sir Winston Church- ill, did not send Vice-President Hubert Humphrey as head of the United States delegation. Instead State Secretary Dean Rusk, who came down with a cold and could not attend the funeral Saturday, and Chief Justice Earl -Warren were named to represent the U.S. Former president Dwight Eis-) enhower, Churchill's wartime colleague, came as a private citizen and was a guest of the Churchills. Although there has been no official comment by the British| government, several 'newspa-| pers speculate on the reasons Britons Wondering Why VP Wasn't At Funeral ington-dated stories critical of Johnson's selection. The Daily - Telegraph says |Johnson "seems to have had |private reasons for his choice of |répresentatives."' The newspaper, in the column London Day by Day, says John- son was "concerned" that Hum- phrey "'should not on his first official overseas trip appear as a second - class visitor."" He would have been "oversha- dowed by heads of state and leaders from Europe and even more by Gen. Eisenhower." The story in the column, to which various members of the newspaper staff contribute, says that the decision was "much more critically received in America than here." But it adds that the decision was "made harder to defend by behind the decision. They gave broad play last week to Wash- 'I Am Bored' Winston's | Last Words LONDON (Reuters)--Sir Wins-| ton Churchill's last words be- fore he died were "I am bored with it all', a London evening} newspaper reported . Monday. The tabloid Evening Standard reported the 90-year-old states- man spoke those words in the presence of his son-in-law, Christopher Soames, five days after he suffered the fatal stroke following which he died} Jan. 24. Churchili's final illness began + |early on the Monday before the} first bulletin was issued by his| physician, Lord Moran, on the afternoon of Friday, the newspaper stated. For most of the 13-day illness,| he was unconscious. It was on} Jan. 15, when he was rather) restless but without recognition,| that he spoke his last words,} the newspaper said. | Mr. Dean Rusk's sudden cold and temperature, which kept him out of St. Paul's, though not off the first available home- ward flight." BIRTH CONTROL PILLS PLANNED CAIRO (AP)--The Egypt- ian government will issue a special bonus of 10,000,000 birth control pills at low cost for Bairam, a three- day festive period starting today, the public health Camera Prompts 500 To Strike PETERBOROUGH (AP) About 500 workers in the ma- chine shop and structural steel divisions of Canadian General Electric Company Limited here walked off the job Monday to pretest the installation of a mo- tion picture camera in. the ma- chine shop: Company officials said the camera was placed in the shop to make a time - and - motion study. A spokesman for Local 525 of the United Electrical Workers (CLC) claimed it was meant to spy on the men. Union members walked off their jobs in 1963 for a similar reason. They won their point on that occasion. A strike originally scheduled for Monday by the local had been called off after a meeting Sunday. Negotiations for pay systems with the company are going on. Angry Leftists Greet U.S. Sub SASEBO, Japan (AP) -- Ja- panese leftists demonstrated to- day against the return visit of the U.S, nuclear submarine Sea- dragon, but police kept the ral- lies and parades under control. Police outnumbered the dem- onstrating Socialists and Com- munists 2-to-1 as the leftists failed in a call for 5,000 folfow- ers to demonstrate against the Seadragon, which arrived today for a four-day visit. Radio Moscow fanned the ex- citement of the demonstrators with a Japanese language broadcast claiming the United States plans to set up bases for nuclear submarines and weap- ministry announced. ons in Japan. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS McNamara Condition "Much Better" WASHINGTON (AP) -- Defence Secretary Robert S. McNamara was described as "much better" today in hos- pital where he is ill with pneumonia. LENS, France (AP) -- An near here today, killing at lea was missing and mine officials was alive. off-hours crew was at work. san. 15! Coal Mine Death Toll At 20 explosion rocked a coal mine st 20 miners. Another miner said there was little hope he The blast came at the 2,200-foot level as a small, Today is Groundhog Day. This little fellow ventured from his snug den in Whitby and as the picture shows, HE SAW HIS SHADOW, saw his shadow. It is a time - honored superstition that if the groundhog sees his shadow Feb. 2 we will DARN IT have another six weeks of winter weather, but if he fails to see it, spring is just around the corner. --Brian McCall, Times Staff Price Drop In Wheat 'Unavoidable' | OTTAWA (CP)--Trade Minis- jter Sharp told wheat producers |Monday it is "'futile' to assess |blame for last week's fall in wheat prices. He said the three-stage drop jin Canadian prices totalling up |to 20% cents a bushel had been unavoidable. It had been "'rel- atively orderly" and served to create a new equilibrium that would be maintained, In a 40-minute press confer- ence, which also served to an- nounce a new sale to Russia of 4,500,000 bushels of wheat, he at- tacked Opposition Leader Dief- enbaker and Alvin Hamilton, former Progressive Conserva- tive agriculture minister. Their comments following the price slashing by the Canadian wheat board had been "com- pletely false and irresponsible." CONCERN NATURAL It was "natural that' the wheat producers should be dis- |turbed," at reduced export jprices, But they were criticiz- jor less inevitable." Neither he nor the Canadian wheat board wished to see prices reduced. 'But the fact is we have moved from what was undeniably a_seller's market last year to what is a buyer's market this year.' Mr, Diefenbaker, returning to Ottawa late in the afternoon, ac- cused the minister of speaking "with an abandon of truth." The wheat situation was one of the most serious facing the country, said Mr. Diefenbaker. jing a situation that was "more! fay) THE TIMES today... Citizens Petition City Hall Probe -- Page 9 O'Shea Faces League Action -- Page 6 My Dear Mr. Churchill -- Page 8 Douglas VICTORIA (CP)--T. C. Doug- las, national leader of the New Democratic Party, predicted Monday the federal government will call a June election to take advantage of a split in Conserv- ative party ranks. Mr. Douglas declined in an interview to comment on the G.M. Dividend 10 Cents Higher NEW YORK (AP)--General Motors Corp., a history-making U.S. money-maker in 1964, Mon- day declared a 75 cents-a-share common stock dividend, 10 cents higher than 1964's first- quarter payment. Only last week, GM reported profits for 1964 of $1,735,000,000, the highest 'ever posted by any U.S. business corporation, de- spite a strike that crippled op- Predicts Election By June current controversy over John Diefenbaker's leadership of the Conservatives, but thought it would outweigh current trou- bles within the Liberal party in deciding a time for the next election. "J just can't see the Liberal party sitting idly by watching a split develop, and then give the Tories time to heal it. "I'm expecting a new session, then a budget with some tax cuts and this will be a sign for|port dissolution," he said. . "T would expect an election in June." Mr. Douglas also said the medical insurance plan pro- posed by the British Columbia government is "worse than tin- cup medicare." ( The proposal is "a retrograde step" since it would involve helping private insurance com- panies dissuade other provinces from adopting government-op- erated. medical insurance plans, erations for about six weeks last all. he said. PC Party Presiden Meets Diefenbake Camp Flies To Ottawa; No Comment OTTAWA (CP)Dalton Camp president of the Progressive Conservative party, conferred today with Opposition Leader Diefenbaker about this week- end's .meeting of the party's national executive over the leadership issue. The party president, who flew in from Toronto late Mon- day night, arrived at Mr. Die- fenbaker's office on Parliament Hill at 11:57 a.m. Mr. Camp declined to tell re- porters what' he would say to Mr. Diefenbaker except to say he wanted to clear up "some misunders' " about the pron poo of vr date for the na- _ execu m B fous report which said he Saturday at the request of sident Quebec Leader Leon Bale Ann Landers -- 11 City News --. 9 Classified -- 14, 15 Comics -- 17 "Mr. Sharp should simply give country the facts rather than} engaging in political propa- ganda." District Reports -- 8 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 16 Obits -- 16 Sports -- 6, 7 Teen Talk -- 12, 13 Television -- 17 Theatre -- 13 Whitby News -- 5 Women's -- 10, 11 Weather -- 2 r. TT. not ¢o," Mr, Camp said. The 120 - member executive had been polled as to whether they wanted to meet before or after the F@b. 16 resumption of Parliament, They had favored a meeting beforehand and he had chosen this Saturday self without consulting anyone. (Mr. Camp turned aside quese tions.-about..the. agenda for the weekend meeting and added that he wouldn't guess whether the executive will call an a@n- nual meeting of the party's national association or a leader- ship convention, if either. Another Test Of Leadership? Mr. Camp's decision, taken after a poll of the executive, meets the demand of the 10- member Quebec caucus for a meeting to decide this question Parliament's Feb. 16 resump- tion. The calling of the executive meeting brings to a e third test of Mr. Diefent sea iefent leadership in two"years, § 7 / could produce a face-to-fack frontation. between the o) ' tion leader and Mr. a "a Both are executive-mem \ Last week the oBbositi leader launched his counter-of- fensive by calling a two-day meeting, for Feb. 11 and 12, of the parliamentary caucus in which he enjoys majority sup- rt. On his return from overseas Monday night, Mr. Diefenbaker told reporters that as a mem- ber of the national executive "I will naturally express my views" at the Saturday meet- ing. He said this meeting in no way affects his plans for the later caucus meeting of Con- servative MPs. The Conservative chieftain gave a non-committal reply when a reporter said the call- ing of the national executive meeting was being interpreted by some persons as a victory by Mr. Balcer over him, Quebec (CP)--Leon Balcer, Quebec Conservative party leader, said Monday he was very pleased to learn that the party's national executive: will meet in Ottawa Saturday to dis- cuss demands for a leadership convention. Mr. Balcer, reached by tele- phone in suburban Lac Beau' port, said "I will definitely maintain my position" that John Diefenbaker should be re- placed as party leader. igi He said he and all other Que- bec Conservatives. will attend the executive meeting.

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