Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Nov 1965, p. 1

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to seize a jetliner over the Gulf i PRIME MINISTER Lester feller and medal presented feller was dinner chairman Ho: B. Pearson, left, poses to- to Pearson by the Society and is president of the Werte Gaeltiin tare Rod Thomas Robinson, 16, who 'night at the New York Hil- for the Family of Man ata © Chase Manhattan Bank. is Paty Gataad Hakan said he wanted to go to Cuba ' ton hotel with David Rocke- _ dinner in his honor. Rocke- (CP) |Premier Ian Smith today that 7! oteas aie a i it will have no part in further- shots into deck of the lounge ' ing what it considers his ille- before he was wrestled to the } gal seizure of independence seat Wednesday night 100 oted | emoted *= i fre j Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, manville, Ajax, Pickering and Ohe eh Sunes SO BE GE re gee ey een tye: Weather Report : and milder tonight and Fri- day. Low tonight, 30. High neighboring centres in Om tomorrow, 40. taris and Durham Counties: VOL. 94 -- NO. 269 ete Pe eS Cativeret OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1965 Asthorized x Second Close Mall Rest Otfies Deo THIRTY-FOUR PAGES: a man who has 'enormously services to the cause of freedom Pearson spoke about the UN mark on man's endless pilgrim- ended with Pearson urging the NEW YORK (CP)--After be- ceived the 1965 Family of Man alize how vitally important to richer for the experience. . . . the hotel ballroom: for the 2%- 5 ing honored Wednesday night as award "for his distinguished them is the United Nations." His career is an land- hour dinner and ceremony that age to peace and freedom... . benefitted" mankind, Prime and humanity," said the UN after David Rockefeller, chair- Minister Pearson warned that could become impotent if newer man of the awards committee, He has assured Canadians a affluent Western nations not to the United Nations faces as members overplay their part. praised the Canadian prime deeper sense of their own iden- let up in their assistance to less much danger from impatient But he would personally be minister as "a dedicated worker tity and is recognized around the fortunate peoples. new members as from obstinate old members. The prime minister, who re- surprised if these new members which "recently emerged from subservient status ceased to re- for peace and freedom." "The whole world: has heard from him and is immeasurably world for clarity and astute- ness. " Some 3,000 persons were in SEE NO SLACKENING © | Continuel On Page 2' Boy Goes Berserk In Jet Blazes Away With 2 Guns Negroes | Say NO! To Smith The party's stand was made Chris disarmed a teen-ager who tried i clear in a statement issued by But the two i e its leader, Josiah Gondo. and a score'of other'top experts i A party statement said: 'The --the cream of the brainpower 1m United Peoples Party has al- in the Gemini program--com- ready condemned the unilateral ing here to check out space ' I nog of indepencence as poe g for tiebtern illegal. There can therefore be space its, C FATIMA, Que. (CP) -- Eigh-/foremen, on the same projects,jof their disqualification as fore iho question of the party sitting without injury. mt teen ae on. winter works|financed by the federal and pro-)men projects in pny ee ciee vincial governments. say oy On on men "for political reasons and as a result of . . . having voted The men said their status as|Conservative." ron with Smith and his col- leagues to discuss ways and 0 of furthering the illegal they voted for the Proioremen was dacussed ats Louis Lacroix, Lib- i. ake 'Comeereaiive party in|municipal couneil meeting Nov.|erai = Sots prin provincial/squen, im any way. This 2 BS gm ----_ pulled i have been' of- Jaod th = it aie el each of egstatare ie a oe = loyal Opposition will adopt in) A WOUNDED AMERI- wounded soldier as rem- -- munist troops, Covered body on stretcher at right. This jeight big: holes in the metal i" tered) jobs as at $1.20/them received a letter from|mayors of two other manicipal- Parliament." CAN soldier, his arm in a nants of ambushed Ist Cay-, ...of one of dozens of U.S, sol- 4s ne of @ series of pictares' | floor. H an hour compared with $1 .40 for!Mayor Albin Aucoin with notice ites on the islands to alter jobs Smith has repeatedly claimed) sling, crawls toward a alry Division battalion came" diers killed in ambush in | 'by Associated Press photo. | "At that. point I got a little i of those "who have been in-|*#@t he had the backing of the| medic seated' beside another under heavy fire by com- Ia Drang valley 'area. lies grapner Riek Merron. (AP) -- cit yt aes "a Bag po tie Negroes for his unilateral dec- i ', volved in partisan Conservative larati utes." ND litics." He said Mr. Aucoin|!aration of independence. e GROU 'SAGGED ON DETOUR lox the term "partisan poli-| Gondo's party has ten mem- GETS JUMP i tics" to mean those persons|bers in Parliament which is due @ | V- Da . It was the electronics 'execu- i; be 4 simply voting Conservative. [to meet Nov. 25. iste tive, Edward C. Haake of Sea- ' Tain efral nh oronto, Forestry Minister Maurice} There are 65 seats in Parlia- e bg Tex., who actually ie | Sauve was re-elected Nov. 8 by ~or dl wie is aie iy B T bo J ee, Graco : ig ogg' gy i oer My by. gr Ins LO acuate oun nn 'ead i 'Slid Off Tr acks': 22 Hurt ative Marc oman. Mayor yore acing Lae si are ~ in- eg V ing him with a handful of gold bt i mi 4 a ! Aucoin said Mr. Sauve "hadjdependent members -- three a ; ul nothing to do with this busi-/Afvican Negroes, one Asian and IN THE CHU PRONG FOOT-/five U.S. spotter planes and in-jnamese, estimated to number|that American troops have so Ph gn og fret go 4 ad, } TORONTO (CP)--Officials of/They were in satisfactory con- Railways] dition. Canadian National have declined to speculate about the cause of the derail- ment of a 100-passenger diesel train Wednesday that sent nine persons to hospital and slightly injured 13 others. . Witnesses said the slow-mov- ing, two-engine train seemed to slide off the tracks of a detour being used while an underpass is constructed to replace a leveljinger, 28, Guelph, crossing in suburban Rexdale. The route was in operation for|Noseworthy, 66, only two days, nesses said that soggy ground, covered with a thin crust of| frozen mud, sagged under the| heavy weight of the train al could have caused the derail ment. But a CNR spokesman P sox it would be some time bé got an official statement is an hour when the engines and/tonguay. a baggage car were thrown on their sides. Two coaches and a|Thomas Davison broke the seal parlor car also left the tracks|to begin his official count on but remained upright. The nine admitted to hospital pital are Alec Fleming, 46, Sar- and some wit-|and shoulder injuries; In Humber Memorial Hos- nia, a CNR fireman, with frac- tured ribs; Berton Newman, 55, Sarnia baggageman, fractured hip; Robert Cook, Sarnia, en- gineman, head and hip injuries; Katherine Bird, 60, Guelph, head injuries; Roy Hensen, 47, Guelph, face cuts; Trudy Gron- injuries to leg; Gerald Sarnia, back Norman head in- head and right Brown, 42, Toronto, juries. Sealed, Empty Ballot Box... When Returning Officer Monday evening, he found the ballts gone and only the tally ness." He said: "The men can return to work if they like, not as foremen but as laborers. I did this to keep the peace because they were arguing with one another about!. the elections." CONTACTS OTHERS Mr. Lacroix said he also had been in touch with municipal of- ficials at Bassin and Havre aux Maisons, other communities in the islands, and asked them also 'to make laborers those foremen who had participated in partisan Conservative poli- tics during the election cam- paign."' He said some foremen were transferred at Bassin and Ha- vre aux Maisons but "in these places we heard no talking." Mr. Lacroix said the munic- campaign," the provincial member said, "was that they should remain calm and not make propaganda or partisan politics during the campaign, given as they were, an oppor- one white. Rhodesians queued up today to affirm their loyalty to the Queen in two opposing and con- flicting ways. At Government House, where Governor Sir Humphrey Gibbs is still in residence despite a Rhodesian government pinprick campaign apparentiy designed to force him out, a steady stream of people came to sign the visitor's book. And at the Legislative Assem- bly, in the centre of the city, hundreds queued up in the hot sun to sign the visitor's book of Clifford Dupont, the Rhodesian breakaway government's new acting "governor."' Dupont, former deputy pre- mier in Smith's regime, was sworn in Wednesday as the country's first acting officer ad- ministering the government un- der the independence constitu- fence, which were held by Du- pont. SEE STILL LOYAL of the densely-wooded Ia Drang pher Richard Merron reached porarily look after the portfo-|counted at least 300 North Viet- lios of external affairs and de-|namese bodies and the figure| was still rising. Over-all casual- ties HILLS (Reuters) -- An Amer- ican air mobile battalion, ham- mered in a ferocious ambush Wednesday afternoon -- appar-|southwest of Saigon. A U.S. ad- viser said 28 Viet Cong bodies/fighting, and in advance of a ently the worst of the South Vietnamese war -- today re- grouped in these hills and be- gan flying out its dead and wounded After a three-day battle ajready caused the American losses of any single|copters flew one battalion to an engagement in the war. The lastjartillery base about three miles troops|official count of enemy dead/to the southeast, The other bat- was 890, not including thosejtalion hiked north into the am- killed Wednesday. mile or so further south, ele- ments of a North Vietnamese regiment hit the U.S. Wednesday as they moved out Valley to set up a new heli- copter landing site. flicted heavy casualties onjabout 1,500 in the area, 220 Vietnamese rangers defending|/miles northeast of Saigon near the Tan Hiep airfield 35 miles|the Cambodian border. were found, ures have not been released, the Ta. Drang battle has al-|pulled out of their positions at Sunday to tackle the North Viet-'was evidently the worst ambush After three days of heavy B-52 bombing attack on Com- munist positions on Chu Phong Although U.S. Mountain, two battalions had casualty fig- greatest|the rout of the aountalas Hebe bush. The sudden, savage action The Americans were flown in American losses prere be- lieved to be heavy in some units of the battalion, but no U.S. casualties were announced in accordance with security reg- ulations, (Associated Press photogra- for the Americans were] said to be "'moderate." 31 Tie Keeps Red China Out Of UN, But Bars Weaken |cannot be barred much longer. paign to keep Communist China out of the United Nations ad- |mitted privately that they may Elsewhere, in South Viet Nam, lhave scored their last annual unless the Nationalists are stentions, a majority of 20 less than the last vote on the same question four years ago. In 1961, the assembly voted 61-34 with seven abstentions that the China Supporters of the U.S. cam- far suffered in Viet Nam. Two and I wasn't convinced he United States fighter-bombers|was all he was trying to be," screamed in at tree-top level to|Said Haake, 46, ted plaster the attackers aes re ae eee po 'm no hero," he said. bombs and napalm. just did what I 'had to do." , Only yards from the Amer-| Haney was sitting next to icans were the North Vietna-iKratt, who directs U.S. astro- mese dead. Lie S oaeee in-/nauts as they circle the globe, Ciudliig fiaiy Uililiesé-maue as- sault "rifles, appeared to belarm of the chats aesoon the ise brand new. Their light khaki uniforms were clean and. well- SEE THREE SHOTS Continuel On Page 2 pressed. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS It Doesn't Pay To Spit At Rusk MONTEVIDEO (AP) -- The man who epat at U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk during a demonstration Wed- nesday is in a coma in a hospital after he was beaten leased ipali i y : ; ae a vets tie] OATS. (C8) | AON ice wockecn peiee oo the tion proclaimed last week. |iht, Truported that "dosens of| UNITED NATIONS (CP) --| Many diplomats believed the| by police. He has been identified as Jesus Puritano Relan » Ough report to transport depart:|) "aiscovered---this time iniWinter season and that they are held b tne wiltian ae lntad dead Americans lay beside|The 47-47 split in the Generaljfact that the 117-nation assem-| Rojas, a member of the Communist Party who is enrolled. ment officials and this takes/ yee a eee nerleton riding--andjhired on the basis of compe-|qipbs ath ey a that|North Vietnamese bodies and|Assembly on seating Communist|bly approved the. call for a two-| at National Industrial University, time," he said. the Liberal and New Demo-|tence and not for reasons oflaipbs no longer ts The legal|wounded Americans crowded] China plus wanting support for/thirds majority by a margin of " | MOVED SLOWLY cratic Party candidates are|their political allegiance. | governor. first aid stations.) |U-S. demands that a two-thirds jonly seven votes was more sis-! South Africa - Rhodesia Trade Again The Chicago-to-Toronto train lodging complaints to Chief "The only thing I asked Con-} Government sources said it} In Saigon, a U.S. military uae fetes" tit ruin oe seein Pe est PRETORIA (AP) -- Normal financial and tradin Ja. was travelling at about 10 miles|Electoral Officer Nelsow Cas-|servatives during the election| was expected Smith would tem-|spokesman said the cavalrymen} The procedural manoeuvre] tions between South Africa and Rhodesia (which pu Agra pended when the British colony declared independence uni- laterally Nov. 11) were resumed today. The South African reserve bank said negotiations had been concluded by which "financial and trade transactions between the two countries may be resumed forthwith on the basis operative included three crew members.!of ballots remaining. Continuel On Page 2 Viet Cong battalions destroyed' victory. prior to Nov. 11." A qe' tunity to work." BENNETT'S PLEA IGNORED BY LABOR FEDERATION Province-Wide Strike Threat In B.C. VANCOUVER (CP) -- British Columbia's chief conciliation of- ficer works under the threat of a province-wide work stoppage today as he attempts to get striking oi] workers and their employers to the bargaining ta- ble. Reg Clements met Wednes« day with officials of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union (CLC) and a representa- tive of the B.C. Federation of Labor. Further talks. between Mr, Clements and oil company offi- cials were scheduled for today while the union goes ahead with plans for a general work stop- page beginning midnight Nov. 24. Premier W. A, C. Bennett's plea Wednesday for the union leaders to call off plans for the 48-hour work stoppage appar- ently fell on deaf ears. The un- jon made no reply. George Johnston, chairman of the strike co-ordinating com- mittee of the 100,000-member la- bor federation, said the work stoppage is intended as a dem- onstration of labor's solidarity in support of the strike by oil workers The premier told a, Victoria press conference that' such a work stoppage would harm not ? only the industry, but all work- ing people in the province. He said he hoped new concili- ation moves would solve the oi} dispute. Mr. Peterson said the work stoppage was instigated by the provincial New Democratic Party of Robert Strachan in an attempt to embarrass the Social Credit government. Mr. John- son said this was "utter. non- sense,"' Attorney-General Bonner said in Victoria the move could cost $20,000,000 and said he thought the union has "rocks in their heads." Commenting. on Mr.: Clem- ents' meeting Wednesday, Mr. Johnson said there was a pods- sibility of direct meetings be- tween the union and companies later today unless the concilia- tion officer thought such meet- ings premature. SAYS AID PLEDGED Pat O'Neal, secretary of the labor federation, claims that most major unions have pledged support for the work stoppage. The federation, in a telegram to labor unions throughout the province, has asked that union members discontinue the use of petroleum products for the 48- hour period and that unions not directly involved in the use of petroleum products withdraw their services for the same pe- riod of time. The oil workers strike began Sept. 17 and was initially con- fined to the British American Oil Co. However, picket lines were later extended to an Im- perial Oil Co. refinery in nearby Burnaby. Work also was halted at Pacific Petroleum facilities in Dawson Creek. Oil workers seek an additional 50 cents an hour in a basic wage of $2.75, "but protection against the effects of automa- tion is chief among their aims in a new contract. question was an important one requiring more than a simple majority. The consensus was that if Pe- king's supporters break the ma- jority barrier next year, they can rally enough support to ad- mit Communist China on a straight vote. Diplomats noted that if Indo- nesia had not quit the United Nations last March, Peking needed to score a simple ma- jority this time. COULD GAIN GROUND It was believed that Commu- nist China's backers could pick up a number of votes if they did not insist on coupling their call for admission of Peking with demands to oust National- ist China. demand, but the sponsors re- fused. Peking has said it will not consider UN membership unless the Natidnalista are Ceylon tried before Wednes-|= day's vote to delete the ouster|= In THE TIMES Gov't Labor Role Hit -- P. 17 $440,00 Building -- P. 5 Crushmen Win 5-3 -- P. 10 Ann Lenders -- 21 City News -- 17 Classified -- 28, 29, 30 Comics -- 26 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 31, 32 Obits -- 31 Sports -- 10, 11, 12, 13 Theatre -- 25 Whitby News -- 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 Women's -- 18, 19, 20, 21 Weather -- 2 Now in its 3ist day, the Greater Oshawa reg ged Shan fhe Gn , of its target in a drive that ends tomorrow. thrown out.

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