Ontario Community Newspapers

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

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manville, Ajax, Pickering aad neighboring centres. in On- tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94 -- NO. 295" 50 Per' Week Heme Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1965 Authorized as Second Closs Mail "s Ottawa and for payment o eather Renort ' pres snowflurries today. Clearing and littis-cooler.. Low tonight, 27. High Suncay; su. Oitice boy = Naa stage: ti ,jand civilian } jalso will take over the immigra- IN BEAUTIFUL TRADITION -- FEAST OF ST. NICHOLAS One of the beautiful tradi- tions of the Ukrainian peo- ple is their annual observ- ance of the feat of St. Nich- olas. According to the Jul- ian Calendar, the feat. falls on Sunday, Dec. 19. Eighty Ukrainian children at the John F, Kennedy Separate School celebrated the feast- day Friday at a party with all of the traditional trim- 10. Children in the forefront are left to right, Mary Ka- chany, 6, Roman Stanko, 6, and Stephen Taras, 6. St. Nicholas was born towards mings. St, Nicholas hands out treats while two '"'an- gels" stand in the back- ground, left to right --Vera Wilura, 8, and Eva Stanko, the end of the third century in Pentara, Asia Minor. He later became the Bishop of Myra. : --Oshawa Times Photo Blazing Return, Space-To-Sea Ends The Greatest Adventure (AP)--|jrafts and gave the pilots of thejearth ended the most exciting;stowed away the loose gear and:Borman reported he was flying Blackened by the fire of re-|rescue planes overhead thumbs-|and the most significant space the last of the debris collected/ery task force of five ships and HOUSTON, Tex. entry, the Gemini 7 space ship|up signals telling them every- rode a parachute to a landing|thing was okay. on the Atlantic Ocean today,! A horse - collar was lowered bringing astronauts Frank Bor-|from the helicopter and ew man and James Lovell homejastronaut was hauled up and) safely from man's greatest ad-|flown to the Wasp, where ex- venture in space. cited sailors lined the rails wait- With a skilfull assist from the|ing for a glimpse of them. They Gemini 6 pilots, Walter Schirra|were deposited on the deck of! and Thomas Stafford. thev had! the carrier at 9:37 .a.m., 32 min- achieved the first true rendez-lutes after splashdown. vous of orbiting space ships--| Weary and heavily --an historic feat recorded onafter-14--days_of the weightless eolor film. : ordeal, they guided their tin The exhausted s pace menicraft to the splashdown at 9:0 asked for a helicopter pickup, a.m. EST, 11 to 17 miles from electing not to wait for the ar-|the prime recovery vessel, the rival of the Wasp. They climbed | aircraft carrier Wasp. through the hatches into life' The meteoric dive back to set aircraft carrier Wasp after their 14-day space flight + Phas ' had THEIR LONG SPACE -- Gemini 7 astronauts James Lovell, left, and Frain Do:- man stand on flight deck of i down in- the Atnlantic and bearded, jof the jduring the long days of life in the tiny space ship. "Are you ready to come home?" mission control asked. "Ready!"" cried Borman. 'Ready!." tighto!" chimed in Lovell. Right on the~ button, at 8 ja.m., Borman fired a_ blast \from his retrorockets. The jolt sporting | of th rockets. slowed the 17,500- mile- -an-hour speed of| the space ship by about 300 voyage ever flown by man. Borman and Lovell had trav- elled far longer than any other spacemen--330 hours, 35 min- jutes -- flown the most miles--| |5,129,400--and had given the|' United States a long lead over the Soviet Union in many other phases of the race between the nations to be first on the moon. A bit wobbiy, bui huge grins, Borman and Lovell] walked to the strains of Anchor weigh and, to the wild cheer es a Wasp's men, to the sick' Falling into the grip of the} bay for their first checkup. . earth's gravity, it began the| After five hours of light sleep,| meteoric, 10,000 - mile dive to Borman and Lovell a wok elearth across the Pacific, Mex- shortly after midnight and/ico, southern Texas, the Gulf of Mexico and Florida. Sixty miles high over Texas, during the hottest part of the ifiery re-entry, the spaceship was enveloped by an electrified |curtain and entered a four-min- ute blackout period. When they came through it a jtruce_ course » toward the recov-' four jet 21 aircraft waiting to pluck them from the ocean 565 miles southwest of Bermuda in the At- lantic. HEES FACING SPEED-CHARGE George Hees, Northumber- land Kiding member of par- liament, is scheduled to ap- pear next month in Brighton Magistrate's Court on a speed- ing charge. Magistrate R. B. Baxter of Cobourg today confirmed that the speeding charge has been laid against the Progressive Conservative MP. Crown Attorney castle said the incident occur- red last Thursday near Brigh- ton on the Macdonald-Cartier Freeway. Denial By Hanoi Of Peace- BULLETIN TOKYO (AP) --The North Vietnamese information minis-| try issued a statement today terming Washington reports of a peace feeler "pure fabrica- |tions, without any basis," WASHINGTON (AP) -- The United States has asked North Viet Nam to clarify conditions jin a peace feeler, by President |Ho Chi Minh for negotiations to jend the Vietnamese war. | | "TJ am prepared to go any- |where; to meet anyone,' Ho }was, quoted as saying | Both the white and State Sec-| jretary Dean Rusk made clear, | jhowever, that U:S. leaders are| | deeply skeptical of the Hanoi of- |fer. At the' same time, officials Stressed they will make every effort an acceptable arrangement i negotiations if! one is possible. "We await Hanoi's reply," |\state department said night. ; "We declare once more our| desire to discuss an honorable} peace in Viet Nam," said Presi- dent Johnson. "We know that nothing is to be gained by fur- ther delay in talking." The peace bid was made Nov 11 in a meeting between Ho and two Italians and passed on to the state department vy arary co» io the Friday were flown to the carrier by helicopter. (AP Wirephoto win endin foam Carrier Wasp) Feeler Foreign Minister, Amintore Fanfani, this year's president of the United Nations General As- sembly. The state department made public the details Friday after published stories indicated the Hanoi offer already had been rejected, Diplomats here and at the UN expressed concern that disclos- ure might torpedo the peage ef- fort and bring strong Chinese} pressure on Hanoi. SEE HANOIS _ Continued On Page 2 Geoffrey | | | | | OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pea son's cabinet and de- partmental shuffle Friday will bring about the biggest fed- eral administrative reorganiza~ tion in peacetime history. Thousands of civil servants will be shifted to new depart- ments and there will be a wholesale change in ministerial responsibilities. The prime minister said the changes "'are designed te adavt the machinery of government to new conditions and changing needs."' will be involved in the proposed new department of manpower. It will take over the sections of the labor department deal- ing with manpower placement and employment services, tech- nical and vocational training rehabilitation. It tion branch of the department One of the biggest changes & \ference. JEAN MARCHAND Immigration of citizenship and immigration. | The effect of the changes will|Changes. He will continue to be be to strip the present citizen [responsible for the legal serv- ship and immigration depart-| ment of many of its existing) responsibilities. which now come under citizen- ship, will go into the new de-| partment of Indian affairs and northern affairs, WILL BE SPLIT The present department of northern affairs and national renga will also be split down Indian . affairs, |tion, lices of the government, the pre-|¢St Provinces. litiga-| FIVE ARE NEW jparation of legislation, prosecutions and _ the 'courts. |MUST BE FREE Mr. Pearson said that "the increasing magnitude of legis- lative programs alone, to keep pace with the rapid changes in the country, has made it apnar- ent that a minister of justice must be free df- other tasks in order adequately ta discWargé. se | middle, with. northern as- is gofrig In with Indian' af: tetra, and resources going un- der the new department of re- sources and energy. In the field of justice, the changes will also be extensive The relatively light duties of solicitor - general will become far heavier with the transfer from justice of the responsibil- ity for the RCMP, the penitent- iaries service and the national parole board. The justice department and the secretary of state depart- ment will also lose some of their responsibilities, said Mr. Pear- son, when additional duties are assigned to "a new and sepa- rate minister." These duties in- clude administration of | the Bankruptcy Act, the Companies Act, combines investigation and research, patents and copy- rights and trade marks. Until the new minister is ap- pointed, Mr. Pearson said some of these functions will go to the president of the Privy Council. The increasing burden on the minister of justice will be greatly lightened by the his' vital seaponei lity for_le- gislation and legal advice." The creation of the portfolio of president of the treasury board, to work closely with the president of the Privy Council, will not have any immediate impact on existing organiza- tions. The new manpower and en- ergy departments. will involve the biggest administrative up- heavals. Mr. Pearson said they will be "key": departments in the economic development of Canada. Unofficially, the link between labor and immigration began forming some months ago when ihe lnimigration Gepartment began taking over manpower surveys that would norma'ly be handled through~-the - National Employment Service. GEARED TO MANPOWER Officials say that with tech- nological advances and skilled- labor shortages, immigration policies likely will be geared closely to manpower problems. They -say there has been an "overlapping of effort'? in the past. The prime minister said there has been a similar lack of co- ordination involving energy. Varous phases are scattered through a series of departments such as trade, mines, resources and industry. When the reorganization is complete, the new department ©; will have responsibility for such organizations as the national energy board, the Northern On- tario Pipeline Corp., Eldcrado Mining and Refining Ltd., Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd., jthe Atomic Energy Control Board, and the Dominion Coal Board. Water resources will = also come under its control. The prime minister said it hasn't been decided yet when the department of mines and | { technical surveys will be merged into the new depart- ment or whether it will con- tinue under a separate minis- ter. JEAN-PIERRE COTE Postmaster-General $4, 500,000 IN BACK PAY, PENSIONS Classic Strike Ended MILWAUKEE (AP) -- The Kohler Co..and the United Auto Workers Union ended 11% 'years of. strife Friday with the company agreeing to pay $4,500,00, in back pay and pensions. The awards arose from a bitter six-year strike' that had become a classic in the an- nals of American labor by the time it. ended in 1960, The struggle. was marked by vio- 5 NEW MINISTE EW JOBS FOR 8 PM Retools Government Winters Takes On Trade, Sharp Official In Finance By MICHAEL GILLAN OTTAWA (CP)--A major fe- organization of the federal gov- ernment structure Friday domi- nated Prime Minister Pearson's | cabinet changes that brought % five. men into the ministry and 3 gave new assignments to eight § others. In what one senior civil serv- 3 ant called the most revolution- ary shakeup in "many, many years,"" Mr. Pearson announced that new departments will be formed to pinpoint federal ac- tion in four important areas-- manpower, energy and re- sources, administration of po- lice and correction services, and ; Indians and Eskimos. "The Canadian economy is growing rapidly and the nature of governmental problems is al- tering to a dramatic degree," he told a televised press cen- ROBERT WINTERS "The departmental organiza-| Trade tion that was appropriate 10) years ago is no longer the most) efficient." The appointments brough tl chairman of Rio Algont Mines Ltd. and the British jyounger men into the ministry) while: giving all but six of the} 26 posts to Canada's two larg-| The newcomers to the $35,000- \a-year jobs are: ; Jean Marchand, 47, former Quebee labor leader and a newcomer to Parliament, The member for Quebec East will be immigration minister until the formal establishment. of ment, to embrace and co-or- Newfoundland Corp., and will quit other directorships as: soon as possible. 0. --J. J. Greens, 46) fon Ren. frew South, the fi ter Teillet, in the provinces: ; --Jean-Pierre Cot Longueuil, new dinate immigration and man- power policy. Robert. H. Winters, 55, rent, government back in pol- ities after an eight-year ab- sence. He will take over as trade minister early in the} new year after he severs ex: | tensive business ties. The new MP for York West said Friday, night he has resigned. as works minister in the St. Lau-} general replacing Rene ; -dlay who resigned frox' | cabinet Thursday night. --John Turner, 36, i without portfolio, a Montreal lawyer who gained wide rrom- inence when he danced with Princess Margaret in 1958, Other ministers were given jadded duties, demoted or their departments reorganized. Al- though the reorganization can legally begin how, new names for the portfolios must await government legislative action in the next Parliament. Mitchell Sharp moves to fi- nance from trade, replacing Walter Gordon who quit the ministry shortly after the elec- tion. Mr. Sharp will continue his responsibility in connection with the Canadian wheat board. SEE NEW LOOK (Continued On Page 2) J. J. GREENE Agriculture | 21 Die, 14 Hurt As Trains Hit SALAMANCA, Spain (AP) -- Twenty-one persons were killed jand 14 seriously injured when | the Lisbon-bound "Sud Express" train from Paris and a local train collided today near the Portuguese Frontier. str MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- At when part of an old 93-room waterfront collapsed during had nearly 100 rooms. It is Havana. U.K. Puts Oil-Emba Friday in what is regarded against the Rhodesian econo: NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 11 Killed In Hotel Fire In Cuba least 11 persons were killed hotel building on the Havana the night, broadcasts from Cuba said today. Many others were injured, Havana Radio said. A search continued through the rubble for more vic- tims, The dead included a boy of nine and a girl of seven, the broadcasts reported. The building, known as Hotel Luz, , located in the old section of rgo On Smith LONDON (CP) -- Britain announced an embargo on oil and oil products on the breakaway colony of Rhodesia as the strongest move yet my. Rhodesia, whose white- minority government declared independence from Britain Noy. 11, used about 280,000 tons of oil annually. Sivan tat acannon neat nents apart family ties, and a union- sponsored, country-wide boy- cott of goods produced by the Kohler plumbing-ware Central characters in the long feud, Emil Mazey, UAW secretary-treasurer, and Ly- man Conger, Kohler vice- president and genera! counsel, sealed the pac' with a hand- shake at the end of a press conference, following the signing. , Approximately 1,400 former will vacaive a total of $3,000,000 back pay in individ- ual amounts ranging up to $10,000. Restoration of pension rights will account for- an- | other $1,500,000. Mazey said the strike cost benefits alone. The dispute dates to April 5, 1954, when members of Local 833, accusing the family-owned Kohler firm of union-busting tactics, walked out | Union security was the main issne the UAW $12,000,000 in strike Saturday Showcase --- Second Russians Thump Canada Again -- P. 8 Ann Landers ---- 14 City News -- 13 Classified -- 22, 23, 24,25 Comics --= 19 Editorial -- 4 Obits -- 25 ...In THE TIMES today... Auto-Racing Homes Become Mosports -- P, 13 Whitby News----~5, 6 Women's -- 14, 15, 16, 17 Weather --- 2 Section Sports -- 8, 9, 10 Theatre -- 18 } SL MILL LULL

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