"DON'T LET the rain come down . Oh, no don't let the rain come down, my roof's got a hole in it and I might drown." The rains have been mak- ing big music the past two days in Oshawa, giving cause for people to sing those song lyrics on a some- what flat key, Who knows, possibly the mainstreet [ean stroller here with the um- brella is singing hopefully, But the girl in the puddle (her reflection, that is) doesn't seem to care about the rain, She is singing a different song, When it all siNight Shift Walk Off Job She Oshawa Smmes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1966 today she will- seek re-election ber municipal election. council --- without missing a years, although she has been defeated in three previous trips to the polls, In 1960 and 1962 elections she placed 13th -- 12 aldermen were elected -- but when aldermen resigned in 1961 and 1963 she completed their unexpired terms, "fT enjoy council work and I've always been interested in municipal affairs," says Ald. Reardon. Antique Cars Stop In City On Expo Route An antique car rally involv- ling over 100 vehicles the largest ever organized in Can- ada --- will roll through the streets of Oshawa next year on its way to Expo. Cars competing in the 11-day Canadian Tire Centennial Tour |will set out next July 24 from several points in Ontario and the Maritimes and converge on Montreal. In "Centennial City" the cars will be put on display and tro- lets up people will be sing- ing the "Washday Blues" as they flood the cleaners with mud-soaked trousers-- and make trips to shoe- shine shops and car washes. Oshawa Times Photos Siarr Defends Diefenbaker; Calls Liberals Disjointed Lester B, Pearson is running a@ "disjointed" government on "disorganized methods' and it makes all parliamentary mem- bers look bad, Michael Starr, MP, Ontario riding, said Wed- nesday after a Progressive Conservative official publicly challenged John Diefenbaker's leadership. Mr. Starr, Conservative House leader in the Commons, ~ gaid he likes working under Mr. Diefenbaker. Dalton Camp, national presi- dent of the PC party, said this week he plans to stump the country in the next few weeks to gain support to depose Dief- enbaker, the party's leader. Camp, a 46-year-old Toronto business executive, said Ottawa Nov, 13 to 16. CLEVER MAN Mr, Starr said there are pe others that don't, Camp definitely 'don't' category. fell in calibre,' interview UNDER PRESSURE Albert Walker MPP, said that when a jiS under pressure, | genuine interest in the party, ple who like methods employe: by the Conservative party and|syMPATHETIC He said Mr the Oshawa riding} PC association convention in]confidence or non-confidence". Mr. Walker said he didn't ex pect anything on the issue would come up at the annual 0- provincial PC convention in To- a ronto Oct. 31 to Noy, 1. | George Martin, president of beg city PC association, said he sympathized with Mr. Camp "Tt like working under John | i**We should be in a position to Diefenbaker, I think he is very) jreplace a leader if S should clever and is a wonderful man. | fee) like doing it." He said the It's been an experience working | constitution should be rewritten with a parliamentarian of his |to allow a leadership conven- Mr, Starr said in anjtion to be called by party mem: bers -- other than by the lead-| jer who (up to now) is the only one who can make the call, "If we could hold a leader leader | chip convention, there would be| "if he has ajno problem," he "T believe I speak for many|should be willing to stand be- Mr. Martin said, adding he wasn't "particularly jin favor vot deposing John Dief- ing f S: ' conv: in calling for a reassessment of | fore a convention and seek aj jenbaker" icy, a reform of party organ- ation, and the reconfirmation | -- or otherwise -- of leader.) ship." He plans to bring the issue to a head at the annual federal' jmandate for leadership. He said Mr jshould be annua! convention, Diefenbaker | "prepared to place his leadership on the line at the | Diefent He should! City Man On Sailing Near A city man was within 480 miles of the north pole on his last mission aboard a 269-foot icebreaker, Lt. R. W.. Munday, son of Mr. and Mrs. -E. R. Munday, 710 Glencairn St., is serving as Royal Canadian Navy Liaison officer aboard the U.S, coast guard cutter. Edisto The Edisto, with a comple- ment of 229 officers and men, has just finished spending 66 consecutive days north of the Arctic Circle Involved on the excursion Was oceanographic survey work in the frozen waters off the northwestern coast of Greenland THICK ICE At one point during her de- velopment she pushed aside 20 foot thick polar pack ice until she was 480 miles from the North Pole. Her oceanographic work was part of a program to clairfy many mysteries con cerning ocean currents and ice berg routes Much of the information com piled from Edisto's studies (in-| eluding biological surveys) at) |NEED LEADER One person who thinks Mr. efenbaker has to RO | is Mrs ' { wi ung to acce a vote 0 -- nev"! Guards Menace: Icebreaker North Pole LT. R. W. MUNDAY bine powered helicopte ch help pick out leads he thick polar ice The icebreaker Sept embarked | 19 on another northern Red Diploma MOSCOW (Reuters)--China's militant young Red Guards have told Soviet diplomats in Peking that they will "tear the skin from you and rip out your |guts,"" it was reported today. The threat, on a hand-painted }poster outside the Soviet em- bassy, was reported by Russia's youth newspaper Komsomols-| kaya Pravda. | Red Guards from Peking's istitute of People's Menicias| |} hung the poster by the embassy gates, it said, presumably dur- ke Jast moath's two-day demon- stration | against Soviet "revis- jionism, All the old and new hatred is graven on our hearts," the poster said. "We won't forget it in a hundred, a thousand or ten thousand years." "When the moment comes, we jwill tear the skin from you, rip lout your guts, burn your bodies and throw the ashes to the winds," i company ASKS NEW CHECK LONDON (Reuters) -- Amer ican lawyer Mark Lane called ts|Wednesday for a new investi in| gation into U.S. president Ken- nedy's assassination -- suggest ing Britain's Scotland pe jcould possibly do the job. Lane the top of the world will be| mission that will take her into| was speaking on the eve of pub-/ available to 'civilian colleges|the Arctic region for anotherjlication in Britain by and institutions of all nations leebreaker of 6,500 tons placement, has a 10 000-1 power diesel-electric propulsion plant is is equipped with two }month ton Mass. - her mer jto their motto jof the Earth." in early November/ Warren commission will have held true} "To the Ends/| Bodley When she closes season}Head of his book Rush to Judg Edisto is a heavy duty peat and returns to her native Bos- ment, which rejects the official view that iLee Harvey Oswald--later shot to death by Jack Ruby--was the 'sole assassin, | phies awarded to the winners. In the Ontario section a total of 75 cars will set out from Sault Ste. Marie and Windsor and join up in Toronto for the last leg of their journey. They will stop in Ajax, Osh- awa, Bowmanville, Port Hope, Cobourg -and points east. En route competitors will be tested in hill climbs, speed trials and driving tests, Driv- ers will wear period costume and these will be judged too. Invitations will be sent to Canada's 5,000 antique car own- ers as well as to famous owners in the States and Europe. Cars will be selected for the tour on the basis of appear- ance, authenticity and perfor- mance, Opinions Sought Ruth Bestwick, PC president of the Oshawa riding "I admire him as a man, but not as a leader, I think we need a new leader. There is too much petty opposition coming up in parliament," she said, adding that younger men should be what the demand is for in parliament now "and new ideas" For Drop-In Plan Seven 'thousand of the city's! jexpect we will be able to report lold folk will receive question-|to council by early December, naires in the mail during the|Maybe a little earlier." next month asking them their} The questionnaire, opinion of the city's plan for a|McCallum, will said Mr. include ques- {Senior Citizen Drop-In Centre./tions of what sort of recreation 'We will be asking them,' /and activities the senior citizens |said Frank McCallum, chair-|would like to have' included in jman of city council's Drop-In'the building. Centre investigating committee,; It will also be asking where 'if there is a need in the city|/the old folk would like to see 2 = a centre.' ithe centre located. ting in committee yester-| 'It will probably have to be "a members agreed that/on a bus route," said Mr, Me- nap aga integer should go out |C allum. he city's old folk as quickly; "As yet we have not con- re poe sidered any sites for the centre, GET MOVING We are asking the committee "We want to get. moving onjmembers to keep their eyes this' _ Said Mr. Me Callum, We} open though," Two Police Officers . Escort Truck At Plant Ald. Alice Reardon announced as an alderman in the Decem- Mrs. Reardon has served on meeting -- fcr the past four Reardon Enters Race For Seat On Council A candidate, said Mrs. Rear- don, should not promise any- thing to the electorate except to serve the city, "It's a lot of work but, after | all, I've a lot at stake in this city -- four daughters, two sons and 17 grandchildren," she added. TWO CANDIDATES Ald. Reardon is the second person to officially announce ~ she will be a candidate, Last ) week Ald. Margaret Shaw said § she would be a council candi- | date, but did not specify which position she would seek. While on council, Ald, Rear- don has been a member of the finance; parks, property and recreation; and public works committees, For the past two Ags years she has been vice- joa chairman of the works com. mittee, She has also been council's housing committee chairman, on the board of management ALD, ALICE REARDON {Labor Council from the Ladies' of Hillsdale Manor, council's|Auxiliary of the United Auto representative to the Oshawa| Workers. She represents the Folk festival and an executive|labor council on the Social member of the Victorian Order| Planning Council and has also of Nurses, been on the mayor's committee Ald, Reardon has lived in|for the retraining of the un- Oshawa since 1928. Her hus-|employed since it was estab- band was employed by General lished six years ago. Motors of Canada for 40 years} Mrs, Reardon served for six and retired last year. jyears on the Oshawa Welfare | For more than 22 years Ald.|Board before it was disbanded, Reardon has been a delegate|She is a member of Simcoe! to _the _Oshawa and District Street United Church, 200 ARRIVE FRIDAY Tour Moseum, GM Plant Delegates to the 12th Com- monwealth Parliamentary Con- ference will visit the city to- morrow. The group is scheduled to tour the General Motors of : Canada Ltd, plant and the/ Sections but for the Ontario and Canadian Automotive Museum. | Quebec ape ean group will : y jtravel as one body. Half the group will make the) This is the second: time Can- plant tour in the morning start-|.95 has played host to the con- me at 10 a.m. and the remain-/ference which attracts dele- ler will visit the auto museum, gates from all Commonwealth In the afternoon the Proce: | countries dure hve ~ reversed. "sy The history of the association Sn hig he vay oo goes back to 1911 when its for- rm sagen if ett t shaabing mation was proposed to cement tie wewtices han be ane * 2 the cordial relationships which 8 gardens has been cancelled. | qoveloped between parliamen- Col McLaughlin is reported tarians from all parts of the recovering from a slight attack/ (then) Empire attending the of the 'flu. There will belcoronation of H. M. Edward a agree] at noon at the Gen-|y1; osha hote $ ; : It was originally called the RECEPTION |Empire Parliamentary Associ- Delegates leave Oshawa by|ation and was administered by train in the afternoon for To-/the United Kingdom branch. ronto where they will attend a} It assumed its present name reception given by Ontariojin 1948 when management of its Lieutenant Governor Ear /Jijaffairs was transferred to the Rowe. General Council on which all The group is expected to/member branches are 'repre- number from 150 to 200 andisented, directly or indirectly. they are visiting all parts of Canada prior to the opening of their conference in Ottawa on Sept. 26. For most of the tour the/® group is being split into smaller TIni Angry about work loads and other internal problems, 124 General Motors night -- shift/thi workers walked off the job last night, The walk-out involved work- ers in department 61 of the GM chassis plant, A suggestion that the men had walked off the job in sym- pathy with their striking col- leagues at the American Motors plant was described as false by an official of the United Auto Workers union today. The walk-out came at 11;30 p.m. after the meal break, HOPEFUL Steve Nimigon of the UAW bargaining committee said it was hoped all the differences would be resolved by this after- noon He said he expected that the men would be reporting to work today at the ordinary time of 6 pm "The men," said Mr. Nimi- gon, "were angry about the work loads. They think the line is moving too fast. "There is also a dispute over supervisory personnel handling work that should be handled by line workers. Auto Prices Still Secret A General Motors spokesman today declined to reveal whether or not Canadian cus- tomers will have to pay more to purchase a 1967 GM car, Over the border, however, GM anrounced that American customers will have to pay an extra $56 on all cars for the new model year, "We do not know yet," said an. Oshawa GM_ spokesman," when an announcement of Can- adian prices will be made. "Tt will, of course, be done market on Sept. raising their prices. Finance Sharp Canadian car gap between Canada and the United States. Mr. Sharp said the govern- ment believes that the price gap should be narrowed not in- creased, before the 1967 7 ,80 on the In the United gates, General); Motors has followed the lead] 4 taken hv Fard and Chrvsler in Minister Mitchell said Wednesday that manufacturers have been told that the govern- ment is opposed to an increase in automobile prices that would maintain or widen the price Will Report Today "With the General. Motors ro tg of 2,600 they think that is type of thing should vad stopped, is "We have set a m the company today to we the problems," A General Motors spokes said the walk-out oT) 4 terrupted the assembly line pro- : gress. "We believe," he said, " the men will be back a, Lines Move » Same Speed ' The three-week-old. strike of 700 United Auto Workers at the General Motors Ste, Therese plant is having no effect on the Oshawa production lines, a@ GM spokesman said today. "We are not quickening the Oshawa lines," said the spokes- man," As you know, much of the Ste, Therese pi goes to the United States, "In Quebec they are usin enamel paint process which is the. system used in the U.S.A, Here in Oshawa the lines are geared to lacquer paints." The Quebec Auto Workers walked out on Sept. 1 demand- ing wage parity with thelr Ontario colleagues. Public Homes Now Occupied Twenty-three new or units on are re y Prag sess" Ald, Alice Reardon, chairman of council's housing committee, says all the Carleton Court units have residents bi a total of 83 the num public housing units in po there on Carleton Court. Mrs, Reardon said ea Corporation this Present tenants, she said, will have the option of termina' their leases or staying on the reduced rents, Thieves Steal Cash, Register Movie Highlights Famous Casa Loma Members of Oshawa Kiwanis Club enjoyed a historical and pictorial tour of Toronto's fam- ous "Casa Loma," with the showing of a color movie, at a luncheon meeting this week, courtesy of the West Toronto Kiwanis Club. Built by Sir Henry Pellett, a cost in excess of $10 millions, the City of Toronto seized Casa Loma, for back taxes. A decision to demolish Casa Loma was changed when the city was prevailed upon to. turn the castle over to the West Toronto Kiwanis Club, to man- at age and maintain, Thieves broke into a av ws station Wednesday night and made off with a cash register and its $138 contents, The break-in at the Texaco station at 380 Simcoe St. §. |was discovered by police at ia 50 a.m. today, SOLDIERS IN RAGS? DARTMOUTH, N.S. (CP) Officials of a military uniform supply company here said Wed- nesday lack of decision on a standardized uniform for Cana- dian forces may leave defence personnel in "'rags."" The Dart- mouth firm of Claude W, Vin- cent Ltd. said orders for exist- ing uniform styles in all three forces have dropped as much as 50 per cent, Picket lines outside the strike-|that occasion eight police offi- bound Albert Street company|cers were on hand. of Oshawa Engineering and) The Albert Street plant was Welding were again opened this struck by its 56 workers on morning to allow a- truck to/Sept. 7, Since the strike there enter the plant jhave been no negotiations be- Two police officers were On|tween company and union. hand to escort the truck through the picket line at the north entrance to the plant Some 12 pickets of the strik ing United Auto Workers union were walking line The truck, which was owned) oPTAWA (CP) the Oshawa construction| penis, a of William Ridgely, in without inci- Lawyer In Court For Second Trial the --Raymond a 38-year-old Montreal returns to court Mon- tday, Oct. 3, for his second trial on a charge arising over the affair of narcotics smuggler Lu- cien Rivard Denis, former executive as- sistant to the immigration min- ister, has been free on $1,000 bail since last March when his first trial was declared a mis- by was escorted aw yet, dent \ union official said he derstood the truck was making a delivery rather than taking products out of the plant Last Friday a General Motors} ruck was escorted through the Iie ket line to pick up dies, _ On TINT BURNS SCALP _ | trial. TORONTO (CP)--Mrs. Helen' He is charged with corruptly Timar, 51, of Toronto wasioffering a sum of money to! awarded $1,092 in damages and| Montreal lawyer Pierre Lamon-! un $250 in court costs Wednesday jtagne to have the former drop|- opposition to bail for Rivard, for first and second degree | now in a U.S. jail. chemical burns to her scalp Toastmaster Club. Making up the new executive, they are proposing a toast to club progress in the coming Proficiency in public speaking is the main aim of these three cup-tinkling members of the Oshawa year. Left to right are: John DeHart, administra- tive vice - president; Alex Cosens, executive vice-pres- ident. and Douglas Tide- TOASTMASTERS TOAST NEW SEASON man, president. Toastmast- ers meet once a week, Members met last night at the Genosha Hotel. --Oshawa Times Photo --