Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Dec 1966, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neiahboring centres in Onte ario and Durham Counties, VOL. 95 -- NO. 283 Be per! West Tore Cotivered : OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1966 The Oshawa Zimes * Weather Report More snowflurries likely with colder weather. Low tonight 6, high Thursday 25, . THIRTY-SIX PAGES © A CANDY CASTLE FOR KIMBERLY'S CHRISTMAS Kimberly, 5, of 1025 New- bury Ave. He says the card- board foundation on which the cookies and candies rest was the most time-consum- ing part of the construction ~~ but he completed the en- tire house within nine hours, Those are the sweetest icicles and the tastiest bells a house ever had. There Daddy knows what his lg sage oe 3 built a and nice . Donald Hoy and are gum-drops and candy canes, chocolate Santas and cookies. Look good enough to eat?' Mmmmm., --Oshawa' Times Photo North Vietnamese Troops Bombed North Of Border SAIGON (CP) -- U.S. B-52)straddle North Vietnam's route) Vietnam and the seventh heavy bombers today caught North/102 and to hit North Vietnamese |bombing by the Stratoforts since Vietnamese troops in the open/bunkers in the area. Saturday either inside the de- just inside the borders of North; While the big bombers struck/militarized zone or just north Vietnam 'and rained tons of above the buffer area, U.S.jor south of it. The objective is high explosives an them. }marines clashed with Commu-jto smash a new buildup by An American military spokes-jnist forces about 15 miles south|North Vietnamese regulars be- man said the intercontinental/of the demilitarized zone. ilieved massing for a drive into bombers struck a concentration) The marines beat off a Viet/South Vietnam. of troops 550 yards north of the|Cong mortar and small-arms) The U.S. spokesman also said demilitarized zone dividing the| attack and reported killing 54 of) American jots Tuesday de- two Vietnams. {the enemy and capturing four.|stroyed a railway bridge less The target, 30 miles southeast| Marine casualties were termed|than 25 miles from the Chinese af the North Vietnamese town|light. is Ey of Dong Hoi, also was a supply) U.S. army units elsewhere re-| U.S, Air Force: F-105 'Thunder- area for the North Vietnamese, | ported killing 25 enemy soldiers chiefs swooped in to destroy the South Vietnamese troops re-/ west of Hanoi, the North Viet Raps Raiding ise." 'Son icteames| at, ent ong U.S, bombing of North Vietnam voy of construction troops was|ing over North Vietnam were the spokesman said. lin sporadic coptacts during}pridee. a Lang Bun, in the jported killing 49 Viet Cong injnamese capital. Military Command said. /Trai Hut, some 25 miles nearer UNITED NATIONS (AP)--| not only has failed to achieve| ambushed by the Viet Cong 214/attacked again Tuesday by su- The bombs were aimed tOithree operations ranging {fom|mountains" near the Chinese jthree widely separated engage-| Other 'Thunderchiefs de The South Vietnamese head-|Hanoi on the same line Senator Frank Church says the/quarters said a 30-vehicle con- jSaigon to the northern border. |horder some 135. miles north- U.S. Senator jments. But the government /stroyed two freight cars in a U.S. Air Force bombers fly the resolve of the North Vietna- |suffered moderate casualties./an air force spokesman said no mese and is dimming the/And a government infantry pla-/ American planes were lost. chances for a negotiated settle-|toon was ambushed 18 miles) The Communist jets fired mis- ment of the war. |southwest of Saigon and took siles and cannons at a flight of In an interview after he) wound up his work Tuesday as/ said the American planes raided a Pupils Find Missile Site a KETTERING, England (Reu-| assembly approval of a treaty ters) -- High school students! panning the use of outer space here unwittingly pitted a bor-|for war. radio set) oF millions of dollars worth! Goldberg described the assem-| rowed £25 ($75) of WS. tracking equipment and) pj, as a "constructive" one. He/ pred a secret Russian eypressed regret that it had| jlaunching site, it was reported) witnessed no forward movement junco 'oday The students from Kettering) progress had been made on dis- High School have been tracking Russian satellites by listening in to their radio signals since 1959 This . year changes in orbit which showe that some of the 'spacecraft could not have been launched from known sites in the south- ern republic of Kazakhstan. Propane Fires Destroy Homes TORONTO (CP) -- fed by propane gas leaking from | a tank destroyed five homes in|space agreement was the out-) a depressed west - end district] standing step taken during the today City officials arranged emer-| pave the way for eventual East- ' | gency housing for the 10 adults} West agreement on arms con- its objectives, it has stiffened|miles northeast of Saigon and/personic MiG-21 interceptors but) and seven children left Hawteless| trol on earth. by the blaze, Cause of the fire! was not determinted but fire-| sounded by |General Assembly which ended they ee ment of U Thant as secretary-|things 24 Flames | 8906, Crisis Topples Greek Cabinet ATHENS (AP) -- Premier Stephanos Stephanopoulos re- signed today, raising the pos- sibility that politically-troubled Greece may get elections a year early. The 67-year-old premier's co- aliion government col- lapsed Tuesday night when Greece's conservative party, the National Radical Union (ERE), withdrew = age The government took office in) ituation of anarchy when my September, 1965, after the na- government took charge. Now, i & worst ego as since] ater 15 months in power and he civil. War, Ot 2987-20... teq despite various difficulties from the tae dane |the opposition, we have suc: "The ERE does nat want any |Ceeded in establishing sound athar ' hte 1h govern but the economic and monetary policies ER os said Panayiotis Canel- and in reir maf sy ahen hace lopoulos, the party's leader, ternal relations. third ERE's 99 members in pariia- pong sr gree ha agg ge ment were the coalition's larg- te ea ie eller ae bald ; ' ; government following est supporting bloc. The govern-|the monarch's ouster of Pa-|PREMIER STEPHANOPOULOS ment held a slim 15% Me "!oandreou to prevent his taking ... Coalition collapses dl pag single - house! control of the armed forces. VOTE DUE IN 1968 The next regularly scheduled elections are due in 1968, Politi- cal sources said King Constan- tine may name a transitional government headed by a non + parliamentary personality to prepare for national elections next summer. Canellopoulos said Tuesday night the coalition government had been vital in building stabil- ity following the ouster of George Papandreou's Centre Union government in July, 1965, but that he regarded the gov- ernment's mission as over, Stephanopaulos said: "The Greek nation was in a weakened Centre Union Party,/by two bomb explosions has been demanding new elec-|Nicosia, Cyprus, moved, easily sweep him back power. -- News of the ERE's with-iyear, injured six persons. UN Delegates Agree On Session Progress (CP)--|Rahman Pazrhwak reflected|way in the war in Vietnam," Most UN delegates agreed to-| general anxiety over Vietnam) Pazhwak said, 'but it is equally day that the 2ist session of the | by closing the session with aj/clear, as has been demonstrated UNITED NATIONS personal appeal to both sides toj/in the general debate and throughout the diplomatic con- declare willingness "to seek tacts made by this assembly, one with some notable achieve-|only a peaceful solution" and ments, readiness to enter into negotia-/that a majority of nations ... The United States and the) tions. cannot remain aloof when ques- Soviet Union joined forces to| 'It is obvious that the United) tions: of war and peace are at pave the way for unanimous| Nations cannot intervene in any/ stake. Tuesday had been a productive " Ambassador Arthur J.) US, 'Compromise Christmas' SALISBURY (AP) -- White larmament, outer space and hu-/Rhodesians, about to enter their |} man rights. _. second year of sanctions, are Goldberg said the reappoint-/ determined to make the best of with a "compromise general 'will stand first on the/ Christmas." list of outstanding accomplish-| ments of the session." : people want for Christmas pres- Soviet Ambassador Nikolaijents that we can't get," said Fedorenko said the assembly | the manager of a leading city had '"consiaérea i ti por Cae '|store. questions in a serious and ur-|- "Jt may not always be the gent manner." exact make or brand they want. "As far as outer space is con-/Customers are having to com- cerned," Fedorenko told a re-|promise and take. something iporter, "the atmosphere wasithat's similar. They are doing | z3 so without grumbling." Sanctions, he said, have not prevented Rhodesian business- }men from getting most imports they seek. Leading businessmen estimate jSpending as high or nearly as on Vietnam but said he believed high as Christmas, 1964, the last "normal" Christmas. In 1965, with independence just declared, Rhodesians spent heavily to build up their stocks before threatened sanctions hit them, It was the wildest Christmas spending the country had known, For many Negroes, a cheer. ful Christmas will not be pos- sible. As sanctions make their slow grind into Rhodesia's econ- omy, labor forces are pruned and Negroes are often the first jto suffer. Reliable reports say thousands are out of work. Many of them are resentful against the- whites, feeling that the whites have more money and a better chance of with. standing financial difficulties. "There's virtually nothing Many delegates felt that the! three-month session and might The only sour note was) Albania, "The| Enquiries, Choosy Computer men said gas escaping from aj United Nations is going down, | : i }3,000 - gallon propane tank at} Sern, heavy casualties, a spokesman' F-105 Thunderchiefs Monday asithe rear of one of the houses|A m bassador Halim Budo./ ifed the flames down," said Albanian Caused Chaos For OMSIP Staff |"Things are getting worse ev- »jrard) and Senator David Croll Papandreou, still head of the|drawal of support was ae vertisement laws. Continuing study of con-jabout them." Chairman Stresses Cabinet Sympathetic To Proposals - id that while) un ted tions hadn't) Mr, outside the tions ever since he was re-|building of the Greek-Cypriot insisting they would|newspaper Makhi, a strong sup- into| porter of ERE. The blasts, first ing in Cyprus in almost a White Rhodesia Prepares 37: 2s « Planned By OTTAWA (CP) -- Stronger! laws to stop unwarranted price} increases and steps to make all) shoppers more aware of price! and quality competition were) recommended Tuesday by the) Commons - Senate prices com-| mittee. | Committee Co-chairman Ron) Basford (L. -- Vancouver Bur- (L--Ont.) said they are hopeful the recommendations will be adopted by the government. After 42 public meetings, the committee now is planning to add to its investigation staff, to hold hearings across the coun- try, and to widen the scope of its inquiry in the New Year into jall phases of consumer affairs }and into great corporate em- | pires. | Its interim report, tabled in both houses of Parliament Tues- day, recommended; | Creation of a new depart- ment of consumer affairs, an- swerable to Parliament or a minister, to embrace the con- sumer sections of the health and welfare, agriculture and fisheries departments, It would supervise tighter anti- combines and misleading ad- PRICES PROBE URGES CONSUMER AID LAW Cross - Country Hearings Committee sumer affairs and the state of the Canadian economy gen- erally by a joint committee of the Senate and Commons. ~Standardization and simpli- fication of grades, nomencla- ture, and packaging for com- monly = purchased consumer items, ~Restraint in the use of give- aways, premiums, contests, prices and other non - price competition at the retail level, to let price competition play a larger role in attracting customers. MISGUIDE CONSUMER Prohibition of the use of cents-off labels -- advertising temporary price cuts below regular prices--because they distort normal price relation- ships. Full regular disclosure of profit, price and cost affairs by all private and public com- panies in retail trade, whether owned by Canadian or foreign interests, Senator Croll told reporters he thinks there is "'a lot of com- mon sense in the committee's recommendations," and added: "In my opinion, the govern: ment ,"'is sympathetic and will be interested." Since the committee's work started, the price line on food has been held and "vast em- pires of corporate holdings" have been disclosed that should have been public knowledge long ago, he said. Senator Croll spoke of the Weston empire, controlling more than one-third of Canada's food business, and said: "When a.man or a group of men sit there with an empire about them, I, feel there is at likely the Garfield Weston in- terests will be called back be- fore the committee, but he is undecided whether the «ize of food chains has a direct bene- ficial or adverse cifect on prices, NDP NOT SATISFIED New Democratic Party mem- bers of the committee issued a press release regretting the committee did not recommend adoption of the NDP proposal \for a prices review board, is in a mood to do something been discussed. with the govern-/ witnesses ment in advance, the govern: favored the prices review and all--including the Canadian Labor Congress -- "turned thumbs down on it." Price con trol could not be enforced with out wage control, and the fed. eral constitution does not give Ottawa power to control prices in peacetime, Creation of consumers affairs department is likely to have majority Commons support. The government last July asked the Economic Council of Canada to study how the interests of the consumer might be related to the department of the registrar- general, The committee unged the council to report soon on this euestica, A Conservative party policy group recommended earlier this year that a bureau of consumer protection and standards be part of a new department of science, industry and research. The NDP has long favored creation of the consumer affairs department with a prices re- view board to keep constant rein on unwarranted price in- creases, Continued On Page lbacked by law to force back 3 VALUE OF PRICE TORONTO (CP) -- The Watson was reported found boy had been missing since TORONTO (CP) -- Ont NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Boy Fougd Dead In Elevator Shaft body of 11-year-old Wesley today at the bottom of an elevator shaft in a Don Mills apartment building. The Dec. 12, Ontario May Change Laws For Auditors ario is considering amend- a U.S. delegate to the UN Gen- SURPRISE FOR SURGEON | The B-52 raid was the ninth fuel depot at Ha Gia, 14 miles eral Assembly, Church asked: [of the war to hit inside Northinorth of Hanoi. jwas set at $22,800, LIVE RIFLE GRENADE No one was injured. Damage /ery year." Marine Carried Death In Mouth DA NANG, South Vietnam (AP)--A U.S. Navy surgeon who said he did not know what he was probing for extracted a live M-79 rifle grenade from the throat of a U.S. Marine Tues. day night The 20-year-old patient is do- ing fine, the surgeon, Lt.-Cmdr, James Chandler of San Fran- cisco, said The marine also has a com- pound fracture of his right leg from a bullet wound The M ~ 78 -- round, dome- shaped, 144 inches in diameter and two inches long had crashed through the marine's right lower jawbone, travelled through the thick part of the tongue and stopped a fraction of an inch from the soft skin below the lower left jawbone Chandler said that before the five-hour operation he had ne idea what he was going after. Had the grenade exploded, it could have killed all eight per- sons in the operating room He would have sandbagged the operating table and sought expert advice if he had known, Chandler said, The doctor could see part of the grenade's shiny dome at the rear of the patient's mouth, Two attempts with forcepis failed to get it. He reached in with his fingers and "it popped -"," * f As he showed it around the operating room, Chandler said, "the eyes popped cut of the peo- ple who knew what it was.' I didn't know what it was," he said. "All the military train- ing I ever had was a couple of weeks where they say 'okay,' this is a gun.' "We've got to get it out of here," Chandler said when- he learned what he had "I tried not to look at it, but I had to, because | might have bumped something walking out, We got it out to the helicop- ter pad about 30 vards from the hospital. I put it. down aout four steps slowly, then ran 'ke hell," be) \ took Demolition experts arrived and exploded the grenade The marine private was wounded as he sat with his pa- trol near a road 11 miles south- west of Da Nang His name was withheld until his relatives could be notified, The marine's voicebox was unharmed and Chandler said he will be talking in three to six weeks, The rifle grenade arms itself in flight, normally after 30 rev- olutions, which amounts to about 14 vards. A spokesman said the grenade that hit the marine probably travelled. only 10 yards. TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario i] Assembly President Abd U1) stodical Ser vic's Insurance Plan's battery of computers and many of its 650 employees have been working overtime and on weekends recently in an attempt to handle the thousands of quer- ies and complaints about government-operated scheme. Top OMSIP officials con- firmed today that-at one stage, sitce the scheme became fully operational in July, there was a pile-up of more than 15,000 letters waiting to be answered And the phones in OMSIP's modérn 14 - storey building were jammed with 1,000 calls a day. To add to the confusion, the elaborate computer system geared to handle 600,000 trans- cent of the work it was sup- }posed to handle. Coniputers spit jout cards by the hundreds, asgk- ing for corrections or more in- | formation Now however the pandemon- lium is subsiding. The phone [eal have dropped to about 500 the) actions a month rejected 40 per! 10 handling them has been in- creased to 50. The sacks of mail that clogged corridors have been answered and the machine, with its mem- ory bank doubled to help it cope with people who won't conform, now is rejecting only a normal! 20 per cent of transactions. The! rejections are being. recycled | quickly for almost 100 per cent | efficiency. } Tests Forecast | TOKYO (AP)--Japanése busi-| jnessmen reputed to be intimate) > ive happenings : inside China) predict the Peking regime will! jundertake two or three nuclear jrocket tests next year, including one from a nuclear - powered)" |submarine in the Japan Sea,|@ tone of Japan's leading newspa-|-- i a day and the original staff eypers said today, ments to its laws to ensure that auditors of public com- panies are independent and their duties clearly defined, Attorney-General Arthur Wishart said today. Russia Launched Spaceship To Moon MOSCOW (Reuters)--Russia today launched a space- ship towards the moon, the Soviet news agency Tass re- ported. Setar A Chinese Rocket --In THE TIMES Today.. 'wo Men Charged Mie beret 13 a as HUN eT d--P. 5 County A Three Generels To Play For Springfield--P, 10 Ann Landers--14 City News--13 Classified--30 to 33 Editorial--4 Financial--29 Comics--35 Sports--10, 11 Theatre--22 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajox---S, 6 Women's--14, 18, 16, 17 Mee

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