Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Nov 1967, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowmane ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL, 26--NO. 271 10€" Single € BSc Per Week 'leanne a Galivered x She Oshawa Gimes we a Em ty sme i Se ae a OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1967 ee, Weather Report Rain will change to snow to- night; Cloudy and colder with snowflurries Thursday. Low a 30; high tomorrow, 5, Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department wa and for payment of Postage in Cash FORTY-TWO PAGES GEORGE McDONALD FOUND UNCONS CIOUS IN GONDOLA CAR ON LEFT Constables Ray Abbott, left, George Scott At Scene Oshawa Times Photo Turkey Says Troops _|OneHundred Must Be Withdrawn ATHENS (Reuters) -- Turkey demanded withdrawal of Greek troops from Cyprus and re- moval of Cypriot commander- in-chief Gen. George Grivas be- fore considering a Greek propos- al made . talks on liable sources said here today. But Greek officials denied knowing anything about a Nico- sia report today that Grivas of- fered his resignation to the Greek government as com- mander of Greek and Greek- Cypriot forces on the island. The report, in the right-wing Cypriot newspaper Patris, said it was not known if the Greek government accepted the resig- nation. Grivas was recalled to Athens went at "here. Observers here believed the Greek government recalled him in an effort to improve relations with Turkey. The two countries came perilously close to war following clashes between Greek- and Turkish-Cypriots on Cyprus last week. WANTS REPLY Greek - Cypriot sure" on the Turkish-Cypriot again flew over Cyprus severa government 1 ers. times this morning, the Cypriot Arrested CALCUTTA (Reuters) -- Po- lice today arrested more than in recent fighting on the island,|1v0 persons and used tear gas to disarming of members of break up a protest demonstra- organizations, |tion against the dismissal Tues- and an end to alleged '"'pres-iday of the Communist-dominat- ed West Bengal government. Among those arrested eaten old ate Public transportation was halt ed in Calcutta. sighted over the island's north- ern and eastern coasts and over Cyprus. A report of a Turkish military reconnaissance flight over Cy- The aircraft were reported|P? Police arrested 15 persons at the capital of Nicosia in central/nearby Serampur after'a crowd set fire to several compart- ments of an express train. They made 95 arrests:of what they Meetings and i were planned in the city and its industrial suburbs. | OSHAWA BOY GENEVA (CP) -- called today for a bold new ini- tiative towards free trade even as the world is preparing to di- gest big changes in commercial patterns agreed just six months ago. Trade Minister Robert Win- ters urged the 74-country Gen- eral Agreement on Tariffs and Trade to push ahead to free trade in commodities such as aluminum, combat non-tariff impediments and set up pro- grams to promote sales of prod- ucts from poor countries. He proposed a positive pro- gram to reduce obstacles to trade in agricultural products such as farm subsidies and sup- port prices. Winters addressed the open- ing session of a three-day GATT ministerial meeting designed to maintain the momentum gener- ated by the Kennedy Round of GATT talks that concluded last May. The Kennedy Round negotia tions, a four-year grind, pro-| duced agreement to reduce tar-| average of 35 per cent in stages Free World Trade Sought By Canada Canada Police Hunt Teen-Ager : boy|Court St. is in critical condition in To-jand barely breathing. | Boy Found In Rail Car, | A four-year-old Oshawa He was unconscious ronto General Hospital today! The boy was rushed to Osh- tectionist reaction could under-/after being beaten by a youth!awa General Hospital and then HON. ROBERT WINTERS »+. takes initiative a meeting tural products generally were\as iffs on industrial products by an| shelved. Winters, one of only 18 trade up to Jan, 1, 1972. Higher world| ministers to attend the windup|be established for a future work wheat prices and a food-aid pro-|jsessions of gram also were agreed, but ef-|opened among officials Nov. 9,\for future action towards freer forts to free trade in agricul-|warned GATT parties that pro-'trade,"' Winters said. that|program in GATT, an agenda mine agreements drafted in a\City police believe to be in his|transferred to Sick Children's final rush last May mid teens Hospital, Toronto. He expressed concern about) &. W. McDonald, 215 Celina! Inspector William Jordan congressional pressures in the St., told The Times today hos-|said he did not know if the United States for greater pro-|pital officials say his son|boy had been beaten with fists tection against imports and wel-| George has about a 10 per centjor if a weapon was used comed assurances: by President|chance of surviving The teen-ager last seen with Johnson that 'everything possi-| He suffered severe head in-|George McDonald is described ble will be done to ensure that|juries and brain damage. jby George's pals as age 14 to such pressures do not succeed| Police questioned two youths|16, about five feet in height in the United States." \this morning but both were re-|with fair-brown hair. He was Privately, some GATT nego-| leased. jwearing a dark colored loose tiators expressed concern about! George was playing in front/fitting coat or jacket when last signs that enthusiasm for freer|°f his house with a group of|seen yesterday afternoon. In- trade is dwindling in other coun-/Other youngsters yesterday|spector Jordan requested any- tries. Britain is preoccupied] 2fternoon, 'His mother noticed|one with information about the with {ts campaign to join the|the boys disappeared for about|beating or knowing of the teen- European Common Market. The|#® hour but when they return-|age boy, to contact police de- Common Market countries are|¢d at 3 p.m., George wasn't/tectives. more interested in adjusting to|With them. : ; | None of the six people who internal trade changes than in| One of George's pals said he|were in the three homes within reducing their common external|"@4 left him near the railway|50 yards of the railway car \tracks at Wilkinson Street with|where the boy was found heard tariffs. | Winters indirectly challenged|2" older boy. Mr. McDonaldjany unusual noises yesterday the clew. that word traders and the boy spent about anjafternoon. hour looking for George and| Mrs. R. C. Branton, 234 Court when they found no trace of|St., said "My dog insisted on him, called police. barking for half an hour about All officers were alerted to|2:30 p.m, I went out a couple ok out for the missing childjof times and tried to get him and at 5:45 p.m. Constable|to stop but I heard nothing." Douglas Aird found him lying|The others, at 230 and 228 face down in a gondola car on\Court St. noticed and heard a CNR spurline behind 230inothing. should mark time while they adapt to Kennedy-Round changes--what U.S. Trade Am- bassador William Roth proposed lo "a period of pause and \study."' "Broad directives should now To Shore Up Revenue OTAWA (CP) -- One of Fi-;man, woman and child in thejances, now running to $32,- nance Minister Sharp's objec-|country at that time. tives in raising taxes at the end British PM Survives LONDON (AP)--Prime Minis-;would only become clear aft = bp Wilson faced a House| trading settled down. id of Commons censure vote to-} The uncertainty of the finan- night assured of his hold on the/cial future og eadersceusll British government, but anxiety|/some commentators said, by the still dogged the devalued pound.|decision to postpone until a Backed by unified Labor|week from today talks that 520,000,000 a year. But in the Same comparison, personal in- of this month is to shore up goy-/SURPASSES ALL OTHERS come taxes have risen 61.5 per|P@tty forces, Wilson was a cer-|were to have opened in Paris on jealled "anti-social elements" in : ; 4 by ss? This year, Mr. Sharp esti-lcent to $2,815,000,000 this fiscal|'#in winner against the Conser-|the British request for a $1,- ; prus was issued Tuesday. Turkey wil Grosce it sivuie the industrial district ofjernment revenues and make it de in tland and ¢uddly r travelling. 'ings with \it sally special! ket oxed, ONE 725.7373 re Wilson, PM Confer reply to a five-point demand submitted by the Turkish gov- ernment before Ankara could consider bilateral talks on Cy- prus, sources said today. Turkish Ambassador Turan Tuluy made this clear when On Cyprus LONDON (CP) -- The threat of new fighting in Cyprus was reported to be a major item in talks today between Prime Min- isters Pearson and Wilson. They met for an hour and sources said Cyprus, where re- newed fighting broke out last week between Turkish and Greek elements was discussed. Pearson is anxious to work to- wards a permanent political so- lution for the island, where Ca- nadian troops have formed part of the United Nations force since 1964 to keep an uneasy peace, He feels that some breakout Greek Foreign Minister Papayo- tis Pipinelis made his peace- talks offer Tuesday, the sources said. The demands were not made public, but were understood to include, in addition to removal from Cyprus of Grivas and CROWS TIPSY IN AUSTRALIA PERTH (Reuters) -- Crows are reported getting drunk by drinking cider ooz- ing from apple dumps in Donnybrook, 132 miles from this western Australian city. One councillor said he saw a crow so drunk it had to rest in the fork of a tree--it could not stand. Greek troops, compensation for the killing of Turkish-Cypriots Hooghly. In New Delhi, opposition members of Parliament today introduced a motion of non-con- fidence in the government of Prime Minister Gandhi follow- ing the action in West Bengal and imposition of presidential rule in Northern Haryana state. | The dismissal followed refusal by the United Front govern- ment, led by Ajoy Mukherjee, to call a meeting of the State As- sembly before Dec. 18 to dem- onstrate whether it had a ma- jority. DENVER, Colo. (AP) -- With must be made from the military) 41 smiles, a few baby tears situation which has tied up more than 800 Canadian service- men. One possible step along this line could require an increased commitment by the UN at the Start. This would provide for a stronger UN force with wider est 25 months, powers and a reduction in the ae . number of Turkish and Greek|*>out, 15% months old--faced troops on the island. _ But this would only be a pre- liminary step towards a com- plete political solution for Cy- prus that would end the neces- sity for a UN presence there. Canadians Injured UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- and an occasional lusty squall, four known survivors of liver transplant operations by a team of surgeons were brought for- ward Tuesday to show off their new lease on life. went the transplants. at the Uni- versity of Colorado Medical Centre here. All have survived longer than any previous recipient of a transplanted liver. Before these cases were undertaken, the longest survival on record for any type of liver transplant was 34 days. One little girl, Julie Rodriguez of Pueblo, Colo., has lived 121 days since her' July 23 surgery. In three cases, function of the Secretary-General U Thant re- implanted liver is reported as ported Tuesday that three mem- ood to satisfactory. bers of the United Nations i Z ction is poor and her peacekeeping force on Cyprus a rr alg were attacked and beaten by rou-| EARLY PROGNOSIS Turkish-Cypriots while o tine patrol duty Monday m- ing, A UN spokesman said Tues- day night the three soldiers were Canadians but could not give their identifications. The three were beaten "with Doctors say the long-range prognosis is unknown. Some kid- ney patients have good function five years after transplant. _ Julie, whom the doctors say 1s about ready to be discharged from the hospital, seemed rifle butts, disarmed and escort-|doomed by a massive liver can- ed into Turkish-Cypriot posi-|cer, discovered when she was 13 tions," Thant said in a written report to the Security Council. months old. The others were victims of extrahepatic biliary atresia, the congenital absence 'In Ottawa, an external affairsjof bile ducts from the liver to Spokesman said the names of|the small intestine. the three men were not known. He said he understood the men had not been seriously injured and that the situation now is "for control, In the four living children, the donor livers were obtained from children about the same age, who died at the medical centre of other ailments. The four little girls--the old- the youngest § certain death until they under- 22-months-old In_ the = the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Hansen of Fort Worth, Texas, under- went. a liver transplant operation in Denver, Aug- PAULA KAY HANSEN, Four Little Girls Saved By Liver Transplants si aes ust 1, 1967. Paula along with three other little girls, were the subject of a press conference yesterday on the progress of the liver trans- Plant operations. so much in the months ahead, He will tell the House of Com- mons Noy. 30 what tax or taxes he will raise, and by how much. He is taking a larger amount of personal incomes, corpora- tion profits, and other kinds of income this year than the gov- ernment has since the Liberals came to power in 1962, and the total has grown faster than the country's total output. In the fiscal year that. began on April 1, 1962--just 22 days before the transfer of power from the Progressive Conserva- tive government of former prime minister John Diefenba- ker--total government revenues were $5,878,700,000. That amounted to $317.77 for every unnecessary for him to borrow year-end mini-budget tax changes, an increase of 54.7 per cent. The population has grown 9.8 per cent in the meantime, and federal government tax and non-tax revenues have grown to $445.78 per capita--an increase jof 40.3 per cent. | Mr. Sharp wants to tackle in- |ftation from a new angle, with- out creating slack and unem- ployment in the economy. Since 1962, Canada's gross na- tional product has risen 51.6 per cent to an estimated $61,- 516,000,000 this year from $40,- 575,000,000. Included in this is a 56.2-per- cent increase in wages, salaries, supplementary labor income, and military pay and allow- Sparks Mid- UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) -- The UN Security Council today finally appeared on the verge of finding a way to take action toward bringing peace to the Middle East, with approval predicted for a British compro- mise resolution that asks concessions from both Israel and the Arabs. Arab delegations were report- ed to have accepted the plan as} Family Wiped Out CALGARY (CP) -- A_ 30- year-old man, his wife and their three children were found dead in the bedrooms of their north- west Calgary home Tuesday, the victims of what police de- scribed as murder-suicide. Neighbors said the victims were Mr. and Mrs. Michael Locke, their sons Edwin, 6, and Kerry, 5, and their 18-month-old daughter Karen. Police said the bodies were discovered by a relative Tues- day night. Police said the vic- tims were clad in nightclothes and all were in bed. A .22-Cali- bre automatic rifle was found near Mr. Locke. A police spokesman said the victims were all shot through the head and the slayings took place overnight Monday. Mr. Locke worked as a labor- er for the city of Calgary. British Peace Proposal East Hopes |the best they could get under) present circumstances, and Is- rael also was understood to be ready to co-operate in imple- menting it, though without en- thusiasm. The proposal would call for withdrawal of Israeli from territory occupied in June. | In return, the Arab countries all claims or states of bellig- erency against Israel. All countries would acknowl- 'edge 'the sovereignty, territo- rial integrity and political inde- pendence of every state in the area and their right to live in peace within secure and recog- jnized boundaries free from \threat or acts of force." | The British resolution calls for a special UN representative to go to the Middle East to make contact with all parties. 4 PLANS CONSIDERED | British delegate Lord Caradon} offered the resolution Thursday. It was one of four plans present- ed to the council. An American resolution, op- posed by the Arabs, was expect- ed to be withdrawn. British) sources were reported hopeful) that a motion introduced by| India, Mali and Nigeria, and) flatly rejected by Israel, also would be withdrawn. Russia introduced the fourth proposal Monday, and Israel also opposed it. If the British resolution was approved as ex- pected there would be no point lin putting the Russian motion to la vote, diplomatic sources said. | mates his total revenues to run|vyear, |to $9,094,000,000 before the Also since 1962, corporation profits before taxes have risen 28.6 per cent to $4,912,000,000. This year's estimate is down from $5,187,000,000 last year and $5,199,000,000 a year earlier be- cause of the narrowing of profit vative drive to topple his gov-|400,000,080 loan from the Inter- ernment because it cut the/national Monetary Fund. value . Britain's currency 14.3 FORESEE EMBARRASSMENT per cent. : Ci But despite the new pound's| postponement indicated' French quick advance Tuesday to thelintentions to embarrass Britain official ceiling of $2.42 U.S. °n/by submitting their post-devak the world money market, finan-|yation plans to closest scrutiny. troops | son. | would in effect have to renounce Wolff, chairman of the cham- | Quaker Yacht | -- . tani % rer margins. CORP'N PROFITS UP But contrasted with the 28 | "ree | commentators were Cau-| 'These plans were strongly A lan i jpercent gain in corporation) 'Financial analysts explained| Wilson's Wala? belieoattel caer jprofits in five years, federalithe strong support of the poundiers. government revenues from cor|in the money market as the re-| Cromer insisted that the sole poration profits taxes have risen) it of speculators buying cut-\blame for devaluation lies on 32.8 per cent, to $1,570,000,000. _|rate pounds to cover obligations|Wilson and his government.. He contracted at the previous high-| was instrumental in bailing er rate and yielding them im-|Britai it of a financial crisis Letter Asks {mense profits. They said that cea altar the tehoe eovere: Gat |the long-range exchange level . For Restraint | took office in 1964. MONTREAL (CP) -- The Ca-| nadian Chamber of Commerce! has asked the federal govern- ment to "exercise extreme re- straint" in its spending program and to put off introduction of medical care indefinitely. "The consequence of the in- troduction of a universal com- pulsory medical care program in Canada would, we believe, only serve to add.flames to the fire of the current inflationary situation," the chamber said in a letter to Prime Minister Pear-} a | NEWS HIGHLIGHTS De Gaulle 77-Years-Old Today PARIS (Reuters) -- President de Gualle is 77 years old today and a public opinion pool reports a slight increase in his popularity among Frenchmen. A poll by the French Institute of Public Opinion shows the president has the support of 54 per cent of the population, compared with 52 per cent in October, Special Reading Instruction Costly TORONTO (€P)----- As many as 10 per 'cent of -Tor- onto's 108.000 public-school pupils might need special reading instruction at a cost of $1,000 a student a year, The letter, signed by A. Olaf ber's executive council, Was) school trustees were told Tuesday night. William Ross, sent last week and made public) chairman of the board of education, which received a Tuesday. report on the problem, said at the board meeting that While the chamber opposed a8) 'somewhere along the line someone. has not been aware universal, compulsory medical) 9; the problem." care program, it did support the| idea of financial support for those who needed help in obtain- ing medical care. .. In THE TIMES Today .. County Court--P, 19 County Couneil--P. 5 Generals Win--P. 16 (ut um Sailors Move DA NANG (AP) -- South Viet-| 1 EAM PPT RPE namese sailors forced their way} aboard the Quaker yacht Phoe-| Ann Landers--20 nix today, hauled up the anchor}: Ajax News--5 and towed the craft into the|- City News--19 South China Sea, There was no Classified --28, 29, 30 violence. Comics--33 E The yacht's crew of eight pa-|_ : Editoriol---4 : tifists, including six Americans, |* G mee aE z was expected to sail to Saigon i : , 3 with their cargo of $6,250 worth} FShin Obituaries--30 A of medicine. | Well Sports--16, 17 The Phoenix tried to deliver o>, Theatres-- 32 the medicines, bought by Quak- wicks Weather--2 er pacifists, to the South Viet- aoe ay si after North Vietnam "How much down there, his a. >i 2223 jsaid American bombing made it| Mitchell? Nemen's--20, 21, 22, lunsafe for the yacht to enter! oe with them, (swan -

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