Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Dec 1967, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 26--NO. 284 Ghe Oshawa Times Paty OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1967 " opy S5¢ Per Week Home Delivered Weather Report Wet snow or rain tonight, mostly cloudy Friday\, Low high tomotrow, tonight, 32; oe or Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash THIRTY PAGES Any Oshawa _ children wishing to phone Santa to make last minute revisions On 'their Christmas lists would find six names in the Oshawa lirectory _ listed under "Claus", And one of Goldberg Considers Resigning | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Am- jbassador Arthur J. Goldberg is | considering resigning soon from his post as top U.S. representa- tive at the United-Nations. | Goldberg has discussed his resignation with President John- json and it is understood Johnson jis agreeable to his desires. | Goldberg spent Wednesday in Washington, attending a cabinet meeting and conferring with ad- ministration officials. Afterward it was learned he | had talked with the president on {several occasions, going back {some time, about ending his ca-,;---- [reer at the UN. | Goldberg, 59, has been John- |son's ambassador to the world organization since July, 1965. He |has told friends he does not con- | sider himself a career public of- ficial and is understood to have been interested in returning to |private law practice. However, there also has. been Pe ARTHUR J. GOLDBERG ++. Confers With LBJ 38 Cong Defect DO SANTA'S QUALITIES RUN IN CLAUS FAMILY? them, Vernon Claus (cen- House, putting heads on by volunteers such as Mr. toys for next year. Watch- |speculation he might be tre), 409 Arnhem St., has dolls, wheels on wagons Claus, who work under the eae a ie = Bath isi hing ag ale ek AA ; ; ; wise ns ~ : eter jauba, , Steve y y S y| all the analitications to be and spokes in bikes. More Christmas Cheer Commit- Ethier, 2 This Guay, |vacancy develops there. Gold-|what is believed. the an official Santa's helper. than. 1,000 Oshawa chil- tee, an agency .of the 11, and Peter Cameron, 10, {berg left the high court at the For the past six years Mr. dren will receive the old Greater Oshawa Commu- who attend Simcoe Hall |president's request to take the|officers reported today. Claus has worked at the toys which are repaired, nity Chest. The committee Settlement House, UN assignment following the| The guerrillas gave up Simcoe Hall Settlement repainted and made new is already collecting broken (Oshawa Times Photo) _| stevenson. He earlier served in|namese military outpost 4 WA ernment's latest Finance Minister budget, tough with small taxpayers. ) Perth) said Mr. Sharp, in the two years he has been finance minister, has misled Canadians into thinking that their money is stable and their prospects good. But now, "they must meet their obligations with less and less money because of this gov- Dr. Cotnam Probes Report TORONTO (CP) -- Dr. H. B. €otnam, Ontario's supervising coroner, said today he will in- vestigate reports that Sudbury coroner Dr. J. A. Pidutti publi- cally criticized a citizen for re- | questing an inquest into a high- ek way accident which killed six 5 * persons. : Dr. Cotnam's announcement followed a report Wednesday that Dr. Pidutti had sensured : Thomas Tobey, a New Demo- # cratic Party organizer in Sud- bury, for writing the attorney- genéral's department asking for an inquest the coroner decided was not required. Dr. Pidutti told Mr. Tobey, now living in Welland, during the inquest Wednesday that he had thoroughly investigated the accident and had concluded no inquest was necessary. Mini-Budget Forces - Non-Confidence Votes (CP)--Opposition|ernment's incessant desire to ics, launching their attack|take away their tax dollars." Wednesday on the federal gov- said|the government on the ground) government harp is too|thdt it has created an unstable|spending plans, is expected to} kind to big corporations and too J. Waldo Monteith (PC-- the cabinet of President John F.|miles south of the U.S. marin Kennedy as labor secretary,|base at Da Nang. The area is i bringing to that job years of ex-|Communist-dominated Quan Clothing, Housing Force Consumer Index Rise aa QTTAWA (CP) + The san and on. sports equipment/been reports from time to time|toon tiator in the labor field. ; : Goidberg is known in govern-|tattles with the Communist ment circles and at the UN as a/often at a heavy price. 4 : , leader and sumer price index moved up/and motion-picture admissions./he was dissatisfied with admin-|leaders, told thas Revenue Minister Benson, to/half a point to 151 in November; In the housin, whom Mr. Sharp has left the|as. Canadians paid more for|sub-index moved to 153.4 from| problems. He moved non-confidence in|task of specifying where the| clothing, housing and recreation-|153.1 as rents increased gener-| U.S. Planes d | Vietnamese troops in the area. plans to trim its} al activity. ally and especially in. Westcrn| P A report by the Dominion Bu Canadian cities. Advances in reau of Statistics today said|building materials and wages and uncertain situation "by its}enter the budget debate tonight. and were held at a Chieu Hoi vacillation and its failure to|But Mr. Monteith, the Conserva-|mixed changes in food prices|Showed up in home-ownership manage the economic and finan-|tive financial critic, dismissed|resulted in a_ slight over-all! CS!S. Bomb Routes tors there. South Vietnam's cial affairs of the country in ajin advance any government at-|price increase for the category.| The household operation com-; Chieu H Program promises responsible manner."' tempt to say that expenditures} he index, based on 1949|POnent edged up fractionally as} ppRNSACOLA, .Fla. (AP) - | Viet Cong they can defect with- Now the government has are being cut. prices equalling 100,stood at higher prices for household tex-/yjlitary sources report U.S./ Out fear of reprisals. Elsewhere Wednesday, th U.S. marine front below the de- zone separating "proposed an increase in taxes t t tal ext: INCREASES SPENDING 150.5 in early October and at|tiles, utensils and supplies were|pjanes are now bombing Com- o meet governmental extrava-|~ ra a . iat) , 145.5 in November, 19 66 largely offset by lower quota-| mynist infiltration routes into|¥-5- pat AOR op Brg i Alga oe br ie aes oa a The year-to-year increase in| !0"S for furniture and floor cov-/-phailand from Laos, but the) militarized contributing to the inflationary|¢SUmate for amounted to : : s " erings. " 5 i reentage terms was 3.8 per f y in PN Conseraies tabs i or coat eae Wie Feee fn cast te last Noveuiie. In The food sub-index stood at|gorically denies it. so|iest The Conservative motion, nthe minister estimated that the|October the year-to-year differ-|148 in November, up from 147.8 An embassy spOkeeren aD Ta st th arine outpost at the form of an amendment to 969 is dit 'ould be $10..|ence had been 3.6 per cent. lin October. Fresh milk prices|directly denied a report from | against the marine DP "| the budget resolution, will De sn ono 00, ROES UE OS Fei A sub-index of clothing prices|WeTe Unchanged and ice cream.|the military sources at nearby|Con Thien, followed by har put to a vote Monday night. att aa hte ers | gh ob pec taped ay Sa cHE. powdered milk and processed|folin Air Force Base that some|stound fighting just to the | There are no cuts ye 'i nthe ts ila inl eight-| cheese were slightly cheaper. American planes have been shot| northeast. j FAVORS HIGH INCOMES jhave been led to believe," Mr.|tenths of a point, mainly as a} Bread -prices went down, al-(down. over Thailand, and said) Initial reports said three flamed up again with the hea bombardment: in weeks death of Ambassador Adlai E.|)Wednesday at a South Viet- DR. SCHICK DIES Dr, Bela Schick, who de- veloped the diphtheria test that led to the virtual con- |, quest of the disease, died "Wednesday in New York's Mount Sinai -- He ears old. =e (AP Wirephoto) YAY Lt U.S. MAY TAKE Attempts To Be Launched For Viet Negotiations ~~ UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- The United States is expected to call for a meeting of the UN Se- curity Council soon to launch new attempts toward a negotiat- ed settlement of the Vietnam war, informed _ sources said today The sources predicted U.S Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg would relay a request from the White House for a meeting of the 15-nation council some tithe this month, Goldberg spent Wednesday in Washington: for a cabinet meet ing, and it was generally be- lieved that he discussed the Sen-} ate resolution adopted last week asking President Johnson to put the war before the United Na tions There that was speculation further U.S. action may havejence on Vietnam, remained op- differences|posed to bringing the war be- which have arisen with Saigon! fore the United Nations. over participation of the Viet| East European diplomats pri- Cong in any council debate on|vately expressed belief that a been delayed by Vietnam, SAIGON (AP) -- Exhausted) The split came into the open|would bear fruit only if the re-|by a year of almost continuous|after it was learned that the|United States took some steps Supreme /fighting, 38 members of a Viet)Viet Cong's National Liberation|which the other side could inter- Cong platoon have defected in|Front had expressed a desire in|pret as a show of sincerity. largest}October to send representatives|They felt a cessation of the mass surrender of the war, U.S.|to the United Nations. Anti-War Demonstrators 0 e in g perience as a lawyer and nego-|Tin province, where southern al- Broken Up lied forces have fought pitched S, NEW YORK (CP) -- Chanting for another round of protesis dove on issues. arising out of the} The officers said the first of anti-war demonstrators staged| : ere have/the defectors, including the pla-|@ third round of '"'stop the|lower Manhattan as the staging squad draft' protests today, spilling) area. f they had|through the streets from. Man- category, thelistration handling of war policy/wanted to surrender for some|attan's southern tip to' Times|demonstrators left the park in time but were afraid of North|/Square and the United Nations./lower Manhattan and sent only ae "e 1 . c, 3 outnum-}a heey force Poy nes downtown iis The > i iem at 'virtually every/armed forces luction .centre, Sit iby: to priivinoial' caval: turn, and the roving band which| principal target of the two pre- *|numbered about 700 at the start/ vious protests. jer Open Arms centre for defec-| had dwindled to about 30 -- 1S- time the demonstrators persed some three hours later. More than 200 of them had|/had failed, the roving bands ran been arrested, on charges rang- e ing from inciting to riot to dis-|police pounded: after them on and parading] horse and on foot. Circling heli- without a permit. Among them ; 4 ; was Blonde Linda Morse, a co- U.S. embassy in Thailand cate-/North and South Vietnam oiiiman of the Mobilization Y-\Committee to End the War in orderly conduct Vietnam. Demonstration leaders, admit- ting frustration and charging police with harassment, called | The NDP submitted a sub-|Monteith said. "Actually, there|result of increases in men's ss Sead } ew nothing of|North Vietnamese soldiers sand) !™mmmmnmmnvonnmmmsennmmnn none a | jamendment 'Wednesday that ac-|is an increase of 4.5 pet cent) wear including men's suits Roc rel la Aiscipiranby dl gi a anti-niteratt|seven meviies were killed and |cused the government of mak-|over the 1968 figure." overcoats. Lesser increases) ("45 We) Ate rial : 160 i/cuns or missiles in the country.|77 marines were wounded NEWS H ( SHLI¢ sSHTS ling the weight of its tax in-| Mr. Batten, occupying the) were recorded for women's| lar a an On eras ve br sy temaleting "the. veports |" creases fall "on the ordinary Speaker's chair because of the| wear, paige wear, footwear|# ss a ye In ctober. oe Pig boii 7 re : iti " i i i ; Speak aj : iec is. was less expensive to buy ' : i. 4 vat citizen," of favoring those in sey dea of Speaker Lucien La gee ee goods a Herat ae, nsive to bus| armed forces of any kind are| Coast Guard Fire Forces 20 People From Homes top income brackets, and of fail-|/moureux, rejected a Liberal! The recreation and reading Erne ; carrying out bombing missions] a ling to raise extra revenue by|claim that the Conservative|sub-index moved up _ by the Sem eey tne ee bu aap Thai soil, and added: 'No| TORONTO (CP) -- More than 20 persons fied their PODER UE: A eta age. A no Convene OH Or wap, OAL eam: emoumes die. +10". price ee Ge woes ais planes have been lost to! Rescues ll homes Wednesday night when fire spread through four joil, mining and insurance com- of order. 8 y: eh aes a : : . i eee |pani H. A. Ols ---Medicine} I , : i patde iy : "TAS , Ore. (AP) -- An oi St. ses. | d ants 5 hurt, | panies. on (L--Medicine| Meats, including beef and ho tile fire from within Tha ASTORIA. Ore. (AP An oil| @ast-end rooming houses. None of the occupants was hurt | Deputy Speaker Herman M/|Hat), a recent addition to the) PEARL HARBOR pork,. were somewhat lower) Oahs qillitary sources were tanker grounded in the stormy| but several were reported sick from smoke, Two dogs |Batten said he will rule tod4y|government from the Social than we risa Dut eke Y | equally fa : mouth of the Columbia River! were rescued and two firemen injured. on the admissibility of the Sub-|Credit party, argued that the prices adyanced from their Oc- : : eee jearly today but worked. herself amendment, put by David| substance of Mr. Monteith's mo-| REMEMBRANCE tober low. These same sources say: | free and headed into port M ss N b 0: P bl a Lewis (NDP--York South) Iftion had already been debated! -- pp apt, HARBOR (AP) -- Cheaper train fares, which al-| io om _ u Bs st a have ; Before she aid, const guard arijuana, Number Vne ropiem accepted, it will come to a vote| when the new Opposition leader, ria pyres y ways occur in November, offset | sought to counter the raids by/helicopters ha plucked 11 sai-| a i Z is |tonight. Robert Stanfield, presented a| Zhe tolling of the bell At la slight rise in the cosW\@f auto-|positioning anti-aircraft guns| lors from the. wave-swept decks. | STRATFORD (CP) -- Marios * oor oo | Mr. Sharp's budget, presented/non-confidence motion against] '"e Playing of Taps--these 7 hile operations and left the|and surface-to-air missiles in} The 572-foot David E. Day,| rug problem facing the world today ss re y last Thursday, calls for a five-|the government last month. | were among the simple eae transportation sub-index un-|the extreme northeastern cor-| carrying 150,000 barrels of gaso-| to control it is strict law enforcement, r. i. . Co nam, \per-cent surcharge on personal) The Liberal objection was SHOES today fot the 20th changed. Health and personal/ner of Thailand. line, diesel oil and fuel oil, went} Ontario's chief coroner, told police officers at a crime lincome tax, up to a limit of based on a rule: that the same sacs a 4 Japaness care was costlier due to charges} --Some American planes have/aground about 12:30 a.m., 1,000 conference Wednesday. $600, and a 10-per-cent boost inj}amendment cannot be moved es 7 ins eat arbor," 'for such apse services - bees et cag sad Line yards off Ce Be piepesintnen : | d taxes on spirits, beer and tobac- twice at the same session of the pe ere dio women's. hairdressing and\although there has been no Offi- Jight on the Washington side o co. Commons. men's haircuts jcial statement on the losses. the river channel. Ransom Demand Trip e | Kio Ta Soe ~~~ | Seamen risked being washed PARIS (Reuters) -- Kidnappers holding seven-year-old overboard by 20-foot waves as 1 Har' tae aj nad nd. for | . Emmanuel Milliart have tripled their ransoran demand | IN 1840 GREETINGS * SYLVANIA UNNOTICED |they went on deck to be taken his release, his ll-vear-old brother said today. Patrice off by two helicopters. : Malliart told reporters on his way to schoo! that his, par- e e ae ak ie ee ents were in touch with one of the eidverbers =and wre | fl pws 8 apis ay rans y was 60,000 s ($12,960) instea Century- teamshl SLVICSY LTAGS ir sorsten anchor ara wth) 4 iy ince Gut) demanied when te boy was Kid her engines still working, man- 'd Srannne en aged to swing her bow into the "4Pped Monday. HALIFAX (CP) -- When the The speed of the jet airliner "There have been incygasing The departure of Cunard will seas. . a z Royal Mail Ship Britannia ar- was blamed by Cunard for its costs all along the line--escalat+ leave _ wapntiss PL guitead Just Frabapal 3:30 a 7 . thive : rived here in July, 1840, almost decision several months ago to ing costs for fuel, ships'.stores, Steamships and the ussian hours after the grounding, Cap everyone in town was at the end its passenger service be- dock charges. There haye been liner Alexandr Pushkin in "egu- |tain S. E. Valentine radioed that In THE TIMES Today hoe pier to greet her. tween England and Canada, many crippling strikes = ap cory Beh a pee W ro pot and cancelled an oe aan. ids SS "i . «ad? . int hy a itis P e n ports. der . g When the Royal Mail Ship Syl- started by Samuel Cunard's Bri the re's been the refusal of the ritish an anadia' : 0 Safety Patrol---=P. 15 i i 1 sda tannia in 1840. British government to subsidize None of these ships is a regular : Sih caboty wee" i fi the lime." caller here. . | Mikita "Four'----P. 12 4 In the 127 years between the "he ae beyeral oticers OF pay SVivas The Sylvania was one of four ew rla Industrial Park--P. 5 i noland? The Sylvania represented the nia said it "hurt" to see liners Cunarders built in the late 1950s | first and last England-Canada end of an era. She was the last under the United States, Italian an ' | 'Ann tended SLté crossings of Cunard Steam-ship Cunarder on the once-booming and Greek flags being heavily specifically for the England: n anuary | eu cad mae Co. liners, every Cunarder from run from Southampton, Eng. to subsidized by their governments Canada run, calling here in win- ee fox Na i. the tiny 205-ton side-wheeler Canada, while Cunard was expected to ter months and sailing up the TORONTO (CP) -- Dennis NS i eh eta < Britannia to the 83,000-ton Some of her sisters will be of- go it alone Ki Tiawrence to Montreal inthe Robertson, 21, charged with Classified --24, 25, 26 Queen Elizabeth has called at fered for sale in the next few "This is nobody's fault," said ea 4 non-capital murder, will likely Comnics 08 this year-round port. months and she herself faces an Captain De Legh. "But econom- suntmer, face another trial in January} Editorial ---4 The orange-red and black uncertain future. Due to go on ics caught up with the situation. The Carinthia was the last after his trial Wednesday ended' _ = Finoncinal 'Sw? stacks of the Cunard ships were cruise until the end of May, she "Once the jets got into opera- scheduled Cunarder to sail for in a hung jury. f Obiituttes 24 almost commonplace along the likely will go on the auction tion, the steamship was on the Montreal, but she was diverted Robertson, was charged with = cee seawall at the southend of the block in June. way out." here because of a dock strike on the June, 25 stabbing of Gabriel! ports --12, 13, } harbor. "It's very sad--but it's eco- i the St. Lawrence. She is due in \Brunet, 35, whose nudy body} Television --28 The Sylvania's stack was nomics,"' said Captain H. L. De PHASING OUT Pegg later this week on | was ag 98 A his ee with | Theatres --23 = sticking unobtrusively into the Legh, skipper of the Sylvania He said the Queen Elizabeth her last crossing more than 50 wounds ic ' a Meattay a2 clear blue sky above the shed A Cunard man since 1938, Il, the new Cunarder that will' The Sylvania had only 354 The 1l-man jury deliberated e pepe were, I'll wait Wintic Rlews: 28 i on Pier 21. Wednesday as the Captain De Legh said in an in- replace the original Queens of passengers when she cleared jnine hours, returning - to the | 'or the mo Ween fe IT Ae : 22,018-ton liner made a_ nine- terview that popularity of the the Southampton-New York run, here for New York Wednesday court room three times for fur- : 4 : ' hour stop on her way to New jet is.not the only factor in the "is very likely the last Juxury night. She can accommodate |ther instructions on points of ee ee al York for the last time, decline of the ocean liner. liner the world will build." 900. law. PM a shi biol ed ver euei mms @ A state department: spokes- man referred reporters to Gold- berg's statement to the Senate foreign relations committee on Nov 2. Goldberg said the United States would vote in favor of the Viet Cong partici- pating in a council meeting on the war. Ambassador Nguyen Huu-Chi, South Vietnam's observer at the United Nations, called on Secre- tary-General U Thant when he heard of the Viet Cong approach and asserted that his govern- ment would ohject to a '"propa- ganda" visit here by ihe Viet Cong. | The Soviet Union, which in 1966 opposed a U.S. resolution |before "the Security Council jseeking a new Geneva confer- adi" er vasa srersasre.e council session on Vietnam bombing would be sufficient. By N.Y. Police Friday, with Battery Park in More than 700 of the young ] Employing new tactics plotted Wednesday night after two days*~ of direct assaults on the centre [ through rain-wet stregé#® while copters followed their ments, More than 100 persons had been arrested by 8 a,m., includ- jing blonde Linda Morse, a co- | chairman of the Mobilization Ne dtea tl ag to End the War in Vietnam, move- = a

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