Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Dec 1965, p. 1

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Home Newspaper -- se = NETL lbties = Oi Gshaws,-- hits; willis manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in One. . tario and Durham Counties, Rows. Oc Single * BOe Per' Week Home VOL. 94 -- NO. 288 livered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1965 ge = ye" Authorized as Second Class Mall Ottawa and for Office payment of Postage i Weather Report Variably cloudy and mild to. __day. Saturday overcast, coole "se tonight, 20. Hick Saturday, 35. ' <8 * --_-- THIRTY-FOUR PAGES CANADA'S ECONOMIC PICTURE MUST BE BRIGHT vincial treasurers are meet- ing at Ottawa today to study Acting Finance Minister Sharp (left) and the 10 pro- the country's economic pic- ture. With Mr. Sharp 'Chief' Enters Roblin of Manitoba and James Allan of Ontario. --CP Wirephoto at start of today's session are: (left to right) Premier Lesage of Quebec, Premier LBJ Releases Doves Before More Hawks WASHINGTON (CP - AP) --,Thursday from his Texas ranch\a Washington press conference} President Johnson says he will|to the AFL-CIO convention in exhaust every peace effort '"'be-| San Francisco. fore other hard steps are taken"| Both Russia and North Viet in the Viet Nam conflict }Nam, however, again blamed A few hours after Britain/|the United States for expanding sought Russia's support for an|the war. (U.S, planes Thursday international appeal to N ort h| subjected North Viet Nam to the Viet Nam for peace talks|heaviest bombing attacks since as soon as possible, Johnson de-|the raids started 10 months fended the United States role in|ago:) Viet Nam in a telephone speech! s Marines Use V-C Tactic Hit 'Em Behind The Lines State Secretary Rusk said at) that China has been giving sub- stantial assistance to North Viet | Nam and if there is to be a U.S.- |Chinese "confrontation" it is a problem which the Chinese themselves must face. Rusk added: "We are going to meet our |commitments" in Viet Nam. | DOESN'T SPECIFY President Johnson did not specily what the "other hard | steps" will be when he said: "Only this week we renewed} our efforts for peace in detail. | Our efforts to communicate our | desire to talk about peace were} met with silence from some,}| shrill propaganda from others. Smith Must Abandon Grab Or No Talks, Says Wilson _ LONDON (CP) --Prime Min-|--t hrough the governor, Sir ister Wilson said today that! Humphrey Gibbs, who is not rec- Rhodesia must abandon its #0} onishd by the Rhod i jzure of independence before} gniz y eeres there could be any negotiations leader. with Britain. Wilson set out for the first He told Parliament that until|time in detail his terms for a then any approaches by Rhode-' settlement of the Rhodesia inde- sian Premier Ian Smith must be made .as a private person--and inot as head of an illegal regime --_ '4-Year Old Locked Out pendence crisis. They are: 1, Britain could not negotiate with any illegal. regime, but is ready to consider any. pro- posals Smith might make as = CS UNION CHIEFS WARN OF STRIKE DIEFENBAKER: 'RESIGN IF...' Sauve Matter By STEWART MacLEOD OTTAWA (CP) -- Conserva- tive Leader Diefenbaker said Thursday that if election irreg- ularities are proven in Iles-de- la-Madeleine, Forestry Minister Sauve should resign from the cabinet. Meanwhile, said Mr. Diefen- baker "'two or three other rid- ings are receiving attention." He said one of the ridings is Shefford, in Quebec, where a Liberal candidate won when the service vote came ip. He did not identify the others. Mr. Diefenbaker told a press conference--on the eve of his departure for a 10-day cruise in Caribbean waters -- that he would expect Mr. Sauve to make an examination of all the statements made about alleged irregularities in the Nov. 8 gen- eral election. And if the state- ments were substantiated, Mr. Sauve, 'in the interests of good government, should resign." Judge Joseph Duguay of Grindstone, Que., has said that Mr. Sauve telephoned him on Pensions Non-Integration Has CS Unions Incensed re, (CP) -- Govern-| "They have no choice," he ment insistence on integrating | saj ipali "« the Canada Pension Plan with = a _ qursenerallner municipal schemes could resulf) government's decision that in a-one- or two-day strike of | 'here shall be integration." civil servants across the proy-| Mr. Spooner's statement was HON. MAURICE SAUVE Zeroed In Upon | The 70-year-old leader said a private person through the|ejection day to protest the re-|his party gvill continue to press governor about the mechinics | for a return to constitutional | government. lease of two men from jail to vote. They had earlier been charged with threatening a Lib-| the government on the question jof 'integrity in government" ince, union leaders warned in apparent conflict with an ear- | Thursday. lier statement Thursday by Pre- | Following a statement by Mu-|™ier Robarts, who said that as nicipal Affairs Minister Wilfred|far as he knew municipalities |Spooner that "there shall be in-| Who operate pension plans out- tegration,"? Harold Wrightman, Side the provincial scheme business agent of Local 79 of the| Would be free to integrate or Canadian Union of Public Em-|"stack" the Canadian Pension ; | Plan as they saw fit. "If I had my way CUPE peo-| However, after the premier ple: would call a 24-hour or 48-|and his minister discussed their hour strike of public employees. |ifferent views, Mr. Spooner I'm sick and tired of having bar- | #8ain repeated his position with- gaining rights legislated away." | Out change, He said a general strike would) He said the government would be the only way to demonstrate | bring down preventive legisla to a government, grown dicta-|tion if necessary to force inte torial because of years in power, | ration of provincial plans with that it has gone too far. | the federal scheme which takes Grace Hartman, president of | effect Jan. 1, the Ontario branch of CUPE,!. The unions argue they should said she didn't "altogether dis-| be permitted to negotiate any al- 2. These must in the first place give the governor tem- In The Cold eral, There were also allega-jand if certain ministers "who tions that some road foremen|ought to have resigned, do. re- agree" with Mr. Wrightman's strike proposal. General strikes are being talked about in many locals across the province because of the general whittling away of collective bargaining rights, she said. ; In a press conference Thurs- day, Mr. Spooner said there would be no choice between in- tegration and the "stacking" system favored by some muni- cipalities. terations in existing pensions plans. LINKED TO SYSTEM The government's policy hinges on the provincially-run Ontario municipal employees ree tirement system, a pension plan | introduced in 1964 that now cove lers about 23,000: municipal em» ployees. A further '17,000 em- ployees, mainly in Ottawa, Hamilton and Metropolitan Tor- onto, are still covered by sepat> ate schemes. QUANG NGAI, South Viet;diately engaged by the Viet Cong, who opened fire on the landing area. With the report on the new battle, it was believed that the total marine force sent in was of regimental size, numbering thousands of men, believed up against at least a regiment-- 2,000 men or more--of hard-core Viet Cong. The Viet Cong, during the two days of fighting which preceded the marines' attack, had split up a South Vietnamese infantry battalion. Fighting was reported around Saigon itself as U.S. and Nam (Reuters)--Heavy fighting between U.S. marines and Viet Cong guerrillas was reported in progress today 50 miles north of here. The battle involved part of a full regiment of marines sent! into an area where the Viet Cong, fighting from fortified po- sitions, have inflicted hundreds of casualties on South Vietna- mese troops in. the last tw days. One part of the marine force broke up Viet Cong battle po- sitions Thursday night, attack- ing in darkness and from be- hind the Viet Cong lines. |South Vietnamese forces On the critical question of read- iness to meet without condi- tions, the response in Hanoi-- still more in Peking--remains completely negative." The president's words aprar- ently referred to two peace appeals in the last week, and U.S. efforts through diplo- matic channels to bring the Vietnamese war from the bat- |tlefield to the conference table. | son said, 'I have reviewed with my top advisers the situation in \Viet Nam. We are carefully istudying how we can best con- tinue to turn back that aggres- sion. We are all determined to There was no immediate an-|clashed with Viet Cong probing _" nouncement here°*on what hap-|the capital's outer and inner ge el wa a isk a pened to a second part of the! fences. marine force, which was flown| The U.S. navy destroyer Rob- into. the. area by_ helicopterjerts, in action for the first time from the U.S. marine base at|in 20 years, steamed eight miles Chu Lai, on the coast, Thurs-jup the Saigon river to pound with its big guns what were be- -- to be Viet Cong assembly areas, ay: But the third section, landing by helicopter today, was imme- "At the same time, we are| jequally determined that every | prospect for peace be exhausted jbefore other hard steps are |taken." EXPLAINS STAND x | Johnson said the United States is in Viet Nam "because British | In the last few days, John-| SUDBURY (CP)--A Sudbury man who mistreated a_ four- year-old boy by putting him outside at night in his pyjamas, locking him in a_ refrigerator and beating him Thursday was) sentenced to six months in! prison | Rudy Allan Chartrand was) convicted last week of assault-| ing Mark Jocko on Nov. 27. Magistrate W. F. Woodliffe told the boy's mother, Mrs. Winnifred Jocko, that when Chartrand is released from jail, she is not to allow him in| her home. Evidence was that Chartrand |lived at the same address as the # Jocko family. porary control of the armed forces and assure the role of the police, pending formation of a fresh government. 3.°There would be a short pe- riod of direct rule by the gov- ernor with the help of Rhode- sians until fresh elections could be held 4. Soundings would then be taken about changes in Rho- desia's 1961 constitution, to be followed ultimately with ne- gotiations about independence. 5. Britain did not foresee rapid Negro majority rule, and would urge the African na- tionalists to seek election to Parliament to gain experience as. ministers in a multi-racial| administration. had been laid off because they voted Conservative. Mr. Diefenbaker, comment- ing on the allegations, said "they didn't possess the neces- sary political fitness requisite for citizenship in that area." NAME LAWYER The Conservative party has appointed a lawyer to investi- gate the statements and Mr. Diefenbaker said that "full con- sideration" is being given to the matter. HEARING NAMES MOSCOW'S FATE GREENSBURG, Ind. (AP) Whether Moscow shal! be sign | natet | Asked who should resign, he replied: 'The furniture boys." | This was a reference to State Secretary Lamontagne and |Postmastér - General Trem- blay, who were criticized Parliament during the last ses- sion for buying furniture, with- out down payment and on gen- erous time - payment terms, from a Montreal dealer who j\later went bankrupt. Mr. Diefenbaker said Privy Council President reau should also resign. 'He deceived Parliament." COMMENTS ON PEARSON | The Conservative leader, ap- Negotiations a standstill. Representatives that Fav- of Merchant Service Guild (CLC) then broke up. epi the as-| jsociation and the Canadian| pang ENTRY met for one hour Thursday and| First Officers Remain Out, At Standstill MONTREAL (CP)--A strike | cause of the strike, he said. But by deck officers on ships of the| Canadian Lake Carriers' Asso-| ciation moved into its second! day today with negotiations at an association spokesman said: "Maybe 40 ships would be tied up at this time of year anyway prior to being put to bed for the winter season." | The St. Lawrence Seaway Au- thqrity announced Thursday \that it will not allow any ship C. E. Poirier, a mediator for|to enter the system unless it | At Chartrand's trial, Mrs.| Wilson declared: "we cannot |Jocko said the accused put/negotiate with an illegal regime |Mark outside. during a snow-|which has introduced in Rhode- |storm. {sia police state methods repug- | He brought the child back in-|nant not only to the spirit of __j|side, but placed. him in the re-|the 1961 (Rhodesian) constitu- frigerator-and closed the door. | tion and to the standards always | After keeping the boy in the re-|laid down by this House when \frigerator five minutes, he took we have granted independence pearing in a jovial mood as he fielded questions prior to his vacation, was asked whether he thought Prime Minister Pearson should be in Ottawa at destroyed will be debated here next Wednesday -- but it's Moscow, Ind., which lies in the bed of the proposed Downeyville 'reservoir. U.S. Army engineers will "pxplain plans for-an-8,800---| 002: "T read a great deal about this time rather than on vaca=) the federal labor department,/can provide an absolute guar- said both sides made some pro-|antee of getting through with- gress initially but one issue|out being halted by a walkout proved to be a stumbling block.|of the deck officers. This was on making a wage in-| Ono ship, the Fuel Transport, crease ior overtime retroactive , to June 1 when the old contract | Owned bY rely ag hoe 9 pe ie between the guild and the-as- |for all our shortcomings, for all jour failings as a nation and a | people, we remain fixed on the jpursuit of freedom as a deep jand moral obligation that will |not let us go." | Noting that "nothing, perhaps, | appears so contradictory to the i |cause we serve as the use of force to advance it," the presi- |dent added that "unchecked ag- |gression against free and help- less people would be a grave | threat to our own freedom--| land an offence to our own con- | science." | Rusk in his Washington press conference reaffirmed U.S. sup- |port for: the British peace pro- |posals, saying the Russians |knew if a conference were |ealled "the United States would |be prepared to work diligently for a peaceful settlement of the , |situation in Southeast Asia." de ys A WOUNDED U.S. Marine is carried by Navy man Bob Peeples of Daven- port, Iowa, through jungled area near village of Que Son yesterday. Marines were airlifted to the area after the Communists. practically a ietnamese ranger battalion. Que Son is about 30 miles south of Da Kang. (AP) corps: demolished | Later in the day, Rusk flew |to Chicago and told a business |meeting: "There's been no signal yet .that the other side is interested in peace talks. The other side is attempting to achieve a mili- tary victory and this will be }denied them." him out and threatened him to dependent British territories, acre reservoir at the hear- ing. Moscow has 25 dwellings, a the seriousness of the absence sociation expired. of the prime minister," he re- plied. "But I don't think it mat-| ,~#llam Dunkerly, vice-presi- | Weller at the Lake Ontario -en- |trance to the Welland Canal. As soon as she, pulled 'in, the with a lighted cigarette, court|but repugnant also to all civil- general store, a church and /ters { don't see very much dif- was told. ized standards." 'Moors-Murder Testimony: Brady 'Svengali' To Myra HYDE, England (Reuters) -- two murders and complicity in| a thitd was transformed after meeting her co-defendant into a secretive person who hated babies and children, her sister told a court here today. Mrs. Maureen Smith gave evi- dence against her sister, stenog- rapher Myra Hindley, 23, and Ian Brady, 27-year-old stock clerk, Brady is charged with killing Edward Evans, 17, and also two children, Lesley Ann Downey, 10, and John Kilbride, 12. Miss Hindley is accused of} and of sheltering Brady, know- A blonde typist charged with|ing that he had killed John. Thursday Mrs. Smith's 17- year-old husband, Dayid, claim- ed Brady butchered Evans with an axe before his eyes. Today, the vivacious Mrs. Smith, dressed in a white lace blouse and short grey and white skirt, told how Myra became a changed girl after meeting Brady at the end of 1960. Before Myra met Brady '"'she used to go to church often... she had many girl friends and liked children, swimming, read- ing and dancing . . . She never kept things under lock and 'murdering Evans and Lesley'key," Mrs. Smith said. MYNAH FINER MIMER THAN 30 OTHERS LONDON (AP) -- Sahib, a fast talking mynah_ bird, | nearly talked himself out of Britain's --talking--bird..cham- -pionship of. 1965 | Reaching the finals with 30 other chatterbox birds Thurs- day, Sahib was approached by the judge, leading soprano Margaret Neville of the Sad- lJer's Wells Opera Company. "Hello, . little bird your name?" pretty Neville asked : Sahib gave her a beady stare. what's Mis $$ "What's your name, little bird?" the soprano trilled 'Hello, big head," Sahib re- plied, loud and clear "What?" exclaimed. "Hello, big head," Sahib. Miss Neville, threw back her laughed. "He's wonderful," Later she cup the-startied_judge replied 26, and who is head she said. awarded him a silver the champion talker. 4 mynah named Shakes- peare came close to winning. as Talking: It's For Birds He greeted Miss Neville with "hello, my love, how are you?" "Gimme a wee kiss," said a budgerigar named Robbie. A mynah named Carrie, whose speciality is pvhistling the--opening bars. of Beeth- oven's Fifth Symphony, re- fused to whistle. To encourage her Miss Ne- ville sang a few bars from Hansel and Gretel "I'm tired of this," said Carrie. "Wot about' a cup of tea?" a stone quarry. ference when he's here or away." Officers and men of Lord Strathcona's Horse (RC) left Calgary today for a tour of duty in Germany. They were accompanied by IN THE LINE OF DUTY their wives and children. This member of the regi- ment boards plane with youngster to settle down for his long trip. dent in charge of personnel for first and second mates walked Canada Steamship Lines, one of| off, leaving her stranded. the member companies in the} A fuel transport was bound . jassociation, said: "We have no/ for Sarnia to take on oil for Tor+ intention of returning to the! onto. r, i eS bargaining table unless ordered natn od pp a ni aad + to. crew members stayed aboard. Guild pickets appeared on the waterfront at the Lakehead and at other ports but.members of other unions continued working. A guild spokesman said deck officers have definitely left 55 of the 170 ships'in the associa- tion. These 55 were laid up be- NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Crippled Freighter Limps To Safety LONDON (AP) The. crippled Greek freighter Costantis was reported heading under her own power today for a rendezvous with a tugboat after a night of drifting awash in stormy seas, Rescuers found the body of one of three crew members who went overboard when gale-driven 40-foot waves battered the ship about 300 miles southwest of Ireland. Another crew member was picked up alive, the third is missing. $130,000 Payroll Part/All Stolen ASBESTOS, Que. (CP) -- A bank branch here was robbed today of part of a payroll of the Johns-Manville™ Corp, "'a little more than $130,000". A spokesman at the branch of the Imperial Bank of Commerce said the three robbers "did a thorough job" but he indicated they may not have got all the payroll. muni' nn eM TLL ...In THE TIMES today... Coulters Will Build Industrial! Pork Plant -- P, 13 Werden Blanchard Honored -- P.. 5, Branch Rickey Dies; Story P. 8, Photo P. 11. Arin Landers --' 14 Obits -- 24 CityNews -- 13 Sports. -- 10, 11, 12 "Classified --=° 20, 21;°22;-23 Theatre -- 19 Comics -- 25 Whitby News -- 5, 6 Editorial -- 4 Women's 14, 15, 16, 17. Financidl -- 24 Weather -- 2, FATT TT

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