Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Oct 1964, p. 1

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LOUIS SEATON IT'S ALMOST OVER DETROIT (AP)--Despite end-, working agreements which sup- ing of a 31-day national walk-|plement the national contract | out against General Motors) would stay out. Corporation, the giant of the ie tis , : automaking industry was hob- | 130 units in GM's empire had bled today by local-level strikes that threaten to snuff-out new operations. tiac division st Pontiac, Mich., reached local-level settlement. Flint, With announcement of the na-|the Buick division at jtional strike's ending, GM/Mich., and the Buick-Oldsmo-| chief At the time 102 of the UAW's'called back maintenance and|bile-Pontiac plant in Kansas|would be other call-backs, but make-ready crews in the Pon-|City, Kan. MANUFACTURING DEPTS. BACK FIRST The question of when the company that normally turns out more than half the new au- tomobiles in the U.S. might get any assembly lines going again was unanswered, But one com- pany source guessed: 'Within a couple of days, maybe." The United Auto Workers un- ion announced Sunday night that 95 of 97 local unions re- porting had given "overwhelm- ing ratification" of a new three- year national contract. The UAW announced that the national strike was '"'termin- ated," but, at the same time, said its 28 local units which had not reached at-the-plant Recal A spokesman for General Motors of Canada Limited said Sunday night that if company plants in the Uni- ted States are all in opera- tion today, the Canadian.as- sembly line will start' next Monday. 34 He said, however, recall of employees: would start al- most immediately and con- tinue through the week as 1 Starts Soon "A start in Oshawa depends on which union locals have settled in the U.S. "Oshawa may get started within a week. Again it de- pends on how badly GM wants to get the parts up here," "After all," he added "'it is not as if the plant was starting from scratch. various manufacturing de- partments -- such as bats tery, radiator and uphol- stery -- go back into opera- tion before the - assembly line starts. A union official agreed with the GM predictions. Richard Courtney, interna- tional representative for the United Auto Workers, said; Louls G. Seaton, GM's vice- president for personnel and its negotiator, said there he was unable'to pinpoint them immediately, '"'and I don't think anybody else can, either." The UAW said it knew only that the 28 local units without at - the - plant agreements posi- tively were not going back im- mediately. The nacional strike was a se- lective one. The union ordered members in GM plants selling parts to Chrysler Corp to stay on the job, But in all it left idle more than 30,000 of GM's work force of 360,000. It started Sept. 25, when a deadline for new national agreement was passed. A hew national contract was negoti- ated on Oct. 5, but the union authorized locals to stay out in support of at - the - plant de- mands. LEONARD WOODCOCK The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, VOL,.93 -- NO. 251 Ghe Oshawa ines Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1964 Weather morrow. High-72, Low. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and: for payment of Postage in Cash, Report Mild Tonight But Scattered Showers To- -52. TWENTY PAGES LORE ROR NR 2 Thant Warns Of World Crisis. UNITED NATIONS (AP)-- United Nations Secretary-Gen- eral U Thant said Sunday fail- ure to solve the UN's present financial crisis could return mankind to the same type situ- ation that permitted two world wars. Thant spoke: during an ob- servance in the General As- sembly hall of the 19th anniver- sary of the UN charter. Earlier, he sent notes to members asking whether the scheduled Nov. 10 General As-| sembly opening should be post-| poned to give the United States and Russia time te try to work out their dispute over UN #| peace-keeping dues. A postponement has been re-) quested by 41 delegations and a} "SHORT-TERM, TEMPORARY" _ Trade Wall Thrown Up By Labor Government Jews, Legion 'Protest CBC Interview | OTTAWA (CP) -- A majority ;of the 15-member Commons flag committee has voted for a Single Red Leaf. Chosen For Flag | Chosen From Three Designs Thursday tionally casts a vote only te break a tie. Before the.committee was.es- tablished none of the | icef'on 'white with ced jeotiioall circuited Gapian pected to consent in Thant's|) LONDON (CP) -- Britain's,money coming into the c TORONTO (CP)--Jewish lead-| leaf on white on. i. Pres 'aiciauiat government, try-|and the pe Bo Pred out---|@Ts and Royal Canadian Legion borders, an informant said Sun-|ment Hill contained rec The U.S. has called for ajing to head off a currency ex-|would reach an ail-time high of|members filed protests and day. : ders; Both the government de- lch isis, today imposed ai to £800,000,000 this pickets paraded outside the} The source said the vote was| sigr and the -red leaf sug- showdown on whether the So-|change crisis, y imposed an/up , 000 year. ; ; taken Thursday after the -| gestion of the New ocrats iet Uni ' lexbra 1S-per-cent duty on all.im-|This deficit forecast is more|©BC studios Sunday night when} t= is = viet Union 'should lose its Gen- the network put on a 12-minute|mittee had eliminated all but| had vertical blue borders, jeral Assembly vote for NON-Pay- | asic majority of members are ex-| CONFER AT STATE DEPARTMENT Secretary of State Dean retary, Patrick Gordon Wal- high level talks with adminis- |ports with the exception of food,|than double what the previous scandal , if | -paliega ag raw materials and un-|administration had estimated, | television interview with George/ three designs in its secret ses- ipo. oetthe no ge i gts ment of back dues for UN| manufactured tobacco, R jLincoln Rockwell, self - styled) S10ns- with. bord ong ; : | : ; It meant that Britain once/commander of the American| Although further committee|the more than 1,000 other de- peace-keeping in The Congo} At the same time it opened ; : hah sal feet : ! | meetings are scheduled for this| sigs th tha Pariiamaat Wi and the Middle East. negotiations to make a huge|48ain was in deep economic|Nazi party. Sule thik cheley cuar-te ane pote as: y iis aoe Such a showdown might re-|drawing of credit from the In-/trouble, buying more than she; A CBC spokesman said there | design ceconinbedad) to: Abe Sig meeting. commi Rusk talks today at the State ter Walker, a leading spokes- Department in Washington man for the Labor Party, is with Britain's Foreign Sec- in the capital for two days of tration officials. | lsult in a Soviet withdrawal |ternational Monetary Fund andjis selling and lacking ability to| Were an unstated number of ;Commons as Canada's national from the UN, some delegates announced plans to provide ex- attract substantial long-term in- | telephone calls following the! flag. --(AP Wirephoto) \ paar. |porters with a small tax rebate jshow, some critical and others --averaging about 114 per cent vestment to this country. WEST-BOUND TRAINS CUT CNR Employees Fail To Show Up For Work OTTAWA (CP) -- The | The CNR said 108 men--all| CNR has agreed to a fed- | firemen, engineers and brake- eral cabinet proposal to put _|men--had reported sick at Cap-| off its éontroversial run- |reol, a CNR headquarters 15} through program at Nakina, | miles north of Sudbury. | Ont., and Wainwright, Alia., | The conductors and yardme it was announced today. : all Capreol employees Sunday) Employee protests against re-| night that they would also stay/ vised work schedules introduced | off work. A total of 286 employ- by Canadian National Railways) ees would be involved. | drought a cut-back in passen-)| A spokesman for the workers} of the value of exports--to stim-| "All this calls for immediate|calls before the program re- ulate more sales abroad. - |but strictly temporary action,| questing that it be withdrawn. Canadian officials estimated|drastic at first but less so as} About 25 demonstrators out- the 15-per-cent extra duty will|both the immediate measures|/side the studio carried signs hit about $200,000,000 worth of|and the longer-term policies be-|reading "CBC co-operates with Canadian exports a year, but/gin to take hold," the govern-/Nazis" and "there is no place the bulk of Canadian shipments|ment said in its statement. for Nazis in democracy." --which total about $1,000,000,-| ae oe eer 000 annually--will escape the) surcharge. | RED SUMMIT MEETING Economics Minister George} Brown and Chancellor of the} ' Exchequer James Callaghan, who announced the new steps ou ee, a Ss aw, j|at a press conference, described the measures as short - term) . and temporary but declined to) t He said he had reached union| A CNR spokesman in Edmon-|say just how many years my as IS a eee officials representing, the menjton said train schedules in the! would jast. involved in centres from Ed-| mountain region of Alberta and A : | MOSCOW (AP)--The Soviet, velopment of relations between monton to Montreal. They had| Saskatchewan were being main-| DEFICIT AT RECORD _, news agency Tass disclosed/the Communist party of the told him that "every man in| tained by supervisory personnel| They estimated that Britain's) Sunday that new Soviet Com- Soviet Union and the Polish United Workers' party, and also |complimentary, in addition to ings are planned leaves. open | However, the fact more meet- the possibility for further nego- tiations to aim at unanimity. Deadline for reporting to the Commons is Thursday, when |the six-week time limit: con- | tained in the committee's terms of reference expires. FORCES ARE OPPOSED The source said there was unanimity earlier for the de- | sign but that at the end four Conservatives voted against. Six Liberals, one Consefva- tive, a New Democrat, a §o- cial Credit member and a Creditiste were understood to |have backed the design. .The |committee chairman is Henman |Batten and a chairman tradi- The. source said that on Thursday there were three de- signs left--the. single red: leaf, the three maple leaf design con- tained in the offginal govern- ment resolution, and a_ single leaf design incorporating a -- Union Jack and fleur de ys. The committee has . been meeting behind closed doors al- most daily since it was estab- lished by Commons. resolution following agreement among party leaders to postpone. for the time being the protracted debate in the House. Opposition Leader Diefen- baker agreed the committee could report with a majority but that near unanimity would be needed before the recome mended design could. quickly pass the House. nithe running trades from Van-|where railway crews did not re-|\deficit in international pay-|munist party first secretary, | AFTER K'S OUSTER of developing all-round co-oper- |decided at a closed meeting of|couver to Montreal would be| port for work. : out by noon'? today. This would involve 2,500 to 3,000 men, he said. Sick bookings were also re- ported by 22 crew members at 'MORE CANADIAN WHEAT |ments -- the balance between! Leonid Brezhnev, and Premier |Alexei Kosygin held a secret |meeting 'the other day' with |Wladyslaw Gomulka, the Po- | lish Communist chief. | The obvious aim of the parley jwas 'to explain the ouster of ation between the Soviet Union 'and the Polish People's Re- public."" | A delegation of the French |Communist party is currently |here to demand an explanation Power Fight TO RUSSIA THEN CUBA ger services during the weekend said they would not return to, Nakina and at Parry Sound, the and threatened to spread today.| work until after the run-through |first division point north from [Nikita Khrushchev, but Tass of the disgrace of Khrushchev. Edmonton. The CNR reduced its passen-|is abolished. ger. service between Toronto) The run-through would mean and Western Canada to one|that nine employees at Nakina, trail a day from three trains| 160 miles northwest of Port Ar-| as firemen, locomotive engi-|thur, would have to move to neers and some brakemen in| other points. Northern Ontario and the west-| Douglas Fisher, New Demo-| ern prairies booked in sick. ¢ratic member of Parliament) Trans-continental passenger for Port Arthur, went to Nakina) service originating or bound for| Sunday to observe the situation Montreal was rerouted through) and reported in a telephone in-| WINNIPEG (CP) -- Russia, The $500,000,000 1963 sale was did not mention this. Gomulka An Austrian group is scheduled Toronto. has bought 10,600,000 bushels of| wheat and wheat flour from) Canada, the Canadian wheat! | board announced today. | | The cash: sale is worth 1 ' laround $21,000,000. eye | Shipment will be made) |through St. Lawrence and At-| B P j ports starting next! Y ltons of wheat and 25,000 long! TORONTO (CP) -- Parentsitons of flour. should be made to realize that} Under the contract, the when they give their teen-aged|wheat and flour can be shipped) children the keys to the family|tg Cuba as well as Russia. car they are really handing T " ; he wheat board announce- Wem rag yy "3 mobile bed") ment did not specify how much| room," Rev. Marwood Patter-| 4+ the wheat and flour would| son of St James the Just An-| ie diverted to Cuba, which has glican Church said Sunday! cigse economic ties with Rus- |lantic | month. | The sale involves 250,000 long \night. } sla There are two reasons why/ Nicolai Belousov, a high-rank- youths engage in pre-marital] ing officer of Exportkhleb, the| sex, he told 1,600 persons at alsoviet grain board, negotiated | youth rally in suburban Downs-|the sale at the wheat board yew. headquarters here. "They permit themselves to| Mr. Belousov was a member Toronto as supervisory person-|terview that about 1,800. men in| nel took over the job of running} the running trades of the CNR} the trains. Freight services| had booked off sick or unfit for) were delayed duty. The employees were protest-;------------ ---- ing weekend changes in opera-; tions to bypass Nakina in North-| TWO Blown Up ern Ontario and Wainwright, Alta. Trains vere sore from} In Gas Blasts ornepayne to Armstrong in} pes) os eg distance of 244 smilie, ORANGE, Tex. (AP)--A Se- involving 5% hours of running|ties of gas explosions, rocked) time. Previously one crew was|two of a string of six petro- used for a division of 132 miles|chemical plants near this and another for the remaining| southeast Texas oil city Sunday, 112 miles. |killing two workers and injur- In Western Canada, freight/|irg 18, one seriously. train personnel would be re-| Ruptures in pipelines carry- quired to work from Edmonton |ing highly volatile gas appar- to Biggar, Sask., a distance of|ently caused the blasts, but 266 miles, instead of changing|company officials said they at Wainwright, 126 miles east of |were unrelated. shares any facilities. be caught in circumstances) of the Russian team that nego- they just cannot get out of, such! tiated last fall's two-stage 239,- said. 'from Canada. dis-| Was one of Khrushchev's most | loyal political supporters and a | close personal friend. | This was the first meeting of SUr/the new Kremlin leadership Was'and Communist chiefs from in the last agreement. |abroad who have expressed dis- It's assumed here the Rus-|may at Khrushchey's sudden sians will trade Canadian wheat| eclipse. to Cuba, possibly for sugar in| Tass said the conferees "dis- a straight barter deal. jeussed problems of further de- NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Ex-Mayor Acquitted of Corruption BRACEBRIDGE, Ont. (CP) -- Charges of municipal corruption and conspiracy against Mrs. Wanda Miller, a former Gravenhurst, Ont., mayor, were dismissed today in a judgment handed down by Magistrate Albert Marck after a preliminary hearing last week. China A-Bomb Boosts Radioactivity OTTAWA (CP) -- The Chinese nuclear explosion Oct. 16 has resulted in a slight rise in levels of radioactivity at a the biggest single wheat posal in Canadian history. The Cuba provision in the new contract came as no prise. Something similar Neither firm|as petting in-parked cars,' he|000,000-bushel wheat purchase| number of points in Western Canada, it was announced here today. to arrive today and one from Italy on Tuesday. ~ WASHINGTON (CP) --Pres- Much to the surprise of the|ident Johnson has been advised Soviet party, there has been|by government experts on Rus- world-wide unease in Commu-|sian affairs that the ouster of nist circles over the unex-|Premier Khrushchev has dam- plained shift. The excuse ofjaged the prestige of Soviet Khrushchev's ill health and ad-|leadership at home and abroad | vancing age has not been read-| and rendered uncertain the fu- jily accepted. |ture course of Soviet policy to- | Hungary's Communist party|ward the West, jsaid Sunday "regrettable mis-| These were among the prin- |takes" occurred under Khrush- cipal conclusions reached in a | chavis regime. jnew study of the sensational | --- shakeup in the Kremlin earlier Filth Time For __|spocal to. te prednat, on South Viet Nam cording to informed officials: 1. The best guess about the SAIGON (AP) -- South Viet | future prospects for Khrush- Nam's military returned the|chev's successor is that a power government to the civilians to-|Struggle probably. cannot be day, marking the fifth change|avoided. The experts say that of government in a year. Communist Party boss Leonid Power was formally trans-|Brezhnev and Premier Alexei ferred to the nation's new chief|Kosygin appear to. represent at of state, ailing revolutionary|the moment the two bureaucra- Phan Khac Suu. Maj. - Gen.|cies of the party. and the gév- {Nguyen Khanh resigned as pre-jernment and these together jmier with the rest of his care-| with the competitive interest of taker government. the military and industrial es- "Unavoidable'" { tablishment set the stage for a power struggle. 2. Factionalism in the Soviet Union tends to hurt Soviet in- terests internally and extem- ally." The deStalination program of a decade ago is cited-as a case in point. It was:one of the issues over which Communist China avowedly split with the Soviet Union, 3. The violent wrench which necessarily resulted from the sudden ouster of Khrushchev has displayed to the world what experts here term the uglier -| side of Kremlin politics and this has been a principal contribu- tion to the loss of Soviet pres- tige. It renders virtually all im- portant aspects of Soviet pol- icy uncertain. 4. While Brezhnev and Kosy- gin have reaffirmed Khrush- chev's. policy of coexistence, the new men and their jockey- ing for power could move So- viet policy in the future in al- most any direction subject only to the limits of Russia's power position. On The Road To GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST Quota Of $275,900 $108 424 | | | $128,000! | | | $158,000 | | | $174 000 | 4 | : | $208,000] | | Pe | | | $254 000] | | | 278.900 Scala renee sveenng:

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