Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Mar 1965, p. 3

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CHINESE PRESTIGE: WANES Peking By HAROLD MORRISON .... 'anadian Press Staff Writer Alt may be too early to suggest at Uncle Sam is calling the pd dragon's bluff, but persist- nt U.S. air strikes in North iet Nam must raise the ques- on of whether China is really eady and anxious to engage in direct collision with Ameri- an military power. With the largest land forces the world and preparations nder way for its second nu- lear test, China's prestige as world power is at stake as orth Viet Nam takes an air ating day after day. Where is the massive Chi- /hese action promised the North jetnamese if their territory twas hit by the "Yankee imper- alists"? Outside of ground fire, he Americans appear to be eeting little air opposition Undoubtedly the decision to Pnttack across the 17th parallel Hvas a gigantic American gam- ple--an indication of how des- rate the U.S. position must ipe in South Viet Nam. .Or did ithe U.S. know something it did jot tell? Both Soviet Premier Kosygin nd China's Mao Tse-tung have ade strong sympathetic ges- ures towards North Viet Nam's 'o Chi Minh. And undoubtedly Moscow and Peking are pre- paring to pour in huge amounts of arms and equipment to help the Communist-led Viet Cong 'throw the Americans and their i Vietnamese "puppets" out of fF South Viet Nam. Did US. Call Bluff? land -- to withdraw their ob- server posts from North Viet- namese territory outside of Ha- noi. The North Vietnamese would rather not have witnesses to border crossings of outside military help. But now the American air strikes in northern territory have been continuing for some weeks.Why hasn't there been immediate and massive inter- ceptor air defence? The Soviet position may be understandable. Kosygin is new and wants to move with ex- treme caution. After all, main- land China, North Viet Nam, North Korea, Albania and Ro- mania did not turn up at the gathering of Communist parties in Moscow. And while those who did at- tend blasted the 'barbarous bombings" in North Viet Nam, there seemed to be a lack of clarity as to what Moscow is going to do about it. Communist China is in a dif- ferent position. Peking seemed in recent years just to be wait- ing for the chance to tangle with the Americans. It boasted of its power and rejected as cowardly the Nikita Khrushchev warning that American nuclear strength is more than that of a paper tiger. Yet in North Viet Nam the Americans are blasting away, sending out great squadrons of planes and losing only a few at a time from ground fire. The immediate reaction is that China at least appears to be That likely is the reason why / Hanoi has ordered the three- | country international! truce com- TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario government moved Wednesday to deprive hospital employee ' mission--Canada, India and Po- | Queen's Park Move Atoot To Curtail Strike Rights slow in reacting and this can only encourage the Americans to inch farther into Red terri- tory. apply to hospital disputes de- spite his new bill. However, strikes and lockouts End Friday Fish Day VATICAN CITY (AP) -- A brief remark ina speech by Pope Paul Wednesday brought speculation that changes may be forthcoming in Roman Cath- olic rules requiring abstinence on Fridays. Speaking at his general audi- ence on Ash Wednesday, Pope Paul noted that the practice of 'asting during Lent has been reduced to two days, Ash Wed- nesday and Good Friday. In the past, all Wednesdays and Fridays of Lent were days of fast and abstinence. He said "the usual law of abstinence every Friday re- mains in force for the present." GETTING AWAY FROM IT ALL MAIDENS, Va. (AP) -- Signs of spring were peep- ing out and A. Mcliwaine and R. Booker agreed it was a good day to take a walk--away from their con- THE DAY IN OTTAWA By THE CANADIAN PRESS WEDNESDAY, March 3, 1965 The Commons adjourned or- dinary business to debate the the escape of Lucien Rivard, key figure in a judicial in- quiry, from jail, The motion to set aside the normal business was made by Opposition Leader Diefen- baker, who accused the gov- ernment of carelessness, Speaker Alan Macnaughton ruled it in order after opposi- tion MPs kept interrupting Justice Minister Favreau. They insisted Mr. Favreau talk only on the matter of ur- gency of debate, not give ex- planations about the escape. Mr. the government of showing solicitude for a 'thug' and disregarding 'public moral- ity." Mr. Favreau said Mr. Dief- enbaker did not outline one federal responsibility in the escape-but only made "'insin- uations." THURSDAY, March 4 The Commons meets at 2:30 p.m. to continue debate on the Canada Pension Plan. The Senate meets at 3 p.m. vict road gang. But nearby an _ unusual class was in session--state police dog retraining with emphasis on tracking. The dogs learned their lesson well whereas Mcll- waine and Booker -- recap- tured within the hour chalked up a total failure. | Heart Attack Fells Queen STOCKHOLM (AP) -- Queen \Louise of Sweden suffered a |heart attack early today and Workmen Get New Appeal TORONTO (CP)--A new ap- peal system for workers dis- satisfied with rulings of the On- tario Workmen's- Compensation Board was announced Wednes- day by board chairman Bruce J. Legge. Henceforth, a worker dissatis- fied with treatment or compen- sation as a result of injury on the job may appear with a law- yer before a special tribunal and a_ non-professional man composed of a doctor, a lawyer chair- The tribunal will be a notch|-- |was operated on at a Stockholm |hospital, | The 75-year-old queen was \stricken at the Drottningholm |Palace outside Stockholm. | A team of surgeons headed by |heart specialist Clarence Craw- ford began operating shortly after 8 a.m. (2 am. EST). King Gustaf VI Adolf was at his wife's side. Court circles said the opera- tion was still going on at noon. Doctors at the nospital would say only that the queen had suf- fered a blood clot that blocked circulation to the heart. Queen Louise spent several weeks in the hospital at the Christmas and New Year's sea- son after suffering a mild heart Diefenbaker accused |g THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, Merch 4, 1965 3 Thatcher Budget T By THE CANADIAN PRESS The legislatures of Saskatch- ewan and Alberta concentrated on budgets during Wednesday's sessions. By 30-to-26 approval the Sas- katchewan Liberal government's first budget in 20 years was ap- proved, but in Alberia the dis- cussion on a record $493,782,862 budget has just begun. Alberta Provincial Treasurer A. 0. Aalborg said in his bud- et speech an expected deficit of $22,638,852 will be paid from government reserves in order to avoid tax increases or borrow- ing. He also announced that de- velopment of the province's oil and natural gas resgurces is ex- pected to pay almost half the $391,000,000 government operat- ing expenses in the new fiscal year. The Saskatchewan budget es- timated revenue of about $220,- 000,000 during 1965-66 with a $250,000 surplus. | ' Acting opposition leader J. H. Brockelbank (CCF--Kelsey) de- scribed the budget as clever and smart but "not quite honest." Highlights from the eight other legislatures sitting Wed- nesday: British Columbia -- Attorney- General Robert Bonner said a high suicide rate is 'always an adjunct' to police forces like the RCMP with codes of dis- cipline similar to those of the Pushes hrough Japanese Kamikaze pilots and the German officers' corps. Manitoba -- Mines Minister Sterling Lyon announced an eight-month $500,000 potash ex- ploration program in western Manitoba by the Canadian Nickel Company. | Ontario--Labor Minister Les- lie Rowntree introduced a bill to remove from hospital em- ployee unions the right to strike and to force compulsory arbi- tration in hospital disputes. Quebec--George Marler, Lib- eral leader in the Legislative Council (Senate), told the body that it would be abolished if it rejects a bill curtailing its own powers. The bill would curb the council's power to delay mofiey bills passed by the Legislative Assembly and restrict its power to block other bills. Quebec is the only province with an ap- pointed upper house. New Brunswick--Premier Ro- bichaud said he had not in- structed his department to take precautions to apprehend Lu- cien Rivard. Mr. Robichaud, who is also attorney - general, was being questioned by Oppo- sition Leader C. B. Sherwood. RECORD PLAYER REPAIRS @ ALL MAKES e FREE Pick-up and Delivery Call 723-3867 No insurance costs No main for full details. attack There Are Special Benefits For All BUSINESS EXECUTIVES AND SALESMEN Saten tae tee coe Meet' aan definite of convo wher @ PONTIAC On vou lease anew... @ BUICK Request everything on one cr two yeor lease items .. . MILLS AUTO LEASE PHONE 723-4634 LTD. 266 KING ST. WEST + +. One rate covers Phone or come in tenance costs will be prohibited. Mr. Rowntree said the com- pulsory arbitration would be carried out by a_ three-man board. The settlement reached by the board would be limited to one year's duration, unless both labor and management agreed to a longer period. The labor minister said he was confident parties in hospital disputes would settle their dif- ferences at the bargaining ta- ble, and that instances where unions of their right to strike. ! Labor Minister Leslie Rown- ) tree introduced a bill in the leg- islature that will force com- {pulsory arbitration in hospital disputes. Such legislation was recom- mended last year by a three- man royal commission which inquired into a strike at Tren- | ton Memorial Hospital, and into | hospital disputes generally. Two members of the commis- above the board's present re-/@ view committee--senior person- nel who hear complaints--and below the final authority, the three-man board itself. Nikita Not 'Dead' Yet compulsory arbitration was nec- essary would be held to a. min- imum. Mr. Rowntree said no other province in Canada has such legislation providing for the compulsory settlement of hos- pital disputes without strikes. DuPont Picket Injunction Sticks Throughout Strike TORONTO (CP)--A tempor-jat two other gates stand at four. ary injunction limiting picket-/Four pickets are allowed at ing by 1,700 striking membersjeach of two entrances not pre- fof the United Mine Workers ofjviously covered. Six pickets are } America (Ind.) at the Du Pontlallowed at each of two railway ' of Canada premises in Kingston|entrances. At three other com- has been confirmed and will] pany premises in Kingston, probably continue for the dura-|where two pickets at each place tion of the strike which started|had been >rmitted, the word- Feb, 24. jing has ben broadened to al- However, the union has been|low two pickets at each ent- allowed to place pickets at sev-|rance | eral entrances not previously) In Court of Queen' covered and to increase the|here Welnesaas' og Prise number of pickets: at some ent-|--. G. Thompson ruled that the rances. jinjunction would continue on the sion later reported to Mr. Rown- } tree that compulsory arbitration pshould be introduced. A labor! repr ive d. Mr, Rowntree said the con- ciliation process provided for in the Labor Relations Act will still ets permitted at the main plant i > » wi gate ta alx from four Pickets|union's my Mie company with the | The original injunction was is- jsued in Kingston last Friday by |Frontenac County Judge Max- jwell W. Strange at the request jof the company which had com- |Plained of watching and beset- \ting and interference with com- Royal Doctor Raps Hospital LONDON (AP) -- Sir Arthur Porritt, surgeon to the Queen, has joined other eminent sur- geons in complaining that some of London's best - known hos- pitals are falling apart. Porritt is a consultant at St. Mary's, a 490-bed teaching hos- pital at which a ward ceiling collapsed last week. With seven other surgeons, he pany operations by the strikers. Union and company repre- jSentatives later agreed to some jlimitation on picketing, but that |the terms of Judge Strange's injunction were too restrictive. MANY BERLINS There are 33 cities throughout The injunction increases pick-|terms of a draft order submitted! PEKING : (Reuters) -- The Peking People's Daily says 4 glance at the Soviet press makes it. clear that former premier Nikita Khrushchey is not 'dead and buried," al- though he has vanished from the politica: arena. This comment is contained in an editor's note on an item headed: "Look what sort of propaganda is in the Soviet press these days." | The item contains excerpts from "representative materials published recently in the Soviet press."' "Since Khrushchev's downfall the Soviet press .. . has in- sisted to the Soviel people and the people of the world that the mantle of Khrushchevism must not be cast aside. that there must be no change in the link of the 'three peacefuls and two entires'," the editor says. These are identified as peace- ful co-existence, peaceful com- petition and peacetul transition, plus the state of the. entire people and the party of the en- tire people. "Acting on the dictates of ithis erroneous line, the Khrush- lchev revisionists have put on one ugly performance after an- other against the Communist party of China and other Marx- ist - Leninist parties, creating a split in the international Com- munist movement and in the Socialist camp." The editor concludes: "Can those who believe in Khrush- chev revisionism escape the sad end of Khrushchev himself, un- less they change their ways?" NEED... | FUEL OIL? Call issued a statement saying hun-| dreds of hours of professional time are wasted each month in| devising stopgap methods mending building defects | Most of the trouble arises from the fact that Britain has! built fewer than 10 new hos-| pitals since the Second World| War and, instead, has made do} with emergency. wards set up| during the war In London, some of the major hospitals are in buildings dat- ing back two centuries. . Re-| building plans were announced) five years ago but shelved as) a result of economies intro- duced by the late Conservative administration. of; DELIVERY JURY AND LOVELL the world named Berlin--there| were more than 50 before the| First World War. | PERRY Dey or Night 723-3443 FLY NON-STOP tt BRITAIN 21 DAY EXC. 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