Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Nov 1965, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow. manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties. VOL, 94. -- NO. 273 he Oshawa Gimes We Per Weak Home Botvered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1965 Anvarised a Sheond Com Mal faut Crean Ottewe payment Postage in Weather Report Wednesday cloudy and slight- ly cooler. Showers less fre- quent tonight. Low tonight, 40.. High tomorrow, 43. PRINCESS SHOPS ON NEW YORK'S 5TH AVE. along Fifth Avenue. here she was at the Bergdorf Goodman store at " 58th Rain spatters window of Princess Margaret's car as she went shopping today street on Fifth Avenue. (See story on page two.) --AP Wirephoto No Cabinet Shuffle Due For 2-3 Weeks -- Pearson By BEN WARD OTTAWA (CP)--No cabinet changes will be announced for at least two or three weeks, "Prime Minister Pearson said 'onday. But he told a press confer- ence that the changes, when completed, will be "fairly ex- tensive' and indicated they might include appointment of a gecond senator to cabinet rank. met reporters in conference room dur- ieee ces first time, reporters and pein were barred from the corridor outside the cabinet room where for years they have waited to question prime minis- ters after cabinet sessions. He said he planned a special meeting with Justice Minister Lucien Cardin later in the day to discuss the minister's health. There have been reports that Mr. Cardin may retire from the cabinet because of a heart con- dition. LOOKS WELL Mr. Pearson said Mr. Cardin "is not in the best of health," but looked quite well at the cab- inet meeting Monday. He said he hoped a new report on Mr. Cardin's condition would allow the 46-year-old Quebec lawyer' to continue in his post. | Later, a government spokes-/tawa has been a minister with-| = one = Pgh assured! out portfolio since the Pearson| health 2 pte of carrying Cabinet was formed in April, on-his cabinet role. aa {1963 One reporter asked whether " Mr. Pearson recalled Liberal 4AVE NO MPs criticism three years ago when| The Liberals now have no/; then - prime minister Diefen-| MPs from Prince Edward Is- baker named Senator Wallace|and, Alberta or Saskatchewan.| McCutcheon to the trade port-| |However, there are Liberal sen- folio. jators from those provinces and) Mr. Pearson said he didn't re-/ |there has been speculation that call such criticism, "certainly |Mr. Pearson might draw on not by me at least." | Senate Pi wes to give one or| He said senators have served|™ore of these provinces repre- in cabinet posts several times|S°Mtation in the cabinet. ; in the past and 'there may be| Replying to another question, situations that make it desirable|Mr. Pearson said that because) PM PEARSON refused to go beyond that re- mark. He also said that his party's lack of a Commons majority would not affect its dealings with the provinces. Nor would the impending cabinet shuffle delay any scheduled federal-; provincial meetings. Several were coming up this week and next, involving various officials from the 10 governments. Mr. Pearson said he had hoped to have a_ post-election vacation but has been too busy, to plan one. However, he would like to get away at the end of; the week if possible. "TI certainly can't go until) after the Grey Cup,"" he added. The East-West football classic will be played next Saturday. The prime minister didn't mention a vacation spot but said it would be some place where the sum is shining on water and sand, Wintry Blitz 'Sweeps Europe » LONDON (AP)--Snowstorms jraged across Europe today, {bringing the hazards jroads, blizzards and hungry| i wolves. The Teramo |from the jheavy snows of the year. wolves Italy appeared near driven One ipack kilied a mule while near-|on Mr. Diefenbaker in the 1963/other will be held before Par- by a farmer blasted with a rifle to drive off wolves attack-} ing his cattle, A wave of cold air sweepingjafter the one-day caucus in the/re - emphasizing" from the Balkans brought the|Parliament Buildin g's West|that showed the Liberals with jsnow to northern Italy, and col- |Block broke up. With 97 mem- \2 handsome lead in popular sup- lided with a front of warmer| air around the Italian Riviera, causing thunderstorms. Heavy| jgusts lashed Genoa and Viareg-| ann UK. Demands Support On Rhodesia Embargo SALISBURY (CP) -- Police shot and killed a Negro dem- onstrator in the southern city of Bulawayo early today, the government announced. The Negro was throwing stones at a bus when a police- man on the bus opened fire and killed him. It was the first fatality in the scattered unrest which has fol- lowed Rhodesia's seizure of in- dependence Nov. 11. MT UALR nis AFEMSHSTANUENONNNN ANNETTE PTH, Lu Lo At Que Que, 100 miles south of Salisbury, another Negro stone thrower was shot and wounded by police, the gavern- ment said. The government ment said: "At ' a.m. today, a bus and a police escort were sioned in Cleary Drive, Bulawayo. The police opened fire and one Af- rican male was shot and killed. ... announce- Send Troops Ci RT ALTERS "Intimidation was reported at Riscom African township near Que Que last night when a po- lice patrol was stoned. Three shots were fired and one rioter who was shot in the foot is now in detention in hospital un- der guard." Cleary Drive is in the Negro township of Mpopoma which has been the centre of much of the unrest and stoning. TINE HNRET AML The demonstration followed a day of strikes called by Negro nationalists to protest against the government's seizure fo in- dependence from Britan 12 days ago. Both the strkes and the de- monstration marked the mirst large-scale response to the na- tionalists' appeal. The demonstrators marched through a main thoroughfare, POLICE KILL NEGRO IN RHODESIA SCUFFLE throwing bricks, stones and gar- bage cans into the street. Two cars carrying British, South African and American newspaper men and a car be- to a local newspaper were hit by flying stones. Police with dogs ordered Ne- bystanders to clear the gro street of debris as truckloads of police drove through the crowd of demonstrators in an effort to disperse them. sca Wilson Outlines Stand Oil, General Trade Curb Now---Judith SALISBURY (Reuters) -- Ju-jher sister, told reporters their : dith Todd, daughter of former | father was ill at his Shabani Rhodesian premier Garfieldjfarm, 250 miles from _ here, Todd, arrived here today from|where he was restricted last {London and immediately called) month. of icy |Nov. 8. The vote of support, he on Britain to send troops to the breakaway colony. The 22-year-old student onl newspaper men she had e-| turned to try to show Britain! its responsibility to help Rho-| desians who opposed Premier! lan Smith's government. "I think the only way Britain} can help is to give Sir Humph- rey Gibbs (the British - ap-| pointed governor) the power to govern and the only way they can do this is to send in bar ott she said, Cynthia Todd, who met Before leaving Britain Mon- day night, Miss Judith Todd asked for British protection in jthe event of her arrest. She said she was liable to be sentenced to up to 20 years in jprison under Rhodesia's Pres- lervation of Constitutional Gov- ernment Act. Repeating her call here for white Commonwealth troops to be sent to Rhodesia, she said: "I believe force could be used now without bloodshed. In six months' time, I don't know." | Cones Pats Dief's Back * Lauds "Non- OTTAWA (CP)--A_ post-elec- tion Conservative caucus Mon- day gave Party Leader John | Diefenbaker a pat on the back |and approved a move to declare non-confidence in the minority Liberal government. Ironically, it was an old anti- Diefenbaker rebel, George Hees, who filled in reporters on; ja_vote of confidence for the! leader by the party MPs elected \said, was "enthusiastically car- | ried" by all. | Reporters sought details from down!Mr. Hees after Mr. Diefenbaker|Ricard, chairman of the Quebec mountains by the first!shied away from questions on|caucus, leadership. Mr. Hees walked out) Conservative cabinet crisis. | Both Mr. Hees and Mr. Dief-| enbaker talked to reporters| |bers, the Conservatives will be ithe official Opposition when} Parliament opens Jan. 18. Mr. Diefenbaker said the) confidence' even though the NDP has indi- cated it will not support an early non-confidence motion, which could topple the govern- ment, Mr. Diefenbaker also said Conservatives will press for the institution of a number of cam- paign promises, including a $25- a-month increase in old age pensions at 70. | He also announced that Mi-; chael Starr was confirmed in his position of House leader. Waldo Monteith, a former) néalth minister, and Theogene| were named co-chair- men of the national caucus. An- liament meets. . Mr. Diefenbaker ticked off| the CBC for "emphasizing and Gallup polls port before the election. He found it "difficult to un- so much time to aid the Liberal]. gio, driving ships to seek shel- iparty plans to move an amend-jparty in this regard." ter. este. There were no power cuts, al- Gales howled through mh | jment ment to the speech from the) |throne, which outlines govern-| legislative plans at the to have more than one senatorjof the vacancies that exist, the|though electricity authorities) tart of the session in the cabinet.' leabinet shuffle, "I think, would | Senator John Connolly of Ot-jhave to be fairly extensive. Viet Guerrillas Encircle Town SAIGON (CP) -- About 2,000)smash the vital radar equip- Viet Cong guerrillas surrounded|ment at another surface-to-air goverhment troops in a district | missile installation 41 miles town of the central coast ofjnorthwest of the North Viet- South Viet Nam and US. naval/namese capital, a U.S. guofire and artillery bombard-)man reported ments were called on today to} The aid the defenders. Five other) Monday against Tuy An, two government posts in the areajoutposts and three militia posi- were feared overrun by the Vietltions. Communications were Cong. jlost with all the posts except A relief government force} iTuy An, which is 15 miles north was driven back and had td) lof Tuy Hoa, the capital of Phu withdraw after. bitter fighting, Ye" Province. and 250 miles a U.S. military spokesman re-|north of Saigon ported. A 2 goto ere found at least re S¢ ? sbeea of the mi me positions ov er 'bade. It was believed the other pi and cut off from the land outlying posts met the same side, U.S. warships off the/rate, coast were trying to drive them) Rjsewhere. on the central off with ao artillery bar-icoast, government forces rages, and U.S. planes pounded) combed the hills around the vil- the attackers. lage of Thach Tru, 320 miles In the air war, U.S. Air Force|northeast of Saigon, in search jets braved heavy anti-aircraft|of more than 1,000 Viet Cong fire to'destroy one Soviet-sup-|who attacked a battalion of missile site 34 miles north-|South Vietnamese rangers there ef Hanoi Monday and to|Monday. He spokes-| Viet Cong struck early made widespread voltage re- ductions. Weather officials predicted tonight would be milder, but! another freeze-up would follow immediately. jment, DESCRIBES MOTION Answering questions, he an amendment involves question of non-confidence. said his party will introduce it! said |\DOESN'T GIVE DETAILS Declining to go into details! about the throne speech amend-} Mr. Diefenbaker said he did not wish to "telegraph in) advance" what the party plans| the;to do. Earlier he had promised | Viet Heja challenge on the honesty-and-jrelations and' the proposed non- 'proliferation nuclear treaty. integrity issue. Judith Todd, daughter of former Southern Rhodesian Prime Minister Garfield Todd, waves from a plane ramp at London airport as she heads for Salisbury to Council last Saturday, Wilson said his government does not regard its terms to be manda- tory. rejoin her family, She was disobeying a last minute request of her father who is under restrictions in Rhode- sia. (AP Wirephoto) Wilson, LBJ Due To Meet JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP)-- President Johnson and British Prime Minister Wilson will) meet Dec. 17 for a discussion} of world issues, the White} House said today. Press secretary Bill D. Moy- ers told a press conference |derstand why the CBC devoted/that the meeting will be either] {in Washington or the LBJ ranch| jin Texas. He said no decision) jon the place has been made Topics to be discussed by the two world leaders are expected ito include British North itic policy, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Rhodesia, Nam, U.S.-British-Soviet Atlan-; Asks Judge To Resign ister Cardin said today he hopes Mr. Justice Leo Landreville will resign from the Ontario Su- preme Court, although the \judge has already refused such a request. Mr. Cardin said he asked Mr. |Justice Landreville to resign in |September, but the judge felt \there was .no reason why he should leave the bench since he had been exonerated by the courts, Mr. Justice Landreville, a former mayor of Sudbury, was charged with municipal corrup- tion and conspiracy involving the sale of shares in Northern Ontario Natural Gas Co. The charges were dismissed at a preliminary hearing, and after a three-month leave of absence the judge returned to the bench a year ago. CANADA'S POSITION CLARIFIED IN STATEMENT OTTAWA (CP) -- by U.S. purported offers to They said Communist tions to chief one bein drawal from before peace The U.S. since to negotiate unconditional] An any neg American South Viet talks Hanoi's position, If anythin said, North Viet has become harder inflexible North and Viet Nam the U.S. against the Viet Canadian government support for Amer- ican principles and objectives in Viet Nam has not been shaken rejection of offers or negotiate, informed sources said Monday. North Viet Nam has attached condi- otiations, can beg April has offered external affairs de ment spokesman said there has been no perceptible change in Nam's attitude attached great importance to protests in war. It seemed to be convinced --mistakenly--that hold out long where would force American South Viet Nam, drawn into discuss the the with Nam gin. the U.S. governme ing proposals for 1 This was strictly a domestic affair, the y: The proposals we part- and confirmed last the US. any. One had Thant, United tary-general, another from French. officials in gz, he Nat more in Nam day, said that when h enough opinion in the U.5. withdrawal Officials here dec American public formed--or misinformed -- by administration maintained there had not been come August, Hanoi At a press conference Prime Minister Pearson if it could speech last public and else- a- unilateral from bombings of he had not lined to be ion of how was in- '""There's whether thes nt concern: contact that 1egoniations, n American y said. re disclosed week after had negotiations. informants sic least, from U secre- 1964, through May, 1965, Mone ions with the e made @ phia suggesting a pause in U.S. he had been informed had been overtures made." But speech on them. overtures, but I knew about the lished by the (U Thant) with certain authori- ties and governments."' J. He did not indicate whether he was referring to the August, 1964, proposals by U Thant for question, was not how Washington had handled its communications American public the nature of overtures, And these overtures were negative inasmuch as they Still Back U.S. Policy On Viet Nam April in Philadel- North Viet Nam "there "predicated" his Nam some dispute é€ are proposals or had been estab- secretary-general edge here said the ba- for Canada at bomb Mr. but the Communist insisted on conditions for nego- tiations. Sources said the Canadian government has been aware of all diplomatic moves in the Viet two disclosed last week. Moreover, as a member of the ll4year-old International Super- visory Commission in Viet Nam, Canada attitude. delegate on the commission, was sent to Hanoi May 31 by External Affairs Minister Mar- tin to get the reaction of North Viet Nam to the five-day pause earlier curred soon after--but was not connected Nam's French diplomats, Situation, including the had first-hand knowl- of the North Vietnamese Blair Seaborn, Canadian that month in U.S. ings Seaborn's mission oc- with -- North. Viet feeler made through ag OTTAWA (CP)--Justice Min- LONDON (AP)--Prime Min- ister Wilson said today Britain will impose an oil and general trade embargo on Rhodesia only if other countries join in to make it effective. In a statement to the House of Commons on a resolution of the United Nations Security He said the British delegate on the Security Council had voted for a general trade em- bargo, including oil, with @ reservation and because the resolution represented @ comni- promise. Then Wilson added that the British government "must in- sist' whatever embargo is ap- plied must be effective. More Powers Heed UN ¢ LONDON (AP) -- Economic on rebel Rhodesia tightened today as more coun- tries heeded the United Nations call for an oil embargo against the breakaway British colony. Among them were Iran, which provides the bulk of Rho- desia's oil supply, and Japan. But Prime Minister Wilson and his cabinet were understood to regard an oil ban as being far from a decisive weapon against the rebel government of Rhode- sian Prime Minister Ian Smith. Government sources said Rhodesia could obtain oil from South Africa or from Portugal. Both countries have declared themselves behind Smith's re- gime and will not join the ban. Reports from South Africa said that Smith arranged to buy oil from Portugal three months 0. Oil industry sources in Rho- desia said the embargo would be difficult and costly to main- tain. Tran provides about 700,000 'tons of crude oil a year to cen- tral African refineries which serve Rhodesia and neighboring Zambia. The oil is brought. by tanker. to Beira, in the Portue guese east African colony of Mee zambique. From there it is piped to Rhodesia and Zambia. Zambia takes about one-third of the supply. Thus, any cutoff in Rhode- sia's supply will also aff Zambia, and plans were be! made in Tanzania for a vast airlift into that country. The planes will fly out copper from the landlocked nation, which is dependent on Rhodesia's rail- ways to move out the bulk of its principal export. The government of Tanzania was understood to be taking the initiative in the airlift, and ma- jor oil companies were reported ready to co-operate. Britain suspended all trade with Rhodesia Nov. 11 wheh Smith's white minority govern- ment declared itself independ- ent. Independence talks with Britain broke down over Brit- ish insistence that Rhodesia's 4,000,000 Negroes be given @ voice in the government, INAS TAT AGN TORONTO (CP) Metzler, 56, deputy minister tree. Mr. Metzler at present retirement will take effect at southern California today in a deaths of two children and hours of each other. Clay Still Chempion--P. 8 Ann Lenders--13 City News--11 Classified--16, 17, 18, 1 Comics--14 Editorial--4 Financial--20 eet seca pem ts nn ni | ...In THE TIMES today... Local Government Study Planned--P. 11 Whitby Tewnship Approves Debentures--?P. $ Obits--20 SU Sw gu ut ACE UHEUGFUEO EEA NEWS HIGHLIGHTS | James B. Metzler Resigns Post -- The retirement of James B. of labor for Ontario, due to ill health was announced today by Labor Minister Rown- is confined to hospital, His the end of the year. Rainfall Swamps South California LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Record rainfalls swamped sea of mudslides and flooded streets, isolated the desert resort of Palm Springs, knocked out schools and caused evacuation of scores of families. Death Cause Of Trio Known PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) -- Ether in a lethal mixture with another anesthetic apparently caused the post-surgery a. young mother at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital, Walter D. Schmier, an assistant Oak- land County prosecutor disclosed today. Schmier said an anesthetic known as Surital was to have been used during surgery on the three patients. The three died within 24 Sports--8, 9, 10 Theatre--20 Whitby News--5, 6 Women's-----12, 13 Weather-----2

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