Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Nov 1965, p. 1

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- La : ° Weather Cloudy, cold and miserable 'weekend. Decreasing high winds. Low tonight, 28. High Resort Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow. manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring ¢entres in On- tario and Durham Counties, VOL, 94 -- NO, 277 10¢ Single ¢ BO0c Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1965 The Osharwa Times " Authorized @s Second Class Mail P ete a 'ost Office Department Payment of Postage in Sunday, 85, THIRTY-FOUR PAGES TORONTO (CP)--A province- wide-strike is promised by the International Teamsters Union (Ind.) unless the Ontario truck- ing industry drops reprisals against union members who took part in an illegal work stoppage last month. "As sure as I am sitting here there will be a strike," Ken Mc- Dougall, president of the union's Toronto local, said Friday night. Mr. McDougall said the strike which would affect nearly 10,000 truckers 'and other employees of the industry might start Jan. 1. } * A conciliation board under Judge J. C. Anderson of Belle- ville ended hearings into the dispuie Friday and adjourned to write its report. i Hamilton teamster represent- atives earlier withdrew from board proceedings because em- ployers would not drop action against the local and its mem- bers. The trucking companies are claiming about $2,000,000 dam- ages in separate grievances launched against the local as the result of wildcat strikes in Hamilton. The conciliation board has no jurisdiction in the matter. Key contract issues un- resolved when the board ended its hearings included demands for a 40-hour week with com- pensating pay in a two-year agreement. " The companies had offered to reduce the industry's 48-hour week to 43 hours over a 42- month period and to increase rates by 53 cents an hour in that time. The terms were or- iginally accepted by the union but repudiated after the wildcat strike. "Our main purpose is to get into a legal position to strike," said Mr. McDougall of the con- ciliation proceedings. TEAMSTERS THREATEN JAN. 1 WALKOUT fer to strike within two weeks but failing that would hold back until after Christmas, Mr. McDougall said: he has asked Judge Anderson to go to the employers "and see if he could have it embedded in their thick skulls that there would be no settlement unless the repris- als were withdrawn." The em- ployer representatives, he said, reported they had the back of their entire group to stan firm on the issue. He said the union would pre- rue tua Excess Radioactivity Contaminating Water VATICAN JOB: Not Danger, THE QUEEN OF CANADIAN FOOTBALL A smiling Glenda Olberg 17 - year-old Calgary high contest, won over represen- wears the coronet symbolic school student, sa Stam- tatives of eight other foot- triumph in becomi: a Mise Grey Cap of 1965. The peder in the anhual beauty _ ball cities. (CP) priceless ancient manuscripts} § stolen Friday from the Vatican| & library have been recovered, the Italian news agency Ansa reported today. 'Boldest eer.) etn Theft In History |Eliiot Lake and Bancroft ura- jnium mining areas were re- VATICAN CITY (AP)--Two)§ |ported Friday by a government linvestigative body that has been studying the situation for a year. A committee of four provin- cial deputy ministers, in a re- port to Premier Robarts, said no danger exists to persons drinking the contaminated wa- ters over a short term. No further amplification was' given as to exactly what the The agency said Petrarch's committee meant by "short- autographed Il Canzoniere, and) @ a manuscript partly in the/® handwriting of the 16th-century Italian poet, Torquato Tasso, Britain May Send Force To Zambia LONDON (AP)--Britain wasjwhite-ruled Rhodesia mounted|pers in London say some type reported ready today to send ajafter saboteurs blew up an elec-jof British unit, possibly from "flag-showing"' military force tojtrical power line tower Friday the RAF, will be sent soon to Zambia, the Negro-ruled coun-jin an apparent effort to cripple Zambia, formerly Northern f breakaway Rho-|Zambia's rich copper mining in-| Rhodesia. : la oe . idustry. Prime Minister Wilson's office Tension between Zambia and| Almost all morning newspa-|declined to comment on the | Plies the Kitwe copper mines. Socreds Have Long Look : Saboteurs blew up a tower on 4 lbia's chief export, continued Wins Umited operation by hooking the electrical power line 27 miles south of Kitwe which sup- Ad limited operation cing into power grids from the neigh- Ait Selves; Thompson had been found in a package thrown into the garden of a villa on the Via Cassia, just north of Rome. The manuscripts apparently were undamaged, Ansa added. Investigators called the case perhaps the smoothest, most daring art theft in modern his- tory. Expert cat thieves isneaked into the guarded seat jof Roman Catholicism under jcover of night, scrambled up a 33-foot drain pipe to a window of the apostolic library and es- two of Italy's greatest poets, Petrarch and Torquato Tasso. Police and art experts sus- nected that peetead that caped with 6riginal works by| 2 job, pulled off Thursday night term exposure." But its report showed that on a lifetime basis residents in the ceptable. Over the long term, the maxi- mum permissible level of radio- active contamination was given as from three to 10 picocuries of radium-226 per litre of water. TEST SHOW EXCESS Tests showed a level of 67 pic- ocuries in Pecors Lake, 36 pico- curies in Quirke Lake and 28 picocuries in Nordic Lake, all in the Elliot Lake area 80 miles west of Sudbury. The contamination level was 45 picocuries at Bow Lake in the Bancroft northeast of Peterborough. The area, 60 miles figures given are based on wa- ter analyses made in 1984. EDMONTON (CP) -- Old guard Social Crediters joined -g with the new this week to put @ under scrutiny the fabric of na- = tional organization they've worn for the last four years. They found in deliberations at their quadrennial convention © that they'll need more money for the fabric they desire and expressed hope they can mend the tear caused by the breaking % away of the Creditistes, the # Quebec wing of the party- headed by Real Caouette. 3 They topk a hard look at their leaders before deciding to re- tain them and decided to seek a new policy pattern that would more effectively explain' their 7 aims. . Robert Thompson was chal- lenged by two Social Credit members of Parliament for the national party leadership but won more votes than his chal- lengers combined. Bert Leboe, 56, MP for Cari- boo, and H. A. (Bud) Olson, 40, MP for Medicine Hat, both said after their defeats they will con- tinue to work with Mr. Thomp- son. Martin Kelln, 43-year-old Re- gina district farmer, defeated a challenge to his national associ- ation presidency from H. J. : expected to be restored today. ROBERT THOMSON boring Congo. Full power was INCREASED PRESSURE Soon after the sabotage, Zam- bia's president, Kenneth Kaunda, increased pressure on The report said improved con- trol measures over wastes pro- duced by. uranium mills are ded to reduce levels of ra- dioactivity to concentrations of from 10 to 30 picocuries. But even lesser concentrations and discovered Friday morning, might have been masterminded by. a warped bibliophile who commissioned expert burglars to get the manuscripts for his private pleasure. against the Rhodesian rebel| government. Observers doubted) Britain would go that far but said Britain might send troops to Zambia as a defensive meas- ure. | Rhodesian rebel prime minis- ter, Ian Smith, claimed in Salis- bury that the power-line sabo- teurs might have been Commu- nists -- "Chinese or otherwise who have moved into Zambia in recent months." The pressure on Britain to send at least a token military force was heightened by fears that any delay might prompt Kaunda to turn to other African nations, or even Communist} powers, for military aid to pro-! tect the Kariba Dam and power line. Britain's Opposition Conserva- tive party has indicated it will disapprove of any extreme) |measures against Rhodesia. | The atmosphere in most parts| of Rhodesia seemed calm, But in Bulawayo, the second largest) city, two Negroes were held on charges of possessing machine- | Bruch, 45, legislative memberjdissemination 'of birth control|guns, ammunition and a stick for Esquimalt, B.C. ical realignment' which would Mr th ined th How dagal se and asked an all-|of dynamite. Earlier this week : .o : - . res rd . r, Thompson cautione at|party inquiry}a Negro demonstrator in Bula-|will join with Metropolitan Tor-|speakers, sai e Johnson ad-| party unity or "so-called polit-\into ways of boosting farm in-|wayo was shot dead during anjonto police and' fire depart-|ministration had rejected such| u 0 nsurance p gain, come. abortive general strike. | draw all free enterprisers to- gether must not come at the cost of Social Credit principles. The subject of a name change for the party .was raised briefly | Pearson Will End Mystery: Britain for military intervention] + andwritten docu ments Specialists said the partly- had priceless cultural and _ historic value but obviously couldn't be sold on the open market. Petrarch lived in the 14th of from three to 10 picocuries "should be adopted as the initial objectives to be attained in pub- OLD ST. NICK COMES TO BOWMANVILLE Short-Term; Won't Define Short-Term: lic drinking waters in the Elliot Lake and Bancroft areas,"' the report states, Premier Robarts was unavail: able for comment. The report was released in his absence on a trip to Britain, Contamination also may exist in forms other than radium-226, according to the provincial de- partment of health, which said preliminary investigation of this now is under way. "The department considers that there is an immediate need for more extensive exploration of the spread of the radioactive contamination through the. wa- ters of the Elliot Lake and two areas are being exposed to/kin radiological pollution far in ex- cess of levels considered ac- 8G io s ; Members of the committee who made the study were T. R. Hilliard, chairman, deputy min- ister of energy and resources management; Dr. W. G. Brown, deputy minister of health; D. P. Douglass, deputy minister of mines, and Frank MacDoug+ all, deputy minister of lands and forests. They recommended the proy- ince undertake a detailed inves- tigation of 'watercourses - and waste disposal in both areas and expand its program of monitor- ing and analyzing mine and mill wastes, surface waters and drinking water supplies. They also said there was some confusion over who has authority over the control of ra- dioactive pollution: The provin- cial government or the federal government. Ontario should ap- proach Ottawa to clarify this, but meanwhile should continue to work with the uranium min- ing industry to maintain safée- guards against radioactive pol- lution. century, Tasso in the 16th. In Italian literature they are sec- ond in greatness only to Dante. The thieves also took a fac- simile of the crown of Saint Stephen, first king of Hungary, and a small gem - encrusted crystal casket containing the text of the speech Ecuador) carrying when he was assassi: "TELL ALL!', THEY'LL DEMAND OF LB . nated in front of a cathedral in J 1965. They not co-operate and send Santa has been at work all snow. However, children year in his Arctic workshops and soon (four weeks to and parents packed the pa- Dec. 25) kiddies will know rade route to welcome St. the contents of all those Nick and see the 23 floats in gaily - wrapped packages at Canada's "biggest - little" home. Christmas time parade. Santa Claus, that annual visitor who brings packs of goodies to girls and boys every Christmas, rolled into Bowmanville this morning. It had to be "rolled" be- --Oshawa Times Photo totally Bomb Placed. WASHINGTON (AP) --|for a halt on bombings in North|cussed what he termed '"'so- \Throngs of 'marchers for peace|Viet Nam, more determined ef-jcalled peace feelers" from the tt ' 9 ing.|forts at peace negotiations -and|Communists during the fall of At Y ] fe Viet Nar came se Washing support for the principles of the|1964 and noted they coincided ugos av jton today, and their leaders) 1954 Geneva accords, which|with increased red infiltration |catfeéd on President Johnson to|cajted for elections to unify alllinto South Viet Nam. "They 'tell all" about what they called| viet Nam. jundoubtedly felt they were on Consul Door North Vittnamese feelers for In a press conference Friday,|the threshhold of victory," he peace. i . "Socialist: 'le: der Norman State Secretary Dean Rusk dis-!said. R } . No Basis For TORONTO (CP)--The RCMP|Thomas, and others billed as trol. Council sources said th council's text dealing with ments to investigate a bomb/feelers without informing the) attack on the Yugoslavian con-|American people. . s s sylate here today. |tion spokesmen have said they 0 t D i d H t Police said a bomb was/regarded Communist offers as) n arlo rivers ar ae ] : placed on the threshold of the| seeking U.S. capitulation, rather) consulate general of Yugoslavia|than genuine negotiations. tary-G TORONTO (CP) = increases; wiil be -12-per cent-in- Brantford NEWS HIGHLIGHTS London: Black Marketing Of Bread LONDON AP -- Black marketeers moved into the void ; created by Britain's bread strike today. They were running = bread from communities where bakers were not on strike < into breadless cities and selling it at sky-high prices. © '© Housewives many of whom had staked their bread claims: in queues before 6 a.m. called them "breadleggers." poser dormers "Yet Another Peace- Trek vatican: Tougher Stand On Birth Control VATICAN CITY AP -- Pope Paul was reported by re-* liable sources Friday night to have asked that the Vatican ecumenical council strengthen its stand against birth con- e Pope had asked that the questions of marriage and family planning take into account the birth contro] teach- ings of popes Pius XI and XIi to reaffirm traditional bans against artificial contraception. Viet Peace Talks WASHINGTON AP -- U.S. State Secretary Dean Rusk says that on the basis of new statements from North Viet Nam he sees no chance in the immediate future of Administra-| peace talks with Hanoi. Asked whether the United States "would accept a proposal from Hanoi through UN Secre- sral U Thant seeking unconditional discussions Fysk said: "I would not product that this is likely to occur. any at the convention as it wound \floor. Stroud, Ont., said the. "'social"| No one was injured. But. win- in Social Credit "somehow is| OTTAWA associated with socialism now injicter Pearson Ontario."' He asked delegates to consider a name emphasizing free enterprise. Min-; Three cabinet posts--finance,| said Friday he agrieuary and mines -- have|dows gs a door on the north eee ing came Opened up for future cabinet/side of the downtown building plans to end the guessing game shuffles. Finance Minister Wal-| were blown out by the blast and about his cabinet shake-up aster Gordon resigned two weeks|windows were broken more At policy - making sessions, /soon as he returns from ajago and Agriculture Minister|than 100 feet away. delegates approved establish-|Caribbean holiday Dec, 16. |Harry Hays and Mines Minis-|. Police said they believe the ment. of a committee to study; The prime minister, who haditer J. Watson MacNaught were|bombing to be work of anti- the effects of automation. Theyjalready reported that an exten-|personally defeated in the Nov.|\Communist sympathizers. asked increased emphasis on fi-|sive shuffle of cabinet portfol-|8 election. | Next Monday marks the nancial reform in the partyjios is in the works, told a press; In his shuffle, Mr. Pearson is|20th anniversary of the Com- platform conference that he has somejexpected to swite¢h several munist party's takeover of Yu- Delegates asked tougher en-|"good reasons' for wailing un- other portfolios as well. There|goslavia, and the consulate ha forcement of bankruptcy andjtil then to make the announce-|has been wide speculationjreceived bomb threats before, (CP)--Prime | while the consul general, B.| The march leaders, ; s s up | |Stanic, and his wife, family andjtime, took steps to 'surround Delegate Lloyd Cumming of, On Cabinet After Vacation were asleep on the second| with American flags' certain mean- \protesters who were determined |to carry Viet Cong flags in the picketing at the White House jand the march to the Washing- jton Monument grounds. The march is sponsored by the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, a number of other organizations critical of Johnson administration policy, how well as authors, professors, jsome civil ri gits leaders, pCICL BR yiMIch anu pyr er ers About 120 Canadians, mostly University of Toronto students The match manifesto ealled food and drug regulations by, Ot-jment, He declined to spell them|about the changes that will bejalthough none preceded this|were to take part in the march. tawa, enlled for fegalizing the'ect, | i involved, morning's explosion. , in 1966 automobile insurance rates, predicted in recent weeks by company. executives, were confirmed Friday night by the All Canada Insurance Federation. The national average rate will rise 5.6 per cent, the feder- ation said. Prince Edward Is- land, Western Canada and parts of Ontario came in for the severest increases. The largest rise in the coun- try will be a 12.5 per cent aver- age in| P.EL. Rates will in- SioabS.-My-tenper-Goueais seat peg, 11.per cent in Vancou and 10 per cent in Calgary. The increase across Ontario and at the Lakehead, 13 per cent in Niagara Falls, and 14 per cent in Sault Ste. Marie. Rates will rise by five per cent at Hamilton and Oshawa while Toronto comes in for a four-per-cent increase and Ot- tawa and Montreal two per cent. Quebec's average increase will be 1.5 cent, The feder- ation said® that province es- caped a larger increase be- cause of a decline in accidents in the last year. Tot. scorranon, rearesenting more frequent accidents and their higher costs make the will average 5.8 per cent but it tate boosts necessary. > 200 insurance companies, said|= Ann Londers--17 City News--15 Classified --20, 21, 22, 23' Comics--24 Editoria!--4 Financial--23 Obits--23 Sports--10, 11 Theatre--18 Nitin abe. Weather----2 SMUT ae ...In THE TIMES today... Toys, '65--Battled In Bond--P. 15 Seturday Showcese Area Nominations--P. 2, 15, 5 Whitby News--5 ee

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