VOL. 94--- NO. 289 =e WN ' * Home Newsnaner Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow. manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On« tario and Durham Counties, 10¢ Sin She Oshawa le Copy 50c Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1965 wes Authorized 'es Second Class - Ottawa and fi Mail lor payment of aoc sf RSP Miid air' sweeping in, 'Today and Sunday warm and damp. Low tonight, 38. High to- morrow, 45. Post Office Department Postoge in Cash, THIRTY-FOUR PAGES os THE MIRACLES OF CHRISTMAS | The Oshawa Times today presents the first article in its special "Miracles of Christmas" series. From now until ® Christmas one of the beautifully illustrated articles will = and professor of journalism at Utah State College A former 7 = newspaper reporter he has written several books on re- | appear daily retelling the stories from the Bible that reveal § the meaning of Christmas. The author, John J. Stewart, is the editor of publications ligion and is a lecturer on religious topics. He is a member @ of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. The series comes to The Times highly recommended. = The stories are admirably suited to reading aloud in, the © family circle. The Miracle In Bethlehem... Nazareth is a picturesque village in the hill country of northern Palestine some 20 miles east of the Mediterranean Sea and a similar distance grest from the Sea of Galilee. One quiet summer evening as the sun set behind Mount Carmel, Mary of Nazareth, a teen-age girl of flawless beauty hand deep spirituaiity, retired to her room, to enjoy in soli- © tude the pleasant thoughts of her recent betrothal and coming | a le ef ; © nance minister'. marriage to her cousin, Joseph the carpenter. As Mary sat in reverie, combing her tong silken ha the room was suddenly flooded with a brilliance of light, in the midst of which stood an angel of God. "Hail, thou who art highly favored,"' spoke the angel. "The Lord is with thee:: blessed art thou among women." The astonished girl trembled with fright, overawed at the » angel's appearing. "Fear not, Mary, for thou hast found favor with God And behold, thou shalt conceive and bring forth a son, and shall call his name Jesus. He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest . . . and of his kingdom there shall be no end." "i In wonderment the gentle Mary asked, "How shall this » be, seeing I know.not a man?" "The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the.Highest shall overshadow. thee That holy Being which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God." As Mary contemplated his words, the angel further told Pe her, "Thy cousin Elizabeth hath also conceived a son in * her old age, and this is the sixth month with her, who was § © called barren. For with God nothing shall be impossible." The angel's momentous message sent a warmth of hap- piness tingling through Mary. The scriptural promise which f all Israel had looked forward to for ages:--- the miracle of 1 the comnig of the great Messiah, the miracle of Christmas -- was about to be fulfilled in her, Mary of Nazareth In ecstasy she said to the heavenly messenger, "Behold © the handmaid of the Lord. Be it unto me according to thy word." By JOHN J. STEWART DRAWING illustrates the Gemini 6, right, moving up into space after its slated blastoff tomorrow from Cape Kennedy, Fla., for a rendezvous with Gemini 7, t s| WAR FIRST... Victory 'Before | | Reform AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) -- Presi- G dent Johnson has launched an| Heftort to convince the Commu-| HOFFA PUTS TRUSTEESHIP OVER TORONTO TEAMSTERS ainists he is willing to curb new) "greaty society' programs to! a finance the war in Viet Nam This was a followup to Jobne| | mson's public warning Thursday Mithat he will order "other hard in Viet Naw pros pects for Civilian those Johnson Congress this iitailed because of soaring costs of thé Viet Nam war A procession of officials par ® aded before newspaper men at) White House press headquar ters here, after conferring with) § Johnson at his ranch home. All| ® Ajcither said their spending plans! , e.were being cut below current mi\levels or, at best, that tney # couldn't say or were fighting to | preserve their programs. 7 In this administration, offi- Hcers of cabinet level do not Z normally volunteer such revela- @tions without presidential ap- 1 proval. And when the president ©\gives such authorization more \than a month before the new ibudget goes to Congress, he @ has a motive Commerce Secretary John T. Connor announced his depart- @ ment's budget for the fiscal ® | year starting next July 1 would my fall short of the current level Hof more than $1,200,000,000. "| "It is quite clear," he said, "that although there will be re- ® duction in many of the civilian »| programs, particularly some of the newer ones that were voted! »\by Congress during the past| steps" peace pro program pushed your even through will be cur fod Temptation got the best of little Mary and she had to ne THE TEMPTATION OF THAT SKULL CAP WAS TOO MUCH day during a Christmas party the prelate gave for newsmen (left photo) and then reached over and lifted York hotel. Mary, 3, stood gazing into space while Car- Executive Board 'Sacked', -All But Rebels Reinstated TORONTO (CP)--The Inter- national Brotherhood of Teams- ters (Ind.) moved swiftly Fri- [ day to bring its strife-torn Tor- | onto-based Local 938 into line. A telegram from James Hoffa, international president of the union, placed the truck driv- ers' local in trusteeship with fi Raymond Greene, Montreal Teamster executive, in charge. Mr. Greene arrived in Tor- onto late Friday afternoon and within minutes issued orders suspending the local executive board, reinstating all but two of them on a temporary basis and cancelling a membership meet- ing scheduled for Sunday. The two executive board members dropped are Secre- tary - Treasurer Lloyd Merritt and Business Agent Charles Thibault, leaders of a dissident group in the local. Set Sabena coh vie ree ritt had called an unauthorized dent Gordon Newman of misus-|8*"eral membership meeting-- jing union funds and not taking|the one that was scheduled for ja strong enough stand in: con- Sunday--in violation of local bye tract negotiations. laws. CALLS IT SCREEN Mr. McDougall said he has Mr. Thibault telephoned Tor-|charged Mr. Merritt and Mr. onto newspapers Friday '0 say!rhipault with violating their t the trusteeship was an attemp joaths of loyalty to the local and JIMMY HOFFA 1 piyear, we still will be able to/ Higet them off to a good start| @ and continue our programs at | a healthy level." the children of New York Foundling Hospital at a New touch Francis Cardinal Spellman's skullcap, yester- dinal Spellman spoke to his cap (right photo). (AP) to cover up his charges. | -He also laid an assault charge) against Ed Murphy, one of the} local's business agents, after a fight in the local office was! the international, abusing fellow members and failing to comply with local bylaws. He said he has also charged ©} Connor was asked if Viet i;|Nam was the reason for the ) belt-tightening. He said he did not discuss this with Johnson 'but 'I'm sure it was in his |mind,"" |. Agriculture Secretary Orville |L. Freeman said his budget, currently programmed at nearly $6,900,000,000, will be 'significantly less' next year--| Bi quite a bit less." He agreed Jiet vi 7 5 Aenean see Webb|%e2r-old dak Ceca eedagh As | Fae ; jmental disturbance was of the Nationa! Aeronautics and| h d. Priday wi deli @\Space Administration said a say with | Selin: i ; : uency in the axe slaying of didn't know where his budget|2UC° fe H| would ehd up. This year's was| {Ve members of a family. In Ax-Killing Of 5 People VANCOUVER (CP) A 17-|,,, The youth was arrested after | UNITED NATIONS Canada scored a major victory the United Nations Friday with the overwhelming . appro- jval of a resolution calling for voluntary contributions to meet the UN's financial crisis over} peacekeeping operations. | The Canadian resolution, co- jsponsored by 18 other nations, (CP)--| Boy Charged Canada Sells Scheme For UN Peace-Paying their weight behind the propo-,well as from a host of. other sal countries, including Canada, he- The almost unanimous appro-jcause it called for immediate val of the proposal, which also|interim financial arrangements urges that the question of!to pay for peacekeeping costs. peacekeeping be returned for; Despite urgent pleas from the study to the 33-member UN spe-|Soviet Union and a number of ing, immediately deadlocked the/that a vote be taken on its pro- committee on what to do with|posal. Finally, a decision on P| about $5,200,000,000. | "Just A Slip' Of _ Sharp's Tongue OTTAWA (CP) --Acting Fi- nance Minister Sharp seemed to; name himself to the permanent} job Friday, but quickly back- tracked. Reporters concluded it was a slip of the tongue, whether it! was an accurate forecast of the future or not His comment came at a press conference following a federal-/| provincial meeting on tax pol- icy. He parried one question by 'saying he "would like to an-| >|swer that question a little bit} 'later in my career as finance| ® minister". After a moment's| » silence, he added, "if I am fi- left, now orbiting the earth This drawing is by AP artist John Carlton. (AP) he gave himself up to a psy- chiatrist. He was to appear in juvenile court Monday on five counts of delinquency. i committee on peacekeep-|other countries, Ireland insisted an Irish draft before it. The Irish proposal was met with strong disapproval from the Soviet Union and France as |was adopted by an 88-to-1 vote,| |with three abstentions, after the| Soviet Union, France, the| | United States and Britain threw! whether to vote on the propo- sal was shelved until Monday. Only Albania voted against the Canadian resolution. Police said the slaying of most of the Osborne Kosberg| family was one of the most-tra- gic. multiple. murders in the city's history. Kosberg and "his wife were' found in bed. Their two-year-| old son Vincent was on the floor) beside the bed. Osborne Jr., six! : rhage y eS ee | en, Aie., (AP). The body of Gayle, 11, and | quittal of three white men Marianne, 13, who was severely|Charged with the civil rights linjured, were in another bed-| Killing of a white Boston minis- room. The body of Barry, 15,|ter left Selma faced with the was in a third. r threat of renewed racial strife. A spokesman for Dr. Martin HAS OPERATION Luther, King Jr. said the ver-| Marianne underwent emer-/dicts feturned by an all-white) gency surgery for head wounds|jury after 95 minutes delibera- in hospital and was in fair con-|tion Friday probably will touch New Selma Strife Threat As 3 Acquitted Of Killing} white men but slight injury. Charged with first - degree murder were a novelty com- pany manager, Elmer L. Cook 42; an auto mechanic, Namon O'Neal Hoggle, 31, and his brother, William Stanley Hog- gle, 37, a salesman. escaped with A fourth white man still faces], federal charges of civil rights dition Friday night. The baby j}was in hospital for observation. Space Chase Nears HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)--Tiny Gemini 7 with its two cheerful | pilots flew flawlessly through Space today, poised for man's most ambitious space venture-- a daring rendezvous with an or- biting sister. ship. Bearded, slightly hoarse and good - natured, Lt.-Col. Frank Borman and Cmdr. James A. Lovell Jr. hurtle past the mid-| point of their 14-day flight about} 11:15 a.m. EST. Gemini 7 entered its 100th or- bit at 4:56 a.m. Sunday is the big day. Gemini 7 breaks tte -world's-space-en- durance record, and the United States makes its adventurous attempt to have two spacecraft rendezvous and fly formation in| Space, perhaps only inches | apart ' Nothing appeared to stand in the way of a 9:54 a.m. blastoff of Gemini 6 from Cape Ken- nedy, Fla., Sunday. Launch teams made ready the Titan IL rocket that, will boost astronauts Walter. M. Schirra and Thomas P. Stafford into a 100,000-mile chase course after Gemini 7. » off "an increase in demonstra- conspiracy growing out of the tions, especially in Selma." ; "The (Nogro} veubls of Selma Reeb. killing. are pretty upset about this,'| _R. B. Kelley, a Selma televi- Rev. Andrew Young, executive|Si0n-repairman, was arrested on secretary of: Dr. King's South-|@ State. charge of killing Mr. ern Christian Leadership Con-|Reeb but a grand jury refused ference, said in Atlanta. |to indict him. He was called as "Tt just means that any Negro|@ witness against _ the other or civil rights worker can be three Thursday but invoked the killed a block away from the |Constitution's fifth amendment heart of town, and those respon- | #8ainst self-incrimination. sible for it. probably will be ac-| The charges filed by the jus- quitted,"" jtice department still must be Rev. James J. Reeb, 38, a|Submitted to a federal grand Unitarian minister and father |JUry, and government attorneys of four children, was attacked|@pparently waited for the out- along with two other white|Come of the trial in state court iclergymen the night. of last|before proceeding 'further with |broken up by police Friday. . |Mr. Merritt with refusing to re- The local, which has branches|turn the local's account books in Hamilton, Kingston, Windsor|which were reported stolen in and London, is engaged in ne-|November and were recovered gotiations with 85 trucking firms| last week hy a private detective m behalfvof 3,500 of its 6,500'hired by Mr. Merritt. 9 members. | A conciliation board report 00 Ae RS cle early next week. Mr. 'MeDou-/™&¥es & turbulent fall for the gall has said a strike is certain, | : but not before Christmas. |, Trucking companies have Mr. Greene appointed Mr.|filed damage claims totalling McDougall temporary business| $2,000,000 against union mem- imanager 'of the local during] bers following a wave of. wild- itrusteeship. Mr. Newman and/cat walkouts across the prove five others are to be temporary |ince during the fall negotiations, business agents. One company fired eight men Mr. Greene said he will re-|and there were 35 applications turn Wednesday to begin pri-|to. prosecute under the Ontario vate interviews with all busi-|Labor Relations Act. ness agents and executive board) The company retaliation members. | Stalled negotiations and Mr. Mc- | Dougall said.a strike is inevit- WILL HEAR BOTH SIDES | He said he will listen to both |*0!€ unless the company actions AUTHOR IN COMA Brivsh: author W. Somer- set Maugham fell into a coma today at his villa in St. Jean-Cap-Ferrat on the French Riviera, his secre- tary, Alan Searle, an- nounced. This picture of Maugham was taken on his 91st birthday last January. March 9 on a street corner one | their prosecution. --AP Wirephoto jblock from Selma's main tho-| |roughfare, Broad Street. DIED IN HOSPITAL The Boston clergyman, who had come to Alabama to join| |the struggle for Negro voting jrights, was clubbed to the ground, and died two days later|* in hospital with a massive brain} u A injury. His two companions also| KENOSHA, Wis. (AP) -- A ad 4 i ¢iyear-end layoff anc job cut- were roughed'up by @ gang °"down dulled the glitter of the Christmas season Friday for 19,500 employees of the Ameri- }ean-Motors-Cor,-Most-were-dis- mayed and many were bitter. The corporation, which makes Rambler automobiles, will halt |production at its Kenosha and |Milwaukee plants three days jbefore Christmas and remain closed until Jan, 17. When the plants re-open, 2,400 workers will be: out of jobs-- most of them in Kenosha, a city of 70,000 where American has 12,000 hourly employees. The Milwaukee plant has 7,500. A company statement said the suspension "'is to re-align field FROGGY WOULD A-FLYING GO PARIS (Reuters) -- Thou- sands of frogs got loose in a 3elgian airliner Friday, causing chaos in the cock- pit. The two - ton live cargo broke free in- mid-air and slithered into the cockpit. The frogs leaped around the pilot and he came in. to land. Most of them were rounded up later. : stocks to the current sales Not-Too-Merry Christmas, [Rambler Lays Off 19,500 pace." Rambler sales in the first ,11 months of 1965 totalled 296,000 compared with 355,636 in the similar 1964 period. "What a nice Christmas vaca- tion,"' said an. unhappy worker at the gate of the Kenosha fac- tory. And looking back toward the plant, he muttered "Thanks, fellas." "T've got a new home and three © kids and I'm already $125 behind in my payments, said another. "'I wish somebody would tell me what I'm going to do now." "It's going to affect busi- ness," said a Kenosha sporting goods dealer, "But we've had our ups and downs. This town|= has had them before and came through it all right." =|sion in the executive-board pre- oe : é ; are withdrawn, sides of the dispute. in--an-at-| manatr i Htempt-to-get-at -its-cause.. The union is seeking a two- "As soon as possible I'll mect Year agreement with a reduc: lwith the general membership| ion in the work week to 40 from |where we can discuss the prob. ey hours with compensating jlem sensibly," he said. | Mr. Hoffa said in his tele-| Members voted to reject the jigram that he was placing the|companies' offer of a reduction local in trusteeship at the re-|to 43 hours over 42 months with quest of five local executive|a pay increase of 53 cents an board members because dissen-|hour over the same period. This is the second time in the vented the union from serving/local's history that trusteeship as an effective bargaining agent has been imposed. In 1960, after for its members. |another period of turbulence un- He said he had been advised| der Mr. McDougall, I, J. (Duke) that Secretary-Treasurer Mer-'Thomson was placed in charge. ai NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Armed Men Grab $150,000-From Bank ASBESTOS, Que. (CP) -- A gang of armed men lay in wait in a bank before it opened Friday and escaped with as much as $150,000 pyhen the staff arrived. Georges Blanchette, manager of the branch of the Canadian Im- perial Bank of Commerce in this town 90 miles southeast of Quebec was herded into the vault along with his 11 + employees when they arrived for work. The vault was not locked. Russia Promises 'No Space Weapons' WASHINGTON (AP) -- The state department says Russia has promised to abide by a United Nations resolu- tion against orbiting weapons of mass destruction in space. Press officer: Marshall Wright said the Soviet stand had been asked after last month's Moscow display of what was described as an orbitting missile. Tass, the official Soviet news agency, said then that the weapon could deliver a "surprise blow on the first or any other orbit around the earth', vtec veo scrote SUNNY ni Oa ...In THE TIMES -today.... Ontario County's EMO Operction--P, 13 Generals Win First In 'Falls 5-4--P. 8 astern USAMA LAS ems Obits--25 Sports--8, 9, 10 Theatre--19 Whitby News--5 Women's--14,; 15, 16, 18 Weather--2 Ann Landers--14 City News--13 Classified--21, 22, 23, 24 'Comics--21 Editorial--4 Finoncial--25 \ iNT mn r uu ~