Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Dec 1965, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturday, December 18, 1965 RT' od By ARCH MacKENZIE ain will "redouble its efforts" to WASHINGTON (CP) -- Prime/get the Viet Nam war to the Minister Wilson of Britain se-|conference table, although it is cured the ready assent of Presi-|"virtually impossible to get into * dent Johnson Friday for an oilja dialogue with Hanoi (North embargo against the rebel Rho- Viet Nam) and. impossible to desian government in a day. of|know what compromises they "extremely fruitful, brisk talks." are ready to make." Wilson also pledged that Brit- But, said Wilson, "we shall not NEW LOOK FOR CABINET (Continued From Page One) de-la-Madeleine dies down. regularities in his riding of Les- HAS WORKING LU AS re jworry about rejections or re- |buffs,"' although he recalled the 'abortive Commonwealth prime ministers' initiative last summer which North Viet Nam declined {to entertain. Wilson met the president and senior government members for a total of five hours Friday and left Washington today. He is due in Ottawa Sunday for conversa- tions with Prime Minister Pear- son en route home. NCH o's Bid 'Lifted' BJ Ane ie FOr: LB ee Bee: BV ARC T Markee WASHINGTON (CP) -- The\-~" | cia i llatest peace initiative in the Vi-, The U.S. has asked Hanoi for etnamese war quotes President|clarification, but officiais say Ho Chi Minh of North Viet Nam'they are skeptical of success. as saying he is "prepared '0 5°! The U.S. state department eam meet anyone" for edgy over recent charges tha' salem Baka it had hidden rejection of previ That's a paraphrase of Pres-\ous peace openings, made pub ident Johnson's March 25 state-|jic this' latest episode Friday ment that he is "preapred to ¢0/but only because the St, Loui: anywhere, at any time and with/Post-Dispatch was printing par' anyone, whenever there islof the story. promise of progress toward an The paper said the U.S. had honorable peace." ; | He followed that with an April rejected this purported feeler a' aankaen ce VIE ATELAL EWOVS \7 commitment of readings for Well,,which the state department f QUITE REAL, STILL AROUND: BOND, GOLDFINGER AND LIZ _ TORONTO (CP) -- Some- ; wnere In Toronto lives a Karl | Mary a William Shai! speare, an Elizabeth Taylor, five James. Bonds and_ three Goldfingers who can't cash in on anything but practical jokes. Marx is a Toronto capital- ist who owns a metal com- pany and vigorously denies any political affiliation -- es- pecially with the founder of modern communism. William Shakespeare is a tax man and Elizabeth Tay- lor is single and a secretary. These are only a few of the "But as soon. as. they sot the hospital number, they put iwa-and iwe tovetier and 1. don't get service, or treui, or anything without. making a federal case out of it," Taylor said. The James Bonds often get mysterious telephone calls with some new ideas on how to trap the Goldfingers. The a kes of fictional secret agent 007 Bond, created by. lan Fleming, are truck driv- ers, engineers and a sales- man among other things in this locality. ordinary Metropolitan Tor- onto persons' who have dis- | covered that famous names | and the telephone can "drive "unconditional discussions." denied. Neither side, in fact, is ap-' It was revealed several weeks |parently ready to follow those ago--and the state department THE WHITE HOUSE an- nounced Friday that Amin- tore Fanfani, right, Presi- Britain's oil sanctions against Rhodesia were announced 'in London after Wilson's working meet anyone." The United States has asked for a clar- ification of the Vietnamese Arthur Laing loses part of his! Revenue Minister E. J. Ben- northern affairs and national te- son will add the presidency of | sources department and takes the treasury board to his du-| on fr ibility for Indis M/ties, and Mr. Pearson said this a new department of Indian af-| new position will be the central fairs and northern affairs. © point for. improving administra- Allan MacEachen, a bachelor, /tion in the public service. replaces Judy LaMarsh, also! ue ee single, in health and welfare. | TOTAL UNCHANGED She takes over a reduced port-| The new ministers fill two va- folio of secretary of state, va- cancies caused by the election cated Thursday night by Mau- and three subsequent resigna- rice Lamontagne. tions and keep the cabinet total John R. Nicholson is to headjat 26, the same as before the a smaller department of labor election. Eleven are from On- and continue handling the Cen- tario, nine from Quebec, two tral Mortgage and Housing Cor- from British Columbia, and one poration which he answered for each from Newfoundland, Nova while immigration minister. Scotia, New Brunswick and Jean-Luc Pepin, former min- Manitoba ister without portfolio, will be The new manpower depart- called mines minister until the ment appears likely to be the energy and resources depart- centre for the war on poverty: ment is set up to handle all re- Tom Kent, Mr. Pearson's policy sources ~---coal, oil, gas and|adviser and head of the secre- atomic power--in addition tojtariat working on poverty, is to the present mines and technical! move in as Mr. Marchand's dep- surveys functions. uty minister The portfolio of solicitor-gen- Questioned about Transport eral, held by Larry Pennell, will}Minister Pickersgill's future, be expanded into a full depart-)Mr. Pearson said the minister ment to help co-ordinate policy |had expressed concern about in fighting crime. The RCMP. |his heavy duties, but still had a the national parole board and}good deal to do in putting rail- the penitentiaries service will be|way legislation through the Mr. Pennell's responsibilities, |Commons leaving the justice department) Works Minister Mcllraith will to handle legislation, litigation continue as government leader and prosecutions. in the House Forestry Minister Mau-| The prime minister also. an- rice Sauve will be given heav-jnounced four changes among jer duties as head of a depart-jdeputy ministers to help speed ment of forestry and rural de-|the reorganization velopment, said Mr. Pearson.' In other changes, the Bank- There 'had been speculation hejruptcy Act, the Companies Act, would be given a more senior |combines investigation and re- portfolio but this may come'search, patents and copyrights Mr. was after the current controversy |and trade marks will be trans- over allegations of election ir-jferred from the state secretary --------|to Privy Council President Fav reau until they are placed under New Job To a "new and separate" minister REACTION MIXED * Opposition reaction to PM Adviser Pearson's announcement mixed. \ Conservative Leader Diefen- TTAWA (CP)--Prime Min-ipaker, on a Caribbean cruise iste} Pearson Friday named his} ntl early next week, was un- fofmer policy secretary and the| available for comment. Alvin chief of the war on poverty./Hamilton, former Conservative To Kent, to be deputy minis-)acriculture minister, said the ter' of citizenship and immigra-' shuffle means Mr. Pearson has tion. ( been unable to find a Quebec) The appointment was among /jieutenant he can trust with a} fi affecting this most senior|major portfolio. Te¥el of the civil service, Mr. Npp Leader Douglas ap- Kfnt will become deputy minis- proved of the new manpower de-| tdr of the proposed new man-| partment but said the appoint- power department. | ment of Mr. Sharp and Mr. Win- Mr. Kent remains chief Of! ters to senior portfolios strength- dhe par on poverty. His salary! ons the "right wing" of the cab- is $25,000 a year. inet Claude Isbister, deputy min- Social Credit Leader ister of citizenship and immi-|son said Mr. Greene will need gration, becomes deputy mines|:'4}) his powers of oratory" to| minister and eventually deputy|<e]; himself to the Western minister of resources and|rarmer. energy when that new depart- Creditiste Leader Caouette; ment is established said the most surprising change E. A. Cote, deputy minister) was Mr, MacEachen's move to of northern affairs and national|peaith. He thought Mr. Mac- resources, becomes deputy! machen knew a good deal ahout} minister for the planned neWhiabor, and that Miss LaMarsh department of Indian affairs|had experience in health despite' and northern affairs early mistakes Dr. Louis Z. Rousseau, dep- The prime minister said he, uty forestry minister, becomesihad considered the allegations deputy minister. of the proposed} against Mr, Sauve -- and the new department of rural devel) minister's rebuital--before mak Dpment and forestry ing up_his cabinet list. All the "Dr. W.._E. Van Steenburgh,| charges had been answered, he deputy mines minister ts to} said undertake special work in the |t was the seventh cabinet scientific secretariat Ofj|shuffle since the Pearson gov- the Privy Council office. Helernment took office, and the will get an extension of his!third this year. Mr. appointment beyond age 66 said he expected no further All the changes among theichanges before Parliament deputy ministers are effective meets Jan. 18. Jan. 1, 1966 : Thomp- -- Pearson} flunch with the president. His |visit also. coincided with the 'State department revealation of a peace initiative begun in Ha- jnot Noy. 11 and on which the U.S. has asked for clarification. | State department officials, how-) ever, have cast doubt on the prospects of success. Wilson 'himself, it was re-| vealed by chance, had no offi- cial word from Johnson or any other U.S. official about this la- test peace initiative, and it was, Before entering talks, Hanoi made public apparently only be-|said, there should be a cease- cause the St. Louis Post-Dis-'fire throughout Viet Nam and patch was printing part of the agreement that negotiations. be story based on the 1954 Geneva agree- Wilson declined comment ment on Viet Nam as defined on the development by the four-point program laid At a press conference at the down jast March by the Na- British embassy Friday nizht tional Liberation Front, politi- the pipe-smoking prime minister ¢al arm of the Viet Cong said his talks had covered a "The government in Hanoi is "very, very wide range." prepared to initiate negotiations He led off with reference to without first requiring actual Britain's penetrating review Of withdrawal of the American its heavy defence commitments, troops," Fanfani reported. The in which the target is to scale North Vietnamese have consist down annual costs to about ently called for U.S. withdrawal £2,000,000,00 0($6,000,000,00€). from Viet Nam, but the four Wilson said Foreign Secretary points are vague on when this Michael Stewart and Defence! should occur Minister Denis Healey of Britain Replying fo Fanfani's letter, will be in Washington next/dated Nov. 20, Rusk said in a month for more discussions 0n pec. 4 letter 'that the U.S. is defence far from _ persuaded" that i cecilia tate 4 'i statements by Ho and Premier -- gs aap yt niaitin' Pham Van Dong '"'indicate a ; ' e 7 I N ms Bott & {real willingness for uncondi- about . A ibs el ae ee tor | ional negotiations." The White di ead nuclear role '0° House said Friday night that it PS re a . 'i : y ' < Wilson said there is no con ood ge Be 6 lic > 'lear pri ye : ' aay | Bae Eek is HATO 0 conduct unconditional discus- 2S » 7 ae " clear role for West Germany has ° gone -- ies oe " ihe ky Robert J. McCloskey said that atte ate 'ee a aad ta wil the U.S. remains ready for ne Many mad g: odes nied os wil gotiations without conditions son sala 7 " "5 pany help pay with North Viet Nam and is son. Salt 1 y , 2 aw: ' reply . for the airlift of oil to Zambia awaiting a reply from Hanoi i ie . Rhodesia for 'to determine whether it wants aor take wa a " iS aie to move this great question eprot ag vl spencer neh to be from the battlefield to the con- . e Ne 3 ome " J c , : ference table worked out. Asked how South On Nae ork Pantani' said Africa might be controlled > Friday night that he had for potential source of Rhodesian). . 4. ante bina ae supply, Wilson said Britain sng] wetted Rus reply bis ~ ae the U.S. will have to consider | ° No ree ee Peery me me any 'seepage or leakage." Con- Me hate viet Nam nor pir alg a having sed cha has mentioned the Hanoi Ones "i eae sipeace feeler in radio Broz terests in the international oil eG Sc etnced at Tokyo road. industry and he mentioned The The facard 'of the Bano Netherlands, France, Germany ace feeler and the U.S. reply and Italy. h hope the mea- was made public here after the i ar veh it " ti orted by |ot Louis Post-Dispatch reported ple ivotiviade . * rT *|the U.S. had received--and re- all countries, he, sald, - _ jected--a new peace feeler from | North Viet Nam. The state de-} partment denied the North Viet- namese offer had been re- jected, dent of the United Nations General Assembly, has re- ported to President Johnson that North Vietnamese Pres- ident Ho Ch Minh, left, has told intermediaries "I am prepared to go anywhere; to (Continued From Page One) to has is department spokesman Ship Aground On Expo Isle MONTREAL (CP) -- Several tugs tried without success Fri jay to refloat the Britis h freighter Manchester Spinner, aground on the edge of a man- made island which is part of the site of the 1967 world's fair The Post Dispatch said had been told by "an informed administration official,' who was not named, that the re- ported overture had been | 'looked at carefully'? and was 'not taken very seriously." The story said the Johnson administration had been told of the offer by an. American law- vesse| went poses minsales in_..the day after l@aving her pier in Montreal harbor. The--ship-_was then veered off course at a right angle and rammed into the rocky fringe of He Ronde She was left with her buw nudging the shore No one was reported injured in the accident 811 - ton earlier Fr Delivered to AT 10 % REG. CASHEWS 215 MIXED NUTS said tg have HERE and THERE Members of the Rotary Club of Oshawa, at their Monday meeting, will see colored slides of club activities. The slides will be forwarded to the Rotary Club of Saarbruchen, West Germany, with which the local chub is paired The Junior - Intermediate Choir of Brooklin United Church is singing at the chil- dren's department of the Mc- 725-6553 RENT-A-CAR DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH 5,00 PER DAY ' 725-6553 RUTHERFORD'S CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS | cal resh Cirisimas All Orders €.0.D. 14-0Z. REG. 2.19 Call Today -- 725-7151 THE GOODIE SHOPPE probe for possible peace talks. The White House also said that it has had no in- dications Hanoi "is ready ta conduct unconditional dis- cussions."' (AP) HANOI'S 'PEACE-FEELER' yer who together with an American writer in Rome learned 'that a meeting had taken place in Hanoi involving Ho, Pham, two liberation front leaders, and two Italians. The Americans told Arthur J. Goldberg, U.S. ambassador to the UN, about the Hanoi meet- ing. Goldberg already had re- ceived the information from Fanfani, togethre with a warn- ing that premature .disclosure could destroy the contact by ex- posing the leaders of Hanoi to the wrath of the Chinese, Goldberg, therefore, did not reveal to the Americans the fact that he knew peace nego- tiations were taking shape but told them the U.S. government would give due consideration to the information they had con- veyed. In New York Friday night, Goldberg said that lawyer had prompted The Post- Dispatch story The ambassador also pressed regret that '"'this has become a .public thing rather than, as we hoped, a matter of quiet diplomacy that I hoped might produce some result." But he declined to say whether he believes the disclosure hindered chances for talks the ex- he has Rusk, in replying to Fanfani, said the U.S. could agree "that negotiations might be under- taken on the basis of the Ge- neva agreements of 1954 with- out any qualifications or condi- tions." The Geneva reements, which, established the states of Viet Nam, Laos and Cambodia from what formerly was French Indochina, specified that cath of the states was to be inde- pendent and fftee of foreign al- legiances. A provision for unifi- cation of North and South Viet Nam was never carried out. Rusk declared emphatically that the U.S. does not agree "with the contention that the 'four points' advanced by Hanoi constitute an authentic interpre- tation of the Geneva agreement of 1954." "Elements in the four points,"' Rusk wrote, "notably the politi- program of the so-called| National Liberation Front, have no basis in the Geneva agree- ments, and Hanoi's apparent in- sistence on a prior declaration accepting the four points thus appears both to be inconsistent with the agreements and to re- quire a substantial condition to negotiations." ._S NUS Your Door SAVINGS OUR PRICE OUR PRICE 1.89 1.89 sentiments and instead seem/confirmed it--that the U.S. re- |bogged in peace semantics. jected a proposal last fall via | Word of possible North Viet-|Secretary-General U Thant of jnamese flexibility wasjthe United Nations for negotia- transmitted to State Secretary|tions with North Viet Nam in Dean Rusk by Italiat Foreign) Rangoon, Burma. |Minister Amintore Fanfani, cur-- The war was going badly for jrent president of the United Na-|the South then and the U.S. bar- \tions General Assembly, in a let-/ gaining po sition would have iter dated Noy.. 20. Rusk did not'been limited. WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy With Snowilurries Partially-Clearing Sunday TORONTO (CP) -- Pores: issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: sts; Timagami, Cochrane, River, Mainly Sywopsis: No significant change in the picture is seen as yet. Snowflurries will be fairly widespread in both northern and southern' Ontario today as the latest in a series of weas disturbances crosses the gion. Sunday is expected to be predominantly cloudy but with snowflurries likely confined to a few areas around the Great Lakes. Lake Niagara, Huron, Windsor, with a few clear periods tonight and Sunday. Light winds and not much change in tempera- tures Forecast Temperatures; Low tonight, high Sunday. Windsor 28 St. Thomas 28 London 25, Kitchener 25 Mount Forest 25 Wingham Hamilton és St. Catharines .... Toronto Peterborough . Kingston Trenton .. Killaloe .. Muskoka North Bay . Sudbury Earliton Sault Ste. \ Kapuskasing White River Moosonee Timmins re- St. Clair, Lake riie, Lake Ontario, Lake Haliburton Killaloe London, Toronto Hamilton: Cloudy with scat- tered light snowflurries today Cloudy with a few clear «pe riods tonight and Sunday. -Net much change in temperatures Winds westerly 15 today light to- night and Sunday Georgian Bay, Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy with occa- sional light snowflurries today tonight and Sunday. Light winds and not much change in peratures DON'T FORGET Che KRih Room NOW OPEN SUNDAY 4 TO 7:30 P.M. Continental French Buffet Served Daily 11:30 - 2 p:m. -- 5 to 8 p.m. GENOSHA HOTEL bo hs ee AAASINIAGTIIa0g bt Bo RD ES tS tem White Friday the signing of Len Fket- | North Bay, Sudbury: ich, a 1965 cut of San Fran-| cloudy with scattered|cisco '49ers. He attended Ore-| light snowflurries today. Cloudy | gon State from 1962 to 1964. | DRUG STORES 'OPEN THIS SUNDAY ~ 12:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. ALL STORES you nuts." TAKE TAYLOR Take E. P. Taylor for in- stance -- not the wealthy in- | dustrialist but the chap who works as an attendant at the Ontario Hospital here. He has trouble getting credit with the gas company. | "If I call the Consumers' Gas for service, I calmly tell them my name and where | they can reach me at work," he says. OLD WORLD TRADITION LONDON CREAM LONDON WINERY. MUTED tONDON © ONTARIO Canaoe SIGN PLAYER VANCOUVER (CP) -- British) Columbia Lions of the Western) Football Conference announced | NEW WORLD PERFECTION 20% OFF SNOW TIRES 7.50-14 Blackwell Tubeless $ Reg. 29.95. SALE PRICE . 23.95 WINTERIZE YOUR CAR NOW Avoid Costly Service Calls iol Rates on TUNE-UPS and BRAKE REPAIRS GARY'S Service 89 723-6532 Simcoe Pick-up and St. S. Delivery Esso ATTENTION BUSINESSMEN ... ! We serve a special businessmen's lunch, including main course, soup, bread, butter, onl vegetables and desert, for 80¢ and up. Tea or coffee 5c extra, TRY US TODAY! 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