Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Jan 1966, p. 1

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- tions Wedn Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowrnan- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres 'in -On- tario' and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO.-10 Siie Beall Wok Terns "Celivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, She Oshawa Cimes THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1966 Authorized @s Second Class Mall Ottewe and for payment of Postage in Cash. Weather Report Colder with snowflurries to- night. Friday sunny, but cold. Low tonight, 18. High tomorrow, 25. Post Office Department TWENTY-FOUR PAGES AN EARLY MORNING The fir columns of fire at the Pickering Town ship farm of Fred Poynt caused an estimated $30,000 damage to a series of barns housing 700 pigs. Four Pick ering Township Fire Depart ments battled for hours to control -- the blaze which started a 6:30 a.m sen black smoke to the skies that about erin enema ARRAN aE eine »|plies of butter at trapped in has not yet the build- been dis pigs ings closed Times Oshawa Photo PIG-BARNS CREMATORIUMS those how PICKERING (Staff) -- An early morning fire today al- ered by hundreds of squeal 1 escaped to most destroyed a series of ing pigs brought-six pieces destroyed pig barns valued at $30,000 for fire fighting equipment the south of Brougham V into action wells and , é t i. He on Pickering Townst a swimming pool for thei d stove Fourth Concession water supply in freezing stater the Fire started at about 6:30 temperatures a.m, and was still burning The barns owned by Fred out of control by 10 a.m. E. Poynton were construct when four Township Fire de- ed of block and sheet metal Fire ,hall from Pickering partments had been called and contained 700 pigs. He Beach, Brougham and Clare in to battle the flames. said it would be hours be mont Thirty firefighters, hamp see barns using overhe i pig quarters blaze Pickering Southwest Fire Department was aided by whue As. Speaker Of House By STEWART MacLEOD OTTAWA (CP I Prime Minister Martir from a cabinet, meet nesday with a pointments, incl inee for Commons the new Parliame moureux The nomin "moureux, Deputy last Parliament pected. And it's foregone conclusion t be acceptable to ties when his non before the Tuesday As Deputy year-old Cornwall government has nomina man M. Batten, 66 ber-St. George's) Ww uty chairman of cc the last Parliame Mr. Martin's on behalf of Pearson who re Lagos Commonweal! ence today, said the deputy chairman is Maurice 'Rinfret real St. Jacques ty Lit Speaker LUCIEN LAMOUREUX inee f. committees Mont Brazil Flood ::: ae = sa wee ie | = mate Dead At 283 : : RIO DE JANI : { . The death totl from floor i dares i oor, be | tensit ae RCAF' oil airlift landslides in ¢iro area with t R i "Sy alge a: ens Was I t vould re ition set up reach disciosure also hit a Br to the north 4 major A when a bould¢ On -for one r ted caused A large ge number of led their way out of burning barns or were Many of the young animals aided by the firefighters buildings and their squeais were trapped in the burning hearlded their impending "disaster. Poynton said the first fire truck units arrived at the farm situated west of the rock oad, before 7 a.m pigs strug the Lamoureux Given Nod Viet Cong 'Guns Down : 'U.S. Dove ALGIERS (Reiiters)--The po litical arm of the Viet Cong guerrillas in South Viet Nam has rejected American peace h in ove tures made throug termedia rie Zerlé Ws 2ported today The South Vietnamese Na tional Liberation F of its few ont has one ssions outside the Communist re Algiers The agency peace American offensive le no con- essions, but only demanded them from the NLF the intermediaries because does ment The agency talks Wednesday Huynh Van Tam Viet Cong mission in Alge and Algerian Premier Col ari Boumedienne ' and that approach was made througt the U.S not. recognizé the report came after nig ght P hatenen head of the Hou- Ten days earlier Boumedienne also had talks with G. Mennen W iliamMs tant se z Afri affairs Williams tour of African capitals can during Boumedienne o. offi ially a med Wednesday night. of the results of U.S. en Averell * petals talks in th President Nasse This led to speculation diplo matic circles here that Algiers and Cairo, both capi Ww the Viet Cong have might "ag. pag their. policies over Viet Nam peace was als ro W moves move-|t missions, | LBJ: Well Have Guns And Butter By ARCH MacKENZIE WASHINGTON (CP) -- The United States is mighty enough to provide all the guns required in Viet Nam, and continued sup- home, Presi- Wednesday dent Johnson said night, The U.S. will Nam until sion ceases stay in Viet Communist aggres- Johnson told the na- tion in the annual State-of-the Union address to the new ses- ion of Congress His message, shot through with concern about Viet Nam, appeared to present an artfully- balanced formuta for rising war costs, fresh domestic legislation in the Great Society and for- eign policy steps including a jbillion-dollar allocation for in- |ternationa health, education, z ilture and population con- trol Democrats and Republicans alike applauded his determina- jtion to press for peace although "we have received no response to prove either success or fail- jure" on the current American @ peace offensive ™ But while Democrats ap-| \plauded his declaration that P| | would not permit the war to PRESIDENT JOHNSON: GUNS, BUTTER |sidetrack his Great Society weed | the year beginning next July/the budget would see an in- icrease of only $600,000,000, the conse-| president said. The modest in- deficit of $1,800,000,000.|crease implied -- despite the [the budget. deficit for the next/ This would be the lowest deficit|president's formula for guns| the president|and butter too--that the axe has educa-} 'grams, Republicans attacked of $112,800,000, revenues many of his domestic program | $111,000, 000,000 and a }proposals and his assertion that | quent fiscal year would be held |31, 800,000,000, lis MAIN CONCERN | Viet Nam, the president said in his sombre speech, "must be the centre of our concern." "Because of Viet Nam we jcannot do all we should or al |we would like to do "But we will not permit fhose} who fire on us in Viet Nam to vin a victory over the desires aa intentions of the American people. This nation is mighty enough, its socjety healthy enough, its people strong enough, to pursue our goals in the rest of the world while build- 4 home ve to be made} 4 they will be. to pay ra perhaps general tax in about which there ation did recommend re sumption of excise tax rates or autos and service Pas I ad been reduced only 12 reduce 0, and also some structure overhaul to improve evenues, fac If the "necessities of Viet to} jin | said The, military would take $58,- 300,000,000 or an increase of al- {gram launched under the John- most $10,000,000,000 on Jast year./son administration. Of this, $5,800,000,000 is speci- | SEE STATE OF ally marked for Viet Nam But the non-military sector of! (Continued on Page 2) 10 Key Words For Viet Nam | WASHINGTON in President some years, jbeen used on poverty, society at president the full authority be- a flat de 'e8Ca- when (AP)--Buried ; Wednesday night, the Johnson's |for the first time put Union mess is a| weight of his own to North Viet hind this alternative with Nam to start scaling down the|commitment to begin war in Southeast Asia without/lating the conflict if and negotiations or even an agreed|the Communists are ready ceasefire In recent days dispatches We wil said, |from Viet Nam have it in low-key, "if others |Some decline in Viet Cong offen: use of force.' sive activity of the ficials said they had no way of advisers think that is, in judging whether this-is signifi- , the way the war may be-| C4"! It could have been, how- gin to end--not with a great ever, a factor in Johnson's of- Nam require it, I will not hesi-| conference or a formal truce but ate to return to Congress for| with a slow dwindling of hostil- additional revenues," he said; |itie's _ He forecast budget spending In his t home, he \borne by ther than the eference to said able 00r-- State of the those 10-word proposal the crease has been spec Jonnson ae respond ne telephone their Some est president's clos- Johnson's major effort, now| three weeks old, is to get the | Communists to agree to a con- ference and a ceasefire, But in this field he had no significant address to Congress new concessions to offer, though} Got A Bud et Beef, Fel a? |two points he made may be read * |by Communist leaders in Hanoi with special interest He declared the United States is ready to discuss and consider "the views of any group," jcifically including a four-point peace program advanced by Bang Ott A Note To Mitch OT:% Mini nadians befo (CP)--Finance invited all Ca he said in a press statement, Mr. Sharp added that the re-| Hanoi Wednesday to write | port of thé royal commjssion on| The reference to "any group" Feb, 12 with any|taxation won't be presented un-|was broad enough to include-the| they might want/til Maret National Liberation Front, the when he pre-) Therefore it wasn't planned political arm of the Viet Cong budget to: put forward "any substan-| guerrillas fig necessary,--he would 'tial proposals' based on the r Part try to make himself available..; until all interested had /in a 'peace for personal interviews with|time: to study it and make|one of Hanoi's John taxpayers or, associations to go/known their views to the gov-|son himself had said. previously jfurther into as _Suggestions, ernment resolved him Su estion him yares this ye Where fo consider ar's front has been Nam ipation of the conference objectives this issue would he to EX- CHIEF OF HOLLAND GESTAPO ARRESTED ON SUSPICION OF 83, 000 MURDERS a main line added as the area be after three, day' Authorities down of casualties dead in Rio; 36 de across th a 1 6. : ive} , in- Pet : nestiec mie iy ) it wall the fir polis that sent ures soaring. City thorittes said the 1 more bodies were onthe » DECLINES morgues here Nitero On -other More raip hampe Ssday r hed of COMMENT and ibje tant teers. sea in the sl Most of there, diary Dutch ones 1s{ t attemy | persons, He was Wilhel a major r in arr im - to the Nazi se and of murder abe H trud'Slottke. ¢ Jewish me olice in He sted of aiding | . irit ted ° Suspe Sted with him were Wilhelm Zopef, 57 curity lewish matters. He is ' tp 93,328 cases of murder. New Entry For Anne Frank's Diary the SS (elite Anne Frank of the Frank of her famil am tfer they hid am Amster- He ended from the Vienna police and while Austrian authorilies probed into his -wartime activities fled to Switzerland. Thefe, he told an nterviewer the Franks had been betrayed by a ima whe publication of ayed by a Dutchman 4 worked drugstore ank. It later was made into nth A aT ¥ ful r The said Hars er ' il pla and a movie , Zmenf and Mi Slottke vOU wrobably be before a Munich court charges. nd three family while with the Gestaonp in mem- ponsible for ers died in a con- ing Amster co tr centration Naz noan for nearly father from The dam attic Only her survived Was sus four years, force Otto Frank, an adviser $ police on susnec fate became one of vies: of the r through The Diary of Their the tting famous ef Anne in thei als¢ authorities tters fo } it Vienna police officer, Karl Silverbauer, admitted in 1963 that he took part in the arrest ylland. She is 4 brought to ans and abetting ¥ wer the |tion 'and other pieces of the pro-| indicated | Administration of-| spe-| ting in South Viet} AIN | Gotham Grinds Into Life After 12 Troubled Days NEW YORK (AP) This; In late morning, Supreme cify's unprecedented, multi -|Court Justice Abraham N. Gel- million-dollar subway and bus/ler signed an order freeing ail- strike ended shortly beforejing transport. workers union |dawn today, minutes after en-| president Michael J. Quill and tering its 13th day eight other labor leaders from | But full restoration of serv-| jail sentences he imposed for jice remained hours away and|contempt. At the same time, he | 3,500,000. New York workers still| dismissed a proceeding which |had to overcome the problem of} sought $324,000 - a - day union getting to and from work. The) fines for ignoring an injunction jmonumental traffic crush built! forbidding the strike. up even as the strike's end be-| The transit authority re- has? rigs y tied ; quested Geller's actions. ayor John ndsay, in a F broadcast report of the settle-| ara who et te YS -- jment, said all the city Transit} a ean age a [A thority's 6,500 subs mr Bellevue Hospital. His col- be way Calsiieagues were in civil jail. |and 4,000 buses could not bh ee | Bus service inethe city got un- jpeted back in use "'until late} ltonight or early Friday." jder way immediately and -par- | < jtial subway service was only | The striking AFL-CIO unions | hours behind. Full service to the --the Transport Workers Union city's 3°590,000 work force was _ the pre ogenge' Bhool expected before the evening lsettiomect tera shortly peters | siesta: , Pee y | But the end of the strike came ieerteageeadt too late for the hundreds of <* § a.m., the first segment | thousands who set out early in of the 237-mile subway system lin. hitter cold to get to work; jwas carrying its first paying |The threat of snow and icy rain | passengers since New Year's} hung over the city. | Day--on the shuttle train be-| # ltween Grand Central. Station| The traffic department said | the number of automobiles and Times Square. A half-hour |later the Transit Authority an-|C'awling along expressways was, |nounced that 3,200 buses were| "early equal that of Wednes- jin operation. day's near record. | Although describing it as| EXIT CHEERFULLY \¢ 'fruitless to get into the num-| The union negotiators were bers game," Lindsay evaluated | smiling broadly and laughing as the new two-year labor contract |they came out to announce the for 34,400 workers at $52,000,-\executive board's decision at 000. But a transport workers un-|6§:25 a.m. EST. ion lawyer said it "is for $69,-| "I would like to announce the 980,000 to the penny." | end of the strike," were the first The breakdown in wage} words of Douglas L. MacMahon, boosts and other money items acting head of the union. He was not immediately available. | added: The workers went back to| 'We are asking all our mem- their jobs pending union ratifi-|bers to return to work immédi- {cation of the contract. ately on their respective shifts Lindsay placed the strike cost) and roll the subwagés and buses, at more than $500,000,000, in-| 'We are happy at the result, | puding $200,000,000 in wages|we feel we have achieved a {fos large measure of justice in our The commerce and industry|demands. We are very, very association however, has eval-| \glad to go back to rendering-the uated the economic impact at/services we have in the past." more than $100,000,000 a day. MacMahon said he figured the Lindsay said he didn't know|two-year contract package at exactly where the money would $70,000,000. One source close to |be found to finance the agree- jthe negotiations, however, said | ment He expressed the hope of|the figure was about $52,000,000. maintaining the 15-cent fare "in| Mayor John V. Lindsay, a Re- the best interests of the people."'| publican who took office the day Although independently incor-|the 34,400 bus and subway em- porated and supposed self-sus-| ployees walked off the job, made taining, the 'Transit Authority|no immediate statement after for several years has had to|the strike's settlement turn..to..the..city.to..make up| MacMahon said the strike multi - million - dollar deficit could not have been settled The mayor said that bills will| without the Help of the media- j; be introduced soon in the state|tors." legislature to create a new; Justice Abraham N. Geller transit authority, the first step|said he would act later today on in his plan to consolidate trans- \the possible release of Michael |portation and related services|J. Quill and other union leaders jinto a new department from custody TETRA NEWS HIGHLIGHTS ' s s ' . \V-C Don't Take 'Crimp' Lying Down | SAIGON (AP).-- A large guerrilla forced ambushed and badly mauled a South Vietnamese battalion and its Ameri can advisers at daybreak today -within artillery range of the big U.S.-Australian Operation Crimp. The\ ambush | came as the South Vietnamese government prepared to join the Viet Cong in a truce for the Wietnamese: Lunar New Year celebration next week. The official news agency Viet Nam Press said South Vietnamese troops would stop fighting for three days in observanee of Tet, the national holiday, which falls Jan. 20-23. | Manufacturers Want 11% Tax To Go OTTAWA (CP) -- The Canadian Manufacturers Asso- ciation asked the government today to remove the 11-per- cent sales tax om production machinery to help industry expand and meet foreign competition. The association rep- resenting three-quarters of the country's manufacturers also gought a reduction of the top bracket of corporate income tax rates, greater incerftives for industrial search and development, and more help in -getting new foreign markets, especially in Africa re- into .In THE TIMES today Planners 'Slaves' To Agenda Says Crone--P. 13 Whitby Firm Plans Extensive Expansion--P. 5, 3-Day Bonspiel Ends With Awerds--P. 8 Landers--14 ncaa i Sports--8, 9, 10 Theatre--11 Whitby News--5, & 14, 18,-16. 17 A HNC ET AMMAN S49 ty News--13 Classified-- 20, 21, 22 eee tba ONC ii aaa,

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