Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Jan 1966, p. 1

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Home Newspaper OF Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, -- Ajax, --e and neighboring centfes a tario and Durham Codinties. 13 sy EE Tanere bshavon Ti OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JANUARY 17, 1966 ' ' Authorized as gy Class Mail Pet Office Ottowa ond for Wi eather: Mainly Report. cloudy and milder {- day and on Tuesday. we Low tonight, 14. High tomorrow, 18. irtment Payment of Postage in TWENTY PAGES ' CARNIVAL PRINCE AND PRINCESS PAY STATE VISIT TO OSHAWA With all the panoply of a state occasion Oshawa's Club Loreley welcomed the official visit of the crown prince and princess of the Canadian festival its carnival on Satur night. His Royal Highness\, Prince' Ernst I from Mortgageville and Her German- season to Loveliness: Princess Mari- anna. from the Golden Horseshoe are in real life Mr. and Mrs, Ernst Grotsche of the Club Har- monie, Toronto, from which emanates the royal retinue , and ministers of merriment who' presided at balls and masquerades from Novem- ber until the eve of Lent. --Oshawa Times Photo IN MONTREAL AND QUEBEC CITY Siudents Idled y Holiday Row MONTREAL (CP) -- Techni-jtheir summer vacation by 214|region east of Montreal and the cal and yocational school stu-| dents here and at Quebec City| stayed away from their class-| weeks, giving them less time to! earn money. Mr. Gerin-Lajoie said he could Papineau region east of Hull.) He said the Quebec law gov- erning relations between teach- rooms today in protests against|not revise the school calendar,}ers and school boards does not extension of the academic year. It could not immediately be | learned whether students at technical and trade schools in| other parts of the province also went on about 27,000 such students alto- getherin Quebec. They'joined some 18,000 stu- dents already missing classes because of a strike by 761 French - speaking teachers at Roman Catholic schools. Representatives of the trade} students Education but and technical school met Saturday with Minister Paul Gerin-Lajoie, ho agreement was reached, Their main complaint is that a new schoo! calendar, insti- tuted this year, would reduce ---- Dice LULU 11a Canadians' Rough Play zP) * -- Canadian| Ambassador Robert Rg the jmands an army short the exhibition | Sherbrooke | threatened to cut three-game Russian ho¢key series of Beavers unless team members behaved themselves on the ice, it. was learned today. The tour ended Sunday with "strike." There are| and that it would run its full} term for 1966 He rejected student claims that a shortened summer holi- day would cut down their earn- ing capacity, on the grounds that vocational and technical training is free in Quebec, so students don't have to depend on summer: jobs to pay their 'way through school There are 74 trade schools alone in the province. EXPLAINS STAND At his. press confefence Sat- urday, Mr. Gerin-Lajoie also ex- plained why hig department has {not stepped in J6"Help settle the strikes in progress in three school districts--the Hull region near Ottawa, the Le Gardeur cee N; Arian, D 4 CGUCHIGAGE Is Tough, No-Nonsense Man ee as atwuvy sVsy Lis LONDON (AP)--The tall man appointed: to bring peace to. Ni-| jgeria is a tough no - nonsense} soldier who made his name in |the chaos of The Congo. Maj.-Gen. Aguiyi Ironsi, once ja private in the British Army's Africa Regiment during Second World War, com- of 8,000 men }who call him--though not to his! face--Johnny Ironsides. He was trained in the British tradition that soldiers don't meddle in politics and once o |der is restored to-Nigeria's 55,- |provide for any such interven-| tion by the province. Meanwhile in the Hull region, representatives of the 354 teach- ers are scheduled to take part in conciliation talks Tuesday. In the Le Gardeur region, where 254 teachers started the series of strikes with their Jan. 4 walkout for better pay and |working conditions, and . the Papineau region, where 123 teachers are striking, the situa- tion is stalemated One ray"of light was the hope that settlement might be reach between 350 teachers and the regional school board in the Vaudreuil-Soulanges region west of Montreal, before -a ~strike |deadline set for Wednesday. pected to step aside and leave politics to the politicians. Gen. Ironsi, in his mid-40s, iwent to The Congo as a major with -the United Nations force Nigerian troops were part of the force that ended four years of military operations June 30, 1964, Rising to command the UN strafed and dropped four bombs |new programs, Congo force and returning to Nigeria a hero, he last year be- came the first Nigerian to cofh- mand the Nigerian army. then, command had, stayed*with| white officers sec d from the Canadians losing their third |000, 000 _People he can be ex-|Britain. start to Soviet teams. Ford called two players and foyr officials of the Allan Cup| champions to his office last Fri-| flay. He appealed to them for| more sportsman-like conduct on| the part of the team, in the in- terest of Canada's good name} here. 'The night before, at Kalinin, 100 miles north of Moscow, the} Beavers had opened their Rus- sian. tour by losing 15-4 to the Soviet army team. Th roughly- played game was marred by a suiccssion of brawls and inci dents which drew the ire of So viet fans. Ford combined his appeal for cleaner hockey with a threat to intervene with Soviet authorities to have dhe final game can celled if the players did not 4 quit themselves better in second game against Russia' ndtional team here Saturday night. ./8-Hour Truce SALISBURY (Reuters)--Rho- desian Prime Minister Ian Smith assured his gasoline-ra-_ tioned countrymen tonight that oil still is coming into Rhodesia despite the British oil embargo. In a filmed television inter- view, Smith told a questioner: "Precisely from where and how much I am not prepared to say --but since the embargo, oil has come into Rhodesia and is still coming in." Asked if he considered the time was' ripe for negotiations between the British and Rhode- sian governments on the crisis, © Smith said he 'was prepared to begin negotiations with Britain at any time, provided they would be. constructive. He said one condition .would* be that Rhodesia remained independent nation. But if British Prime Minister Wilson was hoping to negotiate ge from a strong position by wait- ing to bring Rhodesia to its knees before starting talks, "'he will be in his grave before that day arrives." Asked to comment on the pos- sibility of the Rhodesian pound ing devalued, Smith said his rnment was not even think- ing "bout devaluation. "No one here talks about that any more," he said, He said he was confident Rho- desia could overcome the Brit- ish and international trade and economic sanctions already im--- posed that the country could overcome any new sanc- tions introduced by Britain. Smith was asked if he could give an assurance to Rhodesia that oil supplies would be forth- coming, and that the people could plan accordingly. "I am as confident and as sure as oné can be in this world - today," Smith declared, RHODESIA GETS OIL, SMITH CLAIMS Protest filed a e with the U.S. state department protesting new reg- ulations of the securities and ex- change commission which ap- pear to extend U.S. Jaw into Ca- nadian company affairs. The note was handed to the state department last week be- fore today's deadline on repre- sentations which the securities commission invited. A spokes- man for the finance depart- ment here said the subject will likely be open to further discus- sions. The U.S. securities regulating commission announced late last year it would require all com- panies to file returns to it if they had assets of $1,000,000 or more and their shares traded over-the-counter in the U.S. among 300 or more American yr" Ordered From AP-Reuters | SAIGON (CP)--Gen. William} |C. Westmoreland, U.S. com- |mander in South Viet Nam, to- ag ordered all American forces to cease firing for starting at noon Thursday in ob- servance of the Vietnamese lu- nar new year holiday, Tet. Westmoreland's oxder gec-| onded the decision of the South | Vietnamese government to halt fighting during the national cel- ebration. Similar went to South Korean, lian and New Zeala®® troops! fighting alongside the Vietnamese and Americans The truce more than doubles| the 30-hour ceasefire observed | by allied forces during the] Christmas holiday. But it falls} 18 hours short of the Tst truce| proclaimed by the Viet Cong. | They have promised not to at- tack from 11 p.m. Wednesday to 11 p.m. Sunday,-.a total of| four days. | SETS TIMES Westmoreland ordered a | ceasefire from noon Thursday Th as no sign in the Sai- gon sector of any letup in fight- | ing before the holiday, although | elsewhere in the courtry mili-| tary activities continued at a slow pace, At least 42 civilians were killed in varied Viet Cong at-| tacks. As the suspension of U.S. air attacks on North Viet Nam went into the 25th day, Radio Hanoi| charged that American planes | on a North Vietnamese village | in the western " part of Thanh} Hoa, causing "a number of| property." | In Washington, the Pentagon | _|denied ed the attack, | instructions | Austra-| |conference as pueden companies whose ares e listed' on "Canadian exchanges only protested ie ager the U.S. regulation, lease it was an intrusion on \their affairs. Many of them had ino desire to be listed on U.S. exchanges and: ssid they had not promoted sale of their stock in the U.S. OTTAWA (CP)--Canada has}, Canada Files Note But if sufficient American shareholders, who may have acquired their stock through Canadian exchanges, wanted to buy and sell them on the un- listed markets in the United States, the Canadian companies were caught up in the new S.E.C. regulation. Th finance department spokesman here said the Cana- dian government's intervention through the or department was designed to protect Cana- dian companies "who through no effort or design of their own" may have become subject to American criminal and civil law process. *"'We hope we can keep these Canadian companies from com- ing within the ambit of the reg- ulations," the 'spokesman said. "We expect there will be. fur- ther discussions and it may- be some time before a final deci- sion is reached." Under the new S.E.C. regula- tion, the U.S. commission will require returns to be filed con- taining more corporate informa- tion in some aspects than is re- quired by the established stock exchanges in Canadaj Communications Lack Stressed By Robarts MONTRE AL! (CP) -- Premier|son at a federal-provincial con- federation are to be resolved a high degree of co-operation-- jand not a continuous state of competition -- must exist be- twéen the federal government and the provinces. He placed the blame for "'cur- rent differences and problems" on a lack of communication be- ltween the two levels of govern- ment, and an insufficient under- |standing of the grave effects of ihe interrelation of government policy. Mr, -Robarts, spaking to the Canadian Club. of Montreal, de- scribed the federal - provincial "an imperfect in- strument on its present form" that was in need of much ex- 'amination and refinement. The federal government 'should not use the federal-pro-~ vincial conference as a _ plat- form from which to announce he said. They should be discussed with the provinces beforehenad. In this context Mr. Robarts Until| losses in human life, houses and|apparently had in mind the an- jnouncement of a proposed' na- |tional medical care program |made by Prime Minister Pear- South|John Robarts said today that if}ference last July. the economic problems of con- | The Conservative premier of Ontario used the medical care scheme to illustrate how Can- ada's constitution gives the provinces broad responsibility for social services but limited sources of tax revenue to carry out these fesponsibilitis. "The federal government is proposing that the provinces each establish a medicare pro- gram to which it will contribute 50 per cent of the actual na- tional per. capita cost. On the basis of present data, this will mean a contribution of $14 per person and will repre- sent a contribution of some $98,- 000,000 to the province of On- tario from the federal govern- ment. "However, in order to take ad- vantage of this opportunity, we shall be automatically com- mitted to an expenditure that will exceed that amount _by $182,000,000 per annum if we are to meet the requirements stipu- lated by the federal govern- ment." These requirements are that the plan be compulsory for all, be government - operated, offer pitysician's and __ specialists' services and be portable between provinces. DEAD ERE SENTENCE ANNOUNCED, DER SPIEGEL SAYS Nagy Slain Without Trial - Magazine HAMBURG (AP) -- Nagy, premier of the 1956 lutionary. Hungarian gov ment, by a secret' police squad than 16 montis before the munists. announced he had condemned to death and cuted, 'he mag mation, previous the West, was supplied high-ranking official who from Hungary fall magazine did not was killed without a trial the West German maga- zine Der Spiegel reported today. gazine said this infor- y unknown in identify official but said his name known known to its editors, Imre revo- ern- Der 'Shieg zel said ant reported Nagy dated by a special Hungary's - secret AVH, at the 1957 mer Sinaia. said June 17; 1958; the agency Tass reporte: had been sentenced by a counter - re fled ies and treason ar The vith three. ac the more Com- been eXe- an Attorne was Szenaski end of in the basement of the for- Romanian. royal castle There was no trial, volutionary omplices told two days: later that' Nagy had the inform- been tried i was liqui-, squad from police, the January, have a calmin people."' tive official, at "Nagy and he Soviet news d that Nagy to death.for activi- id executed ing. They 22, 1956, after them. safe diers from y - General reporters stopped the "accomplished Der Spiegel, gave this account: spent three weeks in the Yugos- lay embassy in Budapest after Soviet tanks ¢ left the embassy Nov. ment of Janos Kadar promised conduct, embassy them to Soviet headquarters, ecret because facts always g influence on the Yugoslavia Hungarian government replied that Nagy and his friends had protested. The gone to Romania at their own quoting the fugi- The 42 other refugees Agency his rushed the upris- the new govern- Soviet sol- 300 yards and. took them " request. U.S. Central Intelligence located Nagy in Sinaia but lost track of him. Nagy and aides, Joszef Szilagyi, on Jan. police squad which cathe from 3udapest. The official who gave. the in- formation to Der Spieget said he was on the train that brought Miklos Gimes. and were executed 28 or 29 by the special Paper Says Gen. Aguiyu Ironsi, aboye, Nigerian arm commander, was one of the Nigerian government members said to still be in control in Lagos, according to a re- port by a British Broad- casting Corp. correspondent direct from Lagos, (CP Wirephoto via direct from London) Crooks Buy Immunity TORONTO (CP)--The: Globe and Mail says an RCMP back- ground paper issued at the closed federal - provincial con- ference on organized crime ear- lier this month outlined how criminals in Ontario and Que- bec cities buy immunity. "To obtain immunity, they (the criminals) must ingratiate or make payoffs to someone in authority -- be it the police, civic authorities, politicians or influential members of the com- munity," The Globe quotes the paper as saying It continues: "The byproduct of this action is corruption--a breakdown in the administra- tion of justice, of government function and of the moral fibre of the. community." The newspaper quotes RCMP Commissioner George B. Mc- Lellan as telling delegates at the Jan. 6-7. meeting that for some years the force has been moving toward a more com- plete bilingual operation. Johnny Broderick "Tough Cop" Dies MIDDLETOWN, N.Y. (AP)-- Johnny (John J.) Broderick, the "world's toughest cop" who shot it out with prohibition era gang- sters, died quietly Sunday at his home in this Orange County community. He was 70. Working out of the main New York city detective office, Bro- derick earned the respect of fel- low policemen, celebrities, and the fear of the ment in 1947. He served as Franklin D. Roosevelt and heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey. Dempsey said of the Irish- tenor-singing cop: and its rules." Broderick was originally named the "worid's cop" by Jack (Legs) Diamond, the squad back to Budapest and overheard the gunmen talking. f wuma Kaduna Nzugwu, and his 4 forces | mitted to , ruler, Maj.-Gen. Aguiyi Ironsi, ¢ whether he has any informa- the public and|= underworld during his 2414-year|= career which ended in retire-| 2 bodyguard at times to President] = "He's the! only man I wouldn't want toj= meet in a fight outside the rings : toughest} = Ironsi Rules Nigeria Rebel Leader Submits General Has No Word Of Kidnapped Premier LAGOS (Reuters) -- Nigerian Army rebel leader, Maj. Chuk- in Kaduna have sub- the country's new it was officially announced to- day. The rebel leader has sub- mitted his sword and command to the new military regime, Gen. Ironsi told a press confer- ence. The announcement meant that all units of the Nigerian armed forces now have rallied behind Gen. Ironsi's military government. Gen. Ironsi was asked tion about missing federal Prime Minister Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, said to have been kidnapped in the revolu- tion which broke "out on Satur- day. He said: "every attempt it be- ing made to locate him. I have no information yet." Asked whether the new ad- ministeration would be a per- manent one or a caretaker gov- ernment, Gen. Ironsi replied: "My main concern is to restore law and order as soon as pos- He said that ultimately a con- stitution prepared in accordance with the wishes of the people would be brought into effect. Asked whether he expects te remain in charge of the govern: ment after that time, the gene eral said: "I hope not." He said he does not think the new military government would start off with press censorship, but added; "I may impose cen- sorship if it becomes neces sary." : Communications officials in Nigeria today have so far re- fused to allow correspondents to send anything but official state- ments. A Reuters telephone call from Paris to the U.S. Emba: in Lagos was cut off, a Niger- ian postal official interrupting ed to say: "You are not to discuss the polltical: vitantion " on the telephone." day's uphea' Nigeria's regional premiers were slain--as '"'general disor- der in the Nigerian army." He said he has no news of federa] Finance Minister Festus Ekotie Ebou, who was reported kidnapped with the prime min- sible." ister, WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- The Canadian council of the United Auto Workers (CLC) has en- dorsed a plan calling for equal- ization of wages between United States and Canadian auto workers. George Burt, Canadian UAW director, made the announce- ment following a meeting of the council during the weekend. Some 140 Welegates represent- ing the union's 87,000 members attended. The plan, put forward two weeks ago by top international and regional officers of major collective bargaining councils, calls | for the cost of equal wages hin tee bo bors by mai tn for Canadians ts UAW Council Endorses Equality-of-Pay Plans the combined U.S.-Canada auto work force. UAW spokesmen said the un- ion is prepared to strike in both © countries in 1967 if the auto industry refuses to bargain on the parity issue. Canadian auto workers now are paid 40 cents to $1 an hour less: than U.S. workers. At a September meeting, the council agreed to ask the inter- national union to make wage parity for Canadians the top item. when contracts come up for renewal in 1967, The UAW believes the Can- ada - U.S. automotive trade agreement removed the last havricr to snes aaualiene barrier fo-wage quality. DORKING, England Nnamdi Azikiwe said today he turn to Nigeria and will await NEW YORK (AP) -- The will be recovered." The major settlement. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS No Plans For Nigeria Chief (Rueters) -- Nigerian President has no immediate plans to re- a request from the cabiriet or the military ruler, Maj.-Gen. Aguiyi Ironsi. Sunday the presi- dent, who is in London recovering from an illness, had said he would fly home "at any moment." N.Y. Strike Cost $1 Billion Commerce and Industry As- sociation estimates that the 12-day subway and bus strike cost New Yorks $1,000,000,000 and that "'less than 25 per cent business group urges that the 15-cent transit fare be increased to help pay for the contract Generals Lose Two More, 4-3, Ann Loanders--12 City News--11 Classified-----16, 17, 18 Comics--15 Editorial--4 Financial--19 then - regarded as one of the}. world's toughest. gangsters, * an ...In THE TIMES today .., No Decision On Rail Stop Here -- P. 11 Unionville Rink Wins British Consols -- P. 5 9-8 -- P. 6 Obits--19 Sports--6, 7, 8 Thectre--14 Whitby News--S5 Women's--12, 13 Weather--2

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