Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Jul 1966, p. 1

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bo Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring cenires in Onit- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO. 145 550 Per Wesk Tome Delivered Weather Report he Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JULY 9, 1966 Increasing temperatures fore- cast with rising humidity. Low tonight 65, high Sunday 85. Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Ottawa ond for payment of Postage in TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES Department Cash. Major Policy Change Made For Emigrants By RONALD LEBEL pe peor Fg oar emg OTTAWA (CP) M ajor|Tegulations will be listed in changes in immigration policy| White paper and debated in the; were announced Friday ta re-|Commons before they are im-| move the last vestiges of racial| plemented. a | discrimination an¢ stem the in-| As for immigrants without flux of back-door immigrants. | legal oe as gehen Immigration Minister Mar-|Said the situation has become chand fold the Commons that alarming and needs an immedi- foreign nationals who entered ate solution. It was possible for Canada by posing as visitors|Criminals and other undesir- have until July 25 to apply for| ables to move to Canada with- permanent resident status. out being detected by authori-| ' A ties. 00 such applica- 5 : i aa ene aun Ned re-| 'This situation amounts to a ceived and officials estimate) Wholesale circumvention of our) another 10,000 to 20,000 aliens\normal systems of pemypiry are living in Canada without! selection and control," he said. immigrant status. CONDITIONS SET | Mr. Marchand also an-| The visitors - turned - immi-| nounced that the white paper| grants who apply for perma- on immigration to be tabled in| nent resident status by July 25] September will relax regula-| will be admitted if they meet| tions mo = re, of im| the following conditions: | migran y yomuves th CAN 4. They are not within pro-| ada and remove all discrimina-| sinited classes listed in the Im- tion on grounds of ethnic or i migration Act, such as crimi- ographic origin. |nals, security risks and persons| UNIFORM STANDARDS |of immoral conduct. | Officials predicted that the} 2. They did not enter Canada| net effect of all changes will be|by any fraudulent: means other | to maintain immigration at the|than posing as temporary' visi-! present level, but to apply uni-| tors. form standards to immigrants; 3. They fall in one of the fol- from all countries. jlowing categories: They would This is expected to stimulate|be acceptable under present immigration from Asia andjregulations if they were apply- Communist countries that dojing abroad; they have married Labor Law Study > Given By Robarts Royal Commission Probes Labor Dispute Injunctions TORONTO (CP) -- A royal commission will be appointed to jexamine labor law in Ontario. Injunctions in labor disputes Canada's Viet Role Crucial OTTAWA (CP) Chester!inary understandings" are nec- + |Canadian diplomat had had '"'a gon and the U.S, Ronning remains the "only con-|essary on the points at issue in tact" between all sides in the the conflict. Viet Nam conflict although no} "Jt seems to me that a con- spectacular results have come|ference lies at the end of the from the Canadian diplomat's road, not the beginning." two visits to Hanoi. Mr. Martin said he has dis- will be among the subjects to get careful scrutiny. Premier Robarts told the leg- islature Friday he was not yet able to say who would be on the commission. External Affairs Minister) cussed Viet Nam this week with Martin, in giving the Commons) coviet and U.S. authorities. He this assessment of Canadian ef-| J ouiq talk to Deputy Premier forts to bring about peace in nnitri Polyansk y of the the Far East, said the = °f/U.S.S.R. now touring Canada, Mr. Ronning was important in| ,5ain Monday. a situation where a breakdown "re debate on Viet Nam in. communications could be) came as the government sought crucial, vas that the |2PProval of $1,662,000,000 it is Also significant was that the) octimated will be spent by Oct. 31, 1966, by government depart- ments. Opposition Leader Diefen- aker opened the debate by grilling Mr. Martin on Canadian "| policy. The external affairs minister said one reason he couldn't an- swer opposition questions about fair hearing" from Hanoi, Sai- "The channel remains open s and its potential usefulness has not been questioned by any one,". Mr. Martin said. Mr. Martin said Canada has been told "on the highest au- thority," and '"'not only from! not restrict emigration, such as Poland and Yugoslavia. Mr. Marchand added at a press conference, however, that immigration from most emerg- ing countries will stay low be- cause few people there are skilled workers and they are badly needed in their home countries. | Canadians on or before July 8, | 1966; they have established a | successful business or have been employed steadily - for jeight months, or they have at |least 10 years' schooling. | Those who do not meet these | conditions or who fail to apply | |for admission before July 25 |will face deportation to their SIGN NEW TRADE DEAL Prime Minister Pearson for Jamaica sign a new Friday in Ottawa. The new (right) has a'gentle smile trade agreement between trade agreements were as he watches Donald Sang- Canada and 13 Caribbean worked out at a three-day | ster, acting prime minister Commonwealth countries conference in the capital. LBJ Urges Settlement Details of the new sponsor-! countries of origin. Dixie Jury Finds In US. Airline Strike NEW YORK (AP)--Proddedjstranded passengers there,|day, "18 hours by Presidest Johnson for & Robert Rousseau, superintend-| Strike." Prompt. settlement, the machin-, ent tor the airline at Montresi's| Union President P ists union and five major air- lines resume negotiations today | international airport, said SPe-| withdrawing our demands."' in an effort to end a strike that|clal arrangements were made} The union has snarled air travel in 231/with Air Canada to operate an|creases totaling 53 cents an U8, Chea, jextra flight to New York Fri-/hour over a three-year period. Both sides appeared gloomy |day. : about prospects for a quick end' The chairman of the airline before Klansmen Guilty ATHENS, Ga. (AP)--Federal juries have convicted two Ku Klux Klansmen and acquitted four others on charges they Sims and Myers were tried by the state in 1964 on charges of murdering Penn. They were acquitted in nearby Daniels-| jville, a little less than two| joined in 'a partnership in cents an hour and a presiden- crime" to deny Negroes their cee P the| Svan. jler, however, says "we're not} 'Clash With Cong is seeking in- The carriers have offered 30) |Moscow,"' that a Geneva con- |ference on the Vietnamese con- flict would get nowhere now. WANT CONFERENCE Prime Minister Indira Gandhi of India has asked the co-chair- }men of the conference, Britain Canada's position on U Thant's proposals to end the conflict was that he would have "'vio- lated a commitment' Mr. Ron- ning: made on behalf of Canada. He didn't say to whom the commitment had been made. Mr. Martin reiterated that There have been demands |that the law on injunctions in labor disputes be revised but |Mr. Robarts said a royal com- ;mission would not.confine itself to the study of injunctions. He noted that several law stu- jdents are conducting research jthroughout the province on in- | junctions, "We want a complete factual assessment so we'll know what |we are talking about." | The premier said he didn't be- \lieve that a royal commission, \"should examine injunctions jalone" but should study the whole field of labor law and as- sess the mechanics of industrial disputes. |WILL ASSESS VIEWS Mr. Robarts said there are jvarying opinions on injunctions jand that government must first assess these views carefully be- |fore one position can be taken. | He indicated that if the house, land the Soviet Union, to con-|Canada can take strong public|which prorogued Friday, had jvene peace talks: | But Mr. Martin said all in- formation indicates such a meeting at this time would not have the desired result. | He emphasized that "prelim- {positions on Viet Nam or con- tinue quietly through diplomatic channels to try and find a basis for solving the conflict. | Canada would continue on the 'later course. From AP-Reuters SAIGON (CP) --, More than civil rights. to the crippling walkout by negotiating committee, William {months after the shooting. | | U.S. district Judge William A. Bootle said he would sentence the two today. They could be imprisoned for as long as 10|CIO). more than 35,000 mechanics and| J. Curtin, has described the. un- other ground personnel, mem-lion requests as unacceptable! bers of the International Asso-\and criticized the union for| ciation of Machinists (AFL-/ breaking off negotiations Thurs- The decisions, announced Fri- day night, were reached in two back-to-back trials. The first verdicts--the one containing the tial panel has recommended|2,000 Viet Cong troops clashed raises 'up to 48 cents spread|today with an armored U.S. in- over a 42-month period. Top|fantry force which lured them mechanies now earn $3.52\from dense jungle. hourly. The flareup in ground fight- convictions--had been sealed in years and fined $5,000 each. At Johnson's request, James -- ee a ad § covtelendaat, I. Reynolds, assistant 1a bo r| y § tary, called negotiators The U.S. government had|Herbert Guest, also would be| Secretar} charged all pig oc or at with|sentenced for a conviction of| back into session. Reynolds said forming '"'a broad conspiracy" possession of '"'pep"' pills. Guest | day ' and night meetings will| to "injure, oppress, threaten|Pleaded guilty to that charge|continue as long as necessary| and intimidate' Negroes in.| before the trial. and indicated the airlines and U.K. Can Enter Market, But Pompidou Cites Rule ing after a 10 day lull was an- nounced by the U.S. military command, which also reported renewed aerial pounding of five loil installations in North Viet Nam. ' A spokesman said a Viet Cong jforce of at least regimental size cluding Washington education- ist Lemuel A. Penn; who was killed by shotgun fire in 1964, Convicted were Joseph How- ard Sims, 41, a machinist, and Cecil W. Myers, 26, a carpen- ter. Both were identified to the FBI by a fellow Klansman as the men who fired shotguns into the car Penn drove along a dark and foggy road near Athens early July 11, 1964. | Both juries were all white. | The jury that convicted Sims and Myers returned a verdict of not guilty for George H. Tur. ner, 33, maintenance employee. | The 12 white men who tried jthe second case acquitted) Guest, 39, a garage operator; jJames S. Lackey, 30, former manager of a service station; jand Denver Willis Phillips, 26,| 'a mechanic. 'Seven Days' le 0 People Quit Follow Haggan, Lieterma TORONTO clals connected with the contro- versial CBC television program This Hour Has Seven Days have resigned, Steve Patrick, a Seven Days researcher and writer, said Friday "T've turned in my own resig- nation. I find it impossible to continue without such men as Reeves Haggan and Douglas Leiterman."' To Jamaica KINGSTON (AP) -- Authori- ties planned today to question nine Cubans who hijacked a plane on a crop-dusting mission in Cuba and ordered the to fly. to Jamaica A Cuban aircraft was wounde The refugees, who included a woman and three children asked for political asylum after the plane landed Friday at Ver- nam Field, a former U:S. air base, about 30 miles south of here Police held them in protec- tive custody and there was no immediate explanation why they were aboard the plane. The guard, Elucido Torres, 18, was shot in the shoulder with the pilot's gun when he re- sisted and the r the was tied up, police reported Torres was taken té a hospital here, pilot aboard the 1 d guard st of crew (CP)--Nine offi-, Mr. Haggan resigned as gen- eral supervisor of public affairs) and was succeeded during the) day by Peter Campbell, former! current affairs supervisor. Mr. Leiterman, the CBC an- nounced earlier, won't have his contract renewed as executive producer of Seven Days. A controversy over the pro- gram has boiled over repeat-| edly among the corporation's | public affairs staff since the CBC fired Patrick Watson and Laurier LaPierre in April as co- hosts of Seven Days. Told that the CBC late Friday union are still far apart. The union's chief negotiator, the walkout 'will last more or|France wound up a three-day! joining. less indefinitely." visit Friday with the statement! Wilson The strike against Eastern, that Britain will be welcomed) readiness National, Northwest, Trans into the European World and United Airlines be-| Market if she is prepared to ac-! essential interests must be met. gan at 6 a.m. local times Fri- cept the conditions of mem-, day. Together, the five airlines) bership. normally carry an estimated 60) In a communique issued fol- per cent of the air passengers--j/owing talks with Prime Min- an average 150,000--on some ister. Wilson, Pompidou said 000 flights daily. nothing would prevent Britain Trans World flies to 23 for-|from gaining ECM membership eign countries and Eastern is a| Providing she accepted the au- link between the U.S. and Can- thority of the Treaty of Rome,| members io make it possible. ada and also flies to Mexico. | Which set up the bloc, and ar-| France vetoed Britain's initial rangements agreed upon subse-/ bid to join the market. INVOLVES MONTREAL quently by its members, Pompidou's message was that In Montreal, 10. mechanics, It was stated by the two coun- and 19 ramp service employees|tries that their governments are involved in the Eastern|will remain in consultation with strike. To aid some of thejeach other and with the other to join the ket. France not only would wel- would work with the other five clear whether she wants to join for entry. LONDON (Reuters) -- Pre-| five members of the market for Joseph W. Ramsey, predicted|mier Georges Pompidou of|further discussions on Britain's Earlier Friday, Pompidou at a press conference stressed that "nothing is less accurate" than to speak of a French "'veto"| over British entry to the mar- come British membership, but Britain must make it definitely|suspected main base areas of a before the way could be paved|miles west of where the 1st Di- jhit an armored column of the \U.S. ist Infantry Division }which had been put out as bait jalong a secondary road near the reaffirmed Britain's| Cambodian border. trade Common| group, but added that Britain's By prearranged plan, the spokesman said, U.S. forces flew in several battalions of re- inforcements by helicopter and hit the enemy with air attacks jand artillery barrages. The spokesman reported that heavy fighting continued hours after the attack. No report had yet been re- ceived of casualties of eitner side. BOMB BASE AREAS B-52. bombers pounded | two Viet Cong division only a few vision troops were hit. One of had only four resignations, Mr. |- Patrick said: "The others def- initely are on the way in." NAMES OTHERS He said those resigning be- sides himself were Mr. Watson, who also produced the program Document; Mr. Haggan; docu- mentary film-maker Beryl Fox; Robert Hoyt and Ken Lefolii, alternating producers of Seven Days; story editor - producer Larry Zolf; James Carney, pro- ducer of Seven Days' summer replacement show, Compass; and Gabriel Michaelides, a Seven Days researcher His list of names came at the end of a day of rumors of fur- | ther resignations among the! more than 40 working on the program. In Ottawa State Secretary Judy LaMarsh told the Com- mons 'the CBC resignations haven't spread beyond the area of Seven Days and that other roduc: i il wi }producers were still working. | | GOING NOWHERE for the planes that unavailable due to a strike of airline mechanies, The fey. planes moving Gium Shriners of the De troit temple wait endless hours yesterday at San Francisco International Air- port filled to- capacity, with long lines still waiting. Additional Greyhound buses were eastward were were American Forges the target areas was less than two miles from the Cambodian border. In a continuation of the 10- day old drive to wipe out the enemy's fuel reserves, air force pilots bombed three oil storage areas 31 to 62 miles north and northwest of Hanoi and hit a fuel tank plant 31 miles north of the capital city. Pilots May Face Trial | SAIGON (Reuters)--U.S. mili- |tary circles here are expressing growing concern at reports from North Viet Nam _ suggesting American pilots shot down there might face trial as war crim- inals, it was learned today. Many officers: doubted that the Hanoi government will take this step. *T think they would be mak- ing a grave error of interna- | tional policy if they did resort | to this,' one officer commented | privately. The U.S. military command here, while declining comment on the possible fate of the 34 Americans now confirmed held in the north, said every effort has been made to treat Viet Cong and North Vietnamese prisoners well and fairly ac- cording to international law. 'Nineteen North Vietnamese torpedo boat sailors captured by the U.S. Navy in the Tonkin Gulf at the beginning of this month are still being interro- gated on board ship. Other North Vietnamese soldiers cap- tured in South Viet Nam are handed over to government for- ces. . Students Stage Jakarta Riots JAKARTA (Reuters)--Heavy armored cars and troops with machine - guns ringed Jakarta University today as thousands of Indonesian students demon Strated against President Su karno and called for a hew |cabinet. The demonstrators, staging |their third anti-Sukarno rally in| = three days, have threatened to their demands are met. call for a new Indonesian cabi net purged of yes-men to deal with the big task of repairing readied toy accommodate some of the Shriners, home- ward bound after their week-long convention, ' Informed sources said Su- jkarno will preside over a |closed-door session of the six- jman ruling presidium Sunday to} |discuss formation of a new cab-| inet, repeat the process daily until|= The students reiterated their | # Indonesia's shattered economy. |= been sitting a little longer he would be in a position to an- nounce who the royal commis- sioner or commissioners would be. The granting of injunctions in labor disputes *-- heen debate" in the legis!' sic and the lab movement has vowed to work harder than ever for their aboli- tion. The spotlight was beamed on injunctions earlier this year in union-management disputes at both the Oshawa Times and the Tilco Plastics Co. plant at Pe- terborough. In both cases injunctions were granted by the courts restrict- Planned For TORONTO (CP)--The third in what leaders of organized labor had called a series of rallies to protest the use of injunctions in labor disputes will be held at Peterborough July 14. A rally at Brantford Friday night' featured a car parade through downtown streets and a speech by David Archer, pres- ident of the Ontario Federation of Labor. Another was held Thursday night in Toronto, at which mem- bers of the Conservative and New Democratic parties stated their personal views on the sub- ject. Police permission is being sought at Peterborough for a parade as part of the July 14 rally. Hugh Faulkner, Liberal MP for Peterborough, has said he will attend; and Keith Brown, Conservative member of the legislature, has been in- vited PEMIER ROBARTS ing the number of pickets al- lowed around the plants, which became scenes of labor protest demonstrations against the in« junctions. TORONTO (CP)--David Are cher, president of the Ontarid Federation of Labor, said Fri- day that the OFL will co-oper- ate with a royal commission's study of laws affecting labor. "* . . If the commission is going to make a study on a wide basis, taking in all phases of labor, we definitely will co- cverate and give our point of \..w," he said, At Ottawa, Claude Jodoin, president of the Canadian Lae bor Congress, offered the One tario Federation of Labor the CLC's help in making represen- tations to the royal commission. The CLC has announced that a national conference will be held Sept. 27-28 in Montreal on injunctions and the threat of compulsory arbitration. Third Labor Protest Rally Peterborough Executive members from each of the 34 union locals in the city will meet Monday to plan the rally. At Oakville, the executive of the district labor council has called for a meeting of the 1,100 affiliated members to demand changes in the injunction legis- lation. No date has been set, In Brantford, Mr. Archer said magistrates and judges who is- sue injunctions are restricting the civil rights of the individual. He told a rally of about 250 un- ion men a union man sees a picket line as evidence of the solidarity of the working clase, but a judge sees it as only two or three persons walking up and down with little signs. Judges and magistrates should be elected so they will "be able to get out and meet the people and learn of the problems of the ordinary man," he said. CAPE KENNEDY, Fila. Minuteman II rocket. peace initiative by non-alig Prime Minister Mrs. Indira the security of the state. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Advance Missile Tests Held (AP) -- The United States' most advanced missile warhead, the supersecret Mark XII, has undergone its first flight test-riding atop a New Peace Initiative Possible CAIRO (Reuters) -- Possibilities of a new Viet Nam ned powers grew today as Gandhi' of India wound up two days of talks with President Nasser. Jehovah's Witnesses Get Jail, Fines LISBON, Portugal (Reuters) -- Forty-nine Jehovah's Witnesses were given the alternative of short prison terms or fines today after being found guilty of offences against Ann Landers--13 Church--6, 7 City News--11 Classified--16 to 19 Comics --14 Editoricl--4 Wa a ... In THE TIMES today... Red Cross Helps Unite Families -- P. 11 Cleaners Make Gambling Pay -- P. 8 Financial--15 Obits--19 Sports--8, 9 Theatre--13 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax News--5 Women's--12, 13

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