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

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering. and neighboring centres in Ont- irio and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO. 199 Ole 83e Per Week Horne Delivered Weather Report Fire, warm weather 'will be followed by a cool spell. Low tonight 60; high 82. Wednesday TWENTY PAGES OSHAWA HONORS A she was presented with & trophy for her accomplish- ment, Ald. Hayward Mur- doch presented the award on behalf of council and Eighteen-year-old Pamela Miller, 1966 Ontario Ladies' Open Golf Tournament champion, was given civic CHAMPION GOLFER the citizens of Oshawa. "It seems like a dream -- I don't know how I did it," said Miss Miller in thank- ing council. She leaves Osh- awa soon to attend the Uni- versity of Western Ontario in London --Oshawa Times Photo recognition last night when Freight Rate Hike Announced By Railways MONTREAL (CP)--The CNRiby the two railways did 'not CPR announced Monday|blame the government for 'the increases. It only said the in- and 1 ionday Eien rate By ber cent tolcreases would "help offset ularly the' 18" per cent 'wage in- However, a CNR spokesman ris-| wage increases awarded to rail work: ae JASON TRIED TO BE RIN - TIN - TIN LONDON (AP)--Jason was a rattling gaod dog, and that was his trouble. "a6 aac tling," explained his own James. Gerard, today. "Tt got so that every time Jason moved he rattled. It was Plan eetealle at The CPR commuter fare com- ership) ner, 'munique said bluntly that the néw fares "are the result of The freight rate increases will OVER KASHMIR ISSU Bennett's Aide VICTORIA (CP)--The Social Credit party won its fifth straight general election Mon- day but lost one of its chief { jarchitects of power. E Attorney-General Robert Bon- ¢ Iner, chief aide to Premier w. A. C, Bennett and a cabinet minister since Social Credit formed its first government in 1952, was upset by a Liberal newcomer in Vancouver-Point Grey. However, Mr. Bennett said in an interview that a Social Credit ; seat may be opened to permit | his attorney-general to try for a j seat in a byelection. t The 66-year-old premier, who @ campaigned intensely for a strong majority, fell short of his mark as the New Democratic Party, official opposition, and Liberals picked up strength. Progressive Conservatives ran only three candidates and were shut out as in 1963. Although winning 33 seats, the same number as in 1963, the So- cial Credit party saw its major- ity dwindle to 11 from 14. Re- distribution of ridings in the ispring increased the size of the jhouse to 55 members from 52 |by establishing. eight new seats jand eliminating. five. Party standings: Social Credit NDP ' Liberal Toral, BLAMES CHANGES" *" Socreds Win Again LONDON (CP) -- Common- jwealth leaders today broke off temporarily from debate on the tortured Rhodesian situation and almost immediately saw a _ between India and Pakis- an. The new controversy, involy- ing disputed Kashmir, came as diplomats outlined: privately the background of an incident ear- lier in the day when Foreign Minister Simon Kapwepwe of Zambia stalked from Marlbor- ough House, scene of the Com- monwealth conference; with the remark that he 'was '"'dis- gusted,"' Diplomats explained that Afri- cans had wanted to go into pri- vate caucus once again on the Rhodesian matter. But Prime Minister Harold Holt of Austra- lia objected that there were many problems in the world be- sides Rhodesia, a subject which the 22-country conference now has been discussing for nearly eight days. He wanted the conference to move on to other world polit- ical problems, such as Viet Nam, and the conference agreed to do this until the afternoon meeting, when the Rhodesian debate would be resumed, DRAFT COMMONIQUE Arnold Smith of Canada, secretary + gen- Loses th Indian Delegate Objects At Commonwealth Parley by Canada's Prime Minister Pearson, . The drawn-out debate on Rio- desia and disagreement over procedure was. followed by the India - Pakistan flare-up over Kashmir--a 20-year-old dispute between the two countries that led to war a year ago this month. Some details of the -- emerged in press brief. ings. A Pakistani. spokesman, re- viewing Foreign Minister Syed Sharifuddin Pirzadi's contribu: tion to conference discussions of general world affairs, quoted Pirzadi as saying: "Pakistan regards Rhodesia as being of great importance te the Commonwealth because it poses the fundamental question * the right to self-determina- on, "That is the question in Kash- mir also." INDIA MADE OBJECTION An Indian spokesman then in: tervened at the press briefing te say that his foreign minister, Sadar Swaran Singh, had raised a point of order in the confer ence, objecting to Pakistan ine eral and hie aidex meanwhile worked on-a Rhodesian nique which would be to the delegation heads for ap- proval or rejection. Delegates said leaders had also the fifth personal vic- /failed to reach full agreement ne ed and Pakistan was : at ruled out Mr. Smith declined to answer directly reporters' questions on whether Pakistan had - crease granted Canada's 118,- 000 railway workers by Parlia- ment Sept. 1. The CPR also announced it will raise commuter fares by five to 15 cents a ticket, start- ing Sept. 17. The joint communique issued said later the "rising costs" were mainly wages. There a "number of reasons" why the statement did not refer directly to the wage boosts granted by the government in legislation which ended the seven-day na- tion-wide rail strike, he added. affect about 30 per cent of the cargo handled by both rail- ways. H The 10 per cent increase, ef- fective Oct. 10, applies to: cargo! carried at "competitive rates."'| A similar increase in "'agreed) charges" rates will be made} unn "So I finally took him to a vet. The vet handled him, moved him about a bit, and sure enough, Jason rattled." Jason's owner is a scrap metal merchant in suburban Iford. Jason had been swal- lowing the merchandise. From Jason's stomach and Mr. Bennett said' redistribu- tion was partly to blame for Mr. Bonner's defeat. "T don't want to lose Bonner," he said in an interview. "He is still the attorney-gen- eral. I hope one of our support- ers will hear my voice and clear tory. for the 66+ year - old premier. since he.came to Owe TOE ial NDP, but lost the two-member;|Bonner in 1952; was defeated in riding of Vancouver + Burrard}Vancouver . Burrard with -run- Social Credit party was re- turned to power in the Brit- ish Columbia -- provincial election Monday. It was on Rhodesia before they turned to other subjects--despite opti-|ence that is conducted tra mism expressed Monday night'ally on informal lines, ruled out of order in 8 confep" . dition- Pearson Predicts Members -- US. Presses North Viets With Record Air Attacks SAIGON (Reuters) The|Monday's air strikes on the United States kept up its intense| north. pressure on North Viet Nam, During their widespread Monday, launching more planes|raids, the fighter-bombers at- against the Communist country|tacked three radar sites 20 than ever before, a U.S. mili-|miles from Hanoi and another tary spokesman said here to-|only-four miles from the major day. port of Haiphong. Although exact figures were) The spokesman said U.S. air- not disclosed for security rea-|craft Monday flew a record sons, more than 500 planes were|number of sorties over North believed to have taken part in| Viet Nam. A sortie is a single rs -------~| flight by a single plane. Des Moines |MISSIONS ONE SHORT Negroes Riot DES MOINES, lowa (AP)--/ ms setimeted 990 Meorn wy: A CGUMSICS ov) NOZro ¥ of which can include several air- craft, was 170--one short of the record set the previous day, he added, But the spokesman said. the day's by one. One American piane, an F-i65 went on a rampage M wks da Y¥|Thunderchief, was shot down night, 'breaking windows and/qver North Viet Nam's central destroying property w 81} coastline F ° eight-block : The spokesman said the pilot The spree of destruction broke| : ~, Of the plane--the 366th reported out after a high school benefit | oct by the U.S. over North football game at Drake Sta-/,,; 4 a dium, police said, when a mob ene Pager listed as miss- of youths _ Started obstructing | In their attacks pilots hit traffic, poking fists through Car! .. era) targets inside the north- windows at occupants and is ¢ Frere tisodine dbledtd at cara, Some" half of the demilitarized pry Maca attended the| Ze between the two Vie: Nams : ~ . jas well as destroying nine anti- game. ; jaircraft gun emplacements and At least 12 cars in the area)pombing 12 fuel dumps farther were damaged and about 10) north, homes had broken windows, po-| - lice said, Police managed to disperse} CHO the crowd early this morning,| suthe in number of sorties exceeded Sun-| U LOSES POST later. To receive the agreed charge rate, a shipper must guarantee a specific amount of cargo dur- ing an agreed period. A spokésman for the CPR said various commodities such) as radio and television sets and intestines' the vet removed seven bali bearings and a curtain rail fixture. Each of the ball bearings was an inch in diameter. Jason appears to be recov- ering. the way for Bonner to take his seat in the legislature. Social Credit picked up five of the new seats, NDP got two and the Liberals one. The government picked up Al- berni and Mackenzie from. the NDP. Liberal Garde Gardom. stalwart elected along with Mr. and Burnaby-Willingdon to the|ning mate Tom Alsbury. Mr. Bonner was the only cab- inet minister defeated, losing tojseat held by Health Minister Bert Price, party whip. andjthe election because of ill Mr. Alsbury, a former "Van- couver mayor, was running in a Prime Minister Pearson pre- dicted Monday that the Com- monwealth prime ministers' conference will work out an Eric Martin who did not contest health. cigarettes will be affected un- der thee competitive rates charge. He called these "high- valued manufactured items" |which the railways compete for as cargo with other modes of transport. The joint statement said that |the two types of traffic which will be affected "now move at rates which are below the gen-|Gaulle arrived here today on jeral freight rate ceiling impose|his way home from an around- by law and frozen by govern- |the-world tour. ;ment action in 1959." |, The French president left Hao Supplements to freight i iffs reflecting the increase are|Monday after observing a World Tour | POINTE A PITRE, Guade- The number of missions, each) peing filed by the two railways|French atomic explosion over| Gordon, 36 - year « old U.S. with the Board of Transport/Mururoa Atoll. |Commissioners. | | The increases will-take auto-|_ PAPEETE, Tahiti (Reuters) \matically unless the objections|rance will explode another nu- jare filed with the board. In that|Clear device Wednesday if event, the board is empowered|We ather is suitable over its ita suspend the increases until|South Pacific testing site, in- la public hearing has been held.|formed sources said here today. |The board can then rule for or} [t was understood the device |would be "'doped" with thermo- jnuclear material--a transitional stage between atomic and hy- |drogen bomb production capac- These increases would mainly ity. affect 7,000 commuters in the| A Chinese nuclear device ex- Montreal area who use the|ploded in May was also re- }CPR. The majority of the rail-| ported to be of this type. way's commuter traffic is in| The test planned for Wednesl |Montreal while the CNR han-)|day will be over Gangataufa Is- jdles most of Toronto's service|land in the Tuamoto Archipe- jto and from the suburbs, lago, not far from Mururoa The CNR said it had no im-|Atoll where President de Gaulle mediate plans for increasing its| watched another explosion in 'commuter fares. the current series Sunday. } jagainst the railways. The proposed new commuter \tariffs have already been' filed |with the board. loupe (Reuters) -- President de| ia ' a i ad tar-|Atoll-in-the-eastern-P-acitic} | | CAPE KENNEDY, Fila. (AP) Astronaut Richard F. Gordon Jr. cut short a space "'walk'"|s today and hurried back to the| troubles. safety of the Gemini 11 cabin} "he got ne-got whon wacen he couldn't see." so hot and eweaty not-anc-s 7 | Navy lieutenant - commander, | |remained outside only 44 min-|cabin was re-pressuvized. utes of the planned | "Listen," he said. br excursion. Dravant AtHachke BAC YUASA SALECHAVERD On Negro Schoolchildren GRENADA, Miss. (AP) {Heavily armed highway patrol- men were in Grenada today to prevent further mob attacks on Negro children attending the city's two previously all-white schools. § The pairol took-over Monday after most of the city and county officers on the scene merely watched as a crowd of Dalira & Wh --|whites, swinging axe handles, chains and. tree branches, at- tacked Negro children leaving the schools Meanwhile, a racially tense area in Atlanta, Ga., had its third straight night of rock and firebomb throwing and an in- cident in Bogalusa, La., threat- ened to lead to open battling. The highway patrol went into although there were periodic re- ports that rocks and bottles were being tossed at passing cars. Brewery Hea Found Dead fe pondents reported today IVRY, Que. (CP) -- Percival; They Talbot Molson, 45, president of| of 100,000 battied the Molson Breweries Ltd., was|guards at Kweilin in southern found shot dead Monday in his| China when the reformers de- TOKYO (AP) -- China's Red |Guards are meeting stiff resis- tance as they push the cultural revolution from Peking into the \countryside, Japanese corres- summer cottage near_this-com-}manded the resignation of the! munity 45 miles north of Mont-| city's mayor real, a spokesman for the brew ery said today Quebec Provincial Police said and that army troops were called in to restore order In another development, death and have no comment to|agency indicated that Premier make on it at present Chou En-lai has been removed A spokesman for Molson 'from his vice-chairman Breweries said it is believedjof the Chinese Communist Mr. Mojson died accidentally|party. However, he apparently while cleaning the gun. 'retained the premiership, post as a reported that a crowd) youthful) Pe-| they are still investigating the} king's official New China news| Red Guards, Peasants Battle The Japanese correspondents|tural revolution was not taking | reported from Peking that the) effect. |clash at Kweilin, a city some| jm {ndonesia, reports of Red 250 miles northwest of Canton,|Gyard activities in China are was one of several in a number! caysing misgivings among Chi- of cities involving the Red|nese planning to return to the Guards and local peasants and mainland, the official news laborers agency Antara reported at Ja- ADMITS MISTAKES seine The Peking People's Daily said the students have made "certain mistakes," but added 'no matter what the pretext, fighting between the students and farmers afd laborers must not be permitted.' : }than to the mainland The reports of violence indi- From. Hong Kong came re cated that official advice in the|ports from travellers to China People's Daily urging the Red|of mass suicides last month in | Guards to stop using force and|Canton and Shanghai due to 'asking others to accept the cul-| molestation py the Red Guards. It said many Chinese--being forced out of the country under the government's policy to oust Chinese from economic domina- tion of Indonesia--would rather go to Singapore or Hong Kong Grenada after Governor Paul Johnson declared that "those who raise the sword of violence will be met by the sword of law enforcement." The 175 burly officers, in full riot dress, took over Monday night, A white man who argued was slugged unconscious and taken away in an ambulance. The crowd dispersed with cries of "nigger lovers" and 'I thought you were a good Mis- sissippian!"' SHOUT DEFIANCE Several hundred whites, shouting defiance of both state and federal authority, held a fu- rious session Monday night in the city hall auditorium to de- mand that the patrol be with- drawn. "If: you get that state high- way patrol out of here there won't be a nigger left in Gre- nada,"'. cried one man. Mayor J. D. Quinn avoided re- plying to an angry query as to which official called for patrol aid, CHOU EN-LAI 'Troubles Cut Space Walk Nears End For Gemini 11 Astronaut It was the third straight: time that an American astronaut cut} hort a space stroll. because of) controllers on the ground ra-\communique, but this is the Command Pilot Charles Con- yi rad_Jr.--flashed -the..word--to_a | tracking station in the Indian! Gordon-had trouble organizing| Ocean that Gordon was back in-/his 39-foot tether after opening| side the spacecraft and that the} P | "T just) ought Dick in. He just got so agreed statement on Rhodesian policy. Talking with reporters, he dis- closed that virtual agreement has been reached on sanctions policy. And he said he is hope- ful the troublesome majority rule problem can also be set- tled, possibly along the lines of a Canadian formula. "T think we'll get a good |hot and sweaty he couldn't see." | "We know hot it is," flight) |dioed. "'When it gets where he toughest conference we've ever pcan t see, you've got to close|had." he said. bot ots The statement was: the must optimistic to come out of the , conference since wrangling on the hatch and it apparently put!the Rhodesian problem began a heavy work load on him. | at the opening a week 'ago. Conrad had to hold onto the| 1 followed a day that had | Space-walker's legs to prevent|pheen called in advance the Will Reach Rhodesia Accord down day"' of the Rhodesian dis cussions. i Pearson began it with e visit from Simon Kapwepwe, the for- eign minister of Zambia whe has been at one extreme in the conflicting range of opinions about what to do on Rhodesia. He urged Kapwepwe not te make any hasty decision on his threatened walkout from the conferenct until he had consid- ered carefully revised British proposals put forward by Prime Minister Wilson. TALKED WITH WILSON Pearson also attended the ses- sion of the conference and had two. private talks with Witsex, the last one late in the evening, Pearson has been playing az active mediating role between Britain and the African mill. tants since he produced a come promise formula at the confers | him from floating out before he! «gay of decision" or the "show- | was ready 'ie 'PM POOPED' | "I'm breathing hard... . I'm | pooped," Gordon reported. | Once outside, Gordon moved) jover to an Agena satellite at- |tached to the nose of Gemini 11. The astronauts had caught) jand docked with the Agena in} record time after their launch- ing Monday from Cape Ken-| | nedy. | | Before ealling off the. stroll,| Conrad accomplished a task vi-| tal to a high - flying experiment} planned Wednesday. He unstowed one end of a 100-/ Former Warrendale foot cord stored under the) Agena docking collar. tached the loose end to a ruler-| like docking bar on the Gemini| nose. The bulk of the line re-| mained coiled in a stoewage! area on the Agena, the other| end attached to the target satel-| lite Conrad and Gordon plan Wes- nesday to disconnect from the) Agena and pull the 100-foot line |taut between the two vehicles} TR ina |to see whether this is an effec-| = | tive, fuel - saving means of. fly-|= jing formation in space. VISOR FOGGED |Z The short walk was reminis-| cent of the Gemini 9 flight dur-|= ing which astronaut Eugene A. |- |Cernan overworked and had his| | helmet visor fog up, then freeze. | Cernan returned to the cabin|= jafter a record two hours, 10): minutes, about 30. minutes/é | shorter than planned. z On Gemini 10, Michael Col-|: \lins was outside 30 minutes, but} had to call the stroll off-25 min utes early because the space Nam into one theatre of wa Warrendale centre. for treatment centres in British NATO Allies Accept PARIS Reuters -- France's to accept Belgium's offer tH | No Blame Held: In Dunbarton Ann Landers--10 City News--9 Classified--14 to 17 Comics--12 Editorial--4 Financial--13 We ..In THE TIMES Today.. Council Backs Auto Workers' Briet--P. 9 New Westminster Trims Gaels--P. 6 Whitby, Ajox News--5 Women's--10, 11 ence Friday. vA HT RATA TT GHTS 'China Denounces Canada, Britain, India | HONG KONG Reuters --"China today denounced Can- ada, Britain and India as vicious scoundrels serving the United States in the Viet Nam war. A commentary in the Chinese Communist party paper People's Daily said the United States wants to spread the Viet Nam war to Laos with the idea of linking Thailand, Laos and South Viet r. Director May Leave He at.| TORONTO (CP) -- John Brown, former director of the emotionally here, said today he has been invited to 'establish private disturbed children Columbia and Saskatchewan. New Headquarters 14 NATO allies agreed today of the town of Chievres+ Casteau as new headquarters. TT Fatality--P. 5 oe Certs Soe ae Obits--18 Sports--6, 7, 8 Theatre--17 ather--2 \craffuel supply tan low.

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