Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Sep 1966, p. 1

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wt ai haga a shawna Sines 2Fe= Cash PR 8 a a ay Pe 4 Home Newspaper' Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in. Ont- erio and Durham Counties. 106 Si Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office SSe Per Weak Ottawa a VOL. 95 -- NO. 210 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1966 ind for poyment of Postage in THE 200-MILE-AN-HOUR winds of Typhoon Ida, which caused enormous damage when it hit central Japan today, drove the freighter Jutoko Maru a- shore outside Yokohama harbor south of Tokyo. Ida washed ships ashore, caused village-burying landslides, wrecked U.S, military in- stallations and thousands of homes, and left a toll of more than 300 persons dead or missing. Highest toll was in the Mt. Fuji vicinity. Decision On Tilco Case Irks Union TORONTO (CP)--The Textile Workers' Union of America said today it plans to make a thajor issue of the Tilco Plas- tics strike in Peterborough at a national conference called by the Canadian Labor Congress for Sept. 27-28 at Ottawa to deal with the use of court injune-| tions in labor disputes. oes Se Canadian di- ss announced the a cae as he blasted as "a ented insufficient evi- to justify AS court erage against ico, whose 'A members have been on! strike since December. 'The strike has brought mass demonstrations. and jail sen- tences for 26 union men for contempt of court in violating a picket-limiting supreme court injunction. The convictions are under appeal. ARGUMENTS RAISED Key point in the labor board's majority report was the fact that last May 15 the company offered to re-employ five of the strikers. The minority decision held that re-employment of five and refusal to consider rehiring of the remainder raised "an arguable question of law" as to) whether the company was bar- gaining fairly. Ed Boyer, a former union of- ficial who wrote the dissenting opinion, said he would have granted permission to prose- cute. The majority decision was signed by J. H. Brown, man; end Herbert Irwin, man agement official before joining | the board. Mr. Watson said it was "in- conceivable in the light of evi- dence we presented, coupled with statements in the legisla- ture by Labor Minister Rown- tree, that the board should deny! the TWUA the right even to initiate prosecution proceedings against the union-busting Tilco Plastics. China Guards Teach Revolt HONG KONG (AP) -- China's rampaging Red Guards were formed as a vehicle to teach revolutionary ways. to youths who never had experienced rey- olution, the leader of a Japa- nese delegation to Peking said Sunday. : The report of former foreign minister Zentaro Kosaka of Japan coincided with a broad- cast from Peking saying the Red Guards now are taking military training, along with huge assignments of political study, all based on the theories of Mao Tse-tung, the Chinese leader. The youthful Red Guards, many of them students, have been storming through Chinese cities trying to uproot 'all old customs and habits and replace them with new ones. PURGE SUBSIDES Kosaka also told reporters that Red Guard activity had "greatly subsided' in recent days. "When we entered.China Aug 29," he said, "the situation was very, very confusing. But on our way out we found the situation very quiet in Shanghai, Hang- chow and Canton." chair-| 'HONEYMOON JOURNEYS SEEN CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) -- Dalton Camp, president of the national Progressive Conserva- tive Association, has reiterated his call for a reappraisal of the party leadership and said Cana- dians want to see a greater re- flection of their views in poli- tics. "If we want to make this na- tion great we have little time to lose,"" Mr. Camp said. "The peo ought to know who is oe and where they are go- Mr. Camp was in the Ueno capital for th annval meeting of the PEL Scenbtatieiemmmae Canearvative Assn. UF-\ciation, He spoke to an open meeting. Mr..Camp said there is need for a reassessment of leader- ship. "Tf we want to renew our poli- tics, we have to renew our party. We need the help of more and more Canadians if the party is to be more democratic. "We must be frank with one another within the party. The art of politics is the art of keep- ing up with the things of tomor- row. You must do what you be- lieve is right and that's what I was elected for." DOESN'T PRODUCE TEST The Chatlottetown meeting had been billed as a possible trial of strength among party brass after Mr. Camp's call for a re-appraisal of the party lead-| ership, but the principals, other than. the national . president, failed to perform as expected. Wallace Nesbitt, member of Parliament for the Ontario riding of Oxford and recognized as pro-Diefenbaker, attended @ st "gingerly into the ® | have repped Boe the 75-year-old former premier and Opposition leader in P.E.1., introduced Mr. Camp and also spoke but did not mention the leadership issue. However, the P.E.I. associa- tion did pass a resolution during afternoon sessions backing John Diefenbaker as leader of the federal Opposition but calling for a resolution of the leader- ship issue in the best interests of the party and country. VANCOUVER (CP) -- British Calumbiate. tan Canearvativer party leadership with a decision to back national Bos-t4a4 Nalian. Camn'e right to call Yor a leadership vote this al In a carefully-worded | state- ment that came Saturday after five. hours of debate among 50 Conservative policy makers here, they said: "The members of the federal executive committee of the Pro- gressive Conservative party of Camp Again Calls For Reappraisal B.C. affirm the right of. their national president to direct the attention of the party to its right under article 11 of the constitu- tion of the party to elect the leader of the Progressive Con- servative party of Canada and to call any convention for that purpose." Their statement also noted that the question of calling a leadership convention should be decided by secret ballot at the national convention Ottawa in November. ay Mavie Fruiton, idered a der for national pa dership, would not ela on the statement, Stuart rieming, we pois © B.C. president and acting leader, said: "'We're not sure Mr. Camp has called for a lead- ership convention. Therefore we asked for a vote on the matter at the national meeting." Diefenbaker Two Students Die| When Planes Hit MARKHAM, Ont. (CP)--Two student pilots, Heinrich Otten of Keswick, Ont., and Brian Good- fellow of West Hill, Ont., were killed Sunday when their planes collided over the Toronto-Mark- jham Airport. Police said two single - seat aircraft were making a final ap- proach for landing when they collided at an altitude of 75 feet. Keith Bacon of Toronto, a pi- lot who witnessed the crash, said Mr. Otten was above Mr. Goodfellow and making a shal- but did not speak. Walter Shaw, low turn, "BAD WAY TO LONDON (AP) -- A honey- | moon trip is "a thoroughiy bad way to begin married life," says a British rabbi. He Suggests newlyweds should start married life together in their own home. "The honeymoon is an arti- ficial way of starting life," Rabbi Vivian G. Simmons wrote in the journal of the National Marriage Council. "Here are two young peo- * ple, freed for the first time from the joys or burdens, the securities or uncertainties of their separate homes, going into the world' together. START OFF" "The proper place for them is the home which they have prepared for themselves, In- stead they are alone together in the characterless atmos- phere of a hotel room, con- demned to live for a time in completely unnatural condi- tions which impose restric- tions on them, "The worst of these is the practical impossibility of get- ting away from each other, morning, noon or night." In the home, he added, "the proper, normal setting of life falls into its proper place." Keeps Silent OTTAWA (CP)--A spokesman for Opposition Leader Diefen- baker said today the Conserva- tive chief has no further com- ment at this time on the report on the Gerda Munsinger case. Mr. Diefenbaker apparently wants to assess public reaction to the report, issued 'Friday, before replying in detail to criti- cism by Mr. Justice Wishart Spence of the Supreme Court of Canada. The judge said in his report that Mr. Diefenbaker should have ordered a fuller investiga- jtion and dismissed Pierre Sev- jigny as associate defence min- (ister "when he iearned as prime minister in 1960 that the minis- ter was associating with Mrs. Munsinger, a prostitute once engaged in espionage. His 1,200-word initial com- ment Friday, issued by his of- fice here as a "preliminary" statement, called the inquiry a political hatchet job aimed at removing him from the Con- servative leadership. Mr. Diefenbaker was in the Boston area at the time on a two-day private visit with his wife. He returned to Ottawa late Saturday night: An aide said he spent Sunday at home reading a backlog of mail and newspapers, But the copy of Mr. Justice Wishart Spence's 20,000-word report on the Munsinger case delivered to his office Friday remained un- opened on his desk. Jap Death Toll 1 By WILLIAM GASSON TOKYO (Reuters)--The death toll from two typhoons which hit Japan during the weekend climbed to at least 197 today as police and rescue workers: continued to dig through mud engulfing thousands of home. Police reported another 123 injured in the country's worst persons missing and nearly. 1,000 typhoon disaster in seven years. Typhoon Ida smashed into the Tokyo and Mount Fuji area early Sunday while Typhoon It was the highest typhoon casualty' toll since 5,041 died near Nagoya Sept. 26, 1959. Today some railway lines, many roads and electric power had not been restored in some areas and rescuers fough mud and huge boulders in the hope of finding survivors of two re- mote Mount Fuji villages bur- fed by a huge landslide. A third big typhoon, June, was churning in the Pacific and could approach Japan Thurs- da damage, including 60 per cent of the pear and grape crops of Ya- manashi prefecture, site of Mount Fuji. sto U.S, bases alone was estimated at $6,000,000. Salty rain carried by the ty- phoon olso did widespread dam- age to harvests . Ida hurled the most violent winds ever recorded by Japan- ese weathermen 202-mile- an-hour gusts -- at the top of Mount Fuji. Gusts of 85 miles in Tokyo were the third strong- the brunt with 89 deaths, as many villagers were caught in their sleep by the landslide, The mud avalanche destroped Ashiwada and Saiko villages on the north side of Mount Fuji, leaving 50 dead, 51 missing and 64 injured, Police said 9,100 houses were completely or partially de- stroyed by the typhoons, which caused 668 landslides. Floodwaters entered 48,321 houses and 67,789 persons were listed as -homeless, Helen was still beating South- ern Japan with less feroci y. The typhoons, ty. particularly Ida, caused multimillion-dollar Yamanashi est on record. The prefecture bore typhoon also washed away 166 bridges. 'mn China Warns The US. TOKYO (AP)--China issued its - 412th "serious warning" against the United States after charging that two American planes and a U.S, warship vio- lated Chinese-claimed air space and waters Sunday. Peking's New China news agency, quoting a spokesman of the Chinese foreign ministry, said one plane "intruded" over China's territorial waters in the area northeast of Mencheong County, Hainan Island, while another plane "intruded" into China's air space over the Hsisha (Paracel) Islands, Kwangtung province, South China, The agency said the Ameri- can warship violated China's waters in the areas south of Pinghai and Swabue in Kwang- tung province. £MN Nrivare wa araay oe Go On Strike. BIRMINGHAM, Engianag (Reuters)--A strike by 600 driv- ers stopped delivery of cars from the huge Austin motor fac- tory here today and threatened to bring production to a stand- still Within 48 hours. The strike was in protest against the pianned dismissal of 300 drivers due to a cut in car production brought about by the government's economic squeeze. A_ spokesman for the drivers said the strike today was com- pletely effective. The giant factory--which em- ploys 28,000 men--has cut Aus- tin production from 10,000 units a week to some 7,000, It can stock only about 5,000 cars on the premises. SISTERS WED THREE BROTHERS ST. FULGENCE, Que. (CP) --Three sisters were married to three brothers in a family ceremony Saturday in this community 120 miles north- east of Quebec City. All -six~-will ~spend honeymoon together United States. * Married by parish priest Antoine Gagnon were three brothers of Martel family and three sisters surnamed Harvey, all of them coming from the nearby village of Sault-aux-Moutons. The happy couples are: Gerard, 32, and Marie-Jeanne, 3M; Pierre-Paul, 29, and Aur- ore, 26, and Joseph-Gabriel, 25, and Marie-France, 24. The Martel brothers until recently were laborers at the huge Hydro-Quebec electricity projects being built on the north shore of the St. Lawr- tier in the ence. They lost their jobs during a recent strike at the project and are now unemployed. tt es held, gO | ASTrOS 10 ie Mleve cliche' wha flow' Gicaial it more than 1,000,000 miles during AT ODDS OVER VIET U.S. Secretary of . State Dean Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko, right, meet in the Soviet U.N. Mission in New York for dinner and discussion. They are in a deep impasse over Viet Nam but possibility of pro- gress on other issues ap- peared. (AP. Wirephoto) DALLAS, Tex. (AP) -- Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. fore- casts a gloomy. future for the American church unless it comes to grips with racial in- equality and ceases to "mouth pious irrelevancies and sancti- monious trivalities.'" In Dallas to address the an- nual. meeting of the interna- tional convention of the Chris- tian Churches (Disciples of Christ), King said Sunday the church must recapture its pro- phetic zeal or become '"'little more 'than an irrelevant social club with a thin veneer of re- ligiosity."" 'Dr. King Sounds Warning | To Churches Of America MACON, 'Ga. (AP)--Members of a Baptist church on the Mer- cer University campus have voted to dismiss their pastor and two other staff workers who had pressed for -an open-door policy for. Negroes, The dismissals, approved. 259 to 189 Sunday, came shortly after members of the Tattnall Square Baptist Church forcibly removed from the church a Negro student from Ghana who attempted to attend the sery- ices. The. membership voted 286 to 109 last summer to remain seg- regated, POPE PAUL \ a] SOUTH AFRICA BACKS DOWN ON NEW SEGREGATION LAW New Rule Would Have Cut All Political From AP-Reuters CAPE TOWN (CP) -- South Africa's all-white government backed away today from one of the most sweeping pieces of apartheid (race segregation) legislation proposed by the rul- ing white nationalists since they gained power in 1948. The government, through its Interior Minister Pieter le Roux, VATICAN CITY (Reuters) -- Pope Paul. said today the Ro- man Catholic Church is going through a grave hour and called for 'unity in necessary things." He said this in a letter to 1,200 Catholic theologians who op- ened'a six-day congress here to mend serious rifts in interpre- tation of modern church teach- ing. The theologians will discuss decrees of the recent Vatican council which unleashed within the church dissensions between progressives and conservatives: Issues to be debated included religious liberty, ecumenism, morality, the teachings on the Virgin Mary and the divine na- ture of Christ. The Pope, who was 69 today, underlined ; the importance of the congress "'in this grave hour in which the Catholic Church is applying itself to the council's decisions," He said it is necessary to point' out to the faithful a straight and safe way to avoid errors that undermine the foun- dations of the faith. POPE STRESSES UNITY Unity is necessary things is always their responsibility, the Pope told the theologians. "Unity is. necessary' above' all in religiously keeping to the en- tire doctrine handed down by the council," He said that in the interpre- tation of doctrine one had te avoid dissociating oneseif trom the church's traditional sacred teaching. Anyone who interpreted trine in his own way. must not despise the opinicas of vii er theologians or present his opin- jons as the truth, but humbly discuss them with others, the Pope said. He called on the the- ologians, however diverse their opinions might be, never to sep- arate the ministry of truth from the duty of Christian charity, 'How many tearful divisions, how many sterile: controversies have occurred through lack of charity in transmitting and spreading the truth," he said. The Vatican council, opened by Pope John in 1962 and <!ssed asre ase HOUR IS GRAVE FOR CHURCH - PONTIFF by Pope Paul last year, un- leashed a new wave of progres- sive thought. The congress was originally planned as a high level scien- tifie study of the Vatican coun- cil's rulings. But some recent interpreta- tions by clergy have been con- sidered near ~ heretical by the Vatican, and have made the congress of major importance for the future of the' Church's teaching. The disputed interpretations have been made principally by clergy in The Netherlands, Bel- gium, France and West Ger- many, countries where the Church is traditionally rather more liberal than in most. told Parliament it was not going ahead with a bill which would in effect have prevented all po- discussion and. contact the color line, Story Of Flight Saat, Gas jasy ane Discussion The new measure, one of the most controversial proposed in the history of the country's apartheid laws, raised a storm of protest on the grounds that its sweeping provisions were pene at ee Le: song of all multi-racial pa' or whose activities impinged i: any way on multi-racial politics, It would have meant the J 4 of such parties as Paton's Liberal party palgere| pos- ibly also the dior hea ind ar the latter ti in: space tell Bay fc ocr Charles Conrad Jr. } Cmdr land Lt.-Cmdr. Richard F. Gor- don Jr. scheduled, a news con- ference for 11 a.m, EDT at the Manned Spacecraft Centre, home base for the astronauts. The public conference marks the end of an extensive series of discussions with key space of- ficials, technical experts and fellow astronauts. Afterwards, Gordon and Conrad planned to fly to Washington for a White House dinner honoring West German Chancellor Ludwig Er- hard tonight, The $6 - year - old navy pilots rocketed into orbit Sept, 12 after two frustrating delays and set Several space records. They splashed into the Atlantic with reconsidered. Five Persons Die In Apartment Fire NEWARK, N.J. (AP)--A 22 year-old grocery clerk who was married only Friday night died with his four stepchildren early Sunday when fire swept their three-room apartment, The dead were identified as Julio Ramos; Dorena Cintron, 5; Ricky, 3; Alfredo, 2, Larry, 1. The mother, Mrs. Julia Cin- tron Ramos, 21, ran downstairs to seek. help. Firemen found her in shock on the sidewalk, Ramos's body was found on a bed on top of the children, His arms were spread as through he had. tried to scoop them up. pinpoint accuracy three days later, All were asphyxiated. OTT UUs minttnn TORONTO (CP) -- Sixty-e ployed by Streetsville Coach cutting service to about 15 the drivers' reason for not critical condition in hospital McGee of Guelph, is "still cri tastic'" reports abroad that be executed, The official, lives, said: NEWS HIGHLIGHTS School Drivers Book Off "Sick" ight school bus drivers em- Ltd. booked off sick today, schools, mostly in Toronto Township. A company spokesman said he did not know reporting to work, He said the drivers are not represented by a union, Crystal McGee Still Critical TORONTO (CP) -- Crystal Ann McGee remains in nine days after being sep- arated from her siamese twin sister, Sherri Lee, who died shortly after the operation. A hospital official said today Crystal Ann, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Leonard tical but progressing," Execution Report Denied ACCRA (AP) -- A high Ghanaian government: official today described as 'absolutely unfounded and very fan- Alex Quaison-Sackey, 42, former United Nations General Assembly president, is to who recalled that similar rumors had come earlier from Conakry, Guifea, where the ousted Ghanaian president, "T am sure this fabrications aimed at discrediting. the new regime." Efforts to reach Quaison-Sackey were unavailing, but. the is reported to have been in hospital for some time. Kwame Nkrumah, now is one of the Nkrumah Sed Turned For New Kedron Ann Landers--12 City News----11 Classified---18 to 21 Comics---16 Editorial---4 Financial---7 ..In THE TIMES Today.. Two Youths Killed In Weekend Crash -- P, 11 Goles Win Senior "'B" Opener -- P.8 Monse -- P. 5S Obits--21 Sports--8, 9, 10 Theotre--14,.15 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax-----5 Women's--13 Tc HNMR

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