Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowmane ville, Ajax, Pickering. and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. 106 Single Cop S5¢ Per Week Home VOL, 95 --- NO. 247 he Oshawa Cimes livered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1966 Authorized as Second Class: Mait Ottawa and for payment of Weather Report Little change in weather an- ticipated. Heavy rainfalls may oceur tonight and. tomorrow. Low tonight 45, high Thurs- day 50, Office Department in Cash campaign worker last night as he became first Negro REPUBLICAN EDWARD W. Brooke of Massachusetts is embraced by jubilant ever elected to Senate by popular vote. Quebec Mayor Bids For PC Lead ership GRANBY, Que. (CP)--Paul nier, president of the Quebec Progressive Conserva- tive Association, said Tuesday night he plans to run as a candidate for national leader- ship of the Conservative party after party leader John Diefen- baker has stepped down. Mr. Trepanier also expressed sharp criticism of Camp, current president of the National Progressive Conserva- tive Association. He declined to announce his stand on whether Mr. Camp Dalton § for regular re-assessment of party leadership. The Quebec Conservative said he is fed up with having to learn via the press of what Mr. Camp is thinking. Since being elected national association president in Febru- ary, 1964, Mr, Camp had called that he had not fulfilled his presidential mandate. Mr, Camp is responsible to a large extent, said the Quebec leader, for a total absence of party organization in Quebec and for an absence of French- ns fromthe top circles would. be a candidate, "together with seven or eight called| others," for the top post. Opposition Holds Up Bill Crisis G OTTAWA (CP)--The minority government is again running out of money and ten- sion is rising on Parliament Hill. More than 60,000 civil servants owing In Ottawa several contractors are awalt- ing. payments, Meanwhile, the Commons re- mains deadlocked on the supply bill after seven days of repeti- tious debat | Several:other obligations will | soon face the government. Another 140,000 vernment employees are scheduled to be \paid Monday and Tuesday; |postal workers are thr H assooin-| | are due to collect their mid-|to strike any day for higher) month pay cheques Thursday,|pay; the civil service commis- but they cannot be paid until/sion has recommended a six- Parliament passes an interim|per-cent interim pay boost for supply bill for Noyember, 150,000 federal employees, and Police Arrest Extremists To Avoid Sacred Cow Riots NEW DELHI (Reuters)--Po- Ice today made a. pre-dawn * gwoop on extremist leaders here in an effort to prevent further bloody riots in the Indian capi- tal over the slaughter of sacred Sewak Sangh (RSS)..also were| Minister Hellyer's bill to unify! cows. Among those arrested, the) ident of the right - } tion developed into-a: riot, kill-| ing eight. | In addition to Jan Sangh lead- jers, men from the militant Hindu Rahstriyva Swayam rounded up. | RSS was blamed by commen- jtators here for deliberately 1 "|preparing for violence Monday. ganizers of Monda Authorities said today's ar-| Stration outside Parliament. | rests were made™in anticipation Hundreds of thousands of In-|Of a breach of the peace. dians led' by holy men marched) Already one cabinet minister, on Parliament. Police turned;|Home Minister Gulzarilal or on- As in previous interim supply debates, the opposition is hold- ing up the bill in the hope of pressing the government into a concession. The government stands firm in the hope that the opposition will allow the bill to pass at the last minute to avoid being blamed for a financial crisis. The opposition claimed victor- ies last March and in Novem- ber, 1964, when it successfully pressed the Liberals to set up judicial inquiries into the George Spencer security case and the Lucien Rivard at- tempted bribery case. The issue this time is Defence the three armed forces. Conser- vative MPs say they will talk on the supply bill as long as Mr. Hellyer refuses to consent to immediate committee hearings on his controversial plan. The minister insists that the normal procedure be followed in debating the unification bill-- them back with gunfire and! Nanda, has resigned over the tear gas when the demonstra-|sacred cow riots. committee hearings only after a Commons vote on the principle is applauded by her hus- band, Alabama Gov, George C. Wallace as she makes her acceptance speech after defeating oT 'The Dearborn city commis- sion, under the urging af Mayor Orville Hubbard, placed the following question on the ballot in Dearborn polls for Tuesday's U.S. and state elections: "Are you in favor of an immediate cease-fire and withdrawal of U.S, troops from. Viet Nam so the Viet. namese people can settle their own problems." Returns from Dearborn's 113 polls showed 20,667 votes against the question to 14,124 for. The poll, which has no legal status, resulted in bitter reac- tion and legal moves to pre- vent its being placed on the general ballot. However, @ U.S. district judge ruled against the efforts: to prevent its listing. 'U.S. Troops Find Arms Dump SAIGON (AP) -- Only light, sporadic ground fighting was reported across South Viet Nam today, but American infantry |men turned up a rich booty in Communist arms and supplies in Tay Ninh province, the scene | of almost a week of hard fight-| ing near the Cambodian: border. U.S. 1st Division infantry un- covered a tunnel complex that had been part of a regimental) command post. In it they found) a "massive array' of supplies and equipment, and 95 bodies, while nearby they uncovered a of the measure. tyle mines. PRIVATE EYE TALKS RCMP Linked With Hotel'Bug' INTER -UNION FEUD mine factory with 450 claymore- her husband as governor of Alabama. Mrs, Wallace campaigned on her huse band's record and will be MRS.' LURLEEN Wallace ~~ James Martin to. succeed ernor of a state since Mrs, Miriam (Ma) Ferguson went out of office in Texas in 1935. sh come the first woman gov- Reagan and his wife, Nan- cy, acknowledge the ova- tion from. the crowd at Republican headquarters in VICTORIOUS RONALD ~ the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles last night after election results showed Reagan the victor in the battle for the California governorship. Reagan de- feated Democrat Edmund G. Brown, who sought hia third term in the office, (AP Wirephotos) BLICAN GAIN ENS LBJ'S CONTROL MEANWHILE, back at the ranch, President Lyndon Johnson had no comment to make on the election re- sults. The president uses a piled' the frosting Republican cake " ry returns from Tuesday's U.S. elections rolled in, Pg Hm Mc mm who was Jee a third four- - year term in the most popu- lous state of the United States, approached 1,000,000 votes. As the count neared its end, the 55 - year - old movie actor, 5 * seeking public office for the first time, passed the 3,000,000-/Brooke vote mark. In the congressional battles, substantial Republican gains threatened President Johnson's control of the 435-seat House of Representatives, cockpit of his "great society' legislation of > an lamieing' 9 Ron-| © oF cent and the last two years. The right-wing Regan moved into the Republican limelight, and a potentially influential po- sition in the contest for the party's 1968 presidential nomina- tion, with re-elected Governor George Romney of Michigan and new Senator Charles H. Percy, an industrialist who de- feated veteran Democratic Sen- ator Paul Douglas, 74, in illi- nois. Percy and Romney, who won a third term in Michigan by a landslide, emerged as leaders of the moderate faction in the Republican party, together with New York state's re + elected Governor Nelson Rockefeller, stick, above, as he turns a Hereford bull on the LBJ ranch in Texas today, John- son took newsmen on a tour of the spread. MAKE BIG COMEBACK Over + all» the Republicans Martin Arrives In Moscow, Bars Viet Peace Talks Soon MOSCOW (CP)--Paul Martin, Canadian minister for external affairs, arrived in Moscow to- day to discuss Viet Nam, dis- armament and other questions with Soviet officials, Martin told reporters in War- saw Tuesday he was not opti- mistic over prospects for early peace negotiations in Viet Nam. Martin flew here to meet For- eign Minister Andrei Gromyko after talking with Polish leaders in Warsaw. Martin might also see Soviet Premier Alexei Kos- ygin, With Canada a member of the International Control Commis- sion that, in theory, supervises peace in Viet Nam, the Vietna- VANCOUVER (CP) -- Assist- ant Commissioner F. S. Spald. ing, B.C.'s top RCMP officer, today ordered a full investiga- tion into claims that members of the force were involved in the bugging of a union leader's hotel room. Private Detective W. B. (Bud) Graham said in a radio interview, Tuesday night that Cpl. Harry Reid of the RCMP's security and intelligence divi- sion arranged a meeting with him and Pat O'Neal, organizer for the International Brother- hood of Pulp, Sulphite and Pa- per Mill Workers. Graham said the result of the meeting was that O'Neal paid him $250 to install electronic listening equip- ment in the convention rooms of the Pulp and Paper Workers of Canada, Assistant Commissioner Spalding said in Victoria he heard the radio broadcast and decided the situation warranted an investigation. Vancouver police transport department officials Monday seized $700 worth of electronic equipment from three rooms in the Ritz Hotel, where the Cana- dian Pulp and Paper Workers Union is holding its convention. One of the three rooms was occupied by Lloyd Craig, presi- dent of the Canadian union who died there Saturday of an ap- parent heart attack. O'Neal denied earlier he had anything to do with bugging the rooms and later could not be reached to comment on the al- legation he paid Graham $250 as a retainer, Graham, who said he was a member of the RCMP's secur- ity and intelligence division from 1955 to 1962, said he would have refused the job except he believed he was acting for the police. Graham said he placed micro- phones in Craig's room, in Room 206 and an adjacent com- mittee room. A receiving set was put in Room 409. on the floor above, "I have never done any bug- ging before and would have re- fused this. case had I not thought it was a RCMP re- quest," he said. "I was surprised and flat- tered when Cpl, Reid came to me. It appeared the RCMP was assisting one union to spy on another." mese war was expected to be a bounced back even more vigor- ously than expected from their disaster in the i864 presiden- tial election, when Johnson jtrounced Barry Goldwater in a Democratic landslide that also swept many Republicans out of Congress. The Democrats, with holdover majorities from two years ago, retained control of both the Senate and the House of Rep- resentatives, but their margin in the house was sharply re- duced. In the Senate, the Republi- cans gained three seats, Make- up of the upper house in the next Congress will be 64 Demo- ndrawn showed 20,067 14,124 for, - sagrenm omg d vote of Negro legislative gains ~~ defeated some a dates was ineffective In others. Nelson A. Rockefeller, 58, moderate' ican, was eas- ily elected to a third term as governor of New York over guard Frank D. O'Connor, her or not 'Am should be withdra In Massachusetts, Edward W. , 46, Republican state attorney - general, became the first freely-elected Negro mem- ber of the Senate, He defeated Endicott Peabody, also 46, mod- erate Democrat and former state governoy. WALLACE WINS Lurleen Wallace was -elected governor of Alabama to suc- ceed her husband, George, who under law could not d Falls. 23k Mrs, Wallace, 40, defeated Republican James D, Martin to' become the first and tho fest in ak yeate tn an , Winthrop Rockefeller, brother of New York's Nelson, climaxed a six - year drive to make Arkansas a two-party state by beating Democrat Jim Johnson, an outspoken segregationist. It was Rockefeller's second try for ry bow and h -pe Arkan- sas Repu! nor since the Civil 4 ase In Florida, investment broker Claude Kirk, 40, captured the governor's office for the Re- publicans for the first time in nearly: a century, He defeated Miami Mayor Robert King High, a Democrat whom Kirk charged with being an ultra- liberal who favored the Ne groes, The titution demands himself but now will continue as governor in all but name. This hefty victory was inter- preted as a boost to George's plans to run as a third candi- that the entire House be elected every two years, with one-third of the Senate elected to six year terms in each election. The presidential election comes date in the next presidential around every four years. armed forces. TORONTO (CP) -- The set farm layoffs in October VN NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Naval Officers Seek Merger Probe TORONTO (CP) -- The Naval Officers Association of Canada has called for a royal commission to evaluate the department of national defence's program to unify the Mental Patients May Make Appeals Ontario government will set up review boards to allow mental patients to make direct appeals for their release from Ontario Hospitals, Unemployment Drops In October OTTAWA (CP) -- New industrial jobs more than off- and reduced unemployment in Canada to 195,000 from 205,000 in September, The level compared with 171,000 in October last year, ue | Tax Hike Set crats and 36 Republicans. magn Hon Ah: Migrant tale Republicans lost two of the here. 35 state governorships at stake, |" | In THE TIMES Poland also is.an ICC mem-|in Kansas and Maine, jripe for ICC action on peace} ROME (Reuters) | cabinet today put a higher tax) plore when on gasoline which it said would | become ripe. ; | bring in about $201,000,000 in) In Moscow, Martin had lit] two years to finance reconstruc-|tle to say during an airport in-| tion of regions stricken in the/terview. | REASONS ELUSIVE last week of flooding. | "It is a matter of great sat-| The cabinet also gave ap-|isfaction to be here in the So-|pre-election speculation, it was proval for the immediate spend-| viet Union today to be greeted |impossible to: pin down to what ing of sdme $74,000,000 to fi-/by Mr. Gromyko," he said. extent the three major issues-- nance relief needed at once in) "'l look forward to an ex} the mud-washed, storm-devas|change of views with him on} tated cities and agricultural! matters which are important to| the time might)more moderate wing of water issue. civil voters, provinces hit by the floods)all the nations and on matters; In the few races in which the : but 8 'ber but Martin said in Warsaw | wrested eight others from the] © 0 | ta Y | Tuesday that the time is not | Democrats. i Except for Reagan, most Re-|/ --The Italian|2egotiations. Talks here will ex- |publican victories went to = * } ele jparty,, which suffered badly in| * the 1964 party split on the Gold- |5 In the results, as in all the the Viet Nam war, inflation and | > rights -- influenced the Ann Londers--18 Ajax--5, 6 City News-----17 Classifed--26 to 29 Editoriol--4 Finaneiol--33 Comies--~35 Women's---18, 19, 20, 21 Error Meant Jail For Man--P, 17 Meter Attendant Appointed--P. Chicage Beats New York--P. 10 Now in its twenty-second day the Greater Oshawa Community Chest has raised $204,200 of the $345,875 objective. which came after 10 days of torrential rain. | of interest to our two coun-| war had been an issue, moder- tries." ates ran ahead although a el cD RE ) aunaudna