Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Nov 1966, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL, 95 -- NO. 260 10¢ Single Co) B5¢ Per Week Home Solivered ¢ Oshawa Simes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24,-1966 Weather Report Brief cold spell tonight will be replaced as a warm front moves' in. Low tonight 28, high Friday 42. ° THIRTY PAGES Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Depertment Ottawa end for payment of Postage in Cash NEW MEN IN MAJOR CABINET PORTFOLIOS AT QUEEN'S PARK ROBERT 8. WELCH DALTON BALES «+» replaces Yaremko «+» labor minister LOUIS CECILE ++ « « « leaves cabinet RENE BRUNELLE + @. lands and forests seep ths THOMOS L. WELLS « » « without portfolio LESLIE ROWNTREE « » » financial portfolio TORONTO (CP) -- Premier 'ohn Robarts today announ ajor ch in his cabinet 1 which two ministers will re- re, sevéral exchange portfo- lios and Tive join the treasury benches. Leaving the cabinet are Wel- fare Minister Louis Cecile, 61, JOHN YAREMKO « « » Welfare minister South African Help Sought To Halt Rebels LONDON (AP)--Prime Minis-| intention of seeking the imposi- ter Wilson has called on South|tion of selective mandatory Africa to press Rhodesia's rebel| sanctions on Rhodesia by the leaders into an 1ith-hour settle-| end of the year. ment with Britain, government! Informants said Wilson's min- sources reported today. | isters noted that Transport, Min- Wilson's request was made injister Ben Schoeman of South! &@ personal message to Prime) Africa felt free this week pub- Minister Balthazar J. Vorster)licly to warn Britain of the dire in Pretoria Wednesday. | consequences that would follow The British leader was said,the imposition of mandatory to be coupling his request with sactions on Rhodesia, the warning that Britain will be|, Schoeman' served notice that compelled to seek United Na-| South Africa would ignore these tions intervention in the crisis|sanctions and he warned the ina matter of days if the Rho-/lush British-South African trade desians reject the chance of! would be ruined, ent. | But Wilson and his govern: move by Wilson came as; ment long have been convinced OTTAWA (Special) -- Osh- awa was being "'a little unrea- sonable" in expecting a quick reply to its supplemental brief dealing with the economic im- pact of the auto pact on the city, a spokesman for Labor Minister John R. Nicholson said today. | He was commenting on dis- "Tt is just over a month since the supplemental brief was pre- sented to us on October 19 and in government terms this is not a long time for discussion and consideration before a decision reached,' the spokesman 1S said. "Oshawa should also keep in mind the fact that the Minis- Ottawa Answers Oshawa Complaint ing of officials of three depart- ments. and Lands and Forests Minis- ter Kelso Roberts, 67, whose retirement was announced last month. Named to the cabinet are Dalton Bales, the member for York Mills, who becomes labor minister; Rene Brunelle, Coch- rane North, the replacement for Mr. Roberts in the lands and forests portfolio; Robert Welsh, Lincoln,' citizenship and immigration minister; Thomas Wells, Scarborough North, and William Darcy McKeough, Kent West, ministers without port- folio. The new cabinet ministers as well as those moving to new portfolios were sworn in this morning by Lt.-Gov. Earl Rowe. "Our opponents say we are old and tired," Mr. Robarts JOHN ROBARTS es « Makes changes cabinet but many of that. de- partment's responsibilities now cussion at this week's meeting of the Oshawa city council when it was revealed that while the ter of Labor has been deeply concerned, with some other jvery pressing problems in the said after the swearing-in cere- mony, "I don't think we are and I don't think we behave Sithat way)" brief itself had been acknow!l- edged, a follow-up letter from Mayor Lyman Gifford urging some immediate action to help the city had not received a reply. The Ottawa spokesman said that it must be remembered that three departments of the |p ast few weeks." He said that everyone was always.urging the government to take 'immediate' action on problems and while it might be easy isions, often decisions taken in to make quick. deci- haste had proven to be wrong. "It's a little unreasonable of pute over the future of| that the South Africans want a ia entered its most tense negotiated Rhodesian settle-. wealth Secretary/as much 'as the do, } | Cr iy British Governor Sir/ Help and Wilson, in his message ar Gibbs, but as Wilson|left, no room for doubt that in teld Parliament Wednesday, his view South Africa will have will be available|to shoulder some of. the respon- in Premier lan! sibility if it falls to press Smith : into a mood of greater realism. Wilson made plain that it was; Wilson, sources said, empha- to Smith to call on Bowden sized Bowden's mission to Salis- and to ge with him to ac-|bury really does represent the cept Britain's terms for a set-jlast chance for agreement and) is Mrs, Carol Ann Nichols who was Miss Grey Cup in 1957 and also Miss B.C, Lions. (CP Wirephoto) Dale Ann Loung, 18, Miss Toronto Argonaut is crowned Miss Grey Cup at Vancouver Wednes- day night, Doing the honors Canada's Two-China Plan 'jand industry and it was not al- * Oshawa to -expect "yoy action in view of all the cir aaa spokesman said, government were involved in the matter, labor, manpower ways easy to get a joint meet- + + + Spokesman replys e age ae Ai MONTREAL (CP)--Air Can-)in separate talks by union and ada and union negotiators re-|airline officials. r Canada-Union Return For Strike End Bargaining They met again in the after- noon and then again for about Before today's changes the average age of the cabinet was 55.7 years. It now is 51.4 years. Mr. Robarts announced also will be handled by the new fi- nancial and commercial q department. ' The premier's announcement describes Mr. Wishart not only as attorney + general but as minister of justice, the first use of: the. latter designation in, On- that Provincial Treasurer |tari James Allan will be replaced by Highways min esas Charles MacNaughton post but remain. in. thee jsucceeds Mr. Cecile in welfare. metic ae Sec tree is en the ner Both men, however, continue net an Specerermege! afairs aaa, serve in the posts Bre bo be- folio George Gomme becomes apy haps ten highways minister and Citizen- Also keeping the same cablug ship Minister John Yaremko, jabs they nd efor days The premier's announcement} Premier' Robarts, Works Min- today ended months of specula-|ister Ray Connell, Health tion there would be sweeping|ister Matthew Dymond, Muni- changes in the cabinet. There cipal Affairs Minister Wilfrid has been apposition pressure in|SP0oner, Reform the legislature for a cabinet re-|Minister Allan Grossman, Agrie vamping and criticism that Mr. tlement. that only a few days remain be- The alternative, Wilson said,|fore the British, in the absence is that the British government|of some sort of deal, will be will be bound to fulfil its stated forced to go to the UN. Gains Little Support At UN sumed talks at 10:45 a.m. today in an effort to end the 10-day) old strike of machinists against| the publicly-owned airline. | The strike by the 5,200-mem- ber International Association of Machinists has grounded the entire fleet of 86 Air Canada Viet Cong Ambush Kills Canadian SAIGON (Reuters) Viet guerrillas ambushed a convoy moving foreign radio technicians through the central ids of South Viet Nam y, killing 20 persons includ- 7 eight civilians. the dead were one Canadian, one American tech- UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- Canada made its much-heralded suggestion for seating the Na- tionalist and Communist Chi- nese regimes in the United Nations Wednesday but there|Chinese membership. Wednes- was little indication of support/day and insisted that it is not from other countries. ja two-Chinas policy, Neverthe- Indications were that most/less, that is the way midst dele- members of the 121:- country/gations appeared to take it. General Assembly continued to| Martin: suggested as an in- ern vue ---- iterim solution, both the Com- jmunist government of Peking jand the Nationalist government jof Formosa' be seated, pending jsettlement by themselves of itheir conflicting jurisdictional support one regime or the other, but not, both, External Affairs Minister Paul Martin tossed thé idea morning strike south of the capital, guerrillas today kid- napped 109 persons, most of them children, from a hamlet in the Mekong Delta, a govern- ment military spokesman re- ported, The guerrillas took nine men, | 25 women and 75 children from Students Pl jinto the assembly's debate on| nician, nine South Vietnamese and three U.S. soldiers, spokes- men here said. The wounded included six American military men, one American civilian. Other technicians killed in the U.S. Thanksgiving Day am- bush included four South Ko- reans, a Filipino and a South Canadian and one & government "'new life'? ham- let--set up to resettle peasants in areas secure from the Viet} Cong. The hamlet is 79 miles south- |west of Saigon. | It was the second time in less jthan three weeks the guerrillas seized morethan 100 persons Neo-Nazi Fight MUNICH (Reuters)--Munich| students have re ~ founded the anti-Nazi White Rose Society to \fight against the right-wing Na-| jtional Democratic purty and its Ss } upporters. The original society was "| group of Munich University stu- dents who carried out anti-Nazi claims, China's permanent Se- curity Council seat would go to Peking. U.S. Ambassador Arthur Goldberg declined direct com- ment on Martin's speech but said the United States stands "absolutely firm" in its support of the Nationalist Chinese re- The two sides adjourned a few| aircraft since pickets were ' ' called out Nov. 14. Another 4,- | minutes before midnight Wed-| p99 airline employees jnesday following a day-long bid) forced out of work. |for agreement. The negotiating teams met for The negotiating teams called|20 minutes Wednesday morning it a night after their third meet-| dnd then adjourned so that each ing 'Wednesday, most of it spentiside could review its position. were Employers Seek Assurances Before Rehiring Dock Workers -- The| There was no immediate re- Associa-|ply from the union. The foremen struck last } | VANCOUVER (CP) Maritime Employers' tion asked Wednesday for as-| surances that 650 longshoremen;|Thursday and stopped water- dismissed at five British Co-| front activity for five days un-} |lumbia ports will do a full day's| til Monday when the employers! | work if rehired. obtained an injunction halting| | The longshoremen, members| picketing. }of the International Longshore-| Judge Kirke Smith, in issuing} jmen's and Warehousemen's Un-|the injunction, said there was} ion, were dismissed earlier/a clear conspiracy between the} Wednesday for allegedly par-|foremen's local and the 4,000-| 20 minutes late at night. Prime Minister Pearson said in Ottawa the government. has urged Air Canada President, Gordon McGregor, to settle the strike by the machinists through direct negotiations and without government interven- tion. Mr. Pearson sent a telegram to Mike Rygus, Canadian vice- president of the union, in which he said he "strongly urged'"' Air Canada to work toward a settle- ment, "The prime minister's tele- gram was in reply to one he re- ceived from Mr. Rygus who asked Mr. Pearson to clarify reports that Labor Minister Nicholson and Transport Minis- ter Pickersgill told Air Canada that they support the Crown- owned airline's stand in the wage dispute. The government - repeatedly has rejected opposition de- mands in the House of Com- mons for the appointment of a federal mediator in the dispute, premier Leslie Frost. culture ahd Food Minister Wil- Minis- Robarts was governing with|!iam Stewart, Transport many of the men originally named to the cabinet by former ter Irwin Haskett, En and Resources Menegietet, Wah ter John Simonett and Econome ics Minister Stanley Randall. Vietnamese, from hamlets in Long Toan dis-| propaganda in 1943, InsFebru- gime, which has continued to Witness Tells Identification of the dead and)'. wounded was withheld pending| Nov. 7, Viet Cong smits took| notification of next of kin. |the whole population of 107 per- The seme carly thie SONS from another ahmlet. morning on a main highway six miles south of the provincial centre of Dalat, about 220 miles northeast of Saigon. technicians, employees) apjy of Communications En-|pucha gineers, Inc., Washington, D.C.,! were going to work at a U.S,! Army radio communications site nine miles from Dalat, company spokesmen 'here said. In another daring early- ine namiet Was tear a Vik Cong base and had been partly| | forei the were returning to. their! ported, ary that year, its leaders Stphie | Scholl, 21, her brother Hans, 25, and a professor of philosophy, | Kurt Huber, were captured, tor that "stad A manifesto ssued by the new | ing." a | BOARD FOR SIX YEARS IN LONDON Demonstrators Jostle Premier MELBOURNE (Reuters) -- Prime Minister Harold Holt was jostied by demonstrators after an election meeting here today --the second successive day he has been the target of angry crowds. The demonstration occurred as Holt left suburban Caulfield town hall after campaigning for Saturday's general elections. A crowd of about 1,000 dem onstrators surged around him and kicked and pounded his/| car. Uniformed police had to link arms around the prime minister and his wife to keep/ the crowd back Earlier today, Holt told aj ress conference he wants to in violent demonstrations in Australia election campaigns. This is the second of series of articles written for The cerning the operation tario cities. will yote Dec. board of control. Teday's view is written hy a st Press. ago out of the municipal moi! of annexation Staffed largely with experienced in civic 'adminis tion, and led by a dominant mem specially Times con- hoards of control in other On- Oshawa citizens 5 to select members of this city's first member of The London Free By KENNETH BAMBRICK Special to The Oshawa Times LONDON -- This city's board of control was born six. years policeman, Stronach, tumultuous period sporadic sniping. One of the keys to of perience in the mun brought by the board. Gon lerton, whose re- aff ground Con, Earl and now retired, city council in 1939 from his 1948 membe tur- came back the as ers of ras ex Commission. f then joined board Sgn Anka ig OR" Sa, ohne ae eet ere renal ae net ae ae Mayor it has survived this successes ts the collective ex- three members of Margaret Ful- speeches still reflect her teaching back- served seven years on council between 1953 and 1960 before she became a controller, Nichols, prosperous restaurant operator, first. sat aldermanic Public om 1956 occupy China's assembly and Security Council seats despite its defeat by the Communists in the Chinese civil war in 1949. Nationalist China's UN am- bassador, Liu Chieh, said his bly settled by the enemy in| group said the National Demo-|government '"'is categorically first place. Many of thejcrats' election victories in the against Mr. people reported abducted prob-|states of Hesse and Bavaria tion." 4 Pee Fi showed that "there are men in| In recent statenients Commu-|tive "responsible in law for|Wednesday in Vancouver, New/|ticers on Cyprus after a visit Martin's sugges- nds who were in Viet|Germany who have forgotten|nist China has been equally | | *;Cong ranks, other sources re-/everything and learned noth-|firm in opposition to the two-|terms of the collective agree-|Crofton and the Nanaimo area/Andreas Papandreou. Chinas idea. ticipating in a slowdown on the) member union to strike. | waterfront in support of 190) Long delays and tie-ups in} forémen on strike for certifica-| handling of cargoes developed | tion in the union. |Tuesday and _ shipping com-| The association asked as-|panies and dock operators ac-/ ,Surances in a telegram to Roy! cused the union of staging a| jomin, Canawan | dent of the union. Nearly 650 dockers, about a The association said it holds|third of the total waterfront} Mr. Smith and the union execu-| work force, were discharged area PiSsi- SOWGGWH. : complete fulfilment of the) Westminster, Prince Rupert,| ment." 'on Vancouver Island. | 'Civic Background Boon To Controllers Con, Norm present dea Gordon with only the board's den Market Coat an executive, was the 1960, was icipal fields often after seeing Lake once a under way. election to but ill-healt him to run on He retired duties in an elected Utilities 1960, of control, é here and to three incun is completing his second 'decade in public office. For 28 years he operated a gas station, and now is manager of Covent Gar- fourth then retired Huron executive T. 0. Robinson won (Elections are set for Dec pected to run again, a radio LONG HEAVY SESSION AT FIRST an Bradford is the n of city council and personality, two aldermen, a public relations man, an auc- tioneer, and a retired land de- veloper have declared their in« tention of seeking one of the $4,500-a-year jobs.) parking building. d apron company Bentley I. Baldwin controller in re-elected in 1962, from public life his pet project, the water pipeline Retired insurance Mayor Stronach says: "You've got to have on board of control people who are prepared to give a lot of time to municipal prob- lems. At the same time, you have to have a board of control that has the confidence of coun- cil." Thé . board -holds regular weekly meetings that start on Wednesday mornings, but often continue in the afternoons as well. In addition, particularly SEE BACKGROUND (Continued on Page 7 the board in 1964, h will not permit again this year 5 the OX> t addition to nbents who are n {( | began among Greek army of- have had to be recalled for fac- been "minimal." Of Treason Plot ATHENS (AP)--The Greek government's star witness in a treason trial testified today that a plot to seize power in Greece there by parliament member The accusation against Pa- pandreou, the son of ex-premier George Papandreou, came from Gen, George Grivas, command- er-in-chief of Cyprus' armed forces. Grivas told the military court trying 28 army officers that in February, 1965, he had drawn up a report for King Constan- tine on the activities of Aspida, the clandestine organization the government charges sought to overthrow the king and take Greece out of NATO, Drury Reveals Auto Defects OTTAWA (CP) -- Safety de- fects have been discovered in both imported and domestically- manufactured automobiles, In- dustry Minister Drury told the]; Commons Wednesday The last major cabinet shuf- fle was in 1962, soon after Mr.| The resignation of Mr, Rob- Robarts became leader of the/erts, a former attorney-general Progressive Conservative party|and tap contender for the Con- in Ontario, and a lesser one|servative leadership on the re- shortly before the last provincial |tirement of Mr. Frost five years general election in the fall of|ago, was announced at Ottawa 1963. a few weeks. ago while Mr, © The only new cabinet ap-|Robarts was attending federal. pointee since then was Arthur|Provincial fiscal and Wishart, named attorney ~ gen-|talks. eral after the resignation of] Mr, Roberts' Frederick Cass two years ago|lands and forests following introduction of the ill- Brunelle, is chairman of the fated Bill 99, dubbed the "police |government + owned Ontario state bill" in the legislature. - |Northland Railway. He was first Mr. Wishart remains as at-|elected to the legislature in @ torney general in the revised{1958 byelection. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS. Tentative Airline Pact Reached MONTREAL (CP) -- A spokesman for the International Association of Machinists said today tentative agreement has been reached with Air Canada on a new labor contract in negotiations which resumed today. Lawyers Postpone Truscott Argument UTTAWA (CF) -- Finwi argument ty lawyer in ane Supreme Court of Canada review of the Steven Truscott murder conviction was postponed today until late January, Company Identifies Slain Canadian WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Canadian civilian killed today in a Viet Cong guerrilla ambush in South Viet Nam was identified by Page Communications Engineers Inc. here as Armand Fortier, 40, supervisor of plumbing and air conditioning of Montreal. successor as minister, Rene rye In THE TIMES Civie Election Forum Held--P. 11 Work On Complex Starts Soon--P. 5 Oshawa Ledies Win Bonspiel--P. 8 i Ann Landers--24 City News---117 Classified----16 to 19 Editorial----4 Financial--14 Comics--21 Obits--19 Sports--8, 9,10 Now in its thirty-third day He did not say how many cars ory examination of. defects But he said recalls of 1967) anadian-produced models have | | | dui Theotre--12 the Greater Oshawa Com- Weather---2 munity Chest fund has Whitby, Ajax--5, 6 reached $276,785 of its $345, Women's-----23, 24, 25, 26, 27875 objective.

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