Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Dec 1966, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajox, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO. 279 S5e per Weak Home Belvered The Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1966 Weather Report: Cloudy, mild weather. expect. ed to continue. Low. tonight 80, high Saturday Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottewa and for payment of Postage in Cash 38. } TWENTY-FOUR PAGES SCROLL FOR OUTSTANDING SERVICE ' chairman, Mr. Savery': > be mee on the scroll: for ! tanding serv- anes is years on library board. The last ficial retiremen' of this year. In -his 's of- it' is Dec. 31 past generation and com- mented on the expansion and 100th anniversary of the library. --Oshawa Times Photo address to the board, Mr. Savery said. he has noted many PARIS (CP)--External Af- fairs Minister Paul Martin of Canada has mounted an exten- sive behind - the - scenes cam- paign at the NATO ministerial talks in a reported attempt to extend the proposed Christmas truce period in South Vietnam. Martin has held a number of | private talks with U.S. State) Secretary Dean Rusk and while he declined to disclose the na- ture of the discussions, inform- ants said they dealt mainly with the Vietnam war. Martin already has concluded that a peace attempt through re- establishment of the 1954 Ge- neva conference is "not in the cards" and that the Interna- tional Truce Commission, of which Canada is a member, can play a significant role since it has links with both Saigon and Hanoi. Escalation of the American raids into the Hanoi neighbor- hood has caused much concern in Martin's delegation here. Nevertheless, Martin is reported Truce Extension Urged By Canada Christmas truce, with a halt in American bombings, could lead to a peace conference. HEAR RUMBLINGS Pressures on the U.S. govern- ment to agree to an extended halt in the bombings are com- ing from other quarters--from political quarters at home. The American government's attitude is that Hanoi also must show some reciprocal action if the truce period is to be ex- tended. While Martin emphasized his peace drive during deliberations here, he also made clear he didn't believe this was the time--despite the warm-up of East-West relations in Europe-- for either the Americans or the British to reduce their troop commitments in Europe. There should be no unilateral troop reductions, he told NATO ministers Thursday, adding that a study should, however, be In Talks To OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com. and Saturday in overtime ses- sions aimed: at preventing a na- tional strike of air traffic con- trollers set for Tuesday. All parties agreed to the over- time sessions proposed by Gov- ernment House Leader Mcll- raith today, providing debate. is limited to legislation designed to block the threatened strike. Mr. Mcliraith introduced a motion to allow the House to sit from 7 p.m, to 10 p.m. to- night and from 11 a.m. Satur- day through 6 p.m, The motion was carried un- animously, along with an amendment by Gordon Church- ill (PC --Winnipeg South Cen- tre) providing that the only sub- ject of the overtime sessions be the measure aimed at keeping the airports operating. Under debate will be legisla- tion to force the nearly 800 con- trol tower and radar operators fo remain at work. Quick pas- sage would mean no overtime session. REMAIN APART DEAN RUSK .»» in private talks made of a proposed gradual and reciprocal reduction of forces in Germany by both the West and to feel that an extension of the the Soviet Union. On Steep TORONTO (CP)> -- Robert Food Lack Blamed Rentals ment of a special housing officer to co-ordinate development and Two-Nations Vision Given By Johnson del J deeply involved in the Negotiations Thursday left the controllers and the treasury board "still quite far apart" in attempts to settle the wage dis- pute, the controllers reported. They plan to go on strike at § a.m. local times while the legislative manoeuvr. Negotiators ' But the talks resumed today |< HOUSE SITS OVERTIME TO DEBATE AIR STRIKE 'Far A part" Set Wages mons has agreed to sit tonight - GEORGE McILRAITH + + + Proposes overtime "We are still quite far apart, but we will continue to negoti- ate as long as the government is ready to talk," he said. Mr. Conway said a bad ation would be -- it' the Pgs flying at most \ small enough to te opera with only visual aids. ™ Revenue, Minister Benson, EBEC (CP)~-Premier Dan- 'ohnson of a, _ read- took in va wi ey nal for -air-|8P judge's repo we nant they would be ready to accept," he added, three years were spent as changes In Oshawa in the Bradley, executive director of and-butter job of getting his who did not take part in the| Mr, Benson has refused to ac- US. Command Air Raids On Civilians SAIGON (CP)--U.S. fighter-/American spokesman said bombers stayed away from the! aerial photos showed that all Hanoi area Thursday as con-|bombs dropped on those days troversy continued to rage| hit their intended targets. around the world over Ameri-| The main objectives were a can attacks in the vicinity -of}truck depot five miles south of the North Vietnamese capital. (the city centre and railway The U.S. military command| yards six miles northeast of the in Saigon flatly denied that) centre. American bombs fell on any-| The Hanoi newspaper Nhan thing but military targets within} Dan today published photos it the Hanoi city limits in raids| described as bomb - damaged this week. | buildings, including a school, in Responding to reports from|or near the centre of the city. Hanoi that U.S. planes attacked|Hanoi, Moscow and Peking residential neighborhoods and) have charged that bombs rained killed more than 100 civilians|on civilian housing. Tuesday and Wednesday, an; In New York, UN Secretary- Detroit Teamster Walkout Folds After Hoffa's Plea DETROIT (AP) -- Teamsters A sampling of Detroit firms | began returning to work today|showed that from 75 to 100 per after a 24-hour walkout protest-|cent of over-the-road, long-<dis-| sion upholding the 1964 jury | work beginning with the mid- | tampering conviction of Inter- | | _ Hoffa flew into Detroit Thurs- Hoffa. Hoffa had urged his men |day and ordered the Teamsters | | "Don't take the law in your M k d M j}own hands or you are going to as e 6 |cheering Teamsters, summoned hastily to a '"'back - to - work" Take Payroll =: Chicago to address the |meeting. masked men, armed with rifle| veloped spontaneously Wednes- and sub-machine guns, burst|day night at a meeting of his of Montreal here Thursday aft-| Effective at midnight Wed-| ernoon and escaped with $50,000inesday night, it quickly spread Bryson is a village of about |total membership of some 70,- 650 people 60 miles northwest! 000. slated for the payroll for con- MAYOR APPEALS : struction workers employed at| Mayor Jerome B. Cavanagh solidated Paper Co. mill. jtelegraph to Hoffa to intercede, Quebec and Ontario Provin-|S@ying a 24-hour tieup of truck- ing a U.S. Supreme Court deci-|tance drivers had reported to| night shift. national President James R.| to go back to work. |back to work. jhurt me," Hoffa told some 1,200 meeting. Hoffa flew to Detroit BRYSON, Que. (CP)--Three| A 24-hour wildcat walkout de- into a sub-branch of the Bank| home Local, No. 299. in cash, to other locals, comprising a of Ottawa. The money was the nearby site of the new Con-|had appealed by telephone and cial Police set up roadblocks|ing would cripple this metro- throughout the area as soon as|POlitan industrial area of 3,700,- they received the alarm 000 persons. Witnesses said the three men| Many short ~ trip drivers of entered the bank and ordered| bakery, laundry, food chain and the three employees and seven|such vehicles reported on customers to remain still. Two|schedule, but some later left armed with ' 1 Team Tours Bombed City HANOI (CP) -- The three |delegation heads of the Inter- jnational Control Commission were allowed to make an on- the-scene investigation today of the six places in this capital hit by United States bombs or rockets Tuesday and Wednes- day. Tue indian chairman and the Canadian and Polish officers Denies General U Thant expressed fear that the alleged U.S. bombings "might lead to a wider war." He issued a statement deplor- ing "the loss of lives and the worsening of the situation re- sulting from the intensification of the bombing of North Viet- nam." In London, 56 Labor members of Parliament asked President ss Johnson in a cable to "stop|were accompanied by a North these attacks now involving| Vietnamese liaison officer. This main population centres, . . ."'|was One of the rare occasions The Vatican newspaper, L'0s-|°" Which the ICC team has been servatore Romano, asked if the|allowed to make a visit to the "intense aerial bombings ever|SCene to investigate in North} close to Hanoi contribute to| Vietnamese territory. formation of a propitious) Newspaper men here also climate for a longer suspension| were allowed to visit three of of hostilities?" jthe places bombs or rockets the Metropolitan Toronto Hous- ing Authority, said Thursday night many children in the city research, H. W. Suters, managing di- rector of the Ontario Housing Commi , said the housing vincial 1e gis lature, Thursday gave a statement of what it's are short of food b their parents have to pay up to 50 per cent of their income on rent. He and three other housing experts at an Anglican diocesan seminar agreed that Toronto's housing shortage is the worst in North America. The meeting, to «which all members of the clergy in Tor- onto were invited, voted to seek authority from various churches to launch an education program on the need for more and cheaper housing. It also approved a church- problem "doesn't affect just the poor, but will affect every one of us." H. L. Stricker, vice - presi- dent of the Ontario division of thewUrban Development Insti- tute, said there will be a "crisis of huge proportions within 15 months." Mr, Bradley said there are 7,500 applications now for. pub- lic housing, representing fami- lies with 14,000 children. Mr. Stricker blamed all lev- els of government for. the short- age. He also blamed tight money, building codes, zoning tions' vision of Canada. "The formula of the future, if Canada is to survive, is the double culture, the double na- tionality," Mr. Johnson told the legislative assembly. "That is what makes us dif- ferent from the United States. . . « How can you. project an interesting personality as a country different 'from _ the United States if you don't have this attribute of two nations and a double culture?" The Union Nationale leader was speaking on a day when, backed lobby at Queen's Park and city hall for the appoint- for one thing, the assembly was and taxes. giving second reading to a bill UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- The United Nations Security Council decided unanimously The paper was referring to|fell. People gave them casualty Pope Paul's Dec; 3 appeal for ligures 'which added up to a a prolonging of the Christmas|total of 12 killed and 30 and New Year's holiday truces.| wounded. Thursday night to keep the UN peacekeeping force in Cyprus for at least another six months, until June 26, 1967. stuffed money cardboard box while a third|for a Supreme Court rehearing | man, armed with a rifle, stood! and hoped to delay his entering | guard at the door prison, if he must, until after) A fourth man waited in the|completion of national contract late model getaway car. The |bargaining which is scheduled! raid was over in about three|to begin in Washington, D.C.,| minutes, Jan; 17, i sub-machine-guns|their routes for Hoffa's meet- from the safe/ing. \§ and the tellers' cages into a| 'Hoffa said he planned to ask} ator of laughter and more serious entertainment died in St. Joseph Hospital, Bur- bank, Calif, at 65. His studio attributed his death Walt Disney and "Mickey Mouse" ride a fire engine Disney's wonderful land of fantasy and dreams -- Dis- neyland, The versatile cre- CHARM AND GENIUS STILZED + |six - month extension of the - |force's mandate, Thant said in 5 |Greek police." ; heavy motors fo gcente circulatory col- lap.c, His left lung was partially .removed last November. Cyprus Peacekeeping Force Kept On By Security Council that would amend the provin- cial Income Tax Act. The amendment would raise Quebec's share of the total in- come tax collection to 47 points from 44, with the federal gov- ernment to take a correspond- The 15-member council ac- ing dectease. fiseal program through the pro- Th baker accused the government of "playing around" and. said the judge had recommended only 17-per-cent raises. controlle of 15 per cent last year and the judge recommended further in- creases of 24 per cent. STICK TO DEMANDS 'We're still talking." "We're still talking," was also the comment of James Conway, vice-president of the Canadian Air Traffic Con- trollers Association. ursday evening talks, would not comment on the progress of all meant to boost, his '"two-na-| (fe negotiations, except to say, cept the wage recommenda- tions in the report of Judge John B, Robinson of Haileybury who was named by the govern- ment to inquire into the air con- trollers dispute. "The oe of Canada can- not afford increases of 40 per cent," he said, Diefenbaker Raps Cabinet On Refusal To Heed Report Opposition Leader Diefen- Mr, son replied that the received hikes Mr. Conway said the workers cepted on the request of Secre- tary-General U Thant, who said withdrawal of the force this HGR Weta Guide, Colaainy have resulted in a war between the Greek- and Turkish-Cypri- would make no attempt to defy the legislation outlawing the strike, bui tie associaiion wiii stick to its wage demands until the legislation is passed. TE whos | « -~ tei ALUULLU NOCKD + jian troops. Until the council + jacted Thursday, i | cil, ots. The UN force, sent to Cyprus in March, 1964, includes Canad- Missing Boy TORONTO (CP) Police have called in a bl d to for eight days ah its mandate of Machinists, whose halted Air Canada operations The International Association strike Thursday pledged full support to the traffic controllers, Mike Rygus, 'general vice- president of the machinists' union, said in a statement the government "must stop acting like an unfaif employer." All the government had to do was to accept the wage in- creases proposed by a commis- sioner it had appointed last June, In the Commons Thursday Mr. Benson refused to disclose the details of the pay increases that would be included in the government's strikehalting bill, Salaries now range from $4,- 800 to $9,528. Judge Robinson recommended increases which would set the minimum and last month, maximum at $5,288 and $11,820, join the search today for 11- year-old Wesley Watson, miss- ing from his suburban North York home since Monday. Police and volunteers have scoured the area since the boy disappeared on his way to school. United States authorities have been asked to watch for him in case he went or was taken across the international boundary. Because no clues to his where- abouts have been uncovered the dog, which recently picked up the scent of another boy after was to have expired Dec. 26. "The persistence of the un- settled situation' in Cyprus points" forcibly" to a further making his request to the coun- "for there can be little doubt that the removal of the force at this time would create a quite unwarranted risk of the renewal of fighting in the is-| land." | Turkey complained to the council that "arms and arm- ored equipment are being se- 0:4 cretly imported into the island|he was missing for 13 days, has from abroad under the ridicu-|been called in. lous pretext of arming the| ~~ - France Denies Rhodesia Buy PARIS (Reuters) -- France's state - owned tobacco monopoly today denied reports that it re- cently bought £2,000,000 ($6,- | 000,000) worth of Rhodesian to- . | bacco. Council Drops The state company, Service Pl Pl " » no tobacco had AQUE PLANS er fount in Rhodesa "at | d'Exploitation Industrielle des DUTTON, Ont. (CP)--Dutton|rectly or indirectly since the "It is interesting to note that these arms and_ equipment, which include armored tanks, and bazookas, are of a kind which are com- monly used for military aggres- sion and not for policing," Turkish Ambassador Orham Erlap said. Tabacs et Allumettes, said in a a bilingual plaque for a monu- | ment in Centennial Park. Councillors agreed at a meet-| ing Thursday that the two-lan- guage plaque would be suitable if Dutton was closer to Quebec Dutton is. 20 miles southwest of |ficial of the Rhodesian Tobacco ago. Reports from Rhodesia said Thursday night the £2,000,000 deal was arranged during a re- (AP Wirephoto) council has dropped the idea of |white - minority regime broke |> away from Britain 13 months|> cent visit to France by an of-|= NEWS HIGHLIGHTS NATO Ministers Back Ties With East PARIS (AP) --. Ministers of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization endorsed today an Italian proposal looking to eventual technological and nations of the Soviet bloc. scientific co-operation with Arrests Follow Wiretapping Probe NEW YORK (AP) -- A 27-month undercover investiga- tion by the New York City district attorney's office into illegal wire tapping and electronic: eavesdropping has cul- minated in the arrest of 28 persons in four states; Thomson Drops Plans For New Journals LONDON (CP) -- Because of union difficulties, Lord Thomson 'is dropping plans to start. two new local 'daily newspapers, it was announced today. nttunasiigaentncagn .. In THE TIMES Today.. Oshawa Sees How Hamilton Ru Glider Approval Recommended--P. 5 Stint With Hornets Helps Bathgate--P. 8 Ann Landers--14 City News--13 Classified--18 to 21 Editorial--4 Financial--17 Comics--23 Pr a? ns----P, 13 Obits--21 Sports--8, 9, 10 Theatre--6 Weather-----2 Whitby, Ajax--5 Women's--14, 15,16 St. Thomas. Corp., Harry Wells, THUUAATUAUU gE aa se vee

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