Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Jan 1967, p. 2

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Ajax, neighboring ville, Whitby; Bowman- Pickering and centres in Ont- ario and Durkam Counties. VOL. 96 -- NO. 4 10¢ Single Copy Ghe Oshawa Times BSe Per Week Home Delivered ACCIDENT VICTIM OFF TO HOSPITAL A 69-year-old Oshawa man was reported in '"'ser- ous" condition today at the Oshawa General Hospital after he was struck by a car in an accident late this : morning at the corner of King and Mary Streets. William Sim, 69 of 392 Elgin St. E., was taken to hos- pital following the acci- dent. Mr. Sim was standing on the corner near The Times building when a car driven by Andy Starcic, 28, of 199 Nonquon Road, col- lided with a car driven by Tom Collen, 65, of 97 Olive Ave. Mr. Collen's car swerved out of control, spun around and came to rest against a light standard. The car struck Mr. Sim OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1966 and. threw him -about 40 feet. Neither driver, nor Mrs. Ann Collen, a passen- ger in the Collen car, was injured. --Oshawa Times Photo By William Daniels Syria Shells Israelis In Border Incidents TEL AVIV, Israel (Reuters)--|later, Syrian tanks at Khirbet|the area but failed to hit the Syrian tanks shelled an Israeli tractor and an advanced outpost in two separate incidents today on the Syria-Israeli border, an Israeli spokesman said. There were no casualties, the spokesman said. The first incident took place southeast of the Sea of Galilee when a Syrian tank at Khirbet El Tawafiq shelled a tractor of the Israeli frontier village of Tel Katzir, the spokesman said. ND Dkka, immediately north of the} Sea of Galilee, fired on Israeli posts area in the last week. STOPS PLOWING The Israeli spokesman said the tractor came under fire from the Syrian post at Khirbet El Tawafiq while plowing about 800 yards southeast of the vil-; lage. He said machine-gun iire accompanied the shelling by a) tank, He said that when the trac-) tor-driver tried to seek cover, In the second, 80 minutes|heavy machine - guns sprayed ti P Leader Lacked Control In Death Crash, Jury Rules -- TORONTO (CP) -- A coro-{the accident was "unavoid-| rae ner's jury Thursday night ruled there was a lack of control or able." | "Because the verdict was) \of Galilee started 'tung's wife and his former farmer. The shelling north of the Sea later in an area where the Jordan River flows into the lake and where Syrian farmers have been try- ing to cultivate land inside the demilitarized zone west of the river. The Israeli spokesman said two shells were fired at an Is- raeli outpost and 30 minutes later three Syrian tanks opened up with cannon fire which con- nued for 10 minutes. The shelling was resumed 50 minutes later. DAMASCUS (Reuters)--Syr- ian army fire destroyed today an Israeli tractor north of the Sea of Galilee a Syrian Army} spokesman said today. The spokesman said the Is- li tractor had crossed the armistice line. He added that} at least one Israeli was killed pre-occupation on the part of|somewhat unclear, I wish to!or wounded and was seen being! Donald MacDonald, Ontario New Demacratic Party leader, when he was involved in a Dec. 4 accident. However, Dr. Morton Shul- man, Metropolitan Toronto chief coroner, told the inquest Businessman Gunned Down TORONTO (CP) -- A 45-year- old father of four was gunned down today in front of his sub- urban North York home by an assailant whom police believe was hiding in a carport beside the home. Salvatore (Sammy) 'Trium- bari, a soft drink manufacturer, had just left for work when "e was shot three times in the head. Police believe his assail- ant was hiding behind Mr. Tri- umbari's car which was in the carport. Madrid Forms Link With East MADRID (Reuters) -- Spain has opened formal relations with Communist eastern Eu- rope by signing an agreement for full consular and commer- cial ties with Romania, it was announced today The agreement, signed Thurs- day in Paris, was expected to prelude similar ties with Po- land, Hungary and other cast European countries. ' -'the median strip." stress that this accident was! lcarefully and lengthily investi- gated and all evidence indi- cated. it was a completely un- avoidable accident and that the) |car went out of control as a re- jsult of striking a depression in| | Dr. Shulman did not conduct jthe inquest, but was. present |when the jury delivered its ver- jdict on the four-car accident in| iwhich Mary Doddatto, 47, of | Toronto, was fatally injured. | | The jury also stated in its) |verdict that there was an "'in- |adequate"" median strip on the |Macdonald-Cartier Freeway in /Toronto's west end where the accident occurred. Mr. MacDonald told the in- quest that as he approached the Kipling Avenue overpass from \the west he came upon a line of | cars. coming to a stop. "I was faced with the prob- | jlem of having to stop. I was| |the unlucky one in the sequence of the chain reaction." | He said he thought he could turn onto the median strip to avoid crashing into the line of cars "IT recall nothing at all after; the left front wheel dropped into} the median..I lost control. The last sensation I had was head- ing for the left lane." Evidence indicated Mr. Mac- Donald's car swerved across {the median strip and collided with a westbound car driven by} Andrew Doddatto, the dead woman's husband Mr. Doddatto's car was then hit by another car from the |rear and forced into the path of a fourth car. removed from the tractor. The spokesman described tne incident as renewed Israeli ag- gression against Arab farmers! in their land north of the Sea of Galilee. HE'S JUST A LITTLE SHAVER | shadow for a has but he's the youngest of 155 people of Lon- only a Jack Gorrie, don, Ont., gions. Purge Led By Mrs. Mao TOKYO (AP) -- Mao Tse- po- litical secretary seem to be di-| recting the purge in Peking| while Mao and his heir appar- ent, Defence Minister Lin Piao, spend the winter in Shanghai, say Japanese correspondents in Peking. Mao's third wife, a former movie actress who uses_ the name Chiang Ching, was an| obscure figure until last sum-| mer when the Red Guards sud-|Vine, killing at least 83 and in-|OMy, without shutting off the \juring about 60, officials re-|flow of outside funds. denly appeared on the scene. Japanese correspondents re-| port that with Mrs. Mao and Chen.at the helm, Peking ap- pears to be in a state of shock|counted at four medical centres|Canadians to invest and bloody clashes between Red|and that many of the injured |home and ; Guards and workers are on the|Were in serious condition. They|tties from foreign takeov increase throughout the country. | A British expert on Chinese affairs, Roderick MacFarquhar, editor of the China Quarterly magazine, speculated that Mrs. Mao might replace Lin Piao as Mao's heir and become China's fourth empress. The Peking correspondent of Asahi Shimbun, in a telephone interview with his editors, said newspapers posted on walls in Peking were reporting numer- ous incidents of bloodshed} among workers in Shanghai, Hungking and other cities and "emergencies"? in various re- taking part in the London centennial beard - growing contest. He hopes he won't need the magnifying glass U.S. Students Fired On By Police NEW DELHI (AP)--The In- dian government closed all schools and colleges in the east- ern state of Bihar today for an indefinite .period after three days of riots that took at least nine lives. Agitation reached a peak Thursday when several thou- sand students paralysed Patna, the state capital, with three hours of looting, arson and at- tacks on police. Police finally opened fire, kill- ing at least nine persons and wounding 54. More than 100 po- jlicemen and local officials also jwere injured by . the brick- throwing mob Press reports from Patna, 50 miles east of New Delhi, said the army was patrolling parts! of the city and that a dusk-to- | dawn curfew had been imposed. | Rioting began when several hundred students clashed with| |police outside the residence of} the state's chief minister, where they had gone to protest alleged | police brutality during two pre-| vious days of demonstrations in other cities. SPREAD DAMAGE The crowd quickly swelled to jseveral thousand and fanned out through the city, burning a bus depot, textile warehouse and four buses and cutting tele- phone and electric lines. Damage was estimated by of- ficials at more than $1,000,000 The rioting was not believed related to the severe food short- age in Bihar but rather to be a reflection of a wave of labor strikes and student demonstra- |tions that have been sweeping| India. | Buses Crash s s . | Pilgrims Die grims collided today on a moun- tain road and hurtled into a ra- ported. The Philippine constabulary} said many dead had seen | expected the toll to rise. Reports from army para-| medic teams sent to the scene} earlier said there appeared to} be only 15 survivors among the | 130 or more persons thought to} have. been on the buses. | Constabulary reports said one of the buses in a 57-bus convoy lost its brakes on the downward stretch of a narrow road south of Manila and plowed into the bus ahead, sending both careen- ing into the ravine. One bus fell 300 feet to the bottom of the ravine, but the second was halted in its plunge by an outcrop of rock. ON SO | Weather Report Major winter snowfall ex- pected to end early tomorrow. Low tonight 25, high Satur- day 37, Authorized os Second Closs Mail Post Office Deportment Ottewa ond for payment of Postage in Cosh EIGHTEEN PAGES READY FOR TALKS LUTION 10 WAR : Washington Will Accept 0M Viet Cong Role At Parley SET TE, "| | WASHINGTON (AP) -- State see Secretary Dean Rusk declared § in a letter made public today © that the United States now is ready to meet with representa- ; tives of NorthVietnam "either in public or in secret to work out § arrangements for a just solu- tion" of the Vietnamese war. Rusk also reaffirmed U.S. as- surances to the Communist side in the conflict that "there will be no difficulty in having the #<4: views of the Viet Cong presented © at any serious negotiation." But he was emphatic in re- jecting Communist demands the > National Liberation Front, the Viet Cong's political arm, be represented as sole spokesman ; for the people of South Vietnam. | THN These Rusk statements, in a seven-page letter to a North Carolina student leader, came in the midst of worldwide specu- lation that the leaders in North Vietnam may be becoming more jinterested in discussions on vis ing the war than they have been in the past. Thursday Hanoi's diplomatic proposals on negotiating an end representative in France de-|to the war. clared that if the United States} Earlier North Vietnamese would 'unconditionally' stop|Premier Pham Van Dong had bombing his country his govern-|spoken in an interview of the }ment would be ready to 'ex: | possibility of profitable talks jamine and study" Americanionce the fighting is stopped. | Official Four-Point Stand Broadcast By Vietnamese | TOKYO (AP) -- The | Viet an DEAN RUSK MAT VAN BO, head of reveals terms the North Vietnamese mis- sion in Paris, sits at lunch- eon table today where, in an address to the French Diplomatic Press Associa- tion, he demanded a defi- nite, prompt and uncondi- tional halt to the American bombing of his country Asked what Hanoi might do if the U.S. acceeded to this demand, Bo said this would be examined by his govern- ment. eee | (AP Wirephoto) SPECIAL ASSIGNMENT Gordon To Study Foreign Control OTTAWA (CP)--Walter Gor- don, named a minister without portfolio Wednesday, will un- dertake special studies of the/ degree of foreign control over | North;papers and broadcasts in "'cap- cone Rik el bs rene todayjitalist nations" had 'distorted "authorized" statement re-|the premier's statements, but no itical independence could disap-|peating Premier Pham Van|specific instance of distortion pear if the present trend to-|Dong's description of Hanoi's}was given. ; ward foreign control of industry |four-point stand on the Vietnam! The broadcast said: "On this continued, war as a "basis" for settle-|natter the Vietnam news f ) "a ssign- | ment. ; : i the Canadian economy, it fed ea -- Pesgrirs Bye The terse announcement enna te tev vate, learned today. lbecause they involve the sec-|in doubt whether it was meant|'The original text of what Pre- Government sources saidjrecy of cabinet deliberations, a|t® encourage or to dampen|mier Pham Van Dong told Mr. Prime Minister Pearson is writ-|snokesman said. It has been|hopes for negotiations aroused|Harrison Salisbury was: 'The ing a confidential letter to Mr.|jearned that Mr. Gordon will|by the North Vietnamese pre-|nosition of the four points of the Gordon, asking him to carry|supervise study of the Carter|Mier's interview, with Harrison|Democratic Republic of Viet out several special assignments | royal commission report on tax-|E. Salisbury of the New Yorkinam is a basis of ways to sete for the cabinet. lation, expected to be published |Times, printed Wednesday. tle Vietnam problems." The most immediate project|in the next few weeks. | The statement was preceded| a will be to gather information on| \by complaints that some news-| Premier Dong's original state- the extent of foreign investment --_------_--_______----|ment was interpreted by some in major industries. Mr. Gordon |net changes continues in Ot- sources to mean a measure of will study the feasibility of pos- | {awa, but one informant said 4 Lf |retreat from the hard line, all- sible measures to preserve | the long-expected shuffle will} al nions lor-nothing stand of the four Canadian control over the econ-|not take place until the end of} \points which have been the the abil session of Parlia-| |main obstacles to negotiations. |ment. | Reject Pact io was quoted as saying the four points were not necessarily |preconditions to talks. eral legislation, to encourage|Lamontagne, who shares Mr.| MONTREAL (CP) -- The! The four points include de- more at|Gordon's views on economic|seven shop-craft unions repre-|mands that the United States to protect key indus-|matters and is a close friend,|senting about 25,000 workers| withdraw all its troops and in- ers. He|will also be brought back into|across Canada have turned|stallations from South Vietnam, the cabinet. jdown a tentative agreement|recognize the sovereignty and shay with the nation's railways|territorial integrity of Vietnam, worked out during three months/|and end all acts of war against of negotiations by federal me-|the North, and permit settle diator H. Carl Goldenberg. {ment by the Vietnamese them- T. W. Read, president of the|selves, without foreign interfer- shop - craft group, announcedjence, "in accordance with the the decision of the membership |program" of the National Lib- today and said the matter now/eration Front, the political arm will go to arbitration. 'of the Viet Cong in the south. Speculation about other cabi- | The former finance minister| There have been reports that has repeatedly advocated fed-|former state Secretary Maurice has warned that Canada's pol-| Quebec Union Condemned By Toronto Labor Council TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto and District Labor Council,| representing 120,000 organized workers in 'the Metropolitan Toronto area, has condemned the Quebec-based Confederation of National Trade Unions "for penters and Joiners. The floor workers joined the CNTU last month, The labor council, in a reso- lution passed unanimously Thursday, called on the 250 members of the floor workers IGHTS tuscan NEWS HIGHL fostering labor disunity in On- tario."' Marcel Pepin, president of the CNTU, announced Thursday that his organization plans to open a regional office in Tor- onto next week The move follows the defec- | tion of the Resilient Floor Work- ers in November as a local of the United Brotherhood of Car- Dutch MDs End Dispute AMSTERDAM (Reuters) Holland's six-month doctors dis- pute ended today when the Na- tional Association of Medical | Practitioners, representing 4,300 family doctors, accepted gov- jernment offers, including for f | the first time a pension. plan. The dispute over higher doc- tors' fees dated from July 1 * |when an agreement with Hol- a a to see the growth on July 1, when the contest ends and beards are judged. (CP Wirephoto) | | lland's health insurance funds lexpired. Family doctors meeting in |Amsterdam voted to accept an éight-per-cent increase in health fund payments to doctors effec- |tive Jan. 1 this year, and a fur. ther 51 per - cent increase |spread over three years after| 1967 unless economic crisis pre-| vents payment, | to return at once to the car- penters' union. The resolution also pledged the council's full support to the Toronto Building Trades Coun- cil "in its fight to defeat the CNTU, not only in Toronto, but anywhere in the country." The council called on the On- tario Federation of Labor and the Canadian Labor Congress to} join the Toronto council in its {support of the building trades! group. The labor council called the CNRU 'a Quebec - orientated separatist organization that has consistently fostered labor dis- unity." Wilson Readies Cabinet Moves LONDON (Reuters) Prime Minister Wilson put finishing touches today to a government reshuffle aimed at promoting key young men Details of the shake-up--re- garded as the most important since Labor came to power two years ago--may be announced |= tonight Wilson was some = older expected to axe ministers in the middle and junior ranks of his ; administration to clear the way for younger men being groomed for future cabinet status. Prudential Creditors Demand Inquiry TORONTO (CP) -- Creditors of the defunct Prudential Finance Corp. Ltd. today made public a petition demand- ing an investigation into possible negligence in the come pany's collapse on the part of Finance Minister Sharp, Attorney-General Arthur Wishart of Ontario and others, | Warrants Issued For Arrest Of Two TORONTO (CP) -- Warrants were issued today for the arrest of accountants Harry Wagman and William Walton on a charge of conspiring with the late C. Powell Morgan, former president of Atlantic Acceptance Corp., to defraud Valley Farm and Enterprises of $140,000, police said. Dutch Royalty To Pay Visit To Canada THE HAGUE (Reuters) -- Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard of The Netherlands will visit Canada in May, the government information service announced today. (uterine nna te ..In THE TIMES Today.. Blood Clinic Sets All-Time Record--P. 9 Two Reeves Race For Warden's Post--P, 5 Gordie Howe Scores 700th NHL Goal--P. 6 Ann Landers--10 City News--9 Classified--14, Editorial--4 13; 3 Financial-- Comics--17 i MU --16 6,7 12 Weather--2 Whitby, Aiox--S Women's--10, 11 Obits Sports. Theatre uuu UTIL Niu UN

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