Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Jan 1967, p. 1

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Weather Report Arctic air moves 'in with another cold _ front. flurries predicted. Low to- night, 20, high Wednesday 25, Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham. Counties. Snow- Ihe Oshawa Fi Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottewa' ond for poymént of Postage in Cosh VOL. 96 -- NO. 7 10¢ Single Copy 55¢ Per Week Home Delivered TWENTY OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1967 AID FOR MAO APPEAL AS LEADER OPPOSED Ce ' Guards, Factory Workers Pilots Claim. Egypt Fight In Canton Streets Fights Horror War AMMAN, Jordan (AP)--Two | Egyptian airmen claimed Mon- day night that President Nasser HONG KONG (CP)--Chinese from Canton reported today that wall posters attacking Commun ist Party Chairman Mao Tse tung had gone up throughout that south China city and that Canton radio had broadcast alerts to his supporters to he ready to come to his defence time to drop gas was between 5 and 10 a.m., when there was usually a "dead wind' in Ye- had ordered gas and napalm bombs dropped on towns in Ye- |men. Cairo called their story a | "shameful farce." | The two men, who appeared 'at a press conference in Am- |man, said they were Capt. Mo- men. TOOK PART IN RAIDS Abdo said he had taken part in air raids on three Saudi Arabian towns, including Abha about 100 miles inside the king- dom Some arrivals said they had seen dozens of anti-Mao posters |Monday ,and early today before \taking the afternoon train to the ; border and crossing into Hong Kong. Others. claimed ther« were hundreds of such posters. THESE YOUNGSTERS commune near Canton dur- ing military training. Some 11,000 youngsters from 10 to 19 participate in the training and are members of the commune's militia. This picture was made in November by a Japanese photographer visiting Com- munist China. ~ (AP Wirephoto) jhammed Abdul Motti Abdo and Capt. Saeed Mohammed Ali Eli Fadeel, both 31. They said they last June and took refuge in Saudi Arabia, which has been OFL Cites Labor Crisis Hees Seeks In Brief To Rand Probe TORONTO (CP) -- The On- strikers 'is a distortion of the tario Federation of Labor said|law, a misuse of the courts and| today that industrial relations in Canada are in a crisis be- a violation of justice." Curtailment of injunc- be settled while the agree- ment is in force. --Insertion of a clear pretation within Relations Act of the phrase inter- Leadership, Tories Say TORONTO (CP) George} the Labor|Hees will become an open can- supporting the royalist side in Yemen's civil war. g id Soviet "pilots-- as 'gyptians were flying Egyptian bombers and fighters in attacks against royalist tribesmen. Abdo said that before going on raids, the airmen were told that Yemen was considered part of the United Arab Republic and that gas bombs should be used 'to crush resistance. He said they were instructed that the best déserted their units in Yemen, They said radio appeals di- jrected Mao's followers to stand jready to "crush the' enemies of 'our great leader." There was no way to virify He said about 700 Egyptian troops are being killed or wounded daily in Yemen and the dead are being buried there. He claimed that 26 Egyptian air ; aces have been lost in Yemen, -~ , |the reports, but most of the Shortly after Amman broad- é |travellers told essentially the cast an account of the press : same stories. confererice, the Egyptian- gov- | They said the posters" and ernment issued a statement say- jcounter appeals followed a,week- ing the pair had been expelled ' jend of bloody fighting between, from the air force last spring pro-Mao Red Guards and anti-4 on Nasser's orders because of crores ' ed peri pd workers in which 'personal misconduct." i Ay 'ee jthey said several persons were Meanwhile, Syrian and Israeli] PRESIDENT NASSER killed, scores hurt, a Canton tanks exchanged fire for four| charges denied |hospital lobby smashed and doc- hours Monday in the seventh |tors and nurses beaten up. clash along the Syrian-Israeli raeli tank; Israel claimed it; Thousands of workers stayed border in nine days. Syria destroyed two Syrian tanks and aWay from their jobs in factor- claimed it knocked out one Is- damaged a third, ies and municipal gas, water] ui - jand_ electric plants Monday,|With all their strength. They |Radio broadcasts repeated ap-|Were Shouting that they were MAO TSE-TUNG ... faces opposition A 42-year-old woman said she feu hundreds of anti Mao youths attack a group of Red \Guards--"'They had iron pipes jand they were swinging them cause of 'outdated labor legis-|tions was one of five major rec- jdidate to replace John Diefen- lation and the indiscriminate use of injunctions in labor dis- putes." "No other section of Cana- dian society is subjected to the kind of treatment unions are getting with regard to injunc- tions," the federation said in a brief to the Rand royal com- ission on labor d ' "What we have is 18th-cen- tury law applied to 20th-cen- tury industrial conditions." The federation brief said the current use of court injunc- tions limiting picketing by ommendations in the brief. URGES OVERHAUL The federation also urged: --A complete overhaul of present conciliation machin- ery to provide voluntary con- ciliation and mediation and a mandatory start of contract talks 60 days before an agree- ment expires. --'Drastic changes in legal provisions regarding agement rights" gitevances not mentioned in a collective agreement can Vatican Envoy Quits Hanoi After Special Peace Quest VATICAN CITY (AP)--A Ger-|led _ by man priest on an extraordinary mission to North Vietnam, will/Nazi leader who is a president much of the blame for today's of' strikes on compuisory concilia- make a direct report soon to Berlin's Dr. Protestant Niemoeller, anti -) of the World Council the Vatican on the condition of Churches. Roman Catholics there and the possibilities of peace. The East agency ADN reported they con- "bargaining in good faith" and strict enforcement of pro- visions ensuring the good faith. --Continuation of the tradi- tion against incorporating or licensing unions to make them liable for damages. OPPOSES COMPULSION The federation also restatéd its opposition to any form of compulsory arbitration of la- bor disputes. The brief was among the first submitted as hearings opened peals for workers to return to|Sick of Red Guards and sick of |their jobs. ae pious ° .,, A still-terrified older woman A middle-aged Chinese said| : i j : her hands shaking, said: '"'Hu- ogg Seg bodies lying On| man blood was mn over on ny gage wate wil dead istreets. They were fighting with y wi a lead. /clubs and bamt 5 y Thay bal. boon. badly clubs and bamboo poles. Many Vote By Quebec Teachers Increases Threat Of Strike .i% tenon ee said Monday. "There is no se-| ONTREAL (CP)--The threatjand the 1,500-member Federa-|other 4,000 teachers in the Lake |Dlood all around. Opponents of Mao in Shang- cret about this among those. of|of widespread teachers' strikes| tion of English-speaking Catho-|St. John ~ Saguenay area will "About 20, maybe more, were|hai, China's chief port, were us who knew George well and|in Quebec intensified early to-|lic Teachers said conciliation! meet to consider a strike vote|hurt when Red Guards fought|accused today of resorting to have known him for a longjday when a majority of the; talks are continuing with the) because of lack of progress in with clubs. They were taken to|economic warfare in an effort time." | Montreal Catholic School Com-/contract talks. baker as leader of the national Conservative party within three months, say Conservative party officials from the Toronto area. "Mr. Hees' every action is aimed at becoming 'the next leader of the party," one official today before Ivan G. Rand, 82- year-old former justice of the} Supreme Court of Canada. Commissiqner Rand's reaching inquiry will law. The royal commissjon was appointed last spring after the Ontario labor launched a campaign against! Martin the use of court injunctions. | The federation 'brief placed| tion, which if said hinders col-! German _ news/lective bargaining. "The knowledge that there is movement One Conservative official said Mr. Hees, who defeated Liberal Pauline Jewett by a slim 563 Northumberland} |riding in the 1965 election, may | f a r-| switch to the new riding of Hast- | cover jings Wet and use an anticipated }most aspects of Ontario labor |landslide win the next election votes in tie as a springboard to the national leadership. 3 WASHINGTON Passport: Ruling By Major Court (AP) -- The The priest, Rt. Rev. George|ferred Sunday with President|the background conciliation of-|U.S. Supreme Court ruled un-|action at a meeting late in ical officers in the Soviet armed jand |high school teachers employed by the Chambly County school commission voted in favor of a strike. The teachers, members o the Chambly Teachers Association, did not set a date for the strike, which would affect some 12,000 high school pupils in 14 muni- cipalities located on the south |shore of the St. Lawrence River | opposite the Island of Montreal. The main issues separating the school commission and its teach- ers in. contract negotiations so far are those of salaries, work- ing conditions and job security. Elementary school teachers in several Chambly County munici- palities voted in favor of strike Huessler, was reported here to-|Ho Chi Minh in North Vietnam.|ficers and boards of concilia-|animously today that an Ameri-| December. the Canton hospital. When the|to disrupt China's -- production mission on a "round-the-clock"| About 500 teachers in the St./hospital refused to turn over|and finances basis. |Hyacinthe area have been on the injured workers, Red| Shanghai revolutionary work- A strike is set for Friday.'strike since Nov. 24, keeping Guards smashed windows, broke|ers made the charge in a mes- The teachers, negotiating a new,10,000 pupils out of school, and down the door, and wrecked the|sage to Mao reported by the contract since last June, seek!another 500 employed by the entrance room." New China news agency. pay increases of 18 per cent|Catholic School Commission in and improved working conditi-/suburban Pointe Claire and ons. Beaconsfield have set a strike The union executive for an-'for Jan. 20. Rebel Force Of Thousands ro - Mao workers reported nances, and sabotage the great s By Soviet Armed Forces jobs and paralysed communica- earlier that last Wednesday /proleterian cultural revolution." |thousands of anti-Mao workers} jt said the "staunch revolu- MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Polit-jincreased military preparedness tions, transportation and. utili- "revolutionary vigilance" ties. : : ike In Shanghai Policy On China Endorsed Staged Strike In Shanghai P 'in Shanghai walked off their tionary left" have seen through these schemes, have stood out against these economic lures, 'and rebuffed what it called forces. were reported today to|among the troops. The message to Mao today) *sypar-coated bullets." day to have already left Hanoi! The mission was studying re-\tion has tempted more than one/can citizen who holds a gener-| to return to Europe. He is duejlief work, but in addition, Msgr.;union negotiating committee |ally valid passport cannot be|TALKS CONTINUE shortly at his home town of|Huessler was empowered byjand managerial negotiat-|criminally prosecuted for trav-, A spokesman for the 7,500- Freiburg, Germany, and isthe German catholic relief or-|ing team to say 'let's leave itjelling to Cuba without govern--member Alliance des Profes- scheduled to come to Rome ganization, Caritas, of which he|to the board,'" the brief said. ment authorization. | Jan. 20. is secretary-general, to survey GREE: 2 It was considered likely that the situation in North Vietnam, ™ Pope Paul would personally con-' He was the first Roman Catho- fer with Msgr. Huessler. |lie official from the West to © > Msgr. Huessler went to Hanoi/visit North Vietnam since the Jan. 1 in a four-member group' Communist takeover in 1954. be rallying rank-and-file sup-| The military railies followed|Said a handful of reactionary port for the Kremlin's policy on | civilian party meetings through-|Communist leaders in Shang- China. jout the Soviet Union during|hai "not reconciled to their 'le- i The army newspaper Red|which Kremlin policy on China| feat" are 'playing new tricks." |seurs Catholiques de Montreal star said Communist party or-|was explained. "Using material benefits as 78 a -|ganizations of the Moscow and| Ten of the 11 members of the bait to corrupt some workers| Meanwhile, China's Premier Leningrad military districts met|party's ruling Pwlitburo, includ-|ideologically, they have at-/Chou En-Lai was reported to- to endorse a new party line|jing Party -Secretary Leonid|tempted to lead the masses onto day to have called for a letup in : which charges Chinese Commu-|Brezhnev and Alexei Kosygin the evil road of economism, so attacks on five of his ministers jnist Party Chairman Mao Tse-\were touring the provinces for a5 to shift the general orienta-|by the militant Maoist forces tung with leading China into al this purpose. tion of the struggle, disrupt,who have created chaos and }dangerous phase of activity. Like the civilian meetings, the Production and the state fi-/violence on the mainland. Party activities in the Lenin-|military rallies were called to "denounced the/discuss last month's Kremlin de- It said the pro-Maoists would "seize complete victory" and firmly oppose "putting bank- notes in command." nmin 1 | Biggest Viet War Attack Launched By U.S. Forces BEN CAT, South Viet Nam| (AP) -- American troops have) launched the biggest U.S. mili-) tary operation of the Vietnam war and surrounded a key Viet Cong area from which terror and guerrilla attacks on Saigon! are mounted. cation of up to 10,000 people who live around the Iron Triangle. They are being moved to re fugee camps inside government territory. The operational area lies 20 miles north of Saigon and is bounded by the Saigon River At least 92 Viet Cong were |that winds into Communist War reported killed. | The huge U.S. force sur- Zone C to the northwest, Route 13 which runs north from Saigon rounded an area north of Saizgon|to the Cambodian border, and known as the Iron Triangle in the Thanh Dien forest. an attempt to capture the major} enemy command directing oper-| ations against the South Viet-) namese capital. The multi-division began at dawn Sunday with a helicopter assault against the Viet Cong town of Ben Suc, on! the Saigon River. | By today, U.S. troops operation | jenemy southern part of the operational larea. The tangled Iron Triangle, an installations, is in the U.S. troops crossed the Saigon River into the southwestern part of the Iron Triangle and other had|hattalions formed into a task surrounded 60 square miles of|force are plunging into the tri abandoned rubber plantations,!angle from the east. villages and jungle which have! not been under government con- trol for years. PLANS ACTION The headquarters sought in These forces are the anvil on The operation has been given the operation is known as M.R.|the code name Cedar Falls. 4, the nerve centre for Commu: | The 196th Light Infantry Bri- ; nist planning for action in the|gade has made the most contact Saigon, Cholon and Giadinh|se far, a U.S. spokesman re area of twisted jungled pitted j by B-52 strikes and crumbline which a hammer made up of } © « battalions from the Ist Infantry * 'Division will sweep down. eo | Ex-Indian Army General | Blames Nehru For Defeat | | 1 grad district Great Power, anti - Leninist,|cision expressing "grave con- anti-Soviet policy of Mao Tse-| cern" over China's militant poli- tung and his group," Red Star (cies. said. The party organization of the The newspaper report indi-|Mosctw Rocket Forces also icated that army leaders were|gave unanimous endorsement to |thinking of China in calling forthe official line, Red Star said. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Anthem Change Proposed By Liberals OTTAWA (CP) -- Three government resolutions deal- ing with the national anthem, parliamentary procedure and civil service pensions were added to the Commons order paper today. Prime Minister Pearson proposed creation of a Senate-Commons committee to study pro- posals that O Canada be declared the national anthem and God Save the Queen the royal anthem. Ontario To Aid West Indian Hospitals TORONTO (CP) -- Health Minister Matthew Dymond announced today. his department's plans to assist hos- pitals in the West Indies through a project to be known as Operation Hospital Supplies. Decision Awaited On Capital Report TORONTO (CP) -- Premier John Robarts said today ~ the Ontario advisory committee on Confederation has 'néither accepted nor rejected' a report on the establish- ment of a federal capital territory in Canada. EW DELHI (AP) -- A re-joperations 'in the Northeast Grsuly tac torder votelwnden Gio ea oer then Ihe minister Jawaharlal N én r u,|Untold Story . eee | former defence minister v. K "Ever since independent,| Krishna Menon and most of the most of our leaders 'believed Indian political hierarchy for In- a ayere VeRO | dia's disastrous showing during|that we attained freedom] the three-week war with China through non-violence and, there- in the autumin of 1962. fore, thought that if we could] Lt.-Gen. B. M. Kaul, who was |expel a power like the British Corps Commander of Indian without the use of arms and ; jnon-violently, there was little ri a Laborite Raps }point in wasting much -- even Australia Trip | though essential--expenditure on MELBOURNE (Reuters) our armed forces." Kaul describes the govern- imental situation in Delhi just} Australian Opposition Leader |October, 1962, as Arthur Calwell lashed out today ing." against a planned visit to AUS: | wnyans OQUTMANOEUVRED |. Ann Landers--10 \ «oyunu 1 «..In THE TIMES Today.. Auto Pact Cuts Trade For City Feeder Plant---P. 9 Whitby Mayor Predicts Increase. In Taxes--P. 5 SEASDEIAY IE 48 Rinks Compete In Curling Club Annual--P. 6 --jbefore the fighting broke out in tralia by South Vietnamese Pre- Obits--18 The general charges that In-} 9 \ Sports Theatre Weather City News- Clossified--16, 17, 18 Editorial---4 commanders |ported, running into heavy sni- plans|per fire, claymore 'mines and booby traps on the western edge of the Saigon River. But its areas. American hoped to upset Viet Cong to increase terror and guerrilla | mier Nguyen Cao Ky, calling} lhim "this miserable little dian troops were outmanoeuv: butcher." . red and driven from the moun- Calwell told correspondents \tains. to the Assam Plains. be CAUGHT IN the © rice the ed to them. They were captured about 20. miles southwest the® rear Arms by their of tied behind activity. in the South Vietnamese | capital and the area immed-! jiately surrounding it An important side-effect of| the huge operation is the relo-| casualties were reported light. The spokesman said 16 Viet Cong have been captured alorpz with 159 suspects, paddies Mekong Delta by American troops, two Vietpamese, strongly suspected of being Viet Cong guerrillas, are march- \ captors. them, they splash through a muddy paddy with troops of the 2nd Battalion, 14th Infantry, close behind of Saigon, where out troops are operating for the first time. (AP Wirephoto) Wh Wor nciol-- he will never remain. silent}cause the Indian Army was un- Financial--15 while Australia is used as a pa-|prepared for war and the force rade ground "for any dictator, |sent to face the Chinese was tog | European or Asian." small, i i

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