Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Jan 1967, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowmane ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. Weather Report Bitter cold snap comes to an end with milder air from the West. Low tonight 25, high Saturday 35. She Oshawa Cimes Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash MAO OPPONENTS COMMIT SUICIDE | Two Red Purge Victims -- NO. 16 10¢ Single Copy SSe Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 EIGHTEEN PAGES Kremlin Seeks | HARDLY FOR HOME in Canberra, Australia, to- day. The real thing is more Nguyen Cao Ky, Madame le South Vietnam's in evidence around her when she is at home in Saigon. Madame Ky is ac- companying her husband on a state visit to Australia. --AP Wirephoto Polish Support MOSCOW (AP)--Trips by So- viet leaders to eastern Siberia and Poland and Kremlin warn- ings that Peking's policy has entered "a new, dangerous stage" reflect growing Russian uneasiness over stormy events jin China, The atmosphere of tension |was heightened by a report in the military newspaper Kras- naya Zvezda (Red Star) of a program of military training for schoolchildren in a far eastern region of Russia borderning on China. The Communist party paper Pravda warned that the power struggle going on inside China "is a serious test for the entire world Communist movement." The Soviet news agency Tass |disclosed Thursday night that |Party Chief Leonid I. Brezhnev, j}Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and, President Nikolai V. Podgorny} }conferred in Poland this week | jwith their Polish counterparts} jon "pressing problems of inter-' national policy." The meeting roused specula- tion that the Kremlin was seek- jing the full backing of Polish} leaders in their quarrel with| |Mao Tse - tung. Polish party; chief Wladyslaw Gomulka has heen a staunch supporter of the! Soviets, but he has been reluct-| ant to condemn China publicly, | PREMIER GOMULKA .«..may condemn Chinese Kosygin spoke last week in the same far eastern section where Red Star says patriotic indoc- trination classes are being held. First Deputy Premier Dmitry S. Polyansky spoke Thursday in an adjoining border area. Pravda's warning about the possible dangerous effects of the Chinese power struggle con- | Quebec Seeks Injunction: stituted a new approach in Mos- | 'Reported Dead In Peking TOKYO (AP)--A wall news paper put up in Peking by unit of China's army today that Lo Jui-ching, purg general Staff chief, and Vi |Premier Po I-po committed sui- | cide Japanese the Chinese "extra" "e+ in the correspondents capital said issued by the 235th Army Detachment also re ported Teng Hsiao-ping, Com- munist party general secretary and one of the chief targets of Mao Tse - tung's purge, and Yang Hsiu - feng, president of the Supreme People's Court, at- tempted suicide. Earlier today one of Mao's mouthpieces, the theoretical journal Red Flag, disclosed that some nominal followers of the party chairman have become alarmed by the turmoil sweep- & ing the Chinese mainland, say- ing, "You are going too far' and "You are making a mess of it." But the official Peking People's Daily quoted a Shang- hai Red Guard as saying, 'We will give the enemy no quarter and will not quit until complete victory." The army wall paper did not give its source for the suicide reports. There have been sev- eral such Hong Kong reports recently. Rumors swept Peking in mid- December that Lo had killed himself, and a Red Guard who LO JUI-CHING -+. Led Chinese Army NDP Leader Questions |MILITARY MEN TEACH cow's efforts to organize a world| defected said in Taipei Dec. 27 | Red Star says that military;\Communist meeting to de-|that Le jumped off a building Pressure On Quakers "OTTAWA (CP) Reports of|selling drugs to Quakers for{representations from the U.S. American government pressure|shipment to North Vietnam. government. The Royal Bank inst Canadian Quakers who; Trade Mini&ter Winters saidjsent cheques from U.S. Quakers ship medical supplies to North|he would check. to banks in the U.S., which had Vietnam led to a flurry of ques-| Mr. Douglas quoted press re-|the responsibility of deciding tions in the Commons Thursday. |ports saying that the U.S. treas-|/whether to cash the cheques. New Democratic Leaderjury department has threatened|ASKS ABOUT USE OF MONEY Douglas asked whether Air Can- |the Royal Bank of Canada to get| Later, Eldon Woolliams (PC ada has refused to carry the/it to stop handling cheques from|--Bow River) said a Vancouver supplies on its regular flights;American Quakers: to finance|newspaper has reported that from Montreal to Moscow. Had|medical shipments to North)thousands of dollars collected the U.S. government requested | Vietnam. |by a British Columbia group for the ban? | He asked whether the Cana-| medical shipments to North "Transport Minister Pickersgill |dian government would allow | Vietnam are being used instead| said he would ask Air Canada|Washington to interfere with|for purchase of war equipment} about it. normal Canadian banking oper- | | David Lewis (NDP --yYork|ations and the humanitarian ac-| He asked whether Prime Min- To End Teachers' Strike | {Monday in an effort to end ajfor bec government will go to court|and Chambly also have vote strike action, but wer maska region southeast of|tions before taking final action. Montreal, Premier Daniel John-| Results were expected late to- son announced Thursday night./day from a strike vote takén The planned bid for strike-|Thursday, among 4,000 teachers ending injunctions was an-lin the Lake St, John region 120 nounced as negotiations contin-/miles north of Quebec City. ued in the strike of 9,000 Roman The strike the Varnes ~, * é | in Lape iy Peper in Montreal, region has left about 8,500 stu- Whe two work sinpniees gre foenes without classroom __in- : i | struction. only part of a disturbed labor) mm. yamaska teachers had maton picture in Quebec pe jected the government's : eg Nees jchoice of a mediator and Mr. Another 515 teachers in {he | Johnson told reporters that the Montreal suburbs of Pointe|time has come for the educa- Claire and Beaconsfield were|tional rights of the students to scheduled to walk out today. Ne-|be given top priority. gotiations continued Thursday! The provincial cabinet met without success. Thursday on the strike situa- by the Communists. South) asked whether it is true|tivities of a reputable religious ister Pearson will investigate that American drug manufac- group. the report. Mr. Pearson said he turers have asked their Cana-| Finance Minister Sharp said|will be glad to look into the dian subsidiaries to refrain from/his department has received no| matter. Cash For Viet Medical Aid s s jor South Vietnam. | in ere Washin ton | 'Why does the prime minis- ter offer to investigate some-} thing when the honorable mem-! be sent to Vietnam, a Quaker|was 'needling the govern-; official said Thursday. ment," he said. | In Montreal, Air Canada said Murray Thompson, peace ed-| The U.S. is opposed to thejit had been asked by the Quak- Committee asked for a treasury; Mr. Thompson said that about|Transport Association regula- licence to second $4,000 to the $15,000 of the $30,000 collected tions. Canadian organization but was for Vietnam by the Canadian) However, Air Canada would granted permission for only|organization came from thejnot refuse to carry goods at | Robert Prittie . (NDP--Burn- TORONTO (CP)--The United) tee within a week by courier ifjber's questions are based on lication secretary for the Cana-|supplies being sent to Northiers to carry medical supplies $2,000. } regular air cargo rates. Aged Groom «:*.:"": Ruled Sane In Montreal, the strike by teachers in Roman Catholic schools has left 217,000 elemen- tary and high school students jwithout classroom instruction. |No immediate settlement was ay : in. sight. PASADEN , Calif. (AP)--Al-| Mr, Justice Andre Montpetit, bert Otis Birch, the 96-year-old appointed as mediator by the |millionaire who married his 59- province Tuesday, was leading | "J will year-old nurse last October, has|the talks involving the Montreal| Montgomery, president of the |been declared mentally compe-'Catholic schoo! commission, | Toronto tent. ne : which runs 500 schools, and two Birch, now living in Odessa,|teacher unions bargaining MONTREAL (CP)--'ilie Que-] Teachers in suburban Verdun pica bordening on China. |nese d e zames involving teen-agers in|reasons for the proposed world) strike of 500 teachers in the Ya-|watching the Montreal negotia- | |men are conducting patriotism | nounce Peking. Edecy ef ant only broke a leg. courses in school in a far east-|proach adds criticism of Chi-! domestic policy and of TRIED TWICE ewspapers reported warjevents inside China as more ear - | meeting. Earlier Soviet the same border area. | Soviet leaders have been| | warning officials in the pore | | bids for jarea that the struggle inside a : > : China has become dangerous.licy and ideological course. was afraid of his crimes. arene a 1a GRA nee seer AT, There was no way of confirm- ling the wall newspaper's re- Northern Railway Lines Bombed By U.S. Aircraft SAIGON (AP) American|Mig Valley in the Red River i jbombers hammered at North Delta, but there was no report|"é | Vietnamese rail yards and mainjof any MiGs rising to chal- The army wall paper identi- rail lines Thursday for the/lenge the American raiders. fied Lo and Po as counter-rev- fourth straight day but two of| Ground fighting in South Viet- olutionary revisionists, Yang the planes and four men-did not|nam was confined to small, Hsiu - feng as any anti-party return, U.S. military headquar-|scattered engagements, but|leader and Teng and President ters reporter today. lallied commanders reported ajLiu Shao-chi as advocates of | | | to Belgrade by the Peking cor- respondent.of Tanjung, the Yu- goslav news agency. Neither Peking radio nor the New jChina news agency carried it, but it has not been their prac- jtice to carry wall newspaper ports. Many of the strikes were |Series of clashes from the south-|the "bourgeois reac tionary) ern tip of the country through | line." the northern provinces | All have at one time or an- South Vietnamese headquar-|other been denounced as Mao's ters reported a government|foes. force of regimental size--about| The paper said Tang Ping- 1,500 men--launched a search-|Cchu, acting editor of the Peking and-destroy sweep in southern-|People's Daily, and Hu Chi, most An Xuyen province and|president of the news agency, Unionist Raps | Arbitration against the northeast line, along The wall paper said the 60 old Lo ~-- once China's dreaded secret police chief and the a member of the ruling party meeting were based on denun-/politburo--died after his second ciations of China's foreign po!-|suicide attempt "because he ports which also.were relayed| in the first-day killed 16 Viet|had plotted rebellion against Cong guerrillas. This was one|Mao in mid-November. of five scattered operations in| The Tanjung report said after TORONTO (CP) -- Donald and District Labor) Council, says unions and em- ployers alike do not want inter- CHIANG CHING -+. unpopular with workers was brought with his leg in @ cast to a rally at which he was humiliated in the presence of thousands of Red Guards. This report said Po was seized by the Red Guards ia Canton and brought to Peking, where he was accused of being a counter - revolutionary ele- ment in the economic fieid. Other wall newspapers re ported by Japanese correspond- ents said that: President Liu's son, Liu Yun- jo, has been arrested in Pe- king as a spy after Mao's wife, Chiang Ching, accused him of "secretly contacting a foreign country." But the--report: indi- cated he was trying to reach a Russian sweetheart he met while studying in Moscow. Workers who made violent assaults on the new Prking se- curity headquarters seven times between Dec. 16 and Jan. 11 cried "Down with Chiang Ching!** * which the Vietnamese com-|Lo jumped from the window, he | ' | Tex., was granted court per-j jointly -- I'Alliance des profes-| vention of the state in their af- mission Thursday to transfer|seurs catholiques de Montreal | fairs. conservatorship of his estate'and the 1,500-member Federa-| Mr. Montgomery Thursday jfrom the Security First Na-|tion of English-speaking Catho-/told the Rand royal commission jtional Bank in Pasadena to the lic Teachers. inquiry into labor disputes in |U.S. National Bank of San Di-) Mr. Johnson told reporters at| Ontario that he does not believe ego. {Quebec City Thursday night/court arbitration in labor-man- Superior Court Judge Frank that if the Yamaska strikers do' agement disputes is a good sys- NEWS HIGHLIGHTS. Cong were killed. Casualties to Ministers Deny Air Canada Refusal government troops were re- troops repulsed a mortar and OTTAWA (CP) -- Cabinet ministers denied in the Com- ground attack against a military post 60 miles southwest of Sai- Wickhem said he based his de-jnot obey the projected injunc-jtem because it relieves the) cision on a psychiatrist's testi- tions, the government will take|parties of the responsibility of| mony. 'court action against them. bargaining in good faith. | whether there is any law pre- venting Canadian organizations rom sending aid either to North stopped some contributions to a} Other U.S. Quaker organiza-|in fact be a smear?" Canadian Quaker group for the|tions have refused to apply for] Mr. Pearson replied: purchase of medical supplies to|licences because they believe it}keep. that in mind." tee, said in an interview that onjeration Front. Equal propor-|fuse, since free shipment of any @ne occasion the American tions are also sent to South Vi-'goods to war zones is strictly Friends (Quakers) Service etnam. |prohibited by Internationa lAir thember society in New York| State has told him it will send) $3,000 to the Canadian commit- | aby - Richmond) then asked States treasury department has/not granted a licence. {speculation and rumor and may| dian Friends Service Commit-|Vietnam and the National Lib-|free to Vietnam but had to re- jemi society new, Yo! CHURCHILL CHOOSES WEST Sect Head Clash Likely Over Convention Site | OTTAWA (CP)--The next big }scene in the Progressive Con- | servatives' leadership . drama _|will unfold in Montreal Feb. 3 e-|and 4 when the party's executive Roman Catholic sect, spent the j committee meets to make plans for a leadership convention. day Thursday in Quebec City| Party sources predict a clash seeking government support to,between the John Diefenbaker continue keeping children at the| and Dalton Camp factions over sect's monastery in' the Lauren-| the date, the place and the com- Seeks Aid "ST. JOVITE, Que. (CP) Father Jean de la Trinite, Qu bec leader of a_ breakaway tian Mountains. position of the convention. Both But police said the search was sides feel these three factors still on for about 50 children' will strongly influence the out- sent into hiding by Father Jean, come of the leadership race. who told reporters in Quebec' Former defence minister Gor- City that authorities are trying)don Churchill, one of Mr. Dief- to persecute his sect, known as lochaver's closest lieutenants, the Apostles of Infinite Love. |said Thursday he favors an Social welfare court in St.Je-| April convention in his home rome, near this community) ¢ity of Winnipeg. Other Diefen- about 65 miles northwest of|paker loyalists' echoed -- this Montreal, ordered Father Jean! yjoew. ; to turn over children under his} Ki sect's care when some parents Party President Dalton Camp 'alleged the youngsters were liv-|said in a CBC television inter- DALTON CAMP ing in physical or moral dan-| view Thursday night he hopes ger. the convention will be held in ...plumps for Montreal { __. | were ported light in all five. Vietnamese headquarters also mons today that Air Canada has refused to carry medical supplies bound for North Vietnam or that drug companies reported that government gon in the Mekong Delta. A have been ordered by their U.S. parents not to sell medical spokesman said 15 Viet Cong killed and government : booed and hissed by young men, } and Ottawa. TORY LEADERSHIP AT STAKE? Montreal after Expo 67 winds ¢ up Oct. 24. A spring convention in Win- = * nipeg would involve many ad- vantages for Mr. Diefenbaker's supporters. The Prairie region * is The Chief's political bastion - and thousands of his admirers = could be expected to descend on } + Winnipeg. This would be in marked con- ' trast to the Conservative con- * vention in Ottawa last Novem- ber, when Mr. Diefenbaker was mostly from Toronto, Montreal Mr. Diefenbaker's allies pri- vately say they consider Pre- mier Johr Robarts of Ontario = as their most dangerous rival, j despite his frequent statement that he is not.a leadership can- didate. They add with undisguised glee that a spring convention would réally "'fix" Mr. Robarts. They expect call a SOHN ROBARTS «+ 'dangerous rival' ' dramatic endorsation from Dan- } sider Mr. Camp a secret sup- porter of Premier Robarts. ' paigning for re-election in On- ' tario, the pro-Diefenbaker stra- _ would also hurt David Fulton * (Kamloops) and George Hees spring election in Ontario, win easily and await a "draft" from federal Conservatives at a fall} leadership convention, with a/ iel Johnson, Union Nationale premier of Quebec. They con- A spring convention would virtually rule out a '"'draft- Robarts" movement since the premier would be busy cam- tegists say. An early convention (Northumberland) in their view, because of the limited time. to woo grass-root delegates. Mr. Camp said last fall the leadership convention should not be held until October or Novem- ber, 1967. He said this would give all candidates a better op- | castialtes were light, In the northern province of Thua Thien, the U.S. marine base camp and airstrip at Phu Bai, 10 miles southeast of Hue, was hit by 30 to 35 mortar rounds today, but U.S. head- quarters said U.S. casualties and damage to equipment were light. Dog Was Shot For CBC Show BRISBANE (Reuters) signs his TORONTO (CP) party's national president, leadership convention on electoral ridings. | RICHMOND, 'Ont. (CP)--An irate village resident com-| lai to the icipal coun-) cil that police had shot his dog! before a CBC television cam-| era to get publicity. Alan Wells, a father of four, | said he asked Constable Ernie| Saumur to destroy the dog be-| cause of the current rabies} threat in the area. | "T asked that the dog be de-| stroyed quietly and with dis-| cretion because of the chil-| dren," Mr. Wells explained.! "Instead Mr. Saumur took it) upon himself to use my dog,| the CBC and Richmond council portunity to make themselves known across Canada. { ' to gain publicity," Aust Ann Landers--10 City News--9 Classified--14, 15, 16 Editorial--4 Financial--13 Comics--12 ..In THE TIMES Today Area Planning Budget Increased--P. 9 Two Men Jailed On Robbery Count--P. 5 Mohns On Scoring Spree Against Former Mates--P. 6 supplies to Quakers for shipment to North Vietnam. Ky Visit Turns Into Tour Of Triumph South Vietnamese Premier Nguyen Cao Ky arrived here by air today amid growing much-criticized five-day turning into a personal triumph. Camp Approves PC Delegation Change Dalton Camp, Australian tour was the Conservative said Thursday' there is a "strong argument" for selecting delegates at the party's the basis of redistributed rit Obits--16 Sports--6, 7 Theatre--17 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax--5 Women's--10, 11 URNA

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy