Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Jan 1967, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowmar« ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 96 -- NO. 18 The Oshawa Simes Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department 10¢ Single vagy S5¢ Per Week Home Delivered Ottawa and for poyment of Postage in Cash OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JANUARY 23, 1967 te, Weather Report Continuing mild Tuesday. Cloudy with some showers, Low tonight 38, high tomor- row 40 EIGHTEEN PAGES TOKYO (AP)--Premier En-lai is reported to have mitted China's 2,500,000 - army to crush Mao Tse-t opponents as news embattled mainland today in the south. quoting Peking wall said Chou's announcement rally in Peking Sunday wa. mmr Premier | Ky Irked By Quiz CHRISTCHURCH, N.Z. (AP)} Premier Nguyen Cao Ky of South Vietnam showed a rare flash of temper on his arrival of revolt and resistance came out of the frozen Manchuria to Kwangtung Japanese corres pondents, posters, Chou com- man ung's The posters said clared: "The People's from Army is the most proletariat. It will revolutionary element ata s the great cultural revolut first statement by a top govern- ment official that troops would be used against Mao's foes tool of the dictatorship of the suppress the handful of counter- trying to destroy the proleterian Japanese correspondents in were Peking also reported purged chairman Chen Po-ta and Mao's wife, Chiang Ching, had or- dered the people of the capital to establish a revolutionary city government composed of work- ers, peasants, soldiers, revolu- tionary students and teachers. REPORT CLASH Quoting wall postets, the cor- respondents said 40 Maoists were injured, 10 captured and many ers support Shao-chi in dustrial city 21 Chou de- Liberation important actionaries"' Manchurian Liaoning, a give battle rebels' con chun resolutely $s who are ion,"' nan clash with students and work- The posters said. the force of 60,000 persons from the ~ ARMY WILL BE USED AGAINST MAO'S FOES -- missing after a Meanwhile, opponents of Mao ye reported . ect ing President Liu were reported to be coll phd the Manchurian in- saya of Changchun Jan. ¥re- were assembling a weapons and forming an Mao army in Kwangtung Chinese arriving in Hong Kong from Kwangtung said Mao's opponents there had been encouraged by reports that an anti Mao army of peasants, workers and former soldiers had seized control of much of neighboring Kiangsi province, provinces of Kirin, nd Heilunkiang to to -"Tevolutionary verging on Chang- "? Hanoi Sends LBJ Peace Talks Offer in New Zealand from Australia. Ky flushed with anger when) a reporter asked for comment on a statement by U.S. Senator J. William Fulbright that if Ky did not negotiate with the Viet Cong, he should be replaced. "een, : a Feinberg Tells Of Talks ome Return : of South Vietnam, smiles during a picture - taking session at the capital city of Canberra during the MADAME MIA RY, wife of Air Vice Marshal Negity- en:Cao Ky, prime minister couple's five - day visit to Australia. They flew to New Zealand yesterday. (AP Wirephoto) 1219 Killed Or In New Drive SAIGON (AP) -- Operation; The massive drive through Cedar Falls, major anti-Com-jjungle and scrub territory 20 munist push through the Iron|to 30 miles north of Saigon also Triangle, entered its third weekjhas yielded a record haul of today and American forces re-| 3,560 tons of rice. ported 1,219 of the enemy killed} U.S. jet bombers kept up or captured. their pounding of North Viet- Death Toll May Hit 20 In Nicaragua Outbreak : MANAGUA (AP) -- Rooftop snipers firing automatic weap- ons battled the Nicaraguan na- tional guard Sunday night after a pre - election demonstration against the political machine of Gen. Anastasio Tachito Somoza, g|shot down Saturday--three in By US. nam's Red River delta and again tangled with Communist MiGs northwest of Hanoi. Four U.S. Air Force F-105 Thunderchiefs engaged an equal number cf MiG-17s Sun- day and fired at least one air- | Hitler. "IT am no puppet of the United States or anyone else,'"| Ky said, his voice trembling. "That is my answer to Mr. Ful- bright. He is a colonialist." | Ky went on to deftly field a| barrage of questions about his| current hero, a reference to a past statement that he admired Ky replied that his heroes were "all the men fight- ing in my country." Outside the airport about 150 orderly demonstrators waved placards which said "Ky not welcome here," "Aid not war" and '"'We condemn bombing of Hanoi and Haiphong." WELCOMED BY CROWD After being welcomed at the town hall, Ky moved across the Old City Square to his hotel and was greeted by another crowd. Ky is scheduled to fly Tues- day to Wellington, the capital city of New Zealand, to meet Prime Minister Keith Holyotke and members of the New Zea- to-air missile against the swept- wing Communist jets, the spokesman said. But the brief engagement ended with no damage to either side, he ad- ded. Four American planes were North Vietnam and one in South Vietnam--and seven air- men were reported lost in the North and South. Two army helicopters also were shot down near Saigon Sunday, but dam- age to one was minor and only land cabinet. Opponents of Ky and the Viet- nam war have planned demon- strations during his three-day visit in Christchurch, Welling- ton and Auckland, Demonstrations in Australia against Ky were on a small scale. The biggest turnout was Sunday, when Arthur Calwell, Labor party leader, led 4,000 demonstrators on a_ two-mile march through downtown § Mel- bourne. 4 o Classes MONTREAL (CP) Some striking Roman Catholic teach- ers'in the Yamaska region east of Montreal were reported back in classrooms today but a ma- jority apparently ignored back- to-work court injunctions. The teachers were ordered to return to their classrooms when injunctions were served Sun- day on them before they were able to implement a planned mass resignation in an attempt to avoid the court order. A school commission ' official in St. Hyacinthe estimated that fewer than one-third of the teachers were back in school for the opening of classes. | He said the commission re- quested that school, children show up for classes today and that most of the children were back in the schools. Many of the teachers, how- ever, stayed away--especially in the larger schools. New Thaw Alert Given | AGREE ON RYAN | The 447 teachers who went on strike in the Yamaska area southeast of Montreal Nov. 24 decided at a meeting Sunday night that they- will wait for jtheir lawyers' opinions before |deciding whether to return to | the classrooms. | Norman" Reid, president of l'Association des educateurs catholiques de St. Hyacinthe, described the injunctions as "basically vicious'? and said he], |has asked for an early report on their legality. | Earlier Sunday, Gaston Dore, jhead of the Yamaska school commission, said the 8,500 French-speaking Catholic school RABBI FEINBERG . - Holds Conference Anti-Sukamno sits ty ace ate Protests Made turn to school this morning on| JAKARTA (Reuters) jthe assumption the teachers|Truyckloads of students shouting would 7 the order. "Hang the president" drove 9 ge rey re oe through streets here today in teachers would show up at what their leaders warned was school, "I think most will wait/only the beginning of massive until we have heard from our/protests against President Su- lawyers. karno of Indonesia. | Meanwhile, Foreign Minister | During the weekend both|Adam Malik again called on sides in the Yamaska dispute|/Sukarno to resign, It is the only agreed that Claude Ryan, pub-| way to end the current political lisher. of Montreal, Le Devoir, crisis, he told journalists Sunday night. = nam has invited President John-| With North Viet President LONDON (Reuters) -- Presi{dent Johnson "will have com- dent Ho Chi Minh of North Viet-| plete security." Rabbi Feinberg told the press son of the United States to visit! conference they had asked Pres- Hanoi for peace talks, Rabbi! ident Ho his permission to quote Feinberg of Toronto told a/the passage referring to the in- press conference on his return vitation. He said this was speci- here from Hanoi today. fically given. Rabbi Feinberg, pastor emeri-|_ ne tus of Holy Blossom Temple,|NO JOKING said Ho told him and Anglican, The rabbi told reporters Ho Bishop Ambrose Reeves: "Mr.|WaS not speaking in jest. Johnson has stated that he| He said would talk to anyone, any time,| "I thought it was a passage any where about peace. jin which he wanted to say that "I invite Mr. Johnson to be|the people and leaders of North our guest sitting just where|Vietnam will be ready to have you are here in the palace of|an atmosphere created in which the former French governor-|peace negotiations could be con- general of Vietnam." \ducted only when the attempt Feinberg said President Ho|by the United States to impose continued: a military solution is termi- "Let Mr. Johnson come with nated. \his wife, his daughters, his sec-| 'In other words, the with- retary, his doctor, his cook--but/drawal of American armed let him not come with a gun on forces is the pre - condition, not his hip, let him not bring his|of peace, but rather of an at- admirals and generals." mosphere in which peace could Ho gave a pledge that Presi-'be discussed," Japanese Officer Walks Out After QuizOn Canada POWs TORONTO (CP) -- A Japan-jtour of North America, walked ese officer who led the 1941 air|ut of the studio when CFTO attack on Pearl Harbor walked asked: '"'What about the Cana- dian troops in Hong Kong? leading presidential candidate of the ruling Nationalist Liberal two crew members were wounded on the other. s ;would be' asked to act as a} | 0 Children private mediator in' the strike.) --_________--_ out of a CTV network TV inter-/They were treated very badly. | Mr view, shown Sunday night, when | Are the people of Japan proud?" Mr. Ryan said Sunday he. had party. Casualty reports said 10 to 20 persons were killed and about 20 others wounded. Street fighting broke out after a political rally in which Fer- nando Aguero, the opposition Conservative party's presiden- tial candidate, called for a gen- eral strike to "demand elec- toral guarantees' for the Feb. 5 elections. The government rushed rein- forcements into the city, and na- tional guard vehicles cruised the streets urging the snipers to surrender. Unofficial reports said government forces suf- fered some casualties. ATMOSPHERE TENSE | With the approach of the| presidential elections, the polit- ical atmosphere has become tense. Opposition parties have been unsuccessful in their at- tempt to get the elections post- poned for a year. The leading presidential can-| didate is Gen. Anastasio (Ta-| chito) Somoza, candidate of the ruling Nationalist Liberal party. Tachito also is boss of the na- GEN. A. T. SOMOZA . .. Candidate Aguero, an eye specialist, withdrew from the 1963 presi- dential contest to leave the field clear for Rene Schick Gu- tierrez, the candidate of the Somoza - controlled Liberal party. Schick died last August. Presidents and members of) their immediate family are barred from the presidency for the succeeding term, so when Luis Somoza completed his term in 1963, the Somozas chose Schick to fill in for the next four years. | tional guard, which serves as the country's police force and army. The total number of planes reported lost in the air war against North Vietnam rose to 465. QUIET ELSEWHERE Ground fighting in South Viet- nam continued on a relatively small scale, with U.S. military headquarters reporting 98 Com- munist soldiers killed Sunday in scattered skirmishes in three sectors. The South Vietnamese command reported 20 enemy dead in five small clashes. U.S. headquarters disclosed that a Vietnamese hamlet was hit by error in a shelling by the 7th-Fleet destroyer Norris Sat- urday. Headquarters said four Vietnamese civilians were killed and nine wounded in the bombardment, the first re- ported shelling of a wrong tar- get by a navy vessel in the Vietnam war. In a delayed report, the U.S. command said that two other 7th-Fleet destroyers, the Stod- dard and the Keppler, destroyed or damaged a radar site, seven cargo boats and two guns in a shore battery around the Vinh area in North Vietnam last} Thursday. { SHE OUTLIVES THREE MATES MONTREAL (CP)--Mrs. Arzelenie Bonami, a_resi- dent of St. Joseph's Home for the Aged who has out- lived three husbands, cele- brates her 100th birthday today. Mrs. Bonami, whose father lived to be 100, made a television appearance dur- ing the weekend, singing a 20-verse song she composed herself. Her three marriages jenergy and conservation, TORONTO (CP) -- Parents across southern Ontario have been warned to va" Mo ha away from ditches*And creeks swollen by run-off from melting snow as a mid-winter thaw hit the area. D. N. McMullen, river fore- caster for the department of said this morning that high tem- peratures are melting snow and filling creeks, rivers and ditches. | He predicted an increase in| the flow of most rivers along} lasted a total of 60 years. She has also outlived five brothers and five sisters. Seven Arrested In Economic Plot | KINSHASA, The Congo (Reut- ers) -- Seven prominent Bel-| gian businessmen and Congolese Senator' Gaston' Diomi have been arrested following the dis-| ice cover. He said there is no immediate viding it does not rain during the mild spell. Record high minimum tem- peratures were recorded in 15 Ontario communites with fog rain and freezing rain common} and northern parts of ce. 17 jin central the provin IT'S WARM At Simcoe the previous record asked. whether the Japanese "I do not know," said Capt. not yet been officially ap- proached ' by either side and| would accept the job only if al settlement seemed possible. | In Montreal Sunday, Mr., Jus- tice Andre Montpetit said talks) under his mediation are "pro-| gressing'"' but no immediate end| to the 10-day strike by 9,000 Roman Catholic teachers seemed in view. | Priest Meets Pope On Viet Issue VATICAN CITY (Reuters) -- Msgr. Georg Huessler, a Roman Catholic priest who recently saw Premier Ho Chi Minh, of North Vietnam had a meeting with Pope Paul today. with a general break-up of the} threat of general flooding pro-| Wee fect sa ictal The MILLIONS = Sf * Se satel flr covery of an economic plot;}minimum of 36 set in 1934 was| against The Congo, a former| Belgian colony, the government) announced today. | topped by 13 degrees when an | overnight low of 49 was rec-! orded. VON THADDEN TAPED INTERVIEW SCORED NAZI CHARGES DENIED 3,000 Picket CBC Toronto Studios TORONTO (CP)--More than program, and its exposure re- 3,000 persons paraded in front of CBC studios Sunday night protesting a special taped inter- view with Adolf von Thadden, right-wing West German poli- tician, on a public affairs pro- gram, The demonstrators men, women, teen-agers and chil--- dren --. carried placards read- ing: The Nazis must not be allowed to poison our atmos- phere; Spending taxpayers' money to hear murderers; Is - the CBC spreading nazism? In the filmed interview, Thadden, 45, deputy chairman of the National Democratic party, repeatedly denied his party is neo-Nazi or that he ever was or is a Nazi. "It's a right-wing party with strong conservative direc- he told interviewers a tion," Larry Zolf and Bob Hoyt of the program Sunday. "I utterly reject, sincerely, that we are a renovation of nazism." Reaction to the program spread outside Toronto. In Mont- real, 75 demonstrators carried signs outside CBC studios pro- testing the telecast of the inter- view. WHAT JEWS FEARED In Winnipeg, Abe Arnold, ex- ecutive director of the Canadian Jewish Congress, 'western region, said the interview achieved what Jews across Can- ada had feared--'"It gave Mr. von Thadden a chance to pre- sent himself as the leader of a respectable right-wing party." The' interview by the Crown- owned CBC was conducted in Hanover, West Germany, Thurs- day and the tape was flown to Toronto Fridiy. It was shown Sunday night, a week before a scheduled live interview with von Thadden in Toronto was to be shown. The live interview was cancelled after protests from the Canadian Jewish Con- gress, the Canadian Labor Con- gress and other groups. Rabbi Gunther Plaut of Tor- onto was interviewed on the program immediately efore the von Thadden film was shown. He said von Thadden should not have been allowed to appear. His appearance would bring "mental forture" to Jews who recall the suffering and perse- cution at the hands of Hitler, he said. Seeing von Thadden was sure to upset Jews who saw in von Thadden the possibility of racial persecution again. The controversial . interview took up half of the hour-long é ceived support from some who felt that it was better to under- stand the views of the right- wing: party so that*they could be challenged. BACKS SHOWING Ayre Neier, secretary direc- tor of the New York Civil Li- berties Union, appeared. on the program with Rabbi Plaut and said von Thadden should be given an opportunity to express his opinions publicly because "the easiest way to combat evil is to. expose if." In London, Ont., David Lewis, deputy house leader of the New Democratic Party, said it was not worth creating "hysteria" over the interview. He felt von Thadden's appearance did not pose a threat to the Jewish people. DEMAND L .: necceacaeaneeinets om lbs: THIS WAS THE SCENE Sunday night outside CBC studios in Toronto. More than 3,000 placard-carrying demonstrators' paraded in protest of the televising of an interview with Adolph von Thadden, deputy chair- man of the West German National Democratic' party, on the public affairs pro- gram Sunday (CP Wirephoto) were proud of the way Canadian |Fuchida. He then left the studio. war prisoners were treated. The interview was taped Sat. Capt.- Mitsuo Fuchida, on alurday. ret 'mnt en 0 NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Treatment Facilities Said Lacking TORONTO (CP) -- Health Minister Matthew Dymond of Ontario was told today that the parents of an emotion- ally - disturbed 13-year-old girl are planning to move to Britain because Ontario lacks treatment facilities for the girl. Stephen Lewis, New Democrat member of the Ontario legislature for Scarborough West, said in a letter to Mr. Dymond that the girl has spent more than five weeks in the Ontario Hospital at Toronto with "no continuing treat- ment and no apparent future." Musial Named Vice - President ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Stan Musial, a former St. Louis Cardinal player who holds more National League baseball records than any other man, was named vice-president and general manager of the club today. Musial, Cardinal vice-president since his retirement in 1963 and director of the President's physical fitness program, succeeds Bob Howsam, named general manager of Cincinnati Reds Sun- day. Survivors Of Ship Blast Land LAS PALMAS, Canary Islands (Reuters) -- The Polish liner Batory today landed 40 crew members of the 18,700- ton Dutch ore carrier Jacob Verolme while two tugs tried to take in tow the ship they abandoned after an explosion Sunday. One other man was killed in the blast and one of the survivors was taken to a hospital with serious burns, TL ..In THE TIMES Today.. City Man Dies, Kidneys Tronsplanted--P. 9 Generals Drop Two Games--P. 6 Ann Londers--10 City News--9 Classified--14, 15, Comics--12 Editorial--4 Financial--13 Obits--16 Sporis6,_2 Theatre--17 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax--5 Women's--10,; 11 16 1867 | 1967 CENTENNIAL FEATURE -- Henry School, Whitby, Puts on Centennial Display by student group on weekend --P. 5, St

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