Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Mar 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, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont= ario and Durham Counties, Weather Report Cold Air expected in Ontario Sunday, bringing present high temperatures tumbling, Low tonight 30, high Sunday 35. She Oshawa Times - OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1967 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash s ' Q ™ UAW Would Enforce Strike wession KUAGSNES tp Bring Plan Into Effect _ Landreville's Bid OTTAWA (CP)--A bid by Mr.jand J. J. Robinette, the judge's} The judge, fighting to retain Justice Landreville to call two chief counsel, jhis $26,000-a-year position on the cabinet ministers, a magistrate! 'The Commons-Senate commit-|bench, said he will try to con- and his own counsel as wit-|tee went into a 40-minute closed|Cclude his testimony Tuesday | |nesses was turned down Endey session and decided against | With a statement on ethics and} Irving. Bluestone, "Reuther's |by the parliamentary commit-|calling the four men. morality. |ministrativ istant vs th tee reviewing his conduct. Senator Daniel Lang, commit | The committee hopes to com-| inion th oun i hi Biggs 4 David Humphrey, counsel for tee co-chairman, said the four|Plete hearings next week and | dais of wich aA an p Mit ta call amplnvene. icehinive the Ontario Supreme Court could only give personal opin- submit a report to the Commons connuthrs mad he ee '00 oi st | Lae es, including the judge, said he would like tojions about the case and the and Senate, recommending for up with several it atte ne n Shed acer os question Justice Minister Cardin| members were looking for fac-|o" against 8 motion by. Mr. | witehi nyho'y i ducti a kl Fite Securely: What benefits and his predecessor, Registrar-| a soa Pohick Nappa Cardin to remove the judge |$¥) ae spe ao uction wor! gad l a man receive' if laid off General. Favreau, about thelr! 'The committee then ad-/T0™ the bench for improper/Slp ie tee mad Bluestone| ble toreihe ey eli: attitudes to the Landreville|journed until 9:30 a.m. EST conduct lexpr ae sBfent the UAW| odie se: Boe case. Tuesday, when the judge will A Algh court judge saa only | il 'so 4 ith ll fl a | i ge Se Wed He also sought permission to|begin his fifth day vorn|bE Temoved by a joint address} ' ine iad Pee ie | ee f ght pern n tojbegin his fift ay of SWOIN!o¢ both houses, something that|/SWers, however, before negotia-| go on overtime rather than call Sudbury Magistrate Albert testimony, which so far has ever has happened in Cana |tions open in July with the big) take on a new emplovea Marck, who dismissed a muni-|consisted mostly of reading |gian history. three -- General Motors, Ford) whose income they will be re- cipal corruption charge against |from the record of previous! wr Justice Landreville said\and Chrysler--where the cur-| quired to guarantee for a full Mr. Justice Landreville in 1964,|hearings. Friday he might ask the com-|rent three-year pacts run out] year? J --Senlority: 'A sticky prob- mittee later to call other wit-|Sept. 5. : sé 99 nesses. He mentioned the regis-| The UAW bid for the guaran-| lem of whether an older Red Menace aay on are and dr trar of the Ontario Supreme|teed income could set the pat- Court and unidentified persons|tern for labor - management] to stay on or leave and draw in Sudbury who would testify|Strife which many financial ex-| his pay while the man with less seniority continued to PARIS (CP)--Prime Minister)tracted as many voters as the Georges Pompidou drove home| Gaullists in previous parliamen: the perils of the "red menace"|tary elections whether they knew in 1956 that)Perts predict for major indus he held an option on gas stock, |tries in the months ahead. work?" oa OS CLOSING GAP COSTLY Friday night as he and other | Pompidou played heavily on political leaders made their fi-|the theme of Communist sub- 10¢ Single Co 85¢ Per Week Home Belivered VOL. 96 -- NO. 59 TWENTY-TWO PAGES DETROIT (AP)--A chief aide jto Walter P. Reuther says the |United Auto Workers union |doesn't have "'all the answers to the many, many thorny prob- lems" a_ guaranteed annual wage would create, but it will strike if necessary to bring such a pay plan into effect. term of employment -- income the employee would draw even if laid off by his ing the specified term "It amounts to guaranted em- ployment or income," he said. He said the array of knotty problems such a plan posed in- cluded: --Eligibility: Whether it should be limited to a man with five vears seniority, or emplover Cur- FEATHERED FRIEND FINDS FAVORITE FOOD Mrs. Robert Euclid St., have adopted a son Leo and pigeon answering to the Carmen, 609 name of 'Onion', Leo ex- tends the courtesy to mouth feeding 'Onion' its favor- ite delicacy -- peas. --Oshawa Times Photo Seals Suffer Mr and Gagnon, a daughter " People are often remind- ed to feed their feathered friends. A family in Whitby, Reuther told 250 UAW dele- gates representing 50,000 techni- cal, office and professional workers Friday: "We're not go- ing to sign an agreement this year until we get a guaranteed income for our membership" in jthe auto industry. |GUARANTEE INCOME Bluestone said the companies are likely to think the plan costly, but he said closing the gap 'from where we are to where we want to: go" would not be a great jump | Under current contracts, a \man woring 32 hours and laid Meg, Tony On Holiday TRAVELS SOLO Miss Stalin In Geneva Shrouded By Mystery GENEVA (AP) --- Svetlana Stalina, Joseph Stalin's daugh- ter, arrived here by plane from 'Rome today. She was immedi- ately whisked away from the Very Little Vet Claims - SAINT JOHN, N.B, (CP)--Dr. In December or January her/Forbes MacLeod, a Saint John nusband or friend, Indian Com-jveterinarian, said Friday hu- munist Brijesh Singh, 59, died/mane Society observers sent to in Moscow. He was cremated|the Gulf of St. Lawrence seal and she was given permission|hunt saw little evidence of to take his ashes back to India|cruelty. However, several rec- airport by Swiss police. Miss Stalina was the soe pas- senger on the Air Italia Vis- count. Unofficial reports from Italy that the 42-year-old former dic- tator's daughter had obtained political asylum in Switzerland could not be confirmed. The aircraft rolled to a stop on the far side of Geneva air- port terminal as a car with two Officials of the Swiss police raced out on the tarmac. Italian frontier authori- ties who had announced Miss Stalina's departure for Geneva, said she arrived in Rome March 7 from New Delhi. Miss Stalina, whose travels from Moscow to New Delhi, India, Rome and Geneva have been shrouded in secrecy, was the sole passenger aboard a spe- cial flight of the Italian state- owned airline. Italian newspa- pers reported that Switzerland had granted her political asy- lum, but those reports could not be confirmed. Shortly after her arrival, the Swiss federal government in Bern issued this announcement: "Mrs. Svetlana Allilueva, who had spent some time in India recently and does not wish to return to the Soviet Union, has asked permission to enter Swit- zerland for a temporary stay of rest. According to known facts she has never been active in politics. Therefore her request has been approved." There were reports earlier that she defected to the West be- cause she feared for her life and had asked political asylum in the United States, but there was no official confirmation from US. or Italian authorities. -- Informed sources in Washing- ton said Svetlana may settle in a West European country but declined to specify which, __ There is no American policy against a Russian defector tak- ing refuge in the United States, Special features this week include: Bobby Orr Makes The Big- Time With Ease. A Breaili Of Scotland To Play Civic Auditorium. Also In the Showcdse you'll find: On The Town Garden Guide Showtime At The Movies Teen Scene Television Highlights Home of The Week 4 and visit his family. In New Delhi, according to un- official reports from Washing- ton, Miss Stalina told U.S. em- bassy officials she feared her ommendations would be made for more improvement. Dr. MacLeod, managing - di- rector of the Saint John Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to | life was in danger in the Soviet|Animals, said that as one of the Union and she was given a U.S. 2 visa. SVETLANA STALINA Stalin's Daughter but Rome sources said her de- fection may have caused em- barrassment to both the U.S. and Soviet governments because of their mutual efforts to ease tensions. SHOCKED CHILDREN Miss Svetlana's defection was reported to have shocked her children in Moscow. Her son Josef, 21, was quoted as say- ing he and his 15-year-old sister had expected her to return to Moscow Wednesday. Josef was identified as the son of Svetlana and Grigory Moro- zov, a student she is reported to have married when she was 17 but later divorced on Stalin's orders, On the day her children awaited her in Moscow India and flew to Rome. They said she received permission from Italian authorities to re- main in Rome for 48 hours. WON'T CONFIRM REPORT Reports circulated there that she was sheltered in the home of Frederick Reinhardt, U.S. ambassador to Rome, but U.S. no information. Miss Stalina retired to an ob- secure, studious life after her father's death in 1953. Russians who knew her during, her father's rule said she was one of the few persons he deeply loved. Miss Stalina, as do most So- viet women, adds an "A" to her name. She is reported to have had several husbands after her marriage to Morozov. One of them was. Mihail Kaganovich, whom she married July 3, 1951. What happened to the marriage politburo in June 1957, accused by Premier Nikita S. Khrush- party group. embassy officials said they had) is not clear, but Kaganovich's| father was expelled from the chev of belonging to an anti- | lobservers on the hunt, he lchecked 700 carcasses and found that "less than 10 per cent did not have crushed skulls, : : /SOUFCES| and in no case did we find any in Rome said, Miss Stalina left|evidence of cruelty, that is, un-|Pand. less cruelty is defined as taking the life of any animal." nal bids for support in Sunday's second round in the elections for the French National Pompidou, beetle-b: mer merchant banker and now heir apparent to President de Gaulle, was taking no chances that lukewarm supporters of the government might be lured away by a new electoral coali- tion of Communists and social- ists which will provide the chief opposition for Gaullist candi- dates in Sunday's vote. The pre-vote predictions were almost unanimous fcr a return of the Gaullists to an absolute majority in the 486-seat assem- bly. Their previous majority of 48 seats over the combined op- position parties was expected to remain 'constant or even ex- But the leftist parties in France have consistently at- MEXICO CITY (AP)--How- | ard F. Hobbs of Phoenix, | Ariz., is driving from Guate- mala to the Arctic Circle to celebrate his wedding an- niversary. His wife is going to wait for him at home. Hobbs, now 84, was mar- ried 60 years ago last March "I'm going up to the Yukon to see the midnight sun}"' Hobbs said. "I hope to set a record as being the oldest man to drive a car that far to see it." Hobbs and his wife, Mabel, 79, were in Mexico City this week after a road tour of Mexico and Guatemala. Next week Mrs. Hobbs re- turns to Phoenix to wait for HUBBY GOING TO THE YUKON: FOR HIS 60th ANNIVERSARY her husband to finish his trip in his 1965 car. OLDEST VISITOR "At the Guatemala border they told me I was the oldest tourist they ever remember entering the country by auto- mobile," Hobbs said. Hobbs says he has driven 1,500,000 miles on the North American continent since he got his first car, a Jeffrey, in 1908. From Mexico City, Hobbs plans to drive to New York City, then to Montreal to see the Expo 67. "T haven't missed a world's fair on this continent in my lifetime," he said. ssembly.|munist party had cynically or- wed for- jused his last television appear- version in a nationwide televi- sion address. He said the Com- ganized a series of withdrawals by either socialist or Commu- nist candidates after last Sun- day's first ballot so the Gaullists would be faced with a single left-wing candidate where ever possible Since 'there is little real op-|at In Bahamas Princess Margaret and her hus- band, Lord Snowdon, were va- cationing together in the Ba- hamas today after an interval of nearly six weeks apart. Snowdon was on hand early New York's Kennedy Airport position to de Gaulle in the field|Friday to greet his wife: flying of foreign policy, the leftists|in from London. Both then flew have been making their strong-|to Nassau. est attacks on the issue of do- mestic failures and de Gaulle's|suit and hat, was first passen- own methods of governing. ger to leave the aircraft here. Francois Mitterrand, leader of|Coming down the gangway she the young non-Communist Fed-|paused a moment, and turned eration of the Left and princi-|and smiled at her husband. | pal architect of the current so-| The princess was warmly cialist - Communist alliance,/greeted at the airport by the | Bahamas' governor, Sir* Ralph Grey, and Lady Grey and by her hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Jocelyn Stevens, in whose home Prin- cess Margaret and Snowdon will stay during their scheduled nine-day holiday. Mrs. Gandhi Supported By Desai N¥w DELHI (AP) -- Prime ance to describe the left as the "modern expression of a great tradition' which has sought to defend personal liberty and so- cial justice. In a barb aimed directly at de Gaulle's "vegime of personal power,"' Mitterrand said: "T think that at a time when the Eastern European democ- racies are opening their doors and windows to the free air of dissent and discussion, it could seem paradoxical that our coun- try should follow a path being taken by Spain and Portugal." U.S. Infantrymen In Fierce Fight SAIGON (AP)--A battalion of helicopter - lifted U.S. infantry- men clashed today in fierce fighting with a Viet Cong force within 14 miles of Saigon. day former finance minister Morarji Desai has dropped his plans te oppose her re-election as head of the Indian govern- ment. "He has pledged his full and In the battle, still raging late|Unqualified support to me," she in the afternoon, U.S, artillery-|told a press conference at her men accidentally fired a round|Tesidence. into their own troops, killing| Mrs. Gandhi said she would From Montreal he plans to cross Canada to Alaska. | four American soldiers andjname Desai, 71, deputy prime wounding eight, a U.S. military|minister--a title he had de- spokesman said. manded as the price for with- drawing from the race for FOUR DIED WITHIN FIVE HOURS "Octuplets" Born To Mexican Mother MEXICO CITY (AP) --A Estrada Sahagun, the family sically, Their arms and legs THIRD TIME THIS CENTURY leader of the Congress narlia- mentary party. The leader, to be elected Sun- Estrada day by Congress party mem- bers of both houses of Parlia- ment, will be asked by Presi- dent Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan to form the new government. said labor started young woman gave birth to eight babies Friday night but four died within five hours and doctors said it was nearly im- possible that any would gur- vive. The birth of octuplets had been recorded twice before in this century, in Mexico in 1921 and in China in 1934. The 21.- year - old 'mother, Maria Teresa Lopez de Sepul- veda, was reported in good con- dition early today but. despond- ent over the deaths. "They looked like litile mice," a nurse said of the eight babies. The father, Genero Sepulveda Boone, 24, said: "We expected triplets but nothing like this," His family, in Mexico for séy- eral generations, claims descent from Daniel Roone, the Ameri- can frontiersman. An associate of Dr. Enrique Fe doctor, said he had looked at x-rays before the birth and "expected some sort of monster because I saw six hearts." Estrada delivered the babies in his clinic in a poor neighbor- hood during an hour starting at 7 p.m. The infants, four boys and four girls, were immedi- ately transferred by ambulance to the 20th of November general hospital. A girl died 8:35 p.m. and a boy at 8:55 p.m. Two other boys died just before midnight Fri- day night. Dr. Hector Villaraes, the di- rector of the pedfatric section of the hospital, said the deaths were caused by dehydration and respiratory problems. He said he did not expect any . of the babies to live 48 hours. Estrada said the babies were from three to four months pre- mature but well developed phy- were no. larger than an adult's little finger. They weighed from 18% ounces to 22 ounces--an aver- age of 191% ounces--and were nearly 12 inches. Jong, he said. It was the second unusual multiple birth in Mexico this year. A peasant farmer's wife from a small village south of Mexico City gave birth to quint- uplets Feb. 5. They are still alive and reported thriving at another hospital in Mexico City, Mr. and Mrs. Sepulveda have one other child, a boy of 2. She had not been taking fertility drugs. The Sepulvedas are Roman Catholics. Sepulveda earns $280 a. month in. the book-keeping section of the architectural department of the Mexican Social Security In- stitute. They live in a two-room house. without aid shortly after 5 p.m. HAD DIFFICULT TIME "The pregnancy was. tre- mendously difficult for her," Estrada said. "Almost all of her normal -functions broke down or troubled her. The womb was swollen to tremend- ous size." A nurse at the hospital bap- tized the infants, giving the boys the name Joseph and nam- ing the girls Josephine. The doctor said Mrs. Sepul- veda, a native of Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, on the Texas border, "was very brave--she had no anaesthetic. whatsoever, just oxygen at intervals." A hospital spokesman said that even if one of the babies survived its chances for a nor- mal life would be poor because of probable defects in the cen- tral nervous system, MRS, SEPULVEDA »»» Eight Babies | Bluestone told the same group,off eight hours of the week still b NASSAU, Bahamas (AP)--/a certain income for a specified } | Princess Margaret, in white] Minister. Indira Gandhi said to-| \the plan would amount to a con-\takes home 95 per cent of what tract guaranteeing an employee|he would have received had he worked the full 40-hour week. "New Provocations' Feared Against Soviet Union UNITED NATIONS (AP) --|speech in English and answered Soviet Ambassador Nikolai T./questions in Russian, which was Fedorenko says he sees signs|translated into English. that Maoists in Communist) Fedorenko, criticizing Chalr- China are getting ready for Mao Taet f the Ch "new provocations against the)" Mao Tse-tung of the Chi- Soviet Union." jnese Communist party, told the The head of the Soviet UN/Students: delegation, a Chinese-speaking| 'Everything showe that it expert who lived for years in|(Mao's group) is preparing the China, spoke Friday to more|Chinese People's Republic for than 800 U.S. college students|further adventuristic actions in who were in New York for a/the field of both domestic and model UN General Assembly at|foreign policy, not excluding a hotel, new provocations against the The ambassador, made his'Soviet Union. iyi yninunemaieaen yt NEWS HIGHLIGHTS China Orders Two Soviets "Out" TOKYO (Reuters) -- The Chinese foreign mibistry to- ,day declared two officials of the Soviet embassy in Pe- king persona non grata and ordered them to leave China immediately, Radio Peking announced. They were describ- ed as a second secretary in charge of the consular de- partment and another second secretary whose duties were not given. Search For Missing Seal Hunters HALIFAX (CP) -- A search was underway today for a single - engine Cessna-180 plane with two men aboard missing on a trip to seal-hunfing grounds off the Mag- dalen Islands. A fisheries department spokesman at Cap- aux-Meule, Magdalen Island, said the air-craft, owned by Wendell Matthews of Summerside, P.E.I., did not return to its sealing operations base Friday night. Police Seek Hit And Run Driver NAVAN, Ont. (CP) -- Police are searching for a car that struck and killed Diane Lemieux, 13, as she walked along a rural road with her sister near their home here Friday night. The girls were walking on the gravel shoulder, facing traffic, when Diane was struck from be- hind, Her sister was not injured. un | vgn .. In THE TIMES Today .. Burt Seeks Ottawa Meet -- P. 9 Flyers On March, Eliminate Generals -- P. 6 School Board Budget Delays Decision -- P. 5 ied t Ann Landers--10 Ajax News--5 City News--9 Classified--14, Comics--20 A TK ® Editorial--4 Yay Obituaries--16 AN] " Pickering News--5 LL 2 Sports--6, 7 a7 § 987 Television --19 haiti. CENTENNIAL FEATURE -- - Theotres--18 a Weather--2 Oshaws beoame City, Feb. Whitby News--5 8 1929, Women's--10, 11 15,16 ttt tag iu) LALA ALLL ida ULLAL! LARA a

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy