Weather Report Colder air has begun to move into Southern regions. Wet snow Wednesday. Low to- night, 28; high Wednesday, 85, Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. Ghe Oshawa Cimes Authorized os Second Class Mall Post Office Deportment Ottowa ond for payment of Postage in Cash 20 PC BOOST DUE IN FEDERAL COSTS VOL. 96 -- NO. 61 TWENTY PASES 10e Single €o BSe Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, MARCH. 14, 1967 MAGAZINE SAYS: Kennedy, Irked LBJ NEW YORK (AP)--President tian, White House press secre- Johnson castigated Senator Robert F. Kennedy last month for his stance on Vietnam and told the senator his political ca- reer would end rapidly if he maintained the stance, Time magazine reports. Time says Kennedy is said to have called the president '"'an s.0.b." "He (Kennedy) did not. call the president an s.o.b.,"' said two aides to Kennedy--Frank| Mankewicz in Washington and Adam Walinsky, who were in Oklahoma City today with the| senator on a speaking engage- ment. Kennedy could not be reached directly. Johnson tary, said the version of the - Kennedy contréittas| tion that has appeared in print} in several more or less similar forms "doesn't accord with the} memories of three people who were in that meeting." | Christian was not present. One participant, however, was Walt W. Rostow, Johnson's spe- | cial assistant for national secu-| rity affairs. DENIES QUOTE ; "There's not a word of truth} in those quotations," Rostow said. | In its current issue, Time re-' ports that Kennedy is said also |New Features, Centennial Powell Due Help To Raise New Budget In Harl em , Ciena OTTAWA government per cent BIMINI, Bahamas (AP) --/Tégts in civil cases are not usu- Adam Clayton Powell, who an-|ally made on Sundays." }nounced plans to return to New| / Powell joined with !87 grant total to $10,485,821,119 (CP)--The federal from the initial $9,318,224,878. is gearing for 20/The new blue book indicates a more spending this|further $237,431,818 will be year than last. sought in year-end appropria- The cost of Centennial Year'tions to pay for the current and new ventures in social and year's final bills. Negro|jeconomic assistance are all-big- --|point: "I don't have to sit here In Washington, Gearge Chris- |'0 have told the president at one a oe Ie jand take that -- ---- --." s r * : : | Pro - Maoists 2c .ottes dese! There are substantial inaccu- racies,"' said Mankewicz. (the Time account) is way off. |There was a meeting Feb. 6 at the White House, it lasted 45 minutes but that's about it." Time bases its account on the Feb. 6 meeting and said it Hold Parade For 100,000 las et PEKING (Reuters) -- About) Asked whether Johnson casti- 100,000 supporters of Commu-jgated Kennedy at the meeting nist party Chairman Mao Tse-|as5 reported by Time, Manke- tung paraded through Peking] wicz replied: : streets today and denounced) "{ wasn't there, but I think reactionary and revis ionist|not, The whole tone of the arti- leaders--a surprise resumption|cle js all wrong. The senator of cultural revolution demon- | got back from Europe and they strations. : jtalked about what happened. The parade was the biggest/The senator told the president demonstration since Red/what he heard about Vietnam Guards besieged the Soviet and the president gave him his Embassy a month ago. |views. They discussed it, and It came during a perigd of|that's about it. relative calm here in which) 'The senator never used the the Maoist press stressed dis-jlanguage described in there cipline and unity under a three-|(the Time account) and for that way alliance of the army, rev- olutionary masses and pro-Mao officials, Later, some of the demon- strators moved to the Soviet; 'They talked about Vietnam. Embassy where they shouted|The senator gave him his pro- slogans and burnt effigies of|posals. and the president ex- dent. The language is just all jwrong. Nothing like that was said. | Clay Shaw (right) who has been booked with conspira- cy in the district attorney's in New Orleans with attorn- assassination probe, is the ey William Wegmann (at focus point of photograph- Shaw's right): A prelimin- ers as he leaves a motions hearing Monday afternoon ary hearing for Shaw, who is accused of conspiracy to murder President Kennedy, is scheduled for today. (AP Wirephoto) Little Change Seen In De Gaulle Policies PARIS (Reuters)--The ham-|one seat over all other parties, mering President Charles ari iue Gaullists seemed certain of Gaulle's prestige took in|finding additional parlia- }day was unlikely to have much |said. | policies, observers said today. ers lost their seats in the Na-|Owe tional Assembly as a 'tactical al- liance of Communists and So-| lcialists brought the left forward as a formidable opposition. the first-round ballot March 5. After Sunday's voting, jnew National Assembly, Jand a possible 487th seat may be added. One seat, representing Bastia matter neither did the presi-|France's runoff elections Sun-|mentary support, the observers on the island of Corsica, was credited to the Gaullists. But effect on his government or| This pointed out that several|the losing candidate, incumbent|leaders boycotted a rallyy aur |, of the 15 Independent has ced Jean Zuccarelli of the non-Com- J ' .|tive. deputies elected 'Sunday|munist Federation of the Left, ory, of Ne Galles subpar their seats to a Gaullist}was reported planning to ask candidate's withdrawal afte That the vote be annulled and a\000 persons to hear Jakarta's jnew election ordered because of| military commander, Maj.-Gen. the election irregularities, |Gaullists had 244 seats in the Returns from Tahiti, in the) pility, one | South Pacific, are not expected| | York next Sunday, says if he isleaders in Harlem and across| jarested by the 'people of Har-|the country in hailing James| lem" will not let him remain! H, Meredith's withdrawal as the| in jail. Republican leaders' choice to; | He told a press conference | oppose Powell in a special con-| !Monday he would "walk. the) gressional election April 11. streets of Harlem' and deliver} 'I didn't think a civil rights} a Palm Sunday sermon at his|leader would allow himself to| {Abyssinian Baptist Church de-|become a white man's puppet,"| spite the threat of arrest on a| Powell replied when asked why| contempt-of-court warrant. The|he thought Meredith had drop-| warrant makes him liable to|ped out of the race. arrest at any time he re-enters | --_ [neste OF New Work ae | sheriff's 'office said: "we do not} Judge Lashes At Rand |know now whether we would arrest Mr. Powell. if he came into town Sunday, because ar- Suharto's } item entries that help inflate to BUDGET NEXT MONTH $11,546,434,084 the government's). Finance Minister Sharp's 1967-68 program of expenditure budget, probably to be deliv- and investment, tabled Monday |¢red next month, will set out in the Commons. how the government plans to But the initial estimates also|Cover the program with tax catalogue a pervasive increase Tevenues. in the size and scope of govern-| Ottawa's payments to the ment activity, running through|Provinces, in the form of tax departments, boards, commis-|transfers for post-secondary ed- sions, agencies and Crown cor-|UCation, equalization, the Can- porations. jada Assistance Plans and a E. J. Benson, president of the Variety of 'social schemes will treasury board and revenue increase by almost $340,000,000. minister, presented the 615-page, It will cost $1,273,906,400 to blue book of spending estimates/C@'ry Canada's public debt, for the financial yéar_starting| some $88,000,000 more than last April 1, | year. More pay and more pensions MAKE ALLOWANCES | will drive the defence budget to He said comparisons between/$1,688,000,000, an increase of initial estimates for 1966-67 and/$115,309,999 or 7.3 per cent over |1967-68 should make allowance!|the estimated outlay of 1966-67, for $350,000,000 in the new blue| Centennial celebrations, in- book which normally would be |cluding Expo 67, are a $50,000,- introduced later as supplemen-|000 item, but this figure ex- t 2 |tary appropriations. cludes some Expo loans that Broadcas OTTAWA (CP) -- Mr. Justice} Categories of the Initial esti-/ may not be recoverable. Leo Landreville lashed: out to-| day at Ivan Rand, the former| justice of the Supreme Court of Canada who has accused him of improper conduct. The Ontario Supreme Court porting acting President Su-\judge commented before a ape- harto today, but the govern-|cial parliamentary committee ment brought out more than 50,-|that Mr. Rand charged $24,100 in personal expenses for 11 days Amir Machmud, appeal for sta-jof sittings he conducted across \the country last year while in- Unofficial student sources|quiring into Mr. Justice Lan- Criticized | JAKARTA (AP) -- Student mates, with comparable totals for last year in brackets: Over-all spending in health and welfare will be $125,000,000 --Normal military and civil-|higher at $1,392,903,400, not jan departments: $9,535,132,-|counting old age pensions or the 584 ($7,950,459,478). |guaranteed income supplement, --Old age pensions and sup-|which are treated as. non: plementary allowances: $1,-|budgetary items. 432,000,000 ($1,035,000,000). The CBC, busy covering the vances on which the govern- | in color, building up Canadian | ment expects eventual repay- | content and pushing TV into ment; frontier areas, Will need $140,- 400). | 147,000 from Ottawa this year. Supplementary spending = len RAS compares with $11,643,000 | Loans, investments and ad- Vaca and Expo, expanding $579,301,500 ($332,765,- mates tabled since last spring's|}a year earlier, a difference of blue book have brought the 1966-|25 per cent. TWO STILL IN DOUBT Two seats remain in doubt 20 PER CENT DROP IN USS. SALES A General Motors spokes-| Albert Taylor, man gave an assurance today|Local 222 of the U that there would be no layoffs|orkers, said today that union because the company is switch-|officials hope to go to Ottawa ing production of the Acadian|/next week to protest against and Chevy IL models Oshawa to the United States. jand Acadian "We plan to take certain |States. lines fs of our Oshawa sched-| Said Mr. Taylor: 'We do not ule on the one hand, but we|know what kind of game GM also plan to increase produc-|is trying to play. The Acadian tion of other lines to the extent |!S an all-Canadian car and they of more than offsetting any re-|Produce a counterpart in the sultant loss of employment," re ited States. We think maybe said. |}this is a drive-to discontinue The company officially an- [building sine tga ae nounced the production switch) 14 retain ena aor na sterday. It will take place ee pew ton Or ve he the end of the 1967 model these models in Canada with- run in July. The cars, wil be], f00, much, hard." he imported from the States for| $ gah sale through the present deal. |Pny workers will be: affect- er outlets in Canada. George Burt, Canadian direc- The move in production of|tor of the UAW, had said earl- models to the 'ithe two models is part of anjier that he did not think export- adjustment of the car indus-|ing the F85 Oldsmobiles, Buick try under the Canada - United|Specials and Chevelles to the States auto pact. The company|U.S. would be great enough to from |the movement of the Chevy II! President of 0! Jean Lecanuet claims 42/Sukarno's presidential title and , elected followers, but official re- i rial forjhear a debate between Mr./A nited Auto| 'for him to be put on trial. for ticism he has made of the So-| viet Union. jturns list his party with 27 and jlabel the other 15 as Inde- pendent Conservatives, SECOND GREEN THEFT BARED TEIGNMOUTH, England (Reuters) -- Ivan Hitchcock was found guilty Monday of Stealing part of the second green of a local golf course. The turf was recognized by the club's head green- keeper, Edward Yeo, as a newly - laid lawn in Hitch- cock's back garden. "Tt was the club's lawn," he told the court. 'There was no turf around here like it." Hitchcock, 39, who denied the charge, was placed on probation for three years for plans to export some 1968 F85|give work to all the men dis- Oldsmobiles, Buick and Chevelles to the U.S. |two models. Specials | placed by the loss of the other stealing 106 pieces of turf from the club. alleged complicity in the at-|Rand and the former Ontario tempted Communist coup Of/chief justice on the ethics of} Oct. 1, 1965. | Sukarno's mains fuzzy. many top leaders in Congress believe Sukarno was totally dis- missed, but military men close}|Commons e to Suharto. adhere to dhe gen-|that must revie eral's position that Sukarno re-|conclusions and r mains president, although injor against the judge's removal name only. : from the bench. actual status re- The Toronto judge was testi- 1) Armed Grocers In Detroit | Claim Another Death Victim threat of armed | DETROIT (CP)--This larmed grocers have claimed |holdups. : : lanother victim with the death} Police said the girl was with 'late Monday of a 14-year-old!a 23-year-old male companion | girl. : lat the time of the shooting. The . Mee SENG |man was wounded and was re- Police said Helen Davis of | ported in critical condition in | Detroit was the second person | hospital. jkilled by local grocers who| The grocer, Grace Tocco, 46, | |have armed themselves against|Stabbed a_ .38-calibre revolver city's |the growing Russian leaders. pressed his point of view." tinea' Square" and. nearby STARTED IN 1960 The Time report says the ital as long, orderly columns of ; yea ae i "4 Fae _|nedy, which had its beginnings perts anticipated any serious i age ' y pat sa wie 3 eee pine gS ae eng air in the 1960 Democratic conven-|trouble for the government ao opposition had per ole J Bag ge So-/with Suharto's Rictesege seid Mr. Justice Landreville said) iinet at nee ants beating . tion, flamed into open warfare|the assembly session starts! . rodent BL Ast rae pad night in which he said Pres-ly7 Rand's code of ethics and| reS'when Kennedy returned from|April 4 erritory votes in a referendum) ident Sukarno "would be treated] .o:ality may be completely! marched up and down shouting|rurope amid rumors he had re-| Despite their majority of only Sunday to remain with France./as the president without any ) astro snes muss stem slogans which their cheerlead-|.cived in Paris a signiticant| _ Despite thelr majority @ Mi Comparison of party strengths! more power in politics." | ; ers read from a prepared list.|neace feeler from North. Viet-| between the old and new assem-| Most of the people at today's | He added pointedly that a || The first four slogans of\nam. blies is complicated by altered|rally were workers and civil de-|tired chief justice of Ontario; = . N | ffs Due inter-party alliances. fence personnel. Chiefs oflonce conducted a government | conomlic, tura ] S "down with Liu Shao - chi',/warned Kennedy about his Viet- | O @ | V oO The federation of the left, for/nearby villages said they were inquiry and refused to charge "Down with Ten sp ge Op stance, telling him: "If voted under socialist, radical} p) bl db th "Dow vith §=T: Chu" and/you k talki i is P socialist, ical)ple as possible and bring them ; f Be tit Be Rg " wart Whee a Gian eta al I GM Tr sfer and other labels in the old ass- . the Gre he already was drawing a gov- peel a Castro Monday wpot | eobeecr ald of an abortive student : : ane wees 5 i ad n sembly. | Tt tudent groups have sxi-| attacke ussian economic and/assault on 'dictator Fulgencio Head of State Liu, party Sec-|this country within six months. | n |" 'The Democratic Centre grounltatea te henge pa Kameval oF ernment pension. lentarad contacts with "'oli-/Batista's presidential palace. It Vice-Premier Tao. were named Will be destroyed." frequently by Red Guards this} Time says that at one point, year as leaders of 'the bour-|Johnson used the phrase: 'The geois revolutionary line" in op- blood of American boys will be ---- Time, the president told Ken- nedy: "I never want to hear your views on Vietnam again." He 'also is reported to have . . ' S d Routine |want to see you again." al | Mankewicz denied that the n |president had used the lan- WASHINGTON (AP) -- The guage attributed to him in di- White House has placed a dam- rect quotes by Time. dent Johnson's trip Saturday t0ltq cee you again,' Mankewicz Guam will result in any spec-|<aiq. "{'ye seen that report two tacular developments concern-|9, three other places and I've ing the Vietnam war. |denied it. He did not say 'The day the Guam meeting is just/on your hands.' " one of a series being held semi-| Referring to Time's account annually to review military and of Kennedy telling the presi- civil developments aspects of| dent "I don't have to sit here George Chri stian, White|Mankewicz said: "If that lan- House press secretary, said,|guage was used it was closer to meanwhile, that Johnson' don't have to sit here and "would not allow politics to in-|listen to you talk like that.' But ing the Vietnam situation." jall."' He was responding to ques-|~-- tions about the decision of the California Democratic Council--} --to support a "peace candi- date" in the 1968 California Democratic party , primary to select presidenti candidates unless the way is ended by September. streets in the centre of the cap- icra oe feud between Johnson and Ken-| But none of the parties' ex |more than half of the 486 seats.| until next Sunday. Another seat said the leaders were unhappy dreville's dealings in gas stock. raits of Mao and _ placards ldifferent from his own. | nearly every column were) Time says the president example, includes deputies who| : 20- | aut TOUNE: ip 88 XORDY peo one cent in expenses because} HAVANA (Reuters) -- Pre-;vana University on the 10th an- retary - General Teng, andjIn six months, all you doves) It would be interesting to/garchy governments" in Latin}was Castro who finally over- position to Chairman Mao. jon your hands." Finally, says Guam Meeting said to the senator: "I never per on. speculation that Presi-) "He didn't say 'I never want| Presidential aides said MOn-!hjo9q of American boys will be the Vietnam effort. and take that -- terfere with any decision affect-|I don't know that he said it at a 30,000-member political group | published articles with the Canada - U.S. A Pact. Americans Sink (EDITOR'S NOTE: This Is the first in a series of widely- dealing The articles are writ- autos and original parts enter- ing Canada from the U.S. The- oretically, these penalties could amount to hundreds of millions of dollars and would deal the ada; uto Earl K. Br of American Motors (Canada) TWO CHOIC | persons who stole $300 from her jmeat market. Miss Tocco's fa- ther, Peter, 73, was beaten up | ES, BOTH GRAVE (istmsrtec\ ast Macc Auto Pact Runs Into Roadblock dent of Ford Motor Co. of Can- Ron Todgham, president of Chrysler of Canada Ltd,, and deni that trou ownridge, president sought. The jin the holdup. SHE WAS SCARED "I did not want to kill,"" Miss Tocco said. "But I was fright- ened for my father . . . I knew I had to do something quickly." A number of Detroit store- keepers, fearful of mounting holdups by thugs, have at- tended gun-training drills set up| ies that any relief has been government maintains the industry's current bles stem from a_ world- fying for the fifth day before a/ba's Jain - Senate 'committee | Stand and declared "we will be|rillas is also helping to repress w Mr. Rand's|@ satellite of no one ideologi-|the revolution because the re- recommend for) Cally, internally or externally."'| volution is not only fought with America in the most overt cri-|threw Batista. Clearly referring to the Soviet Union, Castro said he opposed Castro said the contacts any form of contact with non- jaccepting extra payment from/helped to suppress revolution|revolutionary Latin American The students and|the government, he said. gg aoe the continent. | governments, "Whoever helped those oli- Communist|garchies who are fighting guer- The .premier reaffirmed Cu- independent Castro's attack came in a 3!4-\arms but also with economic jhour speech on the steps of Ha-'credit," he said. marta cme MO, NEWS HIGHLIGHTS West Germany Seeks Stang] In Brazil BONN (AP) -- The West German foreign ministry said'today it has asked Brazil to extradite Franz Paul Stangl to face charges of complicity in the murder of 700,000 Jews during the Second World War. Stangl, 60, was ar- rested in Sao Paulo, Brazeil, March 2 on a preventive arrest order issued at the request of the Austrian govern- ment, Stalina Reported Ducking Reporters BEATENCERG, Switzerland (AP) -- Svetlana Stalina was reported on the run today from reporters and pho- tographers after spending several days in a hotel in the small Swiss ski resort of Beatenberg. Heavy Guards Ordered In New Orleans NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- A heavy guard was ordered today for the legal showdown in District Attorney Jim Garrison's controversial Kennedy assassination investiga- tion. Twenty sheriff's deputies were assigned to watch over the small criminal district courtroom while state and defence lawyers argue whether retired executive Clay L. Enemy Trawler SAIGON (Reuters) -- Three American vessels, including a detroyer, today forced an armed Communist trawler ashore on the South Vietnamese coast and blew it up after a furious sea battle, a U.S. mil- itary spokesman said. A navy spotter plane sighted the steel-hulled, 100 - foot - long craft early today as it tried to infiltrate arms and supplies to the Viet Cong, the spokesman said. Meanwhile, guerrillas again shelled an American infantry brigade's command post in the central highlands near the Cam- bodia border. They lobbed 450 mortar rounds onto the head- quarters Monday night and to- day, the spokesman eaid, ten by Patricia Carney, busi- ness columnist of The Van- couyer Sun.) By PAT CARNEY The U.S.-Canadian auto trade agreement has run into a road- block thrown up by the 20 per cent drop in U.S. auto sales. The four top automakers in Canada have advised the Cana- dian government that they are unlikely to meet \the 1967 pro- duction commitments which they undertook in return for duty-free trade in automobiles and original parts between the U.S. and Canada. Unless they are granted a re- prieve, the automakers say there are only two choices open to them, both equally grave: --They must pay import duties on the swelling flood of pad companies a heavy financial blow. --They must ask their Ameri- can parents to shut down Amer- ican plants so that the Cana- dian subsidiaries can meet their production obligations. This, however, would jeopardize the auto pact when it comes up for re-appraisal by both coun- tries in 1968. ALTERNATIVES ¢@ These alternatives are out- lined in a letter to Industry Minister C. M. Drury: from the Motor Vehicle Manufacturers' A fuociaoitn over the signature of E. H. Walker, head of Gen- eral Motors of Canada Ltd.,-and current president of the Asso- ciation. The letter was also seen and approved by Karl Scott, presi- Ltd. It followed a meeting between the automakers and Drury in December. At that time, the Industry Minister indicated there would be no release from the automakers from their com- mitments. Referring to the letter, one automaker said: "'It is the first hard-nosed step the industry has taken." Although the automakers soft- pedal any conflict with the goy- ernment over the auto pact, they freely admit they have asked for some relief. "We've all been up there,' ~ says Karl Scott. "They know exactly what our' problems are." However, Drury, glacial, for- mal, very much by - the - book, wide softening of markets, not the auto pact. About 5,700 peo- ple have been laid off in Can- ada and plant down time has slashed pay cheques for thou- sands more. Officially, the government's view is that the trade pact is working as hoped and is achiev- ing its objectives. These are in- creased employment in Canada and a reduction in Canada's automotive trade imbalance with the U.S. by increasing auto production in Canada. Department of industry fig- ures show that motor vehicle production in Canada hit 901,- 230 units in 1966, a 34 per.cent increase over the 1964 level, base year for the pact. (SEE -- AUTO PACT) Continued on Page 2 / by their fellow merchants. In the last five weeks, seven incidents involving shooting by grocers deaths and four cases of wounding. 25 Persons Die (CE) = 25. persons into the sea near here. Audrey Rosenthal, a doctor of University of California. have resulted in two): As Plane Plunges), EAST LONDON, South Africa | =z An American woman|= was the only foreigner among]= fearedkilledMonday | = night when a South African Air- |= ways Viscount airliner plunged |= The South African Press As-|2 sociation said the Amefican was |= philosophy in history from the |= Shaw should go. to trial. .. In THE TIMES Today 's Whitby Tex Rote Up 8 Mills -- P. 9 Reeve Laycoe Gets 18 Percent Pay Boost -- P. 5 runny Crushmen Square, Semi Final Series --- P. 6 Ann Landers--10 Ajax News--5, 12 City News--9 2 Classified--16, 17, 18, 19 Comics---14 Editorial--4 Financial--15 Obituaries--19 Pickering News--5, 12 Sports--6, 7 Television--14 Theatres--13 Weather--2 Whitby News--5, 12 Women"s--10, 11 [Exum