Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, neighboring Pickering and centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOE, '96 -- NO. 91 ee 10¢ Single Cop' BS5e Per Week Home She Oshawa Fimes jalivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19; 1967 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Weather Report Variable cloudiness. Some sun Thursday. Milder. Low tonight 35; high tomorrow 55. \ THIRTY PAGES Postage in Cosh Rebuilt From Ruins ADE RHOENDORF, West Ger. many (AP)--Konrad Adenauer, former West German chancel- lor who led his country to pros- perity from the ruins of the Second World War, died at his é home here today after a week's illness. He was 91. Adenauer's death was nounced by a spokesman for his Christian Democratic Party. He - said he died at 12:21 p.m. (6.21 a.m. EST). an- = The autocratic. elder states- © man, who was chancellor for 14 | years, week fighting bronchitis and in- fluenza which weakened his heart and circulatory system. Seven doctors attended: him in his Rhineside villa. Toward the end pe had been in an oxygen tent. was bedridden for a : His family was at his bedside. © BEGAN RECONSTRUCTION Adenauer began the exhaust- ing task of building up his war- {2 « torn country in 1949 at the age f of 73, when most men are re- tired on a pension. Throughout his long chancel- lorship,. he never ceased to as- tonish Germans and foreigners by his extraordinary vigor. He became chancellor with © his country occupied by the 7 United States, Britain and France. But by early 1951, he had won © ission to set up a foreign ; minis' and a year later the occupying powers gave his gov- | ernment almost ci lete sover- eignty. Under his stable gévernment, © the West G economy | moved ahead rapidly and Ade- © nauer was able to play a lead- ing part in the establishment of © the European Common market. : He took West Germany into a detente with France under President de Gaulle, a move which he regarded as a pinnacle of his chancellorship. LEFT WITH RELUCTANCE Adenauer bowed out reluct- antly as chancellor in 1963 in favor of his economics minister, Erhard, but remained chairman of his Christian Dem- ocratic party until last year, re- signing 'after' his 90th birthday. He kept up his energetic in- terest in government policy in retirement and 'was particularly critical of Erhard. NAUER D ae -- 'Der Alte' 91 IES | countrymen, was still a member of parliament when he died. All through the cold war, he was one of the West's most un- compromising opponents of So- viet communism, In his last years, however, after he relin- quished the chancellorship to Erhard, he predictd China Syste would be the West's major men- ace and urged closer relations with Russia, Sir Winston Churchill a Hopes Held By Martin sa Adenauer "the greatest German statesman since Bismarck." Former president Eisenhower cuts FOr Viet Peace Moves. world," The late President John F. Kennedy hailed him as 'an historic figure." LONDON (CP)--External Af- fairs Minister Paul Martin said UNIFIED COUNTRIES lin the. midst of Anglo-Canadian ministerial talks today "we President de Gaulle held him i oo in high personal esteem and Poe Awe adr "= ° gether they worked for recon-| Martin eras as he emerged ciliation between their two coun-|s.5m a closed session between ' yng which had been enemies|rritish and Canadian ministers p fr centuries. lat-which Prime Minister Wilson @ While Adenauer was chancel-|asked him to expound .on the lor, the Communists fiercely at-|Vietnam peace ideas he out-| Canadian ministerial study group. The Canadian side listened with interest to Wilson's review of his reconnaissance attempts to take Britain into the Com- mon Market provided essential British and Commonwealth safe- guards are attained. An ob- server gained the impression-- jalthough the ministers firmly denied comment --that Wilson probably confided to them an in- tention to make a formal bid. Canadian ministers stressed the need for full consultation among the 15 NATO mémbers, including progress on_ tripartite talks about offsetting the costs of British troops in Germany. » Khrushchev frequently f auer's policy was the reunifica- ~ that East Germany remain part 4 and helped found the Common Only last February, he vio- KONRAD ADENAUER hope during the weekend, when Ad lently attacked the project East-West treaty to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons, say- ry. egg planned to use it to strike at West Germany's econ- y . omy. The first sign that Adenauer was dying came early this morning when a bulletin issued by the team of doctors attending him spoke for the first time of "a very grave condition." ppeared to rally and his doctors spoke of stabiliza- tion of his illness. CONDITION DETERIORATES But all hope vanished Ties- day night when the evening medical bulletin said: '"'His gen- eral weakened condition and the State of his lungs have not im- tacked him for his hard line in the cold war. Premier Nikita) singled | him out as a "'warmonger." One of the chief goals of Aden- tion of West and East Germany, split as a result of the war. The Soviet Union, however, insisted the Communist world. denauer also worked steadily for the unification of Europe Market. "The federal German chancel- lor must be both a good German lined in Ottawa last week. Wilson presided at the session at 10 Downing St., which de- voted 45 minutes to Vietnam and shorter discussion periods to the European Common Market, the draft East-West nuclear non- proliferation treaty and the} North Atlantic Alliance. South Vietnam government proposed Tuesday to North Viet- nam that the two governments pull back from the buffer zone dividing them along the lines of Martin's: plan. But the North Vietnamese pote el Nhan Dan earlier castigated Martin's four - stage and good European," he often/formula. When Martin was said. Adenauer's long life covered a period during which his coun- try's fortunes rose and fell dra- matically. He was born in the neighboring Rhineland city of Cologne Jan. 5, 1876, just after the close of the France-Prussian Hitler. proved." In 1916, his first big political asked by a reporter today about the cold North Vietnamese reac- tion, he replied: "We must never close the door on these matters." MAY VISIT HANOI Martin said he hoped Can- war. He knew the eras of Bis-|ada's representative on the In- marck, Kaiser Wilhelm II and|ternational Control Commission in Vietnam, Ormond Dier, As a poor boy, the young) would visit Hanoi either this Adenauer studied law and mar-jweekend or early next' week. ried into an influential family./Canada is the third country on the ICC along with India, Der Alte --the old man.-- as/break came when he was/man, and Poland. Adenauer was known to his There was a brief flurry of| chosen mayor of his native city. All Provinces To Enter Federal Medicare Plan OTTAWA (CP) -- Bursting with. confidence, Health Minis- te? MacEachen emerged from talks with provincial health min- isters Tuesday to forecast par- ticipation by all provinces in a federally - supported medical care insurance plan. "My prediction is that all provinces will be in at July 1, Three Points Not Settled With Ottawa, Says Dymond TORONTO (CP)--The federal and Ontario governments are still in disagreement on three issues concerning the federal medical care program, Health Minister Matthew Dymond of Ontario said Tuesday night. On his return from a two day conference of provincial and fed- ral health ministers in Ottawa, Mr. Dymond said Ottawa and the province cannot agree on the definition of public administra- tion of a medical care program, a requirement that must be met before Ottawa will share the costs. He said the governments are still in dispute on the scale of the federal contribution to the program and whether the fed- eral government will share ad- ministration costs of provincial plans, : 1968," he told reporters, He sounded more optimistic than at any time since the federal medi- cal care bill was passed last December. But Ontario Health Minister Dr. Matthew B. Dymond went away with unresolved doubts. He said the meaning of some features of the federal law are Mr. Dymond said Ontario still feels that private insur- ance companies operating a non - profit medical insurance plan should be allowed to par- ticipate in the provincial plan jthout the province having to tdreo federal grants. ntario also wants Ottawa to pay half the operating costs of medical care schemes in-each province instead of half the na- tional average cost as proposed, he said. Ontario, with above na- tional average expenditures, would receive less than half its costs, Mr. Dymond said Ontario had proposed a compromise formula to establish the cost of admin- istration at two per cent of the full cost of the scheme with Ot- tawa and the province each pay- ing half of the two per cent. not clear to him and the prov- inces are left to figure it out for themselves. by one year and Mr. Eachen said only Saskatchewan asked for an earlier start than July 1, 1968. STATES FEDERAL POLICY Martin also said he expects to talk Thursday with U Replied Mr. MacEachen: "We don't think the areas of uncertainty are great." The federal government last fall set back start of the plan Mac- HALFPENNY FINDS ANCIENT COINS MANSFIELD, England (AP) -- A watchman em- ployed on a_ building site found two silver coins 600 years old, took his pen knife out and started digging. He came up with 447 more coins from, the reign of Ed- ward I and brought them to the Mansfield police. Experts now will assess the value of the treasure and the watchman's share of it will be decided. His name is John Half- penny. Mr. MacEachen said federal police "is to start July 1, 1968," paying half the national average per capita cost to qualified prov- incial plans. Current estimates are that, with all provinces participating, the cost will be between $720,- 000,000 and $740,000,000 a year, with Ottawa covering half the cost. To qualify for the federal money, the -provinces must launch plans meeting four con- ditions. All have agreed on two of them--that benefits be port- able from province to province and that each provincial plan _ at least insure the cost of all physicians services. ; The main stumblingaeocks appear to involv: they fed- eral conditions. A provincial plan must cover 90 per cent of the province's population at the start, rising to 95 per cent in three years. Royal Romance Rumor Denied LONDON (Reuters)--Friends of Prince Charles today squashed rumors of a budding romance between the 18-year- old heir to the throne and a wil- lowy Australian blonde. Anthony Tryon, 27 - year - old friend of the prince, told report- ers the girl--27-year-old Angela Rau--went along last Monday night to make up the theatre Md, and it was Tryon him- who invited her on the the- re visit. Miss Rau, a former Melbourne University student who has spent several years in England, was headlined in Monday's press as the prince's "mystery girlfriend" after she was photog- raphed sitting alongside him in eral, when the Burmese diplo- mat passes through London en route to New York. Martin plans to confer with Thant again next week, in New York. Martin was accompanied by five other Canadian ministers and there also were six British representatives at this first ses- sion of the newly-formed Anglo- 'U.S. Pilots Hit Steel Plant SAIGON (CP) -- U.S. pilots took advantage of a break in the weather Tuesday afternoon to give North Vietnam its sec- ond worst bombing this year and to attack the showpiece Thai Nguyen steel plant for the 10th time. A U.S. military spokesman said the U.S. planes scored a direct hit on the steelworks and left the area in flames. The American airmen hit the North with 145 missions. A U.S. spokesman indicated that more intense raids are to be expected as soon as the sea- sonal bad weather breaks. @ American flyers flew only two less missions Tuesday than the year's high of 147 April 3. The record for the war is 175 mis- sions in November last year. HIT STEEL PLANT The Thai Nguyen steel plant OTTAWA (CP) -- Even pigeons will join Centennial celebrations this 'summer. The Federal Racing Pi- geon Club announced Tues- day night it plans to release 2,000 homing pigeons on Parliament Hill July 1, when Queen Elizabeth is scheduled to address both Houses of. Parliament in an open-air ceremony, ~ Club President Robert Taylor said the birds will be driyen here from Sarnia and mdon; Ont., and he ex- pected about 90 per cent of THOUSAND PIGEONS TO FLY BACK HOME FOR CENTENNIAL the flock should make it back home if the weather is good. In another centennial race, Ottawa pigeons will be taken 700 miles west to Armstrong, Ont., 150 miles north of Port Arthur, and released. The last time homing pi- geons were in the news, they flopped miserably, Some Liberals organized a fidon - Montreal pigeon as a campaign stunt in the \1963 election and the birds\ were never seen again New Immigr . Endorsed Program With Flexibility | In Operation By Summer | OTTAWA (CP) --.A flexible new system for selecting imnf- Ff grants was welcomed Tuesday ' |by a parliamentary committee | jand will probably be in oper- ' lation by summer. f | One expected effect within |Canada will be to reopen a source of. unskilled labor for man-hungry industries such as mining. The special Senate-Commons committee endorsed the new | |system after being told it prob- ably won't be able to report on | immigration session. '3 A Hansard backlog that won't | be overcome until mid-May, | and expected prorogation of the | present session before then, were given as reasons. MEETS GRIEVANCES However, MPs said the sys- tem outlined by Manpower Mir- ister Marchand meets a good many of their grievances about policy outlined in a white paper|«'personal qualities," the on_immigration. _ |strength of demand for his type The minister told the commit-|of occupation, his age, and his tee he hopes to have a new in-|occupational skill. Z dependent immigration appeal|- 'The remaining four factors board constituted by July 1. |would affect "the speed and He also said department offi-|ease with which he is likely to cials have presented a brief to| cet settled." the royal commission on na-|" 'They are whether he has a tional security. The department|definite job arranged, his would await the commission's|knowledge of English, French, dati re ions before chang-|or both, whether he has rela- before the next HON. JEAN MARCHAND -.. Outline Welcome hallucinatory Shulman Criticizes LegislationOnLSD chair-/ TORONTO (CP)--Federal leg-|simple possession of the drug| The committee also was told! islation to Curb the use of the/would be illegal with a maxi-|that immigration figures in the drug LSD with)/mum penalty of three years and/first quarter ran about 30 per nt,/stiff prison terms'for possession|the fine. Sale of the drug, which|cent ahead of those in the first|™issible,solely because he is United Nations secretary - geN-|4nq sale was criticized today by|/has been banhed for a number|quarter of 1966, a year in which|>rother,' ing rules affecting immigration|tiyes in Canada, and "the gen- from behind the Iron Curtain.|eral employment. situation in MPs have pressed for relax-|the area to which he intends to ation of security regulations) 99, that have made it difficult for) Mr. Marchand said sponsor- the last 20 years for eastern ship of nen-dependent relatives Europeans to enter Canada, can't be a right but the new even when they have close rela- formula Hoel dil the pal to tives here. jthose with other factors in their |favor. "A brother would not be ad- "But he said. he Dr. Morton Shulman, former|of years, would carry a maxi-|195,000 immigrants came to|Would be/ admissible as long as Toronto. Dr. Shulman' said the stiffer penalties for trafficking were warranted but having a maxi- mum penalty of three years in prison and a $5,000 fine for pos- session will turn LSD users to other drugs. "IF possession becomes a crime they'll quickly shift to one of 30 other similar drugs which aren't LSD but give the same psychedelic effect," he said. "This will be a completely un- enforceable law." > Legislation dealing with LSD was introduced in the Senate Tuesday. For the first time, Taxpayers Union Meeting Called TORONTO (CP)--A meeting will be held here Friday to form a Canadian taxpayers union. George F. Rogers, chairman chief coroner for Metropolitan|mum sentence of 10 years. The|Canada. It was one of the heavi-|he rank present penalty is two years. Dr. Shulman said the govern- ment bill will not settle the LSQ problem. "This is the wrong approach," he added. "Instead of forbidding its use there should be a pro- gram of education with perhaps some form of controlled availab- ility of LSD." Dr. Shulman was fired as cor- oner recently by Attornéy-Gen- eral Wishart for defying On- tario's supervising coroner, Dr. H. B, Cotnam. Dr. Robert Bell, director of the Donwood Foundation Hospital for alcoholics and drug addicts, said he favors any approach that limits the unsupervised use of LSD. However, he. said he hopes that the law will go easy on youngsters caught experiment- ing with the drug and that every effort will be made to find out why the user is drawn to the drug. of the Canadian E Foundation, sponsors of the un- ion, said the meeting has the support of the Congress of Con- cerned Canadians, a group with branches in Toronto, Calgary, Regina and Montreal; the Alli- ance for Free Enterprise, of Toronto .and Vancouver; the Free Enterprise Foundation of Canada, Toronto; and various ratepayers and hous ew ives' groups. cs 38 miles north of Hanoi was hit by a force held ready for the break in the weather. F - 106 Thunderchiefs and F-4c Phan- toms streaked into the Hanoi- Haiphong-Thai Nguyen triangle which is guarded by an iron ring of anti-aircraft guns and the front seat of his car. surface-to-air missiles. BIG BLOW "OUT IN SWINGING LONDON ROYALTY STAYED UNTIL 2 A.M. Centennial Ball Smashing Success LONDON (CP)--It was one she said today in s umming up fully introduced by master of tasting English eat, the Al- of the biggest social blow-outs swinging London, had seen in many a year. Princess Mar- garet and Lord Snowdon, the royal guests, stayed until 2 a.m., congratulating the organ- izers on a smashing birthday party marking, Canada's cens tennial for hundreds of natives away from home. But for the convener of the centennial ball, Mrs. Harold Shenkman of Ottawa, London patron of the arts, the 12 months of hard work that went into the festivity folded into a feeling of numbness. "It was a magnificent event . but now I don't feel a thing,": the Mayfair show staged in one of Europe's biggest ballrooms. 'Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon were very pleased. 'fheir congratulations were very warm." 'ALENT SHINES External Affairs Minister Yaul Martin, representing Prime Minister Pearson, ex- pressed surprise and elation with the great array of talent 'ined up for the event. These ncluded singers Monique Ley- lac.and Shirley Harmer, Co- nedienne Libby Morris, opera ar Joseph Rouleau and folk ers Malka and Joso,' skil- ceremonies Max Ferguson. Perhaps there was too much talent, for the floor show seemed to_go on and on and the orchestra reared out its music with such gusto that some of the songs were drowned for the more than 1,000 guests--at $15 a head--who squeezed into the ballroom. More than 700 had to be turned away. ae Five Canadian cabinet minis- ters, here for -Anglo-Canadian talks, joined into the festivities which included a banquet of lobster, salmon and beef flown in from -Canada for the occa- sion. And for many expatriates who subsist on rather strong: ? berta beef was a rare delicacy. . Eight trumpeters from the Royal Canadian Ordnance Corps based in Soest, Germany, rolled out a number of fanfares as the special guests appeared at the head of a. staircase leading down into the ballroom, Cana- dian crests, bunting and provin- cial coats of arms lined the balcony rails. The artistic talent and food were contributed without charge to the festivity, proceeds of vyhich go to charity and_estab- hment of a scholarship for a Canadian student to study in Britain. PRINCESS MARGARET . id Dance All Night? Thailand Seeks U.S. Missiles . WASHINGTON (AP) -- Thai- land has bid for U.S.-made 'sur- face-to-air missiles amid warn- ings at the SEATO foreign min- isters meeting that Communist subversion is continuing in Southeast Asia Foreign inister Thanat Khoman of\Thailand told the Southeast Asia~Treaty Organ- ization Tuesday that since his nation has become involved in the Vietnam war, "'some of our people should be protected by missiles." Thanat and Jesus Vergas of the Philippines, SEATO secre- tary - general, advocated stronger co - operation among the treaty members. Effectiveness ior U.S. defence official ack- nowledges that North Viet- ing attacks, even though they American planes. : anti-aircraft guns. rs Of Bombing Cut)' WASHINGTON (AP)--A sen-|- nam's MiG jet fighters and anti-| = aircraft missiles have cut down| = the effectiveness of U.S. bomb-|2 have destroyed relatively few : Dr. John Foster, the Penta-| 3 _|gon's research chief, also says| 2 '|that surface - to - air missiles} = '\force .U.S. planes into evasive) - +/patterns that make them more|= vulnerable to concentrations of} = even very modestly est inflows since the Second|in the gther selection factors, World War. "Profided he h ood per- OPENS DOOR WID sonal i would be ad- Mr. Marchand aad tip new|missible virtually without skill system will open the, door of|° @ducation. : sponsorship a bit wider, and also provide a path for junskilled immigrants where they are Ky To Reward needed, 5 It modifies sharply the em- phasis now placed on skill and g Defectors education as requirements for entry. | SAIGON (AP)--A_hew. pro- In their place is substituted|gram of rewards to induce de- a nine-point formula by whicft|fections among higher ranking immigration officers will assess| Viet Cong was announced today the would-be newcomers. by Premier Nguyen Cao Ky. Five factors are aimed at as-| He said {defectors would be sessing the applicant's chance|"warmly welcomed as citizens" of 'successful establishment in| with full political rights, includ- Canada." ing those of voting and running They deal with his education, for office; Ne NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 4 se ¢@ Clergymen Charge 'Censorship ORILLIA (CP) -- The Orillia and District Ministerial Association announced today it would ask the Board of Broadcast Governors for a ruling on what it calls "censor- ship of religious broadcasting' by Orillia radio station CFOR. CFOR cut two church broadcasts off the air be- cause the ministers referred to a liquor plebiscite to be held Monday. : Indonesians Burn Chinese Stores JAKARTA (Reuters) -- Thousands of young Indone- sians set fire to Chinese houses and stores in the port town of Panarukan, east Java. Antara news agency said today. Tite latest in a series_of continuing demonstrations against the country's 3,000,000 Chinese left the streets lit- tered with charred furniture and household goods. . . . ® Key Installations Seized In Nigeria ENUGU, Nigeria (Reuters) -- Eastern Nigeria took over all key federal installations in the region under an edict issued Tuesday night, it was announced today. The edict carried the signature of the Eastern governor, Lt.- Col. Odumegwu Ojukwu, who has sought more regional autonomy from the federal supreme military council. PNDNLGMEANUUESSURUEPOONMEREOUASEDNAEOOOH EN OUEST ANON ER LT Th __ In THE TIMES Today .. Nancy Green To Attend Centennial Dinner--P, 8 County Seeks Voting Power Change--P. 5 GM Recalling 125 Laid-Off as Ann Landers--12 - Obituaries--28 . Ajax News--5 Sports--8, 9 Television--20 City News--11 Classified --24 to 27 Theatres--28 Weather--2 Comics--20 Editorial--4 Whitby News--5 Women's--12, 13, 14, 18 Financial--16 (NAIA }