Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. Weather Report Wednesday mostly cloudy with a few showers. Low to- night 42, high tomorrow 55. he Oshawa ines Title Mae: 1A t3e pa Sl Hone Bavered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1967 Miho oe ate Seema al Roope Can PAM GIVES GOLF TIPS TO SPORTS Defending Ontario senior women's golf champion Pamela Miller of Oshawa, right, took time out this tonight's Oshawa Centenni- al Sports ner. Taking advantage of the free tips just prior to Celebrities Din- ie CELEBRITIES DINNER GUESTS Terence V. Kelly, president of the Ontario Soccer As- sociation and chairman of the dinner committee; and ner in Civic Auditorium to- night. Shack was still on the course when word came through that he had been traded by Toronto Maple PEARSON SAYS ter Gordon. Vietnam. demonstrated the government regards -- principle of cabinet solidarity. | He declined in the Commons ® pave the way for a special tnam debate demanded by osition Leader Diefenbaker, io for the second day ques- fioned the government about "division and discord" over Mr. Diefenbaker said that Mr. Gordon's criticism of United States involvement in Vietnam "the. absurdity and ramshackle way' in --o e He asked Mr. Pearson to take the initiative in setting aside a day or two to debate the views of Mr. Gordon which, he sug- Calgary Girl, 13 Greatly Improved Lynn Stanway's father Viet Policy | ing nations have jof trading with the successful i Ke. Cl | e jconclusion or the Kennedy round, cutting tariffs an esti- OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- gested, also are shared by Reg- ter Pearson maintained todaylistrar-General John Turner. the government's Vietnam pol- iey is unchanged, despite cont- rary views expressed publicly by Privy Council President Wal- Mr. Gordon said last Satur-| day in a public address that the} Americans are engaged in a| bloody civil war in Vietnam which is without moral or stra- tegie justification. SAYS VIEWS DIFFER Mr. Diefenbaker said these views run counter to those of the prime minister and External Affairs Minister Martin. They have said that Canada should avoid taking sides in the Viet- nam. conflict while striving to- ward a peaceful solution. Mr. Pearson, just out of a cabinet meeting at which the Gordon speech was reported to have been discussed, said the current throne speech debate in the Commons provides an op- portunity to make statements on Vietnam. The government hoped when the debate ends Friday to begin discussion of departmental spending programs and there would be "ample opportunity" on the external affairs depart- "T don't think any special pro- jto the United States, its biggest GENEVA (CP) Major trad- turned an historic corner in their centuries mated 33 to 35 per cent on world trade now worth $40,000,- 000,000 a year. The successful conclusion of the biggest and most exhaustive battle to lower tariff walls af- fects some $5,000,000,000 worth of Canadian trade. But the main benefit for Canada will be better terms on $1 of every $4 in sales customer, Massive bargains that may be translated in time into more jobs and higher earnings for millions of workers may also shift the world from heavy con- centration on islands of trade into the broader sphere of freer trade among continents. Weary from a four-year strug- gle to fulfil the dreams of the late president Kennedy, negotia- tors slapped backs and hugged each other as the announcement of success came a few minutes before midnight Monday night. The accord came after four intensive day-and-night sessions during which the negotiations appeared doomed at one point. The reductions finally .am- : _|mered out fell short of the 50)worth of Canadian trade, par- NEW YORK (CP) -- Chelley ~sateaumaakee for further de-| or cent over-all cut that had sa Py jbeen sought, but they far sur- |vidual of goods, details of which are to be announced next month. The agreement affects more than 80 nations. Fifiy-four na- tions took part in the Kennedy round. | Canadians had achieved not) only great benefits from indi- bargaining but higher prices under a new three-year wheat agreement, linked with a new international program to set aside 500,000,000 bushels of wheat to feed the world's hun- Ty. The cost of the program is to be borne by a number of coun- tries, with Canada's share 11 per cent. Canadian Agriculture Min- ister Greene, in Geneva, and federal Trade Minister Winters, in Ottawa, issued statements drawing great comfort from the negotiations. Greene said the Kennedy round put Canada in the big \league. It would gain markets but also give markets. "For Canada it will mean that we are an even more integral part than ever before of a world community," he said, Another official estimated that while the tariff cuts, affecting some 6,000 individual products, will touch on some $40,000,000,- 000 worth of free world trade a year, it will have specific impact on some $5,000,000,000 ticularly on exports. HISTORIC GENEVA DEAL CUTS CANADA PRICES - |Better Terms Predicted In Sales To United States stood there will be gains for Canadian paper and metals manufacturers, along with hun- dreds of other suppliers. British - born Eric Wyndham |White, conference chairman, said: "The results we have achieved are a fitting memory to the great president who was lost to the world too soon."' He is di- rector - general of GATT, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. Many non-tariff import bar- riers are to be modified or eliminated. A new anti-dumping code is to go into force which would scale down the amount of protection given national in- dustry. To make sure there is no sud- den jarring impact on home industries, cuts and modifica- tions are to be enforced in stages spread over a period of some four years beginning next January. Outcome of the Kennedy round was not shared with equal elation by producers of tropical products. Wyndham White said that because of preferences-- apparently referring to Common Market preferences with former African colonies -- the Latin American countries didn't ob- tain tariff concessions on many of their exports. Developed and \developing countries will have to find ways of removing these preferences if they are to There would be bigger|dchieye the objective of duty. Monday night 'there has been [passed any achieved before.in] market; De tenbash s oy ' mprovement"? in" t 1 : tariff negotiations. oe well no 7 ter " ory free ehtry, "ne 'added. or Murray Oliver and cash. physical condition and: mental has been no change in govern- 2 S wi in Europe and in| Jean Rey, the Belgian chief (Oshawa Times Photo)/attitude of the 13-year-old Cal-|ment policy," Mr. Pearon said.| However, there will be cuts/Britain, While Canadians de-inegotiator for the European gary girl who is being treated Mr. Diefenbaker demanded to|f 50 per cent in many majorjclined to disclose individual}Common Maret, said his group at the Golf Club 'to pass along a' few hints to fellow guests at to the first tee are, left to right, Eddie Shack of the Boston Bruins, Steve Douglas of the On- tario Jockey Club. Allare head table guests at the din- Leafs to the B We|cedure. is necessary since there know whether Mr. Pearson ap-|Products and whole categories'products negotiated, it is under-/was "extremely satisfied." He Oar i cerk one ition with|Proved of Mr. Gordon's Viet-| said the U.S. "finally gave way " nam views. on chemicals'? while the Com- her Grearees." Bee. Sraway mon Market made "consider- Bitter Fights Flare In South Viet Areas SAIGON (AP) -- Hard fight- ing at both ends of South Viet-| nam was reported today, with! 113 guerrillas killed in two bat-|6 "CHOPPERS DOWNED Communist gunners in the Mekong Delta and 52 Com-| northern province of Quang munists and 16 Americans killed| Ngai also brought down six U.S. in three clashes in the northern|helicopter gunships supporting sector. | troops of the U.S. 101st Airborne |Division. One of the choppers was destroyed. | The paratroops, part of an and the Communists lobbed 60|army force that has moved in to mortar rounds into the U.S. mil-|help the thinly spread marines, itary advisory compound before|Suffered seven killed and 34 wounded in a series of actions tles with American infantry in| Communist rocket and mortar! attacks continued around the} clock in the northern provinces, dawn in downtown Hue. | The U.S. command reported) 99 air missions over North Viet-| trucks, roads and river barges. | that 85 South Vietnamese civil-| ians were killed in Viet Cong) nearly double the number the) week before -- while 97 were| wounded and 78 kidnapped. division, sweeping Mekong Delta| paddy lands long controlled by the Viet Cong, flushed guerrilla forces frequently Monday in an gon. killed. U.S. casualties were not re- ported. Monday. Six Americans were wounded nam Monday, mostly against/and one South Vietnamese was killed in the mortar attack be- U.S. officials also announced fore dawn at Hue, 60 miles be- low the demilitarized zone and terrorist attacks last week--|the old imperial capital of Viet- nam, In the marine battleground jjust below the zone, seven ma- Troops of the U.S. 9th Infantry|tines were killed and 77 wounded while engaging an es- timated 150 North Vietnamese in a 12-mile fight one mile from Con Thien; area about 40 miles below Sai-| ported killing 10 North Vietnam- ese, Aided by air strikes, the US.| The marines have had 29 infantry reported 113 guerrillas | killed and 190 wounded in three |been quickly put back intoj|had not yet produced a report 'days of fighting near Con Thien. | operation." the Hanoi The marines re- The three other marine outposts, form a square--Gio Linh, Dong} Ha and Camp Carroll. MORE CASUALTIES Marines in Operation Union, 22 miles south of Da Nang, re- ported killing 22 Communists Monday, with six marines killed and 32 wounded. | A spokesman said 10 more| marines were wounded in a U.S. jet air strike during the opera- tions, but details were not im- mediately available. In the hills above Duc Pho, 75 miles south of Da Nang, U.S. Army forces conducting Opera- tion Malheur killed 20 Commu- nist troops and lost three dead and 34 wounded. radio admitted North Vietnam's agriculture has "met with numerous. difficul- ties" because of U.S. raids but added that "'agricultural produc-|ducts is tion developed greatly." Turning to industrial produc- tion, Hanoi radio reported that|Substantial because of the bombing, "most| timber. of our industrial enterprises} At have been divided into many parts and moved to various lo- calities." But it also said "al- most all bombed factories have TORONTO (CP) day that amount of cash. To Boston -- Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League announced to- left winger Eddie Shack has been traded to Bos- ton Bruins for centre Murray Oliver and an undisclosed said in an interview. her legs." cer and Allied Disease. | cles, that sage" conference stands present, forestry study begun for the legislature. MacDonald Dans Forestry Policy TORONTO (CP) -- NDP Leader Donald MacDonald told the legislature Monday a re- volution is needed in govern- ment forest management, re- generation and planning poli- He said the "dominant mes- of a national forestry in 1966 was that world demand for forest pro- increasing and that Canada and the Soviet Union are the only countries left with of virgin he said, about one-third of the allowable cut from Ontario forests is be- ing used, but a government in 1964 only | accident last January. Gen. de Gaulle come. opinion. manufactured items. "She's now eating three meals a day. She's very bright and very: optimistic and she's get- ting very restless and wants to prove she can sit up and bend Chelley was flown here May 7 for treatment by Dr. R. D. Molander of the Pack Medical Group. She is being treated at the Memorial Hospital for Can- The bone cancer was detected after she broke her leg in a toboggan Won't Buck U.K. PARIS (AP) -- President de Gaulle said today he would not veto British entry into the Eu- ropean Common Market, but he then listed a long series of ob- stacles which he said would be difficult for Britain to over- Speaking at a press confer- ence, de Gaulle said "It now seems possible to receive Great Britain," but he then went on to propose so many difficulties that he seemed to refute this He said the agricultural ques- tion would be especially thorny. He declared the result of British entry would be higher food prices and salaries in Britain as well as more expensive British pression of views with govern- ment policy. There was no change in the policy laid down by Mr. Martin and himself. New Democrat Leader Doug- las, who has already said pub- licly he shares Mr. Gordon's opinion on Vietnam, suggested that the government has shifted its stand on the need for cabinet solidarity. Mr. Pearson replied that the principles of cabinet solidarity are well understood. OTTAWA (CP)--Finance Min- ister Sharp said today he will ask for parliamentary approval of Canada's new import duties, as a result of the Kennedy round of tariff - cutting nego- tiations in Geneva, about the end of June. Mr. Sharp said in the Com- In his speech Saturday, Mr. Gordon said Canada should de- mand commitments from the| U.S. not to use atomic, bacter- ial or chemical weapons in the war, | THIRD CONSECUTIVE TERM BY LANDSLIDE VOTE Taylor Re-elected "222" President ogy "ABE" TAYLOR eee Triple winner Albert Taylor, the sometimes controversial and perennial hard - digging Oshawa - labor leader, is behind his office tele- phone today with a third straight biennial election win to back him up. Thirty-nine-year-old Mr. Tay- lor. has been overwhelmingly returned to-his capacity as president for another two-year term of Local 222, United Auto Workers Union. The 17,000 to 18,000-member local: ran its biennial election from Wednesday to Friday last week and gave Taylor a land- slide win as he picked up 6,257 of 8,899 votes cast for presi- dent. Mr, Taylor, running as leader of the Democratic Right Wing Party, becomes the first man ever to win a third consecutive term as president since the union local switched from an- nual elections to votes every two years in 1957, The only h ' other man to win three presi- dency terms in a row was Rus- sell McNeil, during annual elec- tions of 1954, 55 and 56. He re- tired as president in 1957 and became _ full-time --secretary- treasurer up until the end of Jast month when he retired for good. The Unity Right Wing Demo- cratic Party ran a long-time local worker, Gordon Hender- son, against Mr. Taylor. But Henderson mustered only 2,642 votes, according to tabulations completed by the local's elec- tion force late yesterday. Mr. Taylor first gained the leadership post in 1963 with a 295-vote majority over Mal- colm Smith. Smith, now an in- ternational representative of the union in Woodstock, Ont., was president of the local in an off-and-on pattern since 1941, when first.elected. He was re- elected in 1952, again in 1953, 1959 and 1961, but he never "io served more than two consecu- tive terms at a time. "It feels good to be re-elected and feel the membership is be- hind you with a mandate that gives me encouragement to forge ahead and get the work- ers what they justly demand and deserve," Mr. Taylor told The Times today. He says before the year is out he willbe up to his ears in five sets of contract ' nego- tiations for the local. A record 9,046 votes were cast by the membership in the election, as compared to the previous high of 8,400 set in the 1965 vote, when Taylor polled 6,418, ballots -- or 161 more than last week. In the only other election re- sult available today, Demo- cratic candidate Steven Nimi- gon has defeated Nelson Wilson (Unity) by 4,736 to 2,997 votes for the position of chairman of the GM shop committee. "PAT" MASON, Election committee chairman, cen- tre, and Secretary Ray "Joe" Collins, right, are assisted by pretty Frances mons in answer to opposition questions that the new customs duties will be submitted in a resolution. But this could not be done until final negotiations are cleaned up with all countries _|mons Monday night that better : |the new bargain on world tar- mir, aren eed mt :/ Shar To Ask Approval Of New Import Duties participating in the Geneva con- ference. He told Opposition Leader Diefenbaker it is not possible to give a general figure on the amount of duty - cutting that will apply to manufactured goods imported from the United States. Canada did not negotiate at Geneva on the basis of an| across-the-board cut. The Kennedy round, con- cluded in Geneva Monday, pro- vided for tariff cuts generally in the 33- to 35-per-cent range, covering some 6,000 items in world trade, Officials said that for Canada, it means reduced tariffs for about one - quarter of U.S.-Canadian trade. Mr. Winters told the Com- terms on $1 of every $4 in sales to the U.S. will be Canada's most important reward from iffs. able" concessions on cereals. The United States exports $27,- 000,000,000 worth of goods a year and imports $19,000,000,000 worth. Most of the benefits of the lowered tariffs will go to bus- inessmen, especially those in the import and export fields, but some of the savings will be passed on to the consumers. Buddhist Nun Takes Own Life SAIGON (Reuters)-- A Bud- dhist nun burned herself to death here Monday apparently in a demonstration for peace in Vietnam. Phan Thi Mai, a 33-year-old Buddhist teacher, burned her- self in front of an altar on a balcony of the Tu Nghiem Pa- goda, about two miles from the centre of Saigon. The nun left three letters-- one to her parents, one to the patriarch of South Vietnam's Unified Buddhist Church and the third to the chiefs of state of South and North Vietnam. Simpson, left, as they count ballots today in the largest election held in the history of Local 222, UAW-CLC. --Oshawa Times Photo NEWS HIGHLIGHTS DeGaulle Raps "Viet Intervention" PARIS (AP) -- President reference to the Vietnam war. the scandal of foreign intervention in Asia." de Gaulle, in an obvious , called today for an end "'to The French president, in reply to a press conference question about French policy toward the war, told hundreds of correspon- dents in the Elysee Palace that France would continue to oppose foreign -- meaning A Vietnam. merican -- involvement in 350 Hydro-Quebec Employees Quit MONTREAL (CP) -- About 350 Hydro-Quebec employees in the Hauterive, Baie Comeau and Sept-Illes districts of northeastern Quebec today la unched their second walkout since a rotating «r staggered-area strike began May 8. The walkout began at 8 a.m., four hours before 800 Hydro- Quebec employees in the Richelieu region, which includes part of the Eastern Townships, were scheduled to walk off their jobs, also for the second time. Both strikes were to last 24 hours. Smt Four Fires In Last T Whitby Man Rescues Two Fishermen -- P. 5 Oshawe Gaels Overpow: Ann Landers--10 Ajax News--5 City News--9 Classitied--14, 15, 16, 17 Comics--19 Editorial---4 Financial--13 a vege mutton ert .. In THE TIMES Today .. Ma hree Days -- P. 9 er St. Kitts -- P. 6 Pickering News--5 Sports--6, 7, 8 Television--19 Theatres--18 Weather--2 Whitby News--5 Women's--10, 11