Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 Oct 1967, p. 1

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t at centre *. §.00 DLE eat panels; quisette. In 12.00 lon under- .. 8.00 . 4.50 ANTY and. sheer leg edges. " 1.00 0 N& 725-7373 VOL. 26--NO. 229 Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. 10¢ Single Copy SS5¢ Per Week Home Delivered a The Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1967 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Deportment Ottawa ond for payment of Postage in Cash Weather Report ° Sunny with a few cloudy periods and not quite so warm, Low tonight 58. High tomor- row 78, EIGHTEEN PAGES PEACOCK, 7, who: attends the Crippled Children's Sehoo! and Treatment Centre, discuss- es benefits she receives from Community Chest funds with E. H. Walker, general manager, General Motors of Canada, during Greater Oshawa Com- munity Chest campaign kick-off dinner at Simcoe Hall Boys' Club last night. Community Chest president Edward Cline and chairman Terence Kelly listen in. During the campaign, can- vassers hope to raise $358,- 000 for agencies in the city, --Oshawa Times Photo Withdrawal Refused Of Abduction Charge PRESTON, Ont. (CP)--Ajordered by Premier John abduction against|Robarts into the Timbrell case. charge of Mrs. Arthur Timbrell, 43, laid after she refused to give up two foster children 'o the Waterioo County Children's Aid Society, today was remanded to Oct. 17. The remand was given after a lawyer for Mrs. Timbrell refused to accent a Crown motion to have the charge with- drawn. The lawyer said the hearing| should proceed so that the Crown could not lay the charge again after the judicial inquiry Magistrate J. R. H. Kirkpat- rick adjourned the case for| written arguments after a pro-| longed argument between Mrs.|to the Children's Aid Society.| Timbrell's lawyer, Thomas B./Mrs. Timbrell's bid to adopt the| O'Neill of Toronto, and Crown! Attorney Harold Daufman. | Mr. Daufman moved for with-| drawal of the charge in light of the judicial inquiry ordered by} Mr. Robarts. Judge Harry, Waisberg of York County court will hold the inquiry, but- no date has yet been set. Children's Aid Answers Its Critics With Statistics TORONTO (CP) -- Provincial Children's Aid Societies, with their backs to the wall in a recent controversy over adop- tion procedures and_ policies, are beginning to hit back -- with statistics. The societies have been sub- ject to a stream of criticism from civil liberties groups and the public following Waterloo County CAS's seizure of two foster children from the home of Mrs. Arthur Timbrell in Preston, Ont. It has since been disclosed that some Canadian children, particularly Negro orphan s, have been allowed for adoption out of the country. The societies were criticized for not doing their job. But according to a survey by the Ontario Association of Chil- dren's Air Societies conducted earlier this year, and dredged up by officials Monday, the problem really lies with those seeking a child to adopt. Icebreaker Aids Crippled Vessel © OTTAWA (CP)--The Cana- dian icebreaker John A. Mac- donald and the U.S. icebreaker Staten Island made contact with the trapped U.S. icebreak- er Northwind off the northern Alaska coast at 4:30 a.m. EDT today and are leading the crip- Of 5,000 children available for| adoption at the time of the sur-| vey, slightly more than 68 per cent were refused by applying couples. Age was the major objection: Half the children adopted in Ontario are a year old. Of sur- veyed cases, 1,228 c hildren were discarded because of age. But race is the really deter- mining factor in the eyes of prospective patents, says Ward Markle, director of the Roman Catholic Children's Aid Society. | He said all 50 children adopt-! ed out of Canada from the RCCAS were "handicapped babies" who wouldn't be adopt- ed in Canada by Roman Catho- lics or Protestants. The abduction charge was laid after Mrs. Timbrell, who had been foster mother to two girls since January, refused to return Peggy, 5, and Valerie, 3, children herself had been rejected by the society. She said at the time she would not give them up until she had written assurance they would not be separated in adoptive homes. COULD BE RELAID Mr. O'Neill said that if the charge was withdrawn, it could be relaid at a later date. But if it was heard and dismissed, the accused could not be recharged. he said. "She is entitled to her day in court." Mrs. Timbrell was accompa- nied to court by three female neighbors. No other members of her family were present. ile i ing Head of State Nguyen Van ere tree. oe Thieu president-elect and Pre- vote of confidence in Police mier Nguyen Cao Ky vice-presi- Chief Arthur Woods and four of dent-elect. Thieu's inauguration, his men for their conduct at the| bad council Monday night moved a Timbrell home. Chief Woods has said his life| Marshal Ky headed the mili- has been threatened a number of times, mostly in letters that Wiiintuie 8 NEN "Dig down deep," a 12-year- old girl urged 500 canvassers and organizers of the Greater Oshawa Community Chest. And the hundreds of canvass- ers started spreading the mes- sage today following the Chest's_ kick-off dinner last night at the Simcoe Hall Boys' Club, sponsored by General Motors of Canada Ltd. The young girl, Jan Hodges, winner of the senior division of the Red Feather public speak- ing contest, urged "everyone to "dig deep" in their pockets to help Chest agencies -- provide equal education for all children in Oshawa. Mayor Ernest Marks said at the dinner contributions by city employees have increased 486 per cent over last year. He said donations are estimated at about $8,200 compared with the 1966 total of $1,400. And, he add- ed that 150 more employees have yet to be contacted. Almost $19,000 has been re- ceived from employees of the city's board of education, the separate school board, the Pub- lic Utilities Commission and the Central Ontario Joint Planning Board. In a pre-campaign canvass, $4,000. was pledged by hourly- ready started. BROWNSVILLE, Tex. (AP) |-- Hurricane Fern's fresh fury [powered across the sea today |Texas and Mexico, still groggy |from the blows of Beulah. Unlike most such tropical storms which usually develop in the Atlantic, Fern sprang to life Monday in the Gulf of Mexico and churned toward the weath- er-weary Mexican port of Tam- pico. The new hurricane -- curled lightly to the northwest and early today appeared headed for a point about midway along the 260 miles of coastline between Tampico and Browns- ville. Only two weeks ago Hurri- A "dig deep" trend has al- more is expected, F ern Sweeps Toward Texas In Fresh Fury jcane Beulah jclose_ to Brownsville at the south tip of Texas. Beulah |toward coastal sections of|killed at least 55 persons,| including 12 in Texas, and inflicted losses topping $1,- 000,000,000. Mexico has been hard-hit by storms since the last weck in August. They have killed almost 100 persons and proba- |bly chased more than 200,600 from their homes because of |widespread flooding. Flooding compounded Beun-| 5: . Hah's destruction over 40,000, istens {square miles of South Texas {Not until Sunday did the Rio |Grande's massive crest reach the sea. smashed ashore | * rated workers at Houdaille and Monday BRITAIN'S Foreign Sec- retary George Brown, with | his hand over his mouth, bree sehen - Saanich) drew sup-|said the new interest rate is a| come into effect until next July | to speeches during Labor Party conference at Scarborough, England. Sec- jers. retary Brown got noisy hassle with newsmen night and plained that photographers [spending priorities and by mis-|ate - Commons committee. ug been plaguing him and |judging economic conditions. | is wife. ue ee 'DIG DEEP FOR CHEST'. CHILD URGES ~ The Woodview Neighborhood Association doubled its 1966 contribution to $1,000. Local 222 of the United Auto- mobile Workers Union has also doubled its donation, from $500 to $1,000. The Get-Together Club has increased its donation by $100 to $1,100. And Terence Kelly, campaizn chairman, says Oshawa's pro- fessional group has donated an average of $200 per person. "Donations to the chest are larger this year because can- vassers are making personal contact with workers," said Mr. Kelly. "Each working person must give 40 cents per week to | | | | | | | | | | | | | into a His motion, ea put the drive for $358,875 over the top. was raised after a re-canvass of some city residents, "Forty cents a week doesn't seem to be hurting the people who are giving it," he told din- ner guests. "A lot of people have given a lot of time and work to what we hope will be a successful campaign. We hope that in two weeks the peo- ple of Oshawa will know that we care," "We've got a good chairman and we're going to do what he asks," said E. H. Walker, pres- ident of GM of Canada. Mr. Kelly said it was a "shame" the chest's drive last "Some people take the atti- tude ,that because they are not connected with crippled chil- dren or retarded children or el+ derly people they are not affect+ ed by the drive," he said. "But not one person here can guar- antee that he will not need a pint of blood this year and the Red Cross blood donor clinic is an agency of the chest." Mr. Kelly said a tour of agen- cies Saturday "'indicated they are doing a tremendous job" "We didn't have 'thousands rushing down to the open house because the people of Oshawa Mr. Chatterton accused the|toon) recommended a thorough| year fell short of its goal by know the agencies are in good $30,000. He said the balance hands," he added. PM TO FACE CRUCIAL VOTE OTTAWA (CP)--The Liberal|less |government will have to muster|interest rates at two or three|board decision to sell wheat at all its forces tonight to stave off| per cent. a concerted opposition attack on its housing policy. lhave to compete on the market| A non-confidence motion jthe Commons Monday _by|investment. |George Chatterton (PC -- than $5,000,000,000 with| defended the Canadian wheat jcompetitive Money for housing should not} prices. He explained prices could fall injwith funds for commercial) below the minimum world price negotiated recently, but the Herb Gray (L---Essex West)|new wheat agreement does not international port from New Democrat, Cre-;maximum rather than a fixed|1. The government would subsi- jditiste and Social Credit speak-|rate. |dize farmers up to the new | Lewis Brand (P C--S ask a-|minimums. Labor Minister Nicholson told government of drifting into| revision of the National Hous-|the Commons amendments to com- jinflation by not establishing |ing Act by a special joint Sen-|the Industrial Relations and Disputes Investigation Act will At the start of Monday's sit-|be introduced before the end of technically an|ting, Trade Minister Winters! October, fixed today a ha | military action in Vietna' fails to bring peace talks. Symington, Symington Proposes Halt | To U.S. Action In Vietnam iners Hold WASHINGTON (AP)--Senator Ee to Vietnam, Laos, Thai- ropose djland, aay eres an Seaton Europe, expressed concern m on alabout Soviet encroachment into date, to be followed by/the western Mediterranean. He possibly unlimited war. if this|indicated this as one reason for/(Reyters) -- A switch of atti- suggesting a dramatic peaceltuge by Britain's Miners' Union could save Prime Minister Wil- |son's economic policy-from con-| HITS ALL WESTERN WORLD a Senate armed) move in Vietnam, the Middle East and Wilson's Fat SCARBOROUGH, --AP Wirephoto ri ras oct] Nationalist Chinese Visit To Canada Off, Says Taipei als have failed to assign priori- ties to essential programs, have not recognized the housing shortage as a major crisis and .|, TAIPEI (AP)--The National-,the celebration of Canada's ae Are der the, National Hous ist Chinese foreign office today|Centennial year and offi at The supply motion must come|2200unced cancellation of C. K./the Republic of China's Nation- to a vote tonight. Yen's projected visit to Canada/al Day ceremonies Oct, 10 at have contributed to the housing problem by setting the maxi- but carefully refrained from) Montreal's Expo 67. Only Monday, informed mum interest rate at 8% per England services committee member, and former air force secretary,) said any such halt should be| accompanied by a Saigon gov-| ernment announcement of its) willingness "to negotiate with) anybody and offer amnesty to) members of the Viet Cong." H Voicing opposition to the ces- sation of bombing alone, the |Missouri Democrai's proposal for a test halt in military action! was expected fo plunge the Sen-| ate into a second round of debate this week over Vietnam | policies after Monday's lengthy | discussions. | Symington, just back from a Victory Won | At llth-Hour | ESCALATION SEEN | "At the same time the United) States should also that, if after this cessation of all military aciion in South! Vietnam, as well as North Viet-| nam, the North Vietnamese and| ued hostilities, then the United) this. war in any manner of its own choosing." Symington did not rule out any form of warfare speech. | Symington said the United! States is "'overcommitted and) overextended" throughout the, world. He said tne Soviets are improving their military posi- tion in the Middle East. "The resources of any coun-| try, even those cf the United) States, are not inexhaustible," he said. 'Therefore these devel- demnation by his own party today. fierce attack at the annua) Labor party conference here. Until the coal miners decided Monday night to throw the |Viet Cong nevertheless contin-|yunion's 416,000 voies behind the| government, it seemed likeiy |States would feel free to pursue/the total 5,500,000 votes from all| unions would be equally. divid- ed. This would have Icft the. ver- in hisidict to local party delegates, | who in their present mood prob- ably would have condemned the government's economic policy, observers said. While Wilson faced the pros- pect of an attack by his own party, Foreign Secretary George Brown faced an old opponent--the press. jattributing this step to a reiter- Finance Minister Sharp, in a/ation of the "two-China" con-|sources here said that Yen | | spirited defence of government/cept by Canadian officials. announce) The policy nas been under/housing policy, said a major | would leave on his Canadian The cancellation wasjvisit Wednesday as scheduled |factor in the housing problem is} announced 18 hours before Yen, following assurances from the \a shortage of capital that is|vice-president and premier,|Canadian government that it jaffecting world. the whole western|was to have left Taipei for ajhas no intention of recognizing nine-day stay in Canada. |Communist China at present. He said the government will) Te foreign office attributed) Yen's visit encountered oppo- have to set priorities and he the cancellation to "practical|sition here after Canadian hoped the opposition would be| Necessities which require the|External Affairs Minister Mar- ready to swallow them when he Presence of the vice-president jtin's speech to the United served them. \year. Prime Minister Pearson said} in August the proposed budget deficit for 1968-69 had been cut during this period of time to|Nations Mr. Sharp said he will make|@ttend to the exigencies of the New York last Wednesday a major review of the national) ®xecutive Yuan (cabinet). economic situation in the budg-| et debate Wednesday. It said another official would|"two-China" jbe designated to represen t/question of Chinese representa- The finance minister is|President Chiang Kai-shek inition. expected to comment on cabi- net discussions last week about trimming departmental mates for the 1968-69 fiscal) "| NEWS HIGHLIG Just Change Of Personnel Says Martin SUMMERSIDE, P.E.I. (CP) -- External Affairs Min- General solution to Assembly in | which, in effect, he advocated a the a | HTS | | | | come from as far away as Van-| couver. LIFE THREATENED Wilson Hunsburger, against his life. jelection } director|assembly committee last week|for the militant of the county Children's Aid|upheld the challenge and urged | demonstrations Society, also received thréats|the full assembly to annul the ad - government met t 5 idemands. SAIGON (Reuters)--South opments in tlhe Middle East and |Vietnam's military leaders held|Europe should also be consid- "Mrs, Timbrell has rights,"|the reins of power today after/ered as we in turn consider an 1lth-hour confirmation by/future policies incident to Viet- the National Assembly of their nam." 'election victory. The assembly voted 58 to 43) | Buddhist Nun Fiery Suicide SAIGON (AP)--One young/political freedom last week. i e Buddhist nun burned herself to} The 64-year-old conservative|to investors, death today and militant Bud-|scholar-politician was | c ] ldhist sources threatened 110/from receiving telephone calls bn he gy a -- us | fiery suicides in theirjor visits six days after he|government lacks the will to . ruled pati pavarniibnt campaign. [became the first major political|deal with the housing crisis on Ford At Oakville To Lay Off 3,000 Premier Nguyen Cao Ky figure } to the Buddhists to regime. : ; As chief of the conservative|for homes are demanding Spokesmen|N ational Radical Union, he) action. Monday night to confirm the} Sept. tary South Vietnam for two years. Defeated civilian candidates appealed : challenged the results, charging stop demonstrating and return their pagodas. s replied that|headed a caretaker government | é ) would go on/jleading the country to elections|tive motion and i waa an army takeover April/expressed clearly her party's 21 results. as expected about Noy, 1. Lt.-Gen. Thieu and Air Vice-| 3 election, officially mak- junta which has irregularities. Anj|to ATHENS calling for Junta Arrests Key Politician Greece's army-backed govern-|Shortage of capital in the next ment today placed former pre-|few years and we shall have to mier Panayotis Kanellopovlos|import it in large amounts," under house arrest | ) defied the regime by publicly) If housing were to compete the restoration of|for capital, it would have to} to openly attack $750,000,000 from_ $1,- 250,000,000 by drastic paring of jSeerrneate spending plans, |MUST IMPORT (Reuters) --! "Canada will probably have a ister Martin said today cancellation of a proposed Cana- dian visit by the vice-president of Nationalist China ap- peared to be simply a change in personnel, The Canadian government would welcome the official delegate of Fore mosa to Canada whoever he may be, Mr, Martin said. Yorkdale Robbers Evade Roadblocks ' TORONTO (CP) -- Police believe two men who robbed an Eaton's cash office of more than $70,000 Monday have probably escaped roadblocks and are no longer in the im- mediate Toronto area, No trace of the car in which the men fled the Yorkdale shopping plaza in north-end Toronto has been found; after he| Mr. Sharp said. | Offer attractive rates of interest banned| Grace MacInnis-(NDP -- the a priority basis, although iad lsands of Canadians desperate OAKVILLE, Ont. (CP) -- Ford Motor Co. of Canada Lid. said today 3,000 hourly rated employees will be laid off Wednesday because of parts shortages caused by the strike against the parent company in the United States, The layoffs are in the car assembly plant. She welcomed the Conserva- said it MR rani views, Mr. Chatterton said new TOPLESS TURMOIL IN MIAMI Judge Twiddles While Go-Go Dancer Churns MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--The judge twiddied his thumbs. The three topless gogo danc- ers did their stuff. It was all in the cause of justice. Judge Carling H. Stedman recessed court Monday and went to a Miami night club to watch three bare-breasted dancers perform after he said two policemen 'were unable to demonstrate or describe adequately what they saw." "Princess" Victoria Vanilla Williams appeared before oa ship through the ice to ty, Judge Stedman in criminag court on a ge Of disor; derly conduct. She was arrested in January at the Tomboy Club. Police said she was dancing topless. Defence lawyer Max Kogen opened his case with an invi- tation to Judge Siedman to see the dance in a night club with music. But Herbert Lane, 50-year- old co-owner of the Tomboy, wasn't so sure it was a good idea when Judge Stedman arrived. ARRIVED WITH WIFE "My God! He brought his WIFE ATTENDS SPECIAL SHOW housing starts in 1966 and this year were about 80,000 behind the minimum established by ..In THE TIMES Today .. Candidates File Papers -- P, 9 "Right the Economic Council of Can- ada as a national requirement. | 2 With four vacancies in the ' Commons, three of them in the & Conservative ranks, the Liber- als hold a one-seat majority. United Appeal Night -- P. 5 St. Louis Favored -- P. 6 Ann Landers--10 folks, we're Ajox News--5 ife,"' 8 ag y- itself into a hammering rendi- now, A : 2 pow a. bad oe Hon of Shake, Rattle and gonna let the girls show you |Standings are: Liberals 131, City News---3, 9 ar wtig Stidinan marched Roll. what they "got," tne announc- |Conservatives 93, New Demo-; Classified---12, 13, 14 Ee veces ace : ; ee ae er bawled as the three girls |¢rats 22, Creditists 8, Social Comics17 into the dimly lt club on her Judge Stedman watched as moved back under the spot- |Credit 4, Independent 3. husband's arm. Francine gyrated, The judge u : be hcl Charl a - Arthur Gauthier Editorial--4 De Ga cb, fed ee ee one number like that |(Creditiste + Roberval) claimed | = Financial--16 - el: three 'V i hi / nber at, bere 8 ace ? = be Poll gow ~ anit a ibe at pr phon, Stedman and his wife headed |senior citizens have had to wait Obituaries --14 2 'a Me "for the door. jup to two years to get housing Sports--6, 7 : ped pics og ses aan Then came Lisa. "] haven's made up my {and branded the National Hous- Television --17 2 Trane The star of the show was mind yet," Stedman replied jing Act as "inefficient." , a ' Th | eee name teat next. She is billed as "Bambi when asked for his views on Robert Thompson (SC--Red | > Pm sure she sin excellent, Won Hs : dancer, She is 24, a native of the Body." the dancing. Deer) called the s/-per-cent) shape sir, but by 'trade-in wn yteene : New York and says her dance "It's different, that's all I'd : "Frid ay the 13th at 9 interest rate terrible, eral we refer to acar!'"" lie News-- 5 2 is "a living, like anything have to say," Stedman com- o'clock we'll aave a hearing. |tous aspect 0 he present ca Women's--10, 11 : else." rg mented while the girls took a That's when I'll make a deci- jing policy'? and called for a a The rock 'a' roll band flung breather, sion," 7 olving housing fund of not ay é' x ¥

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