Weather Report Windy And Very Cold Today And Sun- day. Scattered Snowflurries. High--25. Low--20 The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshavva, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickerin-- and neighboring centres; She Oshawa Cures Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. ° Price Not Over TWENTY PAGES ' 10 Cents per Copy VOL. 93----NO. 74 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1964 Paratroops Poised To Liberate Whites Hostages May Have Been Moved From City LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (AP) -- The Congolese Army moved closer to Stanleyville to- day while a Belgium paratroop unit was poised off Africa's west coast ready to liberate 1,000 whites held hostage in the rebel 'capital. (Reuters, news agency re- ported today that the rebel 3,500 PROTEST CONTRACT DEADLOCK Union Negotiators Meet After Wildcat The master negotiating com-|Production was unable to con-|offers, claiming they would still mittee of the UAW meets today|tinue without them and the|/leave Canadian workers earn- ? : : other employees were sent/ing $1 an hour less than their in closed' session following a home, he said. |U.S. counterparts. wildcat strike Friday night at | WHAT AN APPLE! the General Motors South Plant. Production was halted as more than 3,500 workers staged| the strike in protest against aj deadlock in contract negotia- tions. The committee distributed a leaflet in the plant earlier oie " | Mr. Lambert said negotiations gona tt -- was an-|Will resume Monday after both nounced Friday by Gordon|Patties consider their positions Lambert, chairman of the|during the weekend. A company UAW's master committee nego-/SPOkesman said negotiations tiating a three-year contract|Which have been proceeding lat- that will affect 22,500 GM work-|°tally at a local level at the ers in Oshawa, Windsor, Tor- five GM plants will also be cen- Stanleyville radio has. an- nounced that all whites in Stan- leyville have been moved out of the city. Their destination was not announced. (Reuters also reported that Stanleyville radio today broad- cast a message allegedly from which said that: 'Walkouis 1 ' : would only cause trouble in the| Onto, London and St. Cathar- plant. and to the negotiating ines, committee.' He said that unless an agree- Night shift. workers at car-| ment has been reached by the producing plant left their jobs|Dec. 3 deadline, a strike will be about 8 p.m. despite pleas by|called at 11 a.m. union officials that they stay on| He made the announcement the job and hold off until Dec.|after a conciliation 'board tab- 3, the official strike date set by|led a report saying it had been the union. junable to effect an agreement President Albert Taylor of Lo-| between the union and GM, who cal 222 UAW said later he talk-|have been negotiating since ed the matter over with the!Sept, 9. ; | strikers and they decided to go| A major union demand has back to work Monday. lbeen wage parit y with GM F The plant normally closes|workers in the United States dy ~ say celibate. .., |during.the weekend.: There is|and a union bulletin to work- The final chapter deals with! y9 night shift on the truck-pro-|ers Friday said: "This is the the place of the Virgin Mary in ducing north plant. lyear when we want equal pay the church. It says the Catholic) "Union officials said about 80|for equal work and nothing shall Church has always venerated! yoy cent of the 4,500 night shift/distract us from this important Mary "'as its' most: beloved loyees were involved in the| goal." : mother." : ent, but.a company spokes-| GM has offered increases of Other chapters define the role}inon said the strike was staged|2.5 and 2.8 per cent in. the sec- of the Jaity in the ehurch the}... : p". of chassis/ond and third: years. af the con- generai/membership of ie aad 'final #8 Ssembly workers.'tract, bat the union rejected the chemi enmnnanis ae place ' : : ie -- Plug Holes In Iron Curtain Chinese Message To Soviet in the church of religious orders By WILLIAM L. RYAN of priests and nuns, and the un- ion between the church on earth AP Special Correspondent China has. delivered its ulti- and the church in heaven matum to the Soviet Union: (saints). De Oecumenismo (On Unity): plug up the holes in the Iron Curtain or the Communist The first counciliar decree dealing entirely with. Christian movement will be irrevocably divided into two camps. unity and the Roman Catholic No other. construction can be tralized here Monday. SUSPENDERS A SEXY SIGN LONDON (Reuters)--If you wear. braces: -- suspenders if you're a Canadian or Ameri- can--you are very likely a sexy type. And if you go for soft-silk dressing-gowns, then it's ob- vious that you are bent on conquest, The authority for these as- sumptions is Hardy Amies, one of the Queen's couturiers, who lifts the lid on the libido lurking behind some of the apparel men wear in.a paper- back book published here Fri- day. It's called An A.B.C. of Men's Fashion, and in it |Amies takes time off from | the world of women's fash- ions to guide- men through the etiquette of dressing. FROWNS ON BRACES He frowns gently on braces, the Belgian. and U.S. consuls saying their nationals in the city would 'remain alive' if America and Belgium immedi- ; ately end military aid to the * Congolese government.) Premier Moise Tshombe's government, meanwhile, rapped the United States. and Belgium for attempting to negotiate with the rebels without its consent. It also warned Belgium: that a unilateral decision. to send troops into the troubled country would be aggression but ex- pressed willingness to. study' a proposal for such an action, Association. With crop of 20,- bia produces about one-third 000,000 boxes, British Colum-.. of Canada's total. VATICAN COUNCIL Judy Way gets into the swim It's National Apple Week 1 of things for B.C, Tree Fruits next week and Vancouver's Ford Rushes Bid To Resume -- Passenger Car Production Bishops Equal today to get back into passen-|troit, which employs 6,300 men| To The Pope ger car production next week | was blamed largely by Ford for) VATICAN CITY (AP)--High- after overnight settlement of its| extensive layoffs and plant shut-/ lights of the three Vatican ecu- Sterling Township (Mich.) parts}downs since Nov. 6. The plant,|menical council decrees pro- plant 'strike, |which makes a wide variety of|claimed today by the Roman Ford, with all its assembly|©@r parts, is described as a/Catholic assembly: fines at a dead h_lt and more|Chief supplier in Ford's U.S.-| De Ecclesia (On the Church): than 80,000 men idle, said it wide system. The major theological decree to resume production; United Auto Workers Localjof the council, it proclaims that Tuesday or Wednesday in some|228 of the Sterling Township) bishops collectively share au- ROBERT THOMPSON OTTAWA (CP) -- Social Cre- dit Leader Thompson reported to the Commons Friday the ap- parent failure of his hostage- freeing mission to Africa on be- half. of the government, "IT would be most happy if I could report... . that we were} Belgium announced Friday able to gain the consent of the|that a battalion of about ,500 rebel authorities to meet thejfough combat men were .at Red-Cross and grant the evacu- f ation -of.. these hostages,"' he said. "They, do intend to do so." DETROIT (AP) -- The Ford| The local strike at the Ster- Motor Company rushed plans|ling Township plant near De- younger men must be single and , will, haid a. ra thority with the Pope, but reaf- kesman Fr-|™ : on the fizms his primacy and the rap ehis, | ment*t oi i thai ai Roman Catholic view that he is xpected| The factory was one°of nine) ifallible when handling matters i f doctrine. The decree says Sundayjin the pa system that were Beaty A sith salioke "the zit would pass,) I Z $ to sup infallibility," but in union the company|the national Ford-UAW agree-|With the Pope proclaim him in- ment of Sept. 18. | fatlible. : Two others, assembly plants} Other major portions of the in. Wayne, Mich., remain on|decree provide for the creation Negotiations. on these|\of a group of permanent |deacons to help priests and per- |mits mature, married men to enter the diaconate. But nadians among tionals pt cp lese ents: aro Ate -headqua ville, ters in New York, UN Secre- Mr. 'Thompson, who worked/tary-Géneral U Thant for: Emperor 'Haile Selassie of 1 UN: 5 Ethiopia for 15 years prior to/#ction 'to: head off a crisis?.He 1958, said he would: not hesitate |did not, however, recommend a to attempt ssuch:a: mission] Specific: session, again. "By offering our good) 'He feels very strongly," a services and taking the initia-}spokesman said, "that eny situ- tive in an effort to free thesejation endangering' international hostages we were doing sume-)peace and security should be thing which perhaps no one else|brought to the Security Coun could have done." cil" NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Detroit Pressmen Vote To End Strike DETROIT (AP)--Striking pressmen voted overwhelmingly today to end their 131-day-old walkout against Detroit's two major daily newspapers. U.S. Bombs Congo, Russia Says MOSCOW (AP)--The Soviet Union today accused the United States of using bombers and other weapons "'directly in com- bat operations" against the Congolese rebels fighting Premier Moise Tshombe's government. 'The extensive imperialist. armed.-intervention in The Congo has created a direct threat to the sdvereignty and independence of that country," it said. # ' week however, before could be geared up to approach fathers offered prayer. |before he took his seat among|United States, United Kingdom The 58-year-old prelate was|the council fathers, and Belgium in appealing to In- born in Quebec and was or-| His death brought to 10 the|dia to Use its good offices to dained a priest June 17, 1928. |number of prelates who have|en§ure*the safety of the prison-| Archbishop Pericle Felici,|died during council sessions. ers. | though admitting they are its 10,000-cars-per-day potential. "more of a help to the good Ford officials indicated Nov, 30 | fitting of trousers than is a eg be the earliest date for a = thorough - going purge in the| belt. = i are approach to other Christians, it U,S.S.R. to weed out all those | consists of three chapters. Communists who supported Ni-| s - The first chapter outlines the kita Khrushchev's policies and Die en. a er ebec Prelate » |principles of the Christian unity, to return to' Stalinism. This} u A 1B I d lor ecumenical, movement with would be bad news for the Com-| T L d PC' ppea y ni NG cophants on patience and open- munist-ruled countries of East-| 0 Ga \ S$ ° ) mindedness in the dialogue ern Europe and equally bad} a Ask d I C NGO) aimed at bringing ali- Christians news for West European Reds| VANCOUVER (CP) -- John 1es n re | 1can | e n 0 g lcloser together, It exhorts all|placed upon a 3,000-word state- for whom Stalinism had proved/Diefenbaker, not E. Davie Ful- | OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- Catholics to work for Christian|ment from the theoretical jour-)a heavy Jiability. . |ton or Robert L. Stanfield, will VATICAN. CITY (AP)--Arch-)secretary general of the council, |ister Pearson. said today he|unity and accepts that the/nal, Red Flag, broadcast by Pe-| The Chinese statement was a|lead the Conservative party 'in bishop Paul Bernier, Bishop of|said in Latin that the Canadian| hopes concerted appeals for the] Roman Catholic church was not/king today. As matters stand] recitation of Peking's terms forjan expected federal or in Gaspe, was stricken during the|prelate was "stricken with a|safety of prisoners held by Con-|piameless in the discords that|now, it means the | Soviet-Chi-| playing ball with Moscow within] aia ride rey eee final assembly of the current|sudden illness." Its nature was|golese rebels .in Stanleyville|have split the Christian world. nese dispute not only will con-ja unified world . Communist) Said Friday. ; ecumenical council session to-|not known. will be. fruitiul. tinue, but probably will grow/movement 'but the terms are) Mr. Fulton, leader of the Brit- day and died. It was learned later , that} He confirmed in the Com- more intense. : just about as tough as they can|ish Columbia party, said he is Archbishop Bernier's death| Archbishop Bernier, a diabetic,|mons, in reply to a question by Peking in breaking a sullen}he. Indeed if the Chinese con-|not interested in taking over the was announced to the assembly|suffered a heart attack at the | Opposition Leader Diefenbaker, a 0 as S ee ee Pg iy -- a aa pom oe me a ag returning to the and' Pope Paul and the council|beginning of the session even|that Canada has joined the probably has thrown a scare|Brezhnev and Premier Alexei]. Dalton Camp of Toronto, na- T t into the Communists of both|Kosygin in the U.S.S.R. could|tional Conservative association e va es Eastern and Western Europe. |not last long. jpresident, said he would like to | Almost openly Red Flag was| Peking heavily assailed virtu-|see. both Mr. Fulton and Mr. asking for a continuing andjally all the domestic Commu-|Stanfield, Nova Scotia premier, TOKYO (AP) -- In his first major policy speech Prime |Minister Eisaku Sato today nist party and foreign policies|in the federal field because they developed' in the Khrushchev | would be great assets to: the Relations With Unknown US. Factor By ARCH MacKENZIE jin' the face at a time when Canadian Press Staff Writer | Johnson has a landslide endors- Future United States relations |ation to strengthen his hand, y Zi 5 remé lar ~ * * an unknown factor in President| UN, MEMBERSHIP Johnson's foreign policy The question is raised as be- ssh ° af fore: How much longer can the Pressures continue to mountiU.S. continue its effort to iso- for broader contact. The voices)jate China at a time when it is urging it--eSpecially now: that)in danger of being isolated by China has a nuclear bomb--are!its own allies. more plentiful. About next January, the _ But they also' continue to be| United Nations will vote again isolated in a sea Of apparent|on admission of China to the public apathy about decisions| world organization, Most of the that inevitably will have to be| major U.S. allies now recognize made about China, This re-|China. mains. true, observers fecl,) There are also serious ques- even with the advent of China's|tions on how efforts can be own bomb. jmade to curb the _ nuclear There is no great public de-| spread among nations unless bate to help shape a new ap-|China is at the conference table. proach and this is one direct}U.S. contact with China has result of U:S/ policy which since|been limited to periodic and the revolution and particularly|sterile exchanges. through War- since the Korean War has been|saw to pretend that China does not} Perhaps most important exist outside of Taiwan |the U.S. at least immediately is But hard facts stare the U.S.'the costly morass of South Viet for | criticized Communist China's recent nuclear test explosion and said Japan must strengthen the U.S.-Japan security treaty. "In the name of the Japanese people I cannot but express heartfelt regret over the recent test by Communist China our neighbor in complete disregard N N lution i bef ot our eager, prayer and the Nam. No solution seems [0 current of the world. possible there without involving | "I urge strongly that Com- (China. jmunist China refrain from any CLOSE BASES more nuclear tests and Savings from the 95 military|promptly accede to the partial bases just closed--about $477,-|test. ban treaty." 000,000--will pay for American} Sato in an address to the Diet aid in South Viet Nam for abou|(parliament) said the treaty a year at the present rate. with the United States must be One American who speaks of|kept "on an unshakeable found- the need for broader contacts! ation." with China is Roger Hilsman China Violation Charged Of Export Control OTTAWA (CP) -- David L. Maunder, head of an Ottawa trading company, was charged Friday on 12 counts of violat- ing government export controls by selling, or trying to sell, goods to Russia and Cuba. One charge alleges that he delivered two "vidicon" tubes to the commercial counsellor of the Soviet embassy in Ottawa. A vidicon tube 'is similar to a television tube, but is de- signed to pick up signals from cameras transmitting a weak signal. now a Columbia University pro- fessor after serving as an assist- ant secretary of state for Far Eastern affairs, He says communications should. be set up on arms con- trol and a reappraisal made of the bank on trade. The travel ban should be lifted and outer Mongolia recognized. There might be no great im- pact on China itself, he says, but it would influence the rest of Asia afid perhaps the younger generation, including| jthe Communist Chinese leaders} jof the future. | Ann Landers--12 City News--9 Classified--16, 17, 18 Comics--13 District reports--6 Editorial--4 Obits--19 THE TIMES today... 53 Candidates Qualify For Civic Election--Page 9 Lt.-Governor Rowe Opens Ajax-Pickering Hospital--Page 6 Flyers Edge Generals--Page 7 Sports--7, 8 Teen Talk Television--13 Theatre--18 Whitby News--5 Womens--10, 11, 12 Weather--2 era, party. eave. JAX & PICKERING GENERAL AJAX AND PICKERING HOSPITAL-OPENED TODAY The new Ajax and .Picker- ing General of beds available in' the oid which building, opened _ this will provide triple the number afternoon by the Hon. Earle Hospital, was Rowe, Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario. Many: prominent' On- tario and district' residents attended the ceremony. This picture shows the modern de- sign of the new building. Oshawa Times Photo, On The Road To GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST Quota Of $275,900 a | sirf 70 | | $128 000] | | | $164 230] ee | sistaze.| | | s208000| bel | sodb,asol | $258,000 | | | $27$.900 PMB, Sia.