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Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Sep 1965, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neirhhoring centres in One tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94 -- NO,.220 80 Per Weak Home Delivered howe & OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1965 Weather Report Sunny with cloudy intervals, Hot and humid through Wed- nesday. Low tonight, 68, High tamorrow,. 75, a TWENTY PAGES Auto Treaty Must Benefit Buyer: WASHINGTON (CP) -- The,lowed one hour today for the Senate finance committee today concluded public hearings on a bill to implement the Canada- United States auto agreement and then moved immediately to into an executive draft its report. Senator Albert Gore, Tennes- see Democrat, wound up his consistent criticism of the measure by questioning of a re- port by the U.S. tariff commis- sion which, among other things, says that Canada's auto-trade deficit could reach $840,000,000 by 1968. Under the agreement, Canada hopes to reduce an an- nual deficit which amounted to nearly $600,000,000 last year. The main feature of the agreement is abolition of tariffs for manufacturers but not con- sumers. Monday Senator Russell B. Long urged a quick windup of the committee's hearings. The agreement calls for sus- at the manufacturers' evel of tariffs on new cars and original equipment for new cars shipped either way across the border. The Louisiana senator, who also is assistant Democratic leader, clashed with two sen- ators over the slow pace of the hearings. Long said he knew a filibuster when he saw one, The senators denied they were fili- bustering. As acting chairman, Long al- sitting Wirtz. hearing of tariff commission testimony and announced the' committee then. would close its doors and start consideration of the bill. The House of Representatives has passed the bill, but it still needs Senate approval to send it to the White House. On Monday, concern whether consumers as well as manufac- turers will benefit from the Canada United States auto agreement was expressed by Labor Secretary Willard Wirtz. The consumer has to get the benefit of lower prices if the objective of the agreement--ex- panding the industry in both countries--is to be met, Wirtz told the Senate finance commit- tee. "I feel concern, which I think is general, whether the benefits in both countries will be passed on to the consumer," said Wirtz. "I do hope very strongly the administration of the program one way or another does result in passing on the benefits to consumers." In theory, the consumer will get his slice through economies} achieved by reshaping produc- tion patterns in North America. However the auto industry! in testimony last week continued to pour cold water on any sug- gestion that price cuts are pos- sible immediately. 'Hurts U.S., Helps Canada' Senators Say They agree they are paying $50,000,000 less a year in Can- ada in duties on imported cars/000 U.S. and parts but say that it is cost- ing @ lot to rearrange Cana- dian production for higher yol-| . umes. The Senate inquiry Monday) @ragged through its fourth day.| Initial plans had been to hold! just two days of sittings. | Democratic Senators Vance Hartke, Indiana, and Albert Gore, Tennessee, renewed their opposition--Hartke on grounds Indiana already has lost busi- ness to Canada and may lose more and Gore on grounds. the fo with Canada is a cartel, elping the big auto makers and harming smaller American parts firms who are threatened with loss of business by larger Canadian shipments. | But Long, reflecting U.S. gov-; ernment concern to move speedily with the measure which president Johnson has made a priority one for this ses- sion of Congress, applied pres- sure Monday afternoon to end the hearings today. © i At one point, Hartke read from a Canadian newspaper a} report that the auto plan is a | Five-Year Wait | To Feel Benefit VANCOUVER (CP)--Jack Da-| vis, parliamentary assistant to, Prime Minister Pearson, says it Of Auto-Pact "bonanza" for Canada. Wirtz said it also means 25,000 to 50,- 8S, jobs, Without the agreement, Wirtz said, he is | . (we) would have today a! tariff wall: so high that, there would be @ serious diminution economically for both coun- tries." Hartke said Indiana has lost) business to Canada, including the shift by Studebaker to Ha- "quite convineed|~ SUMMER COMES IN FALL Summer finally .came to Oshawa -- in time to greet the fall, After'two months of low temperatures accom- panied by rain during what the calendar calls summer, the weatherman finally re- lented. yesterday with warm temperatures and sunny skies; Grade" 12 dents Heather Connaty of 115 Ade- laide st. e., lefi, and Cathy Hayden, 137 Masson st., practise volleyball _ this morning in the sunny seven- ties at O'Neill Collegiate. j\down a U.S; Air Force F-104 Anti-Truce In Lahore LAHORE, Pakistan (Reuters) Public feeling is running high in this front-line city against ac" ceptance by Pakistan of the United Nations Security Coun- cil ceasefire order. Shouting demonstrators pa- raded in the city this morning, carrying banners against "The Israel - United States - India" axis. Lahore was the first target of the Indian advance over the border. It is generally felt there that the UN order lets down Pakistan by calling for a with- drawal to positions held before Aug. 5, when Azad (Pakistani) Kashmir irregulars began crossing the ceasefire line into Indian Kashmir. President Mohammad A y ub Khan has called leaders of the four chief opposition parties to Rawalpindi for consultations on the UN resolution, and they are expected to tell him their feel- ings tonight. In Karachi, officials of oppo- sition parties planned to meet today to consider vroposals for a general strike if the govern- ment should accept the cease- fire call, US. Air Loss Heaviest Yet SAIGON (CP)--American air power suffered its heaviest blow of any single day in the Viet Nam war Monday with the loss. of six jet fighter-bombers and a ratuh Neleoter. Three jet pijots and the four} crew members of the helicop- ter were reported missing, The New China news agency claimed a Chinese aircraft shot Starfighter over Hainan Island INDIANS RETURN CHINESE GUNFIRE NEW DELHI (Reuters) -- Indian troops on the Sikkim frontier today returned fire from the Chinese side, a de- fence ministry spokesman said, All-India radio had an- nounced earlier that Chi- nese troops were keeping up their fire on the Sikkim and Ladakh borders. The radio said also that active Chinese patrolling was noted and that Chi- nese troops continued to (More usnteeneagnraene nectarines cg mt Haul Banks Back, Diefenbaker Plan PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. (CP)--John. Diefenbaker said Monday night that if he heads a Conservative govern- ment after the Nov. 8 election, wheat sales will be expanded and livestock producers helped to meet the growing demands for their product. The Progressive Conservative leader outlined some of his party's agriculture policy, in- cluding a national dairy com- mission and water diversion measures, at a meeting which unanimously nominated him candidate for Prince Albert con- stituency for the sixth time. Repeating an earlier pledge to "clean up the mess" at Ot- tawa, he sald a Conservative administration would take lega) Steps to bring back 'Bonnie Hal Banks" from the United States. Banks, former Canadian head of the Seafarers' International Union, fled Canada after his conviction on charges arising and said the pilot, Capt. Philip --Oshawa Times Photo milton from South Bend. He} said Canada 'unilaterally had) started the processes leading to| this agreement by launching in 1962 a system of tariff rebates! --hotly fought by U.S. industry --which also sought to expand Canadian auto production and diminish the large trade deficit with the U.S. Hartke said the U.S. has no need to apologize for the situa- tion which exists, although Can- ada might have. Gore said he had a telegram from a Detroit local of the} United Auto Workers union say- ing 350 men were losing jobs be- cause a spring-producing plant was moving to Canada. Gore said the agreement with Canada is free trade for the big auto companies but not for the American people. | The labor secretary displayed some irritation as the day wore} on and his two questioners re-| peatedly retraced ground al-| ready covered. | Wirtz repeated that both econ-} omies will benefit from re-ar-| ranging auto - production pat- Liberal Campaign Starts In Earnest start campaigning today for the Nov, 8 election.) The follow right. behind. jcandidates and prospective can- didates. gather today for a talk session-on-cam paign. strategy. About 75 to 100 are expected from across the|Scotia capital. country. at tawa's Minister Pearson is to speak at a workshop luncheon and at closed sessions later. jrank OTTAWA (CP)--The Liberals] in earnest) NDP and Conservatives) Liberal campaign personnel, in the capital It will be an afternoon affair the Chateau Laurier, Ot- prestige hotel. Prime Finance Minister Gordon, the| Liberals' nationalcampaign),, 1 at 8:4 . | lchairman, will be another top| np 7. pare, DT, speaker at the event,| will be five years before the full|terns on a North American ba-|Pilled as the party's official) benefit of the Canada-U.S. auto) parts agreement is felt by the Canadian public. But he predicted Monday that by 1970 cars will be selling in) 1965 counterparts The Liberal Capilano said that while Ottawa has removed tariffs amounting} parts from the U.S. under the agreement, car manufacturers|facturers -- either to Canadianjroad campaigning, are committed to invest several/firms or Canadian subsidiaries|say. times that amount in Canadianjof the main car makers--and| Mr. plant and equipment to build|this will push up U.S. parts!in Newfoundland -- where thejonto, Sault Ste. Marie and Ot- 'Liberals held ail seven seats in tawa. cars for the U.S. market. "ALDERMEN FEAR SIS. "I'd rather have 50 per cent) of a pie of 100 than 60 per cent) of a pie of 75,"' he said. Gore said the ' the price in higher costs 'in five] or seven years, He said the} contracts with the auto manu-| prices. BACKLASH ... 'sacrificial |! y n Canada $500 cheaper than their/lamb in this deal" is the Amer-/$9™® East in Northern Ontario. | bined with his nomination meet- ican parts-making firm and the| The MP for Coast/American consumer would pay|pected to be' more non-political than political for the remainder|Mr. Diefenbaker's Halifax rally. of September. A month-end trip} to $50,000,000 a year on auto|parts makers will lose theirjto St. John's, Nfld. will mark|Ontario for a week of cam- the start of his serious on-the-|paigning, largely in northern jcampaign kick-off, | However, Mf. Pearson got the campaign on the road last/Friday night in Mr, Douglas's weekend on a trip-dogged by|home g--to his home riding of Al- Liberal leader is ex informants! | Pearson will be preceded) the last Parliament--by Opposi-| tion Leader Diefenbaker. | The Conservative leader re-| turns to Ottawa today from Saskatchewan and flies to Hali- fax Friday, with a Montreal stopover, for his formal cam- paign opener, It will be a rally in the Queen Elizabeth High School auditorium in the Nova He flies to Newfoundland the following day for an evening rally at St. Mary's Hall in St. John's and then flies back to Halifax. There he boards a train Sunday. He'll whistlestop through Que- bec from Amqui to St. Hya- cinthe Monday, reaching Mont- NDP Leader Douglas is ad-| dressing public meetings in British Columbia this week. They will Jead up to the so- cialist party's campaign kickoff riding, lam. The rally Burnaby-Coquit- will be. com- ing. & This is the same evening of Mr. Douglas then heads for communities such as Timmins, New Liskeard and Kapuskasing. He'll also be at Sudbury, Tor- E. Smith, was captured, | A U.S. military spokesman|- confirmed that Capt. S mith's) plane went down in the Tonkin Gulf, but said the pilot radioed his aircraft was suffering mech- anical difficulties and he was bailing out. A search-and-rescue operation out of Great Lakes violence. "If we take office... I think failed to locate Smith and he} was listed as missing. | LOSSES HEAVY | Two air force F-105 bs a chiefs were lost over North Viet} Nam, A rescue helicopter was shot) down by North Vietnamese pa-| trels which also drove off a sec-; ond helicopter with intense fire. A U.S. Navy fescue helicop- ter picked up the pilot of an A-4 Skyhawk from the carrier| Independence whose plane was shot down on the coast of North Viet Nam. Two U.S. Air Force Starfight- ers were lost when they col- lided in the air over Da Nang air base, in South Viet Nam. North Viet Nam claimed to have shot down eight American planes Monday, bringing to 581 the total of U.S. aircraft the North Vietnamese claim to have downed since Aug. 5, 1964.| | ® | Pauline Jewett es, ¥ ' Gets Grit 'Nod COBOURG, Ont. (CP) --Dr. Pauline Jewett, member for Northumberland in the last Par- liament, was nominated Mon- day night to contest the riding again for the Liberals in the ay by the Weston Observa- y. Rey, Daniel Linehan, director of the geophysical observatory which is a department of Bos- ton College, said the earth- quake was the strongest one in i) tod tor: that area in several years. jand adjusted. Vatican Council Gives OK To Religious-Liberty Issue VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The|port of the right of every man Vatican ecumenical council)to worship according to his con- voted preliminary approval to-| science. day of its religious liberty dec- laration, defeating a conserva- tive bid to shelve the contro- versial document, A council spokesman said the assembly's cardinals, hops, bishops, patriarchs and other prelates voted 1,997 to 224 in favor of accepting the docu- ment as a basis for a definite declaration after further delib- eration. This vote in effect committed the council to go ahead with the preparation of a final doc- ument putting the Roman Ca- Nov. 8 general election. tholic Church on record in sup- Minor Tremors On Grand Bank WESTON, Mass. (AP) -- A moderate earthquake in Grand Banks some 800 miles northeast { Boston was recorded early hold positions close to the Tibet-Sikkim border. The latest announcement said there were no casual- ties on either side in the exchange of small-arms fire. Answering questions at a press conference the spokes- man described the situation as "not all that serious," adding: 'They fired a few shots and we fired a few shots--that's all." there will be extradition pro ceedings to bring back that man so that justice shall not be denied." A crowd announced at more than 1,000 gave their loudest applause to Mr. Diefenbaker's reference to the Lucien Rivard affair, no- downpayment furni- ture purchases by cabinet min- isters, payment of full salary to Judge Adrien Meunier of Montreal while on bail pending appeal of a criminal conviction i and Banks. "The Liberal government can- not, brush aside the issue of honesty in government, Mr. Diefenbaker said. "The people of Canada want to know. what he (Prime Min-| ister Pearson) is going to do to clean up the mess," he said at a press conference, On agriculture, the Conserva- tive leader said the Liberal government Inst the western farmer $140,000,000 on the basis of current crop estimates by cutting the price of wheat in the recent sale to Russia. The Conservatives would ex- pand such sales and by concen- trating on pastures, water con- servation and feed grain banks, help livestock producers to im- prove output, he said, In co-operation with provin- cial milk boards, a national dairy commission would be set up to raise the price of milk sold for processing to $4 a hun- dredweight. Mr. Diefenbaker said a royal commission would be set up to ensure that legitimate claims of Indians that their treaty rights } | archbis-| were abrogated would be heard The announcement of the re- sult of the vote was greeted by cheers from both the bishops and the non-Catholic observers. Progressive prelates had fought for acceptance of the document while a small group of conservative bishops had ar- gued for its rejection. There were reports Monday night that conservatives had sent Pope Paul a petition to put off voting on the declaration. The vote amounts to a defeat for those prelates who sought to shelve the declaration. _..REAL 'HOWL' PREDICTED Dogs Get New"Leash - For Life Oshawa"s dog population -- city's dog control department.) Ald. Murdoch said the dog de-| Ald. Brady said he agreed about 5,500 strong -- had some-/The fee has been a flat $2 per/partment is operating at about)with the increase in charges but thing to howl about last night They lost their freedom. City council decided that dogs must be tied up 365 days of the year. Dogs have been allowed to} run at large from Sept. 30 to April 1 each year. But, effective when a dog is off the property immediately dog. Three aldermen, John Brady,|many surrounding communities I Cephas Gay and Alex Shestow-|require dogs to be tied up all/rather hard -- or inhuman as sky, recommendations made council's parks property recreation committee. 'Either way we go we'll be|Y® in the dog house,"' said Ald. r "has been very severe'. He said non-dog owners seem of its owner, it must be on a/Hayward Murdoch, chairman ofjto think that two or three men} leash of a maximum of 10 feet/the committee, who has one dog,jand members of council can| Ald. Norman Down said he or within 10 feet of the personjone cat and four children. "'i'lljmake sure that all-dogs are tied/nas been opposed to tying up in charge. Dog owners may also "howl" when they discover it will cost $5 per day or part of a day and $2 per day each subsequent day to retrieve their dogs from theija vote.' get it as soon as I go home." Ald about 5,500 dogs in which prompted Ald. Brady to) quip "Too bad they haven't got/I think it has to be done," said . lAld, Murdoch "Personally I don't like it but i la $16,000 a year deficit; that| opposed the tie-up rule. "After Sept. 30 I think it's opposed the dog controljyear, including Toronto for the|far as dogs are concerned -- to by|past 20 years; and that "abuse" keep them tied up," he said, and{directed at dog department em- |ployees after April 1 of each)ago dogs had to be tied up for Ald. Gay said several years three months, then it changed to six months, that's as far as I'm prepared to was jup the first day or week after/dogs longer than anyone else on Murdoch said there are|the tie-up comes into effect each council. as he opposed having the city,|year on April I them tied up when he was a township council member. "But, I voted for this one," said Ald; Dowa. 7 "and § DOG'S LIFE LIMITING IN OSHAW4 NEW DELHI (AP)--Informed sources said today Indian Prime Minister Shastri has told the United Nations he will ac- cept a Security Council demand for a ceasefire if Pakistan also complies. The informants said Shastri asked to be notified at once of any reply by Pakistan so that orders can be sent to India's troops, The sources said Shastri re- ported this course of action to a meeting of leaders of his po- litical opposition. There has been no word whether Pakistan has replied to the Security Council demand. Pakistani Foreign Minister Z. A. Bhutto flew to New York to- day to discuss the ceasefire res- olution, The Security Council set Wed- nesday as the deadline for com- pliance with its ceasefire de- mand. It was prepared to con- sider invoking a threat of force if India and Pakistan fail to heed the latest call. Shastri's aides were reported warning him against accepting the UN's additional request that he order India's armed forces to fall back to positions held Aug. 5 before the war over the disputed state of Kashmir inten- sified, A similar call has gone out to Pakistan. . India claims the only reason it thrust into West Pakistan was to destroy bases being used to mount assaults against In- dian territory. Shastri's aides said that to fall back now would mean a sacrifice of hard-won gains. tum from China that has over: PLL ACCEPT UN TER IF PAKISTAN DOES: INDIA India Buys UN Conditions, But Only If Pakistan Does Peking has warned that In- dia must dismantle 56 military posts on or near the border of the Indian protectorate of Sik- kim and Red-ruled Tibet by midnight Wednesday or face "grave consequences," MAKES NEW PROTEST China raised tensions again today with a new protest ac- cusing India of fresh violations by its border troops. Peking also announced that measures were being taken to bring the Chinese militia to "combat readiness," This could plunge the two Asian neighbors back into the border war that saw_the Chi- een hurl back the Indians in Shastri told Parliament Mon- day China was only looking for a pretext to launch new aggres- sion in collusion with Pakistan. He charged that even before its own deadline expired, Peking had started firing across the frontier in two sectors, China first set Sunday as the deadline for dismantling the In- dian military posts but ex- tended it three days to Wednes- day. INDIA WILL FIGHT If border posts are used as & pretext for an attack on India, Shastri said, India will fight back, He then told the Chinese that if controversial posts are in their territory they themselves should tear them down. India made another charge today that Chinese troops fired across the Indian frontier in 53 ector be F shadowed its conflict with Pa- kistan, Burn Library KARACHI, Pakistan (AP)-- About 10,000 demonstrators burned the U.S, information service library in Karachi to- day and pulled down the United Nations flag from the building. The violence followed a gen- eral strike in the city with all shops and businesses closed to protest the UN resolution or- dering Pakistan and India to ceasefire, The demonstrators shouted anti-UN, anti-U.S. and -anti-in- dian. slogans, They also de- manded that Pakistan withdraw its membership in. the United Nations and the Central Treaty Organization and the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization, both Western defence alliances. Fire brigades and police dis- * + vehicles near the border in seve eral areas. 10,000 Rip Down UN Flag In Karachi persed the mob and put out the library fire. Some demonstrators marched toward the U.S. Embassy but were blocked by police. Later about 100 Arab students went to the U.S. Embassy and pre- sented a letter expressing their resentment over U.S, govern- ment policy toward Kashmir and Pakistan. Police removed the students from the premises, Students and other demon- strators. carried life-size por- traits of President Sukarno of Indonesia, Communist Chinese leaders Chou En-lai and Mao Tse-tung, King Hussein of Jor- dan, the Shah of Iran and Turkish President Cemal Gur- sel, who have expressed sup- port of Pakistan against India, of the resolution, which wa bizarre plot to dynamite the tence against Michelle Duclos UNITED NATIONS (AP) General Assembly. difficult sessions of the assem NEWS HIG House Okays Anti-Red Use Of Force WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- A resolution calling for the use of force to combat Communist intervention in any Western Hemisphere nation was over-whelmingly approved Monday by the House of Representatives, The vote in favor Armistead Selden of Alabama, Michelle Wins 5-Year Suspended Term NEW YORK (AP) -- A Montreal blonde won leniency Monday and escaped a prison sentence for her role in a LM LIGHTS s sponsored by Democrat was 312 to 52, Statue of Liberty and other United States shrines. A conditional five-year prison sen- , 26, was suspended and she was placed on five years' probation. She also was banished from the United States forever. Tough Time To Take Over Assembly | -- Amintore Fanfani, scheduled to take over today as president of the UN 57, is It will be his duty to preside over one of the most bly since the United Nations was founded 20 years ago. One of his responsibilities will be to greet Pope Paul Oct. 4. Town Council Opp ...In THE TIMES today... Master Perkland Plen Authorized--P. 9 County A Ann Landers--11 City News--9 Clossified--14, 15, 16 Comics--18 Editorialt--4 Tiny Chihuahua Models Extreme In Leashes ! + Financial--17 Geels, Brooklin Game From Minto, Mann--P. Obits--17 6 Whitby News--5 Women's--10, 11 Weather--2 ae 4

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