Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Nov 1965, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowe manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties, VOL. 94 -- NO. 271 0 Per' Weak Heme Beltvered g th 4 i, pe - pote Oe eee nee ee ee i i ak a ee as a a al ll ane ¢ 4 oe et ie Ok OE St She Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1965 Auitorized es Second Clam-Melt end for payment Weather Report Cloudy, rain possibly mixed with snow. Sunday cloudy, seasonable. Low tonight, 35. High tomorrow, 42. THIRTY.TWO PAGES Compromise Calls For An Embargo UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- Two Latin - American nations |sought support today for a com- U.S. BURDEN EASED South Troops Rip Into Reds Smith Drops SALISBURY (CP)--A press report said today the Rhodesian government has dropped its controversial demand that all civil servants take a new loy- alty oath. FORCE NOT RULED OUT OF UN-RHODESIA PLAN His Demands For Mass Oath Of Loyalty jdays this week met with all the chiefs and headmen who repre- sent the 3,500,000 Africans liv- jing in the tribal land of Rho- desia, the statement said, Rhodesia has a total popula- The report in The Rand Daily|tion of 225,000 whites and 3,800,- There's money to play with as the Greater Oshawa Community Chest goes over the top. Stormie Dingley, Miss Red Feather, has one last fling with some of the 'IN DANGER' NDP Chief Warns Of ne fo: U.S. Union SASKATOON, Sask. Political union of Canada with the United States will follow if;Cial conciliation officer, was to|against all oil companies. © |promise plan on rebel Rhodesia | \in an effort to break the dead- lock between Britain and the / African states that has para- © |lyzed the UN Security Council. ; The council called for an SAIGON (CP)--Easing the] U.S. cavalry battalions and burden of U.S. cavalrymen, | the Vietnamese paratroopers South Vietnamese paratroopers|were on independent sweeping battled North Vietnamese regu-|operations. The spokesman re- lars in the Ia Drang valley to-|ported the Americans ran into day and reports from the field|light sniper fire. emergency session today to act © on the resolution introduced © |Friday night by Uruguay and Bolivia. nation council to call for aj world - wide oil - and - arms| 'embargo against Rhodesia and| jurged Britain to '"'quell the} » |rebellion'" of Rhodesia's white-| »|minority regime. | | The resolution makes no |mention of the Africans' contro- : \versial demand for military "s\force but it leaves the door | lopen for such a step by calling on the council to keep the issue 'junder review "to examine what jother measures it may deem| necessary." SA The resolution asked the 11-| | jnear the Cambodian frontier. said they killed up to 220 Com-| South Vietnamese forces munists. |claimed several minor vic- | A spokesman said the fight|tories and reported two defeats. jraged for nearly four hours at| North Vietnamese troops put up stiff resistance Friday night against government paratroop- Contact was broken at dusk.|¢'s rushing in to link up with Losses among the government) U-S. units in the Ia Drang Val- troops, freshly committed, were|!€Y- described as light. | The paratroopers, part of a A figure of 180 Communist|"egiment, are trying to reach dead was cited in one repart, [battle - worn U.S. cavalrymen and 220 in another during this|Who have been fighting in the action, one phase of a bloody,|Valley, 210 miles northeast. of six-day battle waged previously|S@igon, for the last week. between the Hanoi troops and| The Americans reported they elements of the U.S, Ist Air|killed 21 of the enemy today Cavalry Division. jand captured one, while the B-52 jets from Guam renewed|U-S., troops suffered light cas- the western edge of the wernt MADE IT -- AND MORE! cash pouring into the chest offices before it goes off to the bank vaults. Miss Ding- ley was the symbol of the chest fund drive which rais- ed more than $308,900 for 20 VANCOUVER (CP)--Crucial| meetings were to be held in| British Columbia during the weekend as the time. for a| scheduled general strike drew for a province-wide 48-hour Co. to all companies unless\days of negotiation, however, (CP)-- Closer. Reg Clements, chief provin-| union is not halted, T. C, Doug-|meet separately with represent- las said Friday. The New Democratic Party national. leader was keynote speaker as the three-day annual meeting of the Saskatchewan Co - operative Commonwealth Federation section of the NDP ended. He said Canada is in danger of losing its position as a sovereign nation. "Economic union . . . would mean Canada would become a periphery to supply raw ma- terials to feed a great insatiable industrial machine. We would atives of individual oil compa- Last-Ditch Try Made To Avert B.C. Strike uy social welfare organizations | serving Oshawa and District. The fund drive closed with almost $3,000 over the tar- get amount -- with more to trickle in during the next few days. The drive to vic- tony was completed in a record five weeks' duration. | (See story page 13) --Oshawa Times Photo © 4 nies and the striking oil work-|the Oil, Chemical and Atomic ers union. Workers Union (CLC) has said} Local unions throughout the it will extend its present strike| province were to consider calls against British American Oil| work stoppage to back up oil|there is a settlement of its dis-| workers if they call a_ strike/pute. | The union has also struck a| The general strike would start subsidiary of Imperial Oil Co. | at midnight Wednesday whenjand is on strike against BA op- Another Body, 'Sans Head', #!*""="%" About To Show In Quebec QUEBEC (CP)--The headless; body of an underworld purge! victim is about to be uncovered,! a reliable source said Friday.| The body would be the fifth discovered victim of what the become the drawers of water and the hewers of wood." He added Canada is building a richer society through a mo- Saic of peoples and cultures. The American concept of so- ciety, places people of ali ori- gins into a single American mould. As part of the United States, Canada could not make a con: tribution to world affairs, the - former CCF premier of Sas- katchewan said. "World powers such as the United States need friends who can speak out bluntly to them on their foreign policies in the way Canada has done on occa- sions."' Mr. Douglas stressed that this did not mean anti-American-| By JERRY PARKER ism. He said the concept of; MIAMI (AP)--'The Travel- economic and political union| ler" is 10, and a celebrity of Quebec justice department calls an underworld attempt to silence possible witnesses in or- der to frustrate investigation of a giant arson ring. Police investigators are to go to the Lake St. John area today to try to uncover the body of Maurice Garneau, who disap- peared in 1957. Informants have was being forced on Canadians) sorts. by the nation's rapidly-growing Ak anyone in the sheriff's trade deficit juvenile bureau, or juvenile A resolution asking govern-| court, or the detention hall mcnits to seek an end to "Amer- Police say The 'Traveller ican armed interference" in the| likes to steal, to 'hear the internal affairs of other na-| tinkle of breaking glass, to tions failed to gain. approval by| drive big cars and trucks. He the more than 500 delegates. | also likes cops and school, to After a brief but heated dis-| tell the truth and to share. cussion on the motion was re-| The Traveller is tough to worded to ask the NDP to urge] figure. world governments to seek an} The people in the juvenile end to armed intervention by; office have been trying for "all nations." four years, Since he was six, said the'dug up near Sherbrooke HE'S ONLY TEN... ----------~ erations as far east as Ontario. Liberal Leader Ray Perrault for a_ special legislature at) which he said the government! could bring legislation that would allow oil workers to post- pone their walkout without | tne 4 ; | body of Garneau, with head,//0°"8 re right to strike. | hands and feet severed, is ly- Mr. Clements has been work-| ing buried near an unidentified/ing since Wednesday to' reach) village in the Lake St. John area @ Settlement as industry and north of Quebec City government warned that a gen-} Police have 3 uncoy-|eral strike would be illegal and| ered the bodies of Redempteur|CoStly. The parties have still to Faucher, 47, and Paul Brie, 43, COme together in face-to-face both of Quebec City, as well as meetings. those of Alberic Bilodeau, 52, Main dispute already is the union's of Ste. Marie de Beauce, Que., demand for job security. It and Paul Chandonnet, 38, of|wants 18 months' notice of tech- Sherbrooke, Que. nological changes, severance Three of the bodies have been pay in the event of partial or found in the Quebec City region|complete plant shutdowns and and that of Chandonnet wasiretraining of employees whose jobs are made obsolete. »?| smith. + | states '|shipments to Rhodesia and sup- 'port Britain's ban on purchases "'sia's main crops. Informed sources said U.S. Ambassador Arthur Goldberg, '|who left a sick bed, played an important role in shaping the compromise proposal. They said Goldberg, a veteran labor negotiator, stepped in Friday as efforts to find a middle African positions appeare about to collapse. Britain balked last wee' African demands for drastic steps, including force, to crush the breakaway white - minority regime of Prime Minister Ian ground between the British red| A deadlock resulted when the| Africans brushed aside a Brit-| ish resolution asking member) not to recognize the Smith regime, cut off arms of tobacco and sugar, Rhode- Insisting that much tougher measures are needed to deal wiin Smith's government, the Africans put up a rival resolu- their blasting at North, Viet- namese positions, staging two saturation bombings in the area between the cavalrymen and| their government allies. | sd | { tion through the Ivory Coast, a council member, | It called for a total boycott of: Rhodesia, including ship- ments of oil, the country's most vital import, and use of troops if necessary to smash the rebel- lion. The six non-permanent mem- bers of the council tried to break the impasse with a com- promise proposal. After five Britain and the Africans still Were IT MUST HAVE BEEN SUICIDE PARIS (AP)--Police con- tend Baroness Sylvanie de Courtry; 34, who was found dead in her apartment two months ago, committed sui- cide although she was bound hand and _ foot, gagged and pinned to the floor with a Japanese dag- ger through her back. To dispel any doubts, the | police have made a film showing how the spinster | could have done it. Miss de | Courtry's stand-in is shown | taking the knife in her two | bound hands and then plunging it deep into her back. The weapon used in the police movie has a re- tractable blade. _.. ARRESTED 18 TIMES The Traveller: Quite A-Boy!? The Traveller has been ar- rested 18 times. The charges included arson, auto theft and had to have it. A few minutes later, he saw a fork-lift truck inside a store room. A $200 burglary. plate glass window stood in "1 don't know why I do it," the way, but not for long, he said. "All I know is I see When the police came, The something I like and I just got Traveller was sitting high in to have it." the driver's seat, his sturdy He picked up his nickname body stretched to reach the he said, when he was a tod- gas pedal, and on his way, dier. "Even when I was just The Trayeller's short life He's in the fourth grade and one year old or so I'd run off, includes between 50 and 100 doing well : All the people started calling burglaries. He can't remem- "51+ woiday. The Traveller me traveller." ber them al : went back 'to juvenile deten- The. boy, whom police did And yet, The Traveller's got tion hall. and he probably not identify Friday, saw a his good point won't be travelling for quite radio lying on a car seat, and "He's a very honest little a while, guy,' R. says Police Lieut. L. Joffre. "In his own way." His record for veracity is better than that of some of his victims. Some have been known.to exaggerate their losssc, but police have learned they can count on The Travel- ler to tell the truth. And The Traveller is a staunch friend of education. Ike Continues To Ge* Retter FORT GORDON, Ga. (AP)-- Former President. Eisenhower continues 'fo mend and doctors now plan--tentatively--to move him by train Monday to Walter Reed army hospital in Washing- ton. | The 75-year-old general has been in hospital here since Nov. 9 when he suffered the first of two chest pain attacks which, the doctors say, resulted in damage to his inner heart mus- cles. In making their medical re- port, the doctors said: 'Mrs. Eisenhower is feeling much better after the strain and fa- tigue of the past weeks." ualties, A U.S. spokesman said the latest North Vietnamese toll brought to 1,207 the number of enemy dead in the battle. Gen. William C., Westmore- land, U.S. commander in Viet Nam, said the heavy fighting jin the central highlands, includ- ing the Ia Drang battle, as an unprecedented victory. He said U.S. air cavalrymen had driven Hi the enemy in every encoun- er. Commenting on the month- tong campaten that began witlr the siege of Plei Me, Westmore- land said U.S. casualties were higher "than in. any previous engagement but were small by comparison with those of the enemy." He called the entire cam- paign 'unprecedented in inten- sity. of. action, magnitude of troops involved and the degree of success by friendly forces." The expanding American mil- itany buildup has brought the number of U.S. military person- nel in Viet Nam to 165,700, a military spokesman said. stalemated over the key| points. | QUEEN OF T London model Lesley Lang- ley 21, adjusts her crown after winning the Miss World international _ beauty . con- test in London last night, edging out the U.S. entry, Dianna Lyn Batts of Church Falls, Va., who placed sec- jinternal affairs, had in four Mail, of Johannesburg, South Africa, said Prime Minister Ian Smith's regime dropped the de- mand in an apparent effort to avoid any internal crisis over the issue. Many senior officials were be- lieved divided between loyalty to the Smith government and allegiance to the Queen. The British government has branded Smith's regime as il- legal. Chief Justice Sir Hugh Beadle truth to a previous report in The Rand Daily mail that Rhodesia's nine judges had re- fused to swear allegiance to Smith's government. Beadle neither confirmed nor denied the report. Beadle has been staying with British governor, Sir Humphrey Gibbs, the Queen's representa- tive in Rhodesia, who has re- mained at Government House despite Smith's order to vacate The rebel government re- stored a police guard to Gov- ernment House after disclosing that Gibbs had received four threatening letters. Smith him- self reported the threats in a radio broadcast. He had previously removed the guard of white and black hinted Friday there was some} 000 black Africans. | The government also an- jnounced today that Dupont, |Clifford Smith's nominee as governor, shortly will begin to juse Government Lodge as his |office, although he will continue jto live at his nearby home. | This move is seen as an at- \tempt to avoid. a final show- |down with British governor Sir Humphrey Gibbs, whom Smith's government refuses to | recognize as the Queen's repre- sentative. Gibbs insists the declaration of independence jis illegal and says he is the only legal gov- ernment in Rhodesia. He ree fuses to move out of Govern- ment House, his official resi- dence. DC-6B Crash 'Not A Fault In The Plane VANCOUVER (CP) -- A de- partment of~ port investi. gator said Friday "something policemen as part of his har- assment of Gibbs. An explosion blasted machin- ery in a clothing factory at Ba- lawayo Friday night--the city's second bomb incident in a week |of racial tension. | An explosion Wednesday caused considerable damage to the Bulawayo city centre, but no one was injured. The bomb incidents came after several attempts by Afri- can nationalists in the last week to organize a general strike by Africans to protest the seizure of independence from Britain by Prime Minister Ian Smith's white government Nov. 11. All the strike attempts were broken up by police. A government statement said today that all the 587 tribal chiefs and headmen of Rhode- sia had expressed their support of Smith's white government in its declaration of independence. foreign to the aircraft'? ap- jpeared to have caused an exe | plosion that resulted in the crash jof a DC-6B and the death of /52 persons last July 8. | John Love testified after a |cleaning woman told of seeing a man in the Canadian Pacific |Airlines plane just 70 minutes |before it took off on its Ml-fated trip. Mr. Love and Mrs, Hubert C. Eldred were testifying at an in- quest into the dea' in the crash near 100 Mile House, B.C. Mr. Love said a toilet bowl in the rear of the plane was so flattened that it was apparent it was the source of the explo- oo that wrecked the tail sec- on. "Our investigations seem to show no doubt that the explo- sion was caused by something foreign to the aircraft," he said, "It is apparent that nothing from the fuel or heating system or any other system of the air- W. H. Nicole, a secretary for craft could have caused a blast with that velocity." MITTIN New Car-Insurance HE WORLD ond. It was the second year in a row and the third time in the last five years that a British entry won the Miss World title prompting some sponsors to suggest the con- test be held outside Brit- | ain next year. See story page 3. (AP) | In THE passengers of Ontario's still m NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Scheme: Paper TORONTO (CP) -- The Telegram says a plan to ex- pand complete insurance benefits. to. owners, drivers and uninsured 52,000 vehicles is expected to be disclosed shortly. The newspaper says the report is based on the premise that "society can no longer be entirely satisfied that th e fault in every accident rests with an individual or individuals" and "the task of establishing exact responsibility in our complex life fre- quently places an impossible WASHINGTON (AP) burden on adjudicators." 'Strike Could Halt Gemini Program Pressure from the White House and the defence department spurred U.S. federal mediators today in the efforts to settle a strike of Mc- Donnell Airfract Cor. machinists that threatens to delay a manned space flight. At St. are built, 17,000 machinists night Thursday. Another 200 Louis where Gemini capsules walked out just after mid- left their jobs at Cape Ken- nedy where McDonnell technicians prepare the spaceships for launching. hl mn St; Therese--P. 13 Saturday Showcase Crushmen Tie--P, 8 Ann Landers--15 City News--13 Classified--20, 21, 2: Comics--19 Editorial---4 Financial--23 = Obits--23 Sports--8, 9 3 Theatre--I1 = Whitby News--5 Women's--14, 15 stepped its 1965 target Weather--2 figure of $306,300. Final figure of money raised $308,968, iw AAT TAT TIMES -- day The Greater Oshawa Community Chest DUT HL UT | m its fast day yester- over- eee 4 ws fe bal a lll Pe CT RNS

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy