1 na _ Home Of Oshawa, Whitny, Dowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties. Newspaper VOL. 94 -- NO, 305 S0¢ ~ Wesk Vome "Botivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, > Aha we oF MWS THURSDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1965 Ottawa and LAL. ~ Weather. Report Clendy with 2 few sunhyv periods and mild Authorized os Second Class Mall Post Office for payment of Postoge in Cash. today, Fri _ day cloudy ana colder. Low tonight, 28, High Friday, 25, EIGHTEEN PAGES Marcos Sworn In As Chief MANILA (AP) -- Onetime la fighter Ferdinand E. Marcos took the oath as the sixth president of the Philip- pines today and pledged his na- tion to austerity at home and greater co-operation with free nations of Asia. Vice - President Hubert H. Humphrey represented the United States at the inaugura- tion, which drew 50,000 Filipinos to Luneta Park beside Manila Bay, and millions more to radio and television sets. Marcos, 48, startled the fes- tive audience with a stern speech outlining the nation's economic and political ills. He extolled the Philippines as a democratic example to un- stable nations in Asia and pledged it would stand besides "every fighter for freedom." But he warned that the nation's coffers were empty and "hard decisions" ~-- such as sending troops to Viet Nam--must be made for the national interest of the Philippines. Before the election last month, Marcos said he opposed sending combat troops to Viet Nam although he favored en- larging the Philippine medical unit there. After the election, he indicated he had changed his mind and was in favor of send- ing a combat battalion. Red China Big Threat, | Lord Says TORONTO (CP)--Lord Thom- son of Fleet, the Canadian-born néwspaper magnate, says the danger of war between. China and the United States 'will be very real" once the Chinese are able to deliver nuclear strikes. In an interview Wednesday, U.S. Vice - President Hubert H. Humphrey, left, talks with Philippine Presi- dent Ferdinand R. Marcos following Marcos' inaugura- tion today in Manila. Hum phrey represented the Unit- Would TORONTO (CP)--The Globe Car Industry AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) -- The| White House announced today another presidential peace mis- sion--this one to Canada--and indicated others would be forth- coming as part of an effort to emphasize the United States quest for peace in Viet Nam. Bill D. Moyers, White House press secretary, announced that McGeorge Bundy, President Johnson's special assistant for) national security affairs, flew to} Ottawa Wednesday night for a meeting with Canadian Prime Minister' Pearson. Johnson himself. planned to} }confer by telephone with Pear-} json later today, Moyers said. | Canada, along with Poland and) India, is a member of the In HERE'S RECORD | 'TO SHOOT AT | | .MONTREAL (CP) -- Mon- | treal Police Director Jean- | Paul Gilbert sald Wednesday | |} the city' record of drunken | } driving during Christmas | week was ghastly. | Forty-six persons were ar- | rested for drunken driving | | and six for impaired during | B Hit | the 10 day-period from Dec. | e 1 18-27, } | run accidents in: which vyehi- | ed States at the inaugura- tion. Marcos wears a barong tagalog, an elegant shirt used by Filipinos for formal occasions. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Manila) There also were 20 hit-and-| force by introducing it as part! cles and other property were | Bundy On Peace Mission lers said the recent comings and|more leaders of the world to Premier Gets Visits PM ternational Control Commission; Moyers said .moye ambas- in Viet Nam. jsadorial travels were likely, Breaking a prolonged White| Patticularly. by Harriman. House silence on obviously co-| "The president in the last few ordinated moves to mount an|iweeks," he said, "has felt it American peace offensivé;"Moy-|Was especially appropriate for goings of American .diplomats|know his views on Asia." connected. with an. effort to em-| 'Moyers said that "peace re- phasize the United States') mains the foremost objective of peaceful objectives. ~ \the United States in Asia and These included a call by everything this administra- United Nations Ambassador] tion is doing is designed to bring Arthur J. Goldberg on Pope| About conditions in which peace Paul in the Vatican.and, a Eu-|'* possible. ropean trip by roving. Ambas-, He added sador W.. Averell: Harriman) 'We have a genuine desire to which took him 'first 'to -War-).co-operate with anyone to whom saw, Poland, and today.to Bel-|peace is the desired goal that grade, Yugoslavia * it is with us." Fantani Post By GERALD MILLER Fanfani pioneered centre-left ' ; | collaboration between the Cath-! ROME (AP) -- Italy's Presi-| (o(@u0rals "5 jolic Christian Democrats and dent Giuseppe Saragat today | the Socialists in a government named Premier Aldo Moro to} it ;: take over the additional port-| Coalition which Moro now heads. cd | Fanfani's followers have long folib: of foreign minister from | considered Moro too cautious mintore f i, who re- : aria ; af vr penten Fanfani had said he was re-| Lord Thomson said China "seares me", but he saw no danger of an immediate war be- twee the Americans and Chi- nese over Viet Nam. Lord Thomson, owner of the world's largest press, radio and television empire, is in Toronto on a visit. He expects to return to Britain in mid-January. "The Red Chinese know they cannot attack the states," he said "Not now." "But Red China scares me. They've got 700,000,000 people and more coming. Their leaders know that no matter what they do they cannot lift the people out of the starvation situation damaged. and Mail says the leaders of He said, officers will ¢e- of a company-wide wage-packet the United Auto Workers Union (CLC) ate. prepared to phn greement: Siceiialinai .,uwevelyenforce the Jaw. and down the North American auto| This, ng@ Sette ait Gat police cars Will keep their red industry, if necessary, to gain) may ental <i gg Mert lights flashing continuously New Year's Eve. "This is to be taken as a constant reminder to drunk and tipsy drivers that they aren't going to get away with anything if the patrolmen spot them," Director Gilbert said. wages for its Canadian mem-|COMpany on : bers equal to those paid auto|basis with a specified sum per workers in the United States. (employee per hour set aside to} The newspaper says this was|take care of inequities. the essence of decisions taken| The Globe aleo says that Wednesday by top UAW officers|Jerry Hartford, public relations from both Canada and the U.S.jdirector for the union's Cana- The wage gap ranges from 40\dian section, was asked what} to 50 cents an hour for produc-|would happen if the auto indus- tion workers and up to $1 anjtry in the United States refused | hour for skilled tradesmen to bargain on an international UAW proposals drafted Wed-|basis for wage parity. nesday call for spreading the| 'They would have to be pre- Ld idl Firm Denies cost of parity for Canadian|pared to take a strike at their) they are in. Infant Is "Fair" | wages in the industry over the/plants," it quotes him as say-| Talks Collapse combined Canadian-U.S. work!ing | OAKVILLE, Ont. (CP)--Strik- jing oil workers at the nearby f 4 Clarkson refinery and Joint Committees Are Sought mesa Ci..c, tape ently dug in behind their respec- tive positions Wednesday night. British} signed 49 tad se oheain? Afihur J. Goldberg, right, Saragat acted as demands|#87me to dissociate himself) U.S. .ambassador, to the | rose te om government oppo-| from criticisms La Pira made of Jnited Nations, who met Be i nents for Moro's entire tentre-| de" seg ih i Dean Rusk 'feft coalition ta resign over the!" ., hFanfani 'crisis, born"of what} !29"'s home. | critics called the foreign min-| passED REPORT ister's amefeurish handling of a| . | North Vietwamese peace feeler.| Earlier, he had "been under harty at Fan- | Moro had asked Fanfani to| fire for passing along to the with Pope Paul VI at the Vatican yesterday, leaves the U.S. embassy in Rome after a news conference to- day. He told newsmen that President Johnson shared the Pope's desire to move the Viet Nam» conflict from the battlefield to the bar- gaining table. where ulti- mately it will have to be resolved, With Goldberg is U.S. Embassy information officer Peter J. Heller. (AP Wirephoto via cable from Rome) elle 1 : =, |U.S. government La Pira's re- i ~| | withdraw the resignation, Fan |port of a peace overture stom fani submitted it after he came] x, Bail, tater oom under fire in connection with the) poe Page seme gable roey fot report from his friend Prof.|~ i } Giotgio La. Pira of a peace|*@PO- | feeler from Hanoi, After Fan-|. 14 Pira admitted making the| |fani insisted he was determined| belittling comments but said he! lto quit Jan. 6, the premier ac-| WaS jesting and was quoted out lcepted his resignation Wednes-| Of context. | | day night. The independent Rome daily} Political observers speculated|! Messaggero expressed hope| that Fanfani either planned to| that the furor would blow over| stay in the background until the| without a government crisis and La Pira controversy cools off or) Produce only a change in for-| would work actively to supplant! eign ministers | the premier. Although a mem-| But Avanti, the organ-of the} ber of the cabinet, Fanfani has| Socialist party, said the govern-| DOG NIPS AT BITE WILL COST $23,784 TORONTO (CP)--When a Toronto couple's dog nipped neighbor John Wintering- ham. in 1963,. it turned out to be a $23,784 bite. This was the amount the Ontario Supreme Court as- sessed Wednesday against Arthur Rae and his wife, Joy. Justice W. D. Parker ruled the couple pras re- HIS NEIGHBOR sponsible for a serum neuri- tis resulting from the dog bite. Mr. Winteringham re- ceived an anti-tetanus shot after the bite and suffered a toxic reaction. A neuro- surgeon testified Mr. Winter- ingham had a permanent partial paralysis of the right shoulder and arm. Meets Pope For One Hour By LEWIS GULICK WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- dent Johnson's peace offensive pushed ahead today as a hint of mystery surrounded the in- ternational travels of two U.S. ambassadors. Presidential envoys W. Ave- rell Harriman and Arthur J, Goldberg paid surprise calls at Warsaw and the Vatican, and were reported ready to carry . the U.S. peace bid to other cap- Sey before returning to the Goldberg, the U.S. ambassa- dor to the United Nations, met for one hour with Pope Paul Wednesday after arriving se- cretly aboard ~a presidential jet. He told reporters today that Johnson shared the Pope's de- sire to move "'this grave con- flict from the battlefield to the bargaining table where ultim- ately it will have to be re- solved." He also descrited his trip as an "effort to re-@mphasize the U.S. willingness to do all it can for peace," and said he would report the Pope's views only to the president. Goldberg was to leave Rome tonight after talks with Premier Also Moro and other Italian of- ficials. He would not disclose his next destination. Roving ambassador Harriman arrived unannounced in Warsaw aboard a U.S. Air Force jet and promptly met with Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki. GIVES VIEWS The U.S. embassy said Har- riman, at Johnson's request, gave the Polish government Washington's views on the Viet Nam situation, Today, he spent two hours with Communist party chief Wladyslaw Gomulka, but told reporters only that their session included talk of the past. "We are old," he sald. "We knew each other during the war." The U.S. embassy announced that Harriman would leave Warsaw today but. again there was no disclosure of a destina- tion. The ambassadors were backed-by the halt since Christ- mas in the bombing of North But Unconscious | TORONTO (CP) -- Holly-Lynn| Whitney, one, of North Bay, who suffered head injuries in a car To Study Key Auto Issues WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Thejwork force in both countries accident near Brechin, Ont,,|United Auto Workers (CLC)/could reduce cost to a "pennies- edn : ' is "twill try to interest major North|per hour size that can fit into by esday, today was reported] American auto manufacturers)whatever bargaining package still unconscious but in fair con-|in forming joint committees to|the union settles for in its next dition in the Hospital for Sick|study wages, bargaining andjround of negotiations." i Children here job dislocation resulting from} Similar jo int studies _ pre-| . ithe Canada-United States auto|pared the way for complicated| The child, daughter of Mr.|trade agreement pension settlements in 1964 auto and Mrs. Charles Whitney, was 3 . : industry negotiations in the! injured when a car driven by| peonard NM ged : seat A ' poli S$. The Canadian UAW coun-| , Yivice-president and director Of/-ij and the international execu-| her mother left the highway 10 the union's 350,000 ' 4 ae membeT itive board of the UAW already] miles southeast.of Orillia, and|U.S. General 4 Motors depart-inave said they are in favor of| struck a road sign. She was |ment tal loaders. of ouncits | making wage parity for Cana-| Py 4 jcollective yarge g co PHS | as yess "i » 1967 taken to hospital in Orillia and| : te z unig, (dans a top item in the 1967 jof both countries that the union), .ootiations | inher transferred mete jintends to "close the Canada-| Details of the meeting held} Holly - Lynn's sister, Sherry-|U.S. wage gap in one SWOOP." |nere Tuesday were released Lee, 12, received facial cuts inj He said the spreading of cost'Wednesday by George Burt, | the accident lfor parity over the combined'Canadian director of the UAW.) No Air Raids 7th Day But "Cong' Fights On By THOMAS A. REEDY (first time the Communists had SAIGON (AP) -- U.S. planes/assassinated a Saigon newspa- gave North Viet Nam a seventh) per man casts today did not acknowledge| day of relief from bombardment) The Vict Cong renewed their;the bombing lull but instead today, but the Viet Cong fought) mortar -and infantry attacks in|}emphasized reports of the un- on in the south with attacks in| Quang Ngai province, 69 miles|abated U.S. and South Vietna- and around Saigon and in the|south of Da Nang after over-}mese action the now exceeds the suspension of} air raids in May. Hanoi broad-| air against A union spokesman said ne- gotiations had collapsed. The company said it was just a standoff The dispute, mainly about job security in the face of automa- tion, has kept the refinery strikebound since Sept. 15 when more than 400 members of Lo- cal 9-593, Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union (CLC) walked out Bob Kirk, the local's public- ity chairman, said the break- down Wednesday night occurred over what he described as the company's adamant position on the issues R. ©. Beale, refinery mana- ger, said it was not a break- down, just a standoff. long been one of Moro's main| ment is confronted 'with a po-| Viet Nam targets and by be- antagonists in their Christian| litical re - examination" of its} Democratic party and in the| whole stand toward the war in} * . centre-left government. Viet Nam 5 Miners Die Disteick: le Anan A | In Explosion ietrich Is Again Remanded | wsostoxe, cow. «arya | coal mine explosion deep in the} 0 7 . M d Ch | mountainous wilderness of west-| n axl ur er arge jern Colorado Tuesday night} ; |killed nine miners, all working} KITCHENER (CP) -- Harry ,after he gave himself up in Lon-| overtime in order to get some} i otri or . don, Ont. He was connected] extra time off for New Year's| -- bal papi ~ a with Battler's death after police| Eve. 1945 murder o ttchener 'aXl)peceived a report a man was| Colorado's chief coal mine in- driver Elmer Battler, today was) bragging in a drinking establish-| spector, Don Haske, said Wed- remanded for the seventh time}ment about a killing. |nesday "a small pocket of me- for preliminary hearing, now set} Dietrich, who earlier under-jthane gas" set off the blast, Jan. 6. jwent a mental- examination, is|shortly before midnight, in a Dietrich was charged with | being defended under the free| tunnel of the No. 1 Dutch Creek capital murder five weeks agojlegal aid plan. mine. « heist, {Passenger | shadow of the U.S. marine} base at Da Nang Bedore dawn 500 Viet Cong drove a South Vietnamese mili-| tary company from a govern- ment strongpoint known as Hill) 60 only four miles from the|in Quang Ngai province earlier/said that American. Air Force] # outer defences of the Da Nangithis month. The bodies were|and navy photographic planes encampment. The Communists|found in shallow graves andsare continuing to range over| still occupied the hill after day-|they appeared to hdve been shot North Vietnamese. territory as| break many times in the face at close a matier of military prudence. In Saigon, a Vietnamese jour-| range, They are trying to learn, among! § nalist whose pro-American arti- : other things, how much pro-| cles brought him threats from| LOCATE BOMBS gress-is being made in repair- the Viet Cong, was shot to death A. serious terrorist incidentiing damage from earlier U.S. this afternoon as he rode home by bicycle. Police attributed the slaying of Tu Chong, 35, a writer for the daily newspay Luan, to Viet Cong agents. assailants escaped. , AUWoriues peu w woe ~~ ver Chinh The weeny running the district town of Minh Long Wednesday A U.S, military spokesman disclosed the Communists exe- cuted three U:S:~- marines and eight South Vietnamese soldiers was narrowly averted when po lice discovered four mines planted in a basket of fruit in ded bu 1 Cholon a crow depot Saigon's Chinese quarter The-air-moratorium began guerrillas in the south. These at- tacks "obviously: contrast with U.S., authorities' allegations of peace and negotiations,' one broadcast said U.S. sources in Washington| 74 attacks as well as the extent of} traffic moving toward the south The reported that 18 le ae BEM sources also U.S. Nar la wpe g for} a m's| Stalled and abandoned | ears' sit in the floodwaters hij hea North: Viet checking of Haiphong, bint mort N RAIN Ce ee i ; rainstorms of the season on a Los Angeles street. yes- swept over southern Califor- terday~as'one-of the worst STALLS CARS IN SOUTH CALIFORNIA hind-the-scenes Washington ef- | forts to discover any peace feelers from Hanoi, But North Vietnamese Presi- dent Ho Chi Minh denounced "U.S. imperialist aggressors" Revenue Ups in a reply to a message MONTREAL (CP) -- Donald Gordon, chairman and presi- dent of Canadian National Rail- ways, said in a year ~ end statement Wednesday that 1965 passenger revenues jumped 12 per cent over the 1964 figure. This level has not been reached since 1957, he said. In 1965, freight revenues in- creased almost six per cent, Canadian National Telecommu- nications revenues increased seven per cent and CN _ hotel revenues increased almost six per cent. 'SNINeeyTaEeNT nents se esa AANA U.S. president,"' from Pope Paul, declared '"'the U.S. leaders want war and not peace." "The talks about uncondi- tional negotiations made by the Ho charged, "are merely a manoeuvre to cover up his plan for war in- tensification and extension Viet Nam." in U.S. diplomats rated Ho's statement, as broadcast by Ra- dio Hanoi Wednesday, as harsh, uncompromising and unchanged from his stand in the past TURN TO P. 2 -- PEACE MOVE -- TW | NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Teamsters' Settlement Faded TORONTO (CP) -- Settlement in the continuing 'clash between Ontario's 8,500 teamsters and the trucking industry seemed more distant today wit ing the industry cannot absorb tract. The union is seeking a h company spokesman claim- the cost of a new union con- 40-hour work week pith the same $2-an-hour wage now earned in a iehour yee verre apes UNEARTH City Finances At Flourishing Pa ...In THE TIME S today... -- co--P. 9 Retiring Jeil Governor Honored--P, 5 Canadian Athletes Won Many Ann Landers--~10 City News--9 Honors In 1965----P. 7 Obits--16 ae Sports--6, 7 | Classified--14, 15 Theatre---13 | Comics--17 Whitby News-----5 3 Editorial--4 Women's--10, 11 Financiol-- 16 Weother--2 nia. One man is trying to : : : push his car from the water. | gui uM om PN TT JOHNSON'S PEACE MISSION © MOVES IN NEW DIRECTI 'UN Envoy ' } awe