THAT OF WOULD-BE PEACEMAXER FOR ASIA New A MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet Union has taken on a significant new diplomatic venture by be- ing host at a conference this week between the government chiefs of feuding India and Pakistan. The most important result of the meeting is likely to be the emergence of the Soviet Union as a would-be peacemaker for Asia. This is a role that has arti- Chinese connotations. Improvement of Indian-Paki- stan relations is considered a remote prospect by some here who are familiar with the dif- ficulties between the two coun- tries. Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri of India and President |Mohammad Ayub Khan of Paki- lstan will consider those difficul- ties in Tashkent, the main city jof Soviet central Asia, af the} linvitiation of Premier Alexei |N. Kosygin. Kosygin flew to {Tashkent Sunday. Kosygin's role will be that of} ja middleman who avoids urging jany solutions, according 'to the \Indians. They have taken pains HARRIMAN IN INDIA gg ors is linterference. In India, Pakistan uss Role Seen The Soviet arms aid to India was originally intended to bols- fer that country against China. It thus constituted an indirect violation of the 1950 Soviet-Chid nese military alliance. Kosygin's peacemaking move can be interpreted primarily in terms of trying to reduce chances for Chinese gains in South. Asia. It also. involves an effort to prevent India from _ turning more to the West in reaction to a Pakistani tie with China. says India is completely right in Kashmir. The Russians want to be more friendly with Pakistan in an effort to counter Ayub's in- creasingly serious flirtation with Communist China. Indian sources here and in New Delhi contend Pakistan is getting from China the weapons it has been denied in the West. Soviet military aid for India, which began several years ago, has' continued despite the Sep- tember war. Knighthood Bestowed On Fiery "Cassandra" LONDON jin 1942 and after serving as an Churchill called him "an able|infantryman, later helped run writer dominated by malevol-|the army newspaper Union| ence." | Jack, | The Communist London Daily| On his return from the army Worker called him "'that hys-|Connor started his first post terical old woman. war column: "As I was saying| The late U.S, Senator Joseph} when I was so rudely inter-| McCarthy withstood an attack rupted..." z by him and said: 'Jeez, that was straight shooting." Some of Connor's choice quotes in recent years: | W. Averell Harriman left, U.S. ambassador - at - large and President Johnson's special envoy on Viet Nam, talks with newsmen on ar- riving at airport in New 34-Car Train Delhi today for talks with They were all talking about a) Indian Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri. (AP Wirephoto via cable from New Delhi) Derailed Oil Fire Follows Near {INDIA RELUCTANT | Shastri has made it clear pub Hicly that he was being dragged lreluctantly to the conference) table. He will be unwilling to make any meaningful change in lIndia's stand on Kashmir. | The dispute over Kashmir is| |the heart of 18 years of hostility | between India and Pakistan. It} lerupeed late last summer into ja 22-day undeclared war. India denies the Kashmiri people the las the columnist Cassandra of| ting romance which makes any 59-year-old Irishman named Wil- On Richard Burton and Eliz- liam Neil Connor, better known|abeth Taylor--"This ear - split- the 5,000,000 circulation London| thing that occurred between Ro-| Daily Mirror. meo and Juliet and Antony and] After 30 years of hard-hitting Cleopatra seem like a one-sec-| nuzzle in a and often savage criticism, Con-, "4 nor really astonished his read-|"€F- + - - ers today. He received a knight-| On trading hood get this buckshee fridge if you! Although many of his words|spend $12,000 on hundreds of| have been directed at excessive! gallons of soup, barrow-loads of| adulation of royalty, it was in soap, cubic yards of spaghetti) to dark cor- stamps -- '"'Youlg VACATIONING LADY THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mendey, Jenuary 3, 1966 3 SALISBURY (AP) -- Africa's leaders will be tested in 1966 as never before. One wrong step could set the lower third of the continent aflame. The tinder a race war of almost incalo¢ftiable consequen- ces to the World is accumulat- ing along the Zambezi River. An economic war between black-ruled Zambia and white- ruled Rhodesia, tjvo natural tra- ding partners, already is in pro- gress. There is every indication that it will be intensified as pressures mount on the two neighbor nations. It started Noy. 11 when Prime Minister Ian Smith of Rhodesia declared Britain's old colony in Central Africa a free and inde- pendent nationa. Britain, intent on obtaining eventual majority rule in Rho- desia, reacted immediately. It announced the exclusion of Rho- desia from the sterling bloc, trade sanctions, an oil embargo the blocking of Rhodesian funds in London and a ban on imports of Rhodesia's rich tobacco crop. Other countries followed suit. Rhodesia, where 225,000 whites now rule 4,000,000 Afri- cans, met every blow with a counter-thrust. Smith cut off oil from Zambia, raised the price of coal to Zambia $14 a ton African Leaders African nationalist guerrillas operate in the northern reaches of Angola and Mozambique. The 36 African nations in the Organ- committed themselves to use force if necessary to crush the Smith government. | Nine African countries, inclu- ding two members of the Brits ish Commonwealth, have ken relations with Britain for rejecting the use of force. They are Algeria, Congo, (Brazzaville) Ghana, Guinea; Mali, Maurita- nia, Sudan, Tanzania and Egypt. An armed conflict seems re- mote at present, due to logis- tics, but Tanzania, Ghana, Al- geria and Egypt have collected large quantities of Communist Chinese weapons. All African attention seemed to be focused on Rhodesia as the New Year opened. But the Congo (Leopoldville), an old trouble spot, remained uneasy under a military dictatorship es- tablished by Gen. Joseph A. Mo- |butu. Rebellion still smoulders. Nigeria survived months of political turmoil last year and should be able to achieve rela- tive stability, but tribal and re- gional tensions persist there. The economic outlook has im- proved. through increased royalties and threatened to raise the freight rates for hauling Zambia's cop- per exports to the port. Smith has not played out his hand. The power station of the immense Kariba hydroelectric power complex on the Zambezi is on Smith's side of the river. Zambia needs the power for her copper mines and Britain needs | the copper. | Rhodesia is cradled among || HEAT WITH OIL | | DIXON'S OIL |} 313 ALBERT ST. | 24-HOUR SERVICE | ization of African Unity have- Mrs. John F. Kennedy, wearing sun glasses and a wool cap topped with a pom pom, presented this picture 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER John Jr., went to the top of Baldy Mountain to ski and watch the annual Kennedy family ski race. She and her right of self-determination be-|the Queen's new year's honors|and enough puffed wheat LEAMINGTON, Ont. (CP) --|O Railway, said in Detroit thaticause of a well-founded fear list that Connor's award was an-| pack the Taj Mahal." Firemen and railway officials,|it might be two days before aithey would choose Pakistan neameee: RIBBED SOCCER Connor's blistering On soccer --"I am probably | South Africa and the Portuguese) territories of Angola and Moz-) ek "ghee ambique, all areas where white) ankles deep in mud and water, damage estimate could be which covets the area were mopping up today after} made--"it could run as high as Sunday's fire and 34-car derail-|a million dollars if all the de- ment of a Chesapeake and Ohio railed cars were loaded." freight train here. The first 10 cars and Firemen from five southwest-/ engines of the mile-long ern Ontario fire departments) were not involved in the derail- fought a 12-hour,gasoline and| ment and were able to continue three When Kosygin first proposed the meeting Sept. 17, Ayub had hopes of United Nations actionjexcelled in descriptions of who r on Kashmir. But after the fight- trainjing ended Sept. 22, the hopes! pussy cat... faded Pakistan finally agreed to the} described the late Richard Dim bleby, famed broadcaster who as '"'the royal! soused with the mayonnaise of his own unction." Connor once said of the royal royal events, the only man in this country) egards soccer with faint sorrow tinged with acute dis- gust." On covering the Jack Ruby trial in Texas -- "Sometimes I think that everybody down here of a winter vacationing lady in Sun Valley, Idaho, yester- day, Mrs. Kennedy her daughter, Caroline and son, children are scheduled to leave Sun Valley today and return to New York. (P WirephotAo) leaders reject Black African na-| 50 YEARS | tionalism. | McLaughlin Public Library Surgery Planned To Replace diesel oi! blaze alongside the|/on to their U.S. destination Tashkent meeting as a way of family: "It has been built up is nuts." Leamington station plat form that began when two of the de- railed cars were smashed open firemen from jthe nearby in the early afternoon crash. The 79-car train was its regular 2'4-hour injured in the accident. The fire had been allowed to| side the tracks. burn itself out to prevent fur-| ther fuel runoff into the town's| Detroit, series} Charles Caves sewage system after a of minor explosions lifted man-|t bound | Kingsville, for Detroit from St. Thomas on|and Gosfield South non-stop) fought to contain run, The five crew members,| which threatened at o all from St. Thomas, were not spread to gasoline st i tanks and a lumber yard along-|a time when Pakistan was an billowing black smoke/keeping the Kashmir issue the wreck scene, |alive. India had to agree to talk Leamington andor look unreasonable. communities of The Soviet Union has in the Mersea|past given complete support to townships|the Indian grip on Kashmir./ the flames, Soviet vetoes in the United Na-| ne time to|tions protected India from Paki- orage|stani demands for plebiscites a As hung over Wheatley, active member of two anti-Com-| Describing the crash later in| munist military alliances. | train conductor Now FAVORS PAKISTAN said: "We (in| Now, however, Moscow he caboose) first heard a 8S€-| seeking to improve its relations | | is hole covers when sewage and ries of bumps and then, within) with a Pakistan that has al- fuel ously shortly after the crash. | the 'half-mile of wreckage at) the town's centre to allow road/eer William Hart, fireman Cliff traffic to again move across Tuff, i man and Frank Currier--with Al Sicnolf, regional public re-|Mr. Caves--were back on duty lations manager for the C. andi Sunday night. PCs Train Their Big Guns On English Cabinet Members the tracks. OTTAWA (CP) -- The English-speaking cabinet min-/ ister to commit a miscue in the new Parliament "wilt be bombed," says a Conservative. Since the Liberal government took office, most of the cabinet ministers under the heaviest opposition fire have been French-speaking. And there are indications that others will face some drawn daggers in the new Parliament. But some Conservatives have expressed fear that the party will be widely accused of dis criminatory tactics if all its fire is aimed at French - speaking ministers. Liberals . have al- ready levelled such accusa- tions. | In the last Parliament, former justice minister Guy Favreau was a prime target, and after the Dorion report on the Rivard affair he stepped down to a lesser portfolio. Maurice Lamontagne and Rene Tremblay; who recently re- signed from the cabinet, also came under attack over easy payment terms in their pur- chase of furniture from a Mont- real firm that later went bank- 7 As politicians prepare for the Jan. 18 opening of the House, | some Conservatives Say they | plan to give Justice Minister Cardin a bit of a ride over his handling of the espionaze case involving a Vancouver civil ser- vant. NOT FORGIVEN Mr. Cardin has forgiven by Conservatives stinging attack he Fun-house Mirror Aids Psychiatrists | CHICAGO (AP)--A fun-house mirror is enabling psychiatrists at Michael Reese Hospital a glimpse into the minds of some patients For many mentally disturbed persons the distorted image in the trick mirror is far from} funny--it is the way they pic- ture themselves. Normal people usually pro-| duce fairly accurate reflections of themselves, said one doctor, but many with serious mental iliness especialls schizophren- ics, create mis-shapen noe been for a made never first |against fumes combined danger-|a matter of seconds, we went|jqwed its Western alliances to from 50 miles an hour to a dead| atrophy. The Kremlin The fire died out by 2-a.m.'stop. We were thrown around a Ledelipeasietiiigsiininlolaeangeionenten today and the task began ofjbit but not one of us. was in- clearing two level crossings of) jured." longer engin- New Press | brakemen Clayton Mill- | Freedom ~|Gains Seen Switzerland (Reut ers)--Gains in press freedom throughout the world out weighed losses in 1965, the In- Institute de- in its annual praised Rhode oditeans eaters The crew members ZURICH, then prime minister ternational Press Diefenbaker several years 2g¢. clared Saturday But one Conservative source report, which savs that if a chink appears in Sian and South African some English - speaking minis-| for resisting censorship. terial armor, Mr. Cardin may "The blank spaces left in escape with a relatively light| Rhodesian - papers by censor- attack. ship cuts were honorable "Let's face it," he says, "we badges of their resistance to just can't aim all our fire at restrictions, on the free flow of any one group, whether we're information," the report of right of wrong." -- director Per Monsen Sai Party members have it geid: 'The courageous disturbed at earlier charges stand of an editor like Laur- that they were trying to em-'ence Gandar of the Rand Daily barrass French-speaking minis- Mail, Johannesburg, was an} ters. example to newspaper men. He| "Nothing could be further Proved that even under adverse from the truth," says one. '"It| conditions such as in South just happened in the last Parli- Africa, a free and independent ament that most of the minis- Newspaper will defy intimida- | ters who got into trouble were tions and print what it believes; from Quebec.' t o be the truth." Beane ce The report cited Japan, Hong | Rather than withold any fire, Kong and Ceylon-as bright! the CONRETYRUSES , hope they spots in Asia; Spain and Portu- can catch an English-speaking gal as dark spots in Europe; minister bet ween the bases and commented that "in Afriga been lstructor with the society, said early in the session. "And if we do," 'watch out." says one, Indian Band Leader, 40, Dies SARNIA (CP) -- Christopher L. Adams, chief of the Sarnia Indian hand, died Saturday night at the home of his father, former chief Telford Adams. He was 40. A heart attack is believed to have been the cause of death. He succeeded his father as chief of the 600 band members in June, 1964. Mr. Adams was active in the Union of Ontario Indians 4nd took part in the affairs of the Indian - Eskimo Association Most 'recently an active part he was taking in negotiations jand studies to turn part of the 3,000-acre into indus- trial land, Chief Adams served with the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War reserve Good Names To Remember en Buying or Selling Wh REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker--VPresiaent i MeFeeters-- Vice Pres Schofield-Aker Lid, 723-2265 the picture is an uneasy one In many areas, with seizures of newspapers and a number of | arrests and expulsions of jour- nalists on different grounds, usually closely connected with the sensitivity of young nations to criticism and opposition." me 1.500 publishers and editors in 52 countries belong to the institute, whose avowed purpose is defence press freedom everywhere. The report said the press in the Western world is on the offensive, demanding legal 're- forms and better protection of its rights Foreign ownership of news- papers, which arose as a con- ltroversial issue in Canada and New Zealand, is sure to appear again as an issue at frequent intervals, the report warned. of into a kind of Walt Disney land." Married, with three children, On a well - known poet -- "'T and a passion for cats, the| Claim to be the only journalist partly bald Connor admits that|in London who goes to pubs and he occasionally makes mistakes.| Who never met Dylan Thomas," "In the 3,000,000 words and; On King Edward VII: "Bertie 6,000 columns I have written, Ijloved other things besides ;, did not pretend to be always|women. And in gay recognition "pate - maker" right," he told friends. }of his capacity at the platter, Connor began his column injhis intimate cronies called him 1935. He joined the British army| 'tum-tum.' "' | Hero-Son Dies In Accident. | Medal Planned For: Parents -- PETERBOROUGH (CP)--The;drowning--two he pulled from Royal Lifesaving Society will be Rice Lake near his home and asked to present a_ special/a third he rescued at an indoor medal to the parents of 15-year-'swimming pool in Peterbor- old Gordon Wood, who died in'ough. He received the 'senior hospital here after a shooting lifesaving bronze medallion. accident Mrs. Wilson said she'll ask ver the society to present a special medallion to his parents in memory of his bravery. Gordon was shot in the chest Thursday by a .22-calibre bullet accidentally discharged from a Harold Wilson, an in- Gordon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood of nearby Keene, has earned "every lifesaving award there js." rifle that he and a friend, Neil Baby's Electronic Device TORONTO (CP) month-old baby |Edward Island, youngest per-|she was two months old. son known to use a permanent heart working normally, electronic device that working Thursday, Lisa Parker of Georgetown,| doctors resorted P.E.1,, was flown to the Hos-| maker when pital for Sick Children here! were unsuccessful. Thursday night by the RCAF) Lisa's page-maker after her mothér noticed her outside the! chest heartbeat had dropped beats a minute from to is the 80/into the heart. Dr. -- A_nine-)learn what happened to the) from Prince|pace-maker she has worn since| Lisa had a heartbeat of only to keep her|40 to the minute at birth com- is ex-| pared with the normal 120. Sent! pected to undérgo surgery|here nine days after birth by| early next week to replace the|her Charlottetown pediatrician, stopped Dr. Ross Parker, she was re- turned two months later after the pace-} drug stimulants! worn with wire} to 40) passing through the chest wall Michael) NEW LIBRARY HOURS ADULT DEPARTMENT: 9 a.m. -- 9 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday 9 a.m. -- 6 p.m, Seturdey Closed Wednesday end Sundey BOYS & GIRLS DEPARTMENT: Fridey 9.15 ---- 6 p.m. daily except Wednesday & Sundey previously maintained by the! Braudo said it may be possible pace-maker, to use a Lisa was reported doing well) maker nejv kind of pace-! which has a_ receiver) Friday at the hospital, wherejunder the skin and a transmit-| heart specialist Dr. Langford!ter outside. Kidd inserted a tube through a vein into her heart to carry a new wire to boost her heart muscle, Another specialist said Lisa! repeated will be well enough in a few month days to undergo surgery tol was needed. the tax - DOUBLED HIS TAKINGS The Babylonian King Hammu- rabi, of the 17th century B.C., gathering when calendar reform WILL 1966 BE A HEALTHIER YEAR? The odds are it will be. Each new year brings import- ant medical discoveries. We can already control Polio, Diphtheria, Smallpox, M td. and Tuberculosis, 1966 Mrs. Wilson said Gordon had| Richardson also of Keene, were saved three persons from!examining. Fischer U.S. Chess C awe Ww waa Wins Most Of 11 frames Played NEW YORK (CP) Bobby, second place, with four points Fischer gwon the United States| each to Gligoric's 414. chess championship for the sev Tragedy struck the chess con enth time Friday when he de-! gress Saturday when Percy Col feated Karl Burger in the 11th/ lier, captain of the Leicester- and final round in 45 moves. shire team, died in hospital at Fischer took first - prize of Hastings. $2,000, finishing one point ahead! Collier, in his 70s, had com- of Robert Byrne and Samuel) pleted two games in the Main Reshevsky, who ended dead-'B section and was taken ill at locked for second place. his hotel last Thursday. Fischer won the most games-- GOOD FOOD eight out of the 11 played in the} round-robin tournament -- and BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12 Noon to 2 P.M. had a final score of 814-24. He drew once, Byrne and Reshev- DINNER 5:30 to 8 P.M. FULLY LICENSED sky, with five wins and five DINING ROOM amn nimi draws apiece, were 744-344. HASTINGS, England (AP)-- Svetozar Gligoric, 42 - year - old Yuyoslav grandmaster, took the lead at the halfway stage in the international chess congress Sunday, defeating England's Norman Littlewood in 32 moves in a fifth-round match. Two Russian entries Boris Spassky and Evgeny Vasukov drew Sunday and now share) CASH Sparetime Income Monufacturer is seeking reliable individuals to service established accounts. No selling, 4 to 6 hours weekly. Only people with good employment record need apply. WRITE MR, ROY BOX D13 HOTEL LANCASTER 27 King St. W., Oshawa Why Pay More. FUEL OIL SAVE!! ON PREMIUM QUALITY Phone 668-3341 DX FUEL OIL Serving Oshawa ---- Whitby & Ajax Districts GARY NESBITT Representative SUN LIFE Assurance Company of Canada * gal. 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