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Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Jul 1966, p. 1

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Weather Report 'A mild spell ahead with some thunderstorms. Low tonight, 65; high Wednesday, 75, Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ' ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. sz Authorized os Second Se Mail Pest Office Department EIGHTEEN. PAGES ad 10¢ Single Copy ase palSe Sinaia, ce OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JULY 5, 1966 VOL. 95 -- NO, 141 tivered ) pean REIS SA D. V. GONDER EXPLAINS PROPOSAL TO MAYOR, CITY OFFICIALS Canadian National Railways|"we are centralizing our Osh- will invest $2.5 million in build-/awa facilities." SKETCH SHOWS NEW CNR STATION IN MILLION DOLLAR DEVELOPMENT * e b i 3 TORONTO (CP) -- Peterbor- Vv * eace OL, . | LO s : s From AP-Reuters the First World War Battle of|seen by the crowds greeting her/an injunction were denied the ' Relocate On 50 a Acre Site | pl | welcome from the crowd. Thou-| ? m enwick -River- accelerated and, James Renwick (NDP-River E ing a passenger and freight; Approval of the plan now lies A 17-year-old apprentice plum-} oF apes Seg ppmetin gmp crete block crashed into the car.|jury was denied to the trade|ter Pearson said Monday it is)noi and Haiphong. ; i at 10- | r "i Project plans were released|before council last night and a maid were charged with trying} to protect the Queen as a result sur-| He criticized Mr. Wishart and| Vening of a peace conference on|tions and he did not think it tossing objects at the royalties between Belfast Protestants Ontario Supreme Court, who| He made the comment in the| Policies of either side. The rail: complex will cover| With the necessary approval "T had no intention of harm-|Lisburn, which she will visit to-|"'stting them up" and |tion against picketing. of the| who asked whether there is any|tension and I prefer to leave it | f m |Rd. S istart on the project. | Peterborough. lto lead the prime minister to| Pearson said. station on Thorton Rd. §. to|Pect to have the complex in T Ch Laid NDPer Raps jough trade unionists convicted BELFAST (CP) -- Loyal Or-|the Somme, | along the way. jright to an impartial trial by bd | angemen gave the Queen and/ eras | Although the royal couple was| jury, a New Democratic Party S h ] <e Prince Philip a rousing show ad ahgpor gt WARM protected by the limousine's|member of the legislature was of their incident-marked visit to! immediately . : complex in the southwest of Osh-|in city council hands. Besides the unprecedented ge- Police, who had been stationed|unionists by Attorney-General] 'impossible to be optimistic Mr, Pearson said Canada is a at a press conference held at/full report is to be prepared poeienouy Mae ont desirable to comment on the _ at ; ; "a ; ;.,)rested a man. : - " y y indi limousine as it drove through'and Roman Catholics, police shouting | Sentenced 25 of the unionists to|Commons in answering Con-| "We have already indicated 50 acres of land south of Bloor|from council the CNR is pre- i y, Wi ».|them all," also attempted to get " Mr, ing anyone--I just done it for ajday, will be guarded by detec at that for: the moment," Mr. Plans include: "If all goes well", said Mr. John Francis Morgan, was|ings. stieinet by 'security GUBTUR-; (ar Wishart adieied: an upslbaleve: there is Wope tor. al Mx. DiMenbaker. otetared dls . s As Queen Gets Cheers *"°° Trial | Railway Facilities Will of contempt of court for defying affection today in the final hours|_ SP@ 80t an especially warm) yin oan opy, the driver) charged. : Northern Ireland. | sands joined in a loud rendition turned a corner when the con-|dale) said the right to trial by|, OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-,North Vietnamese cities of Ha- : awa. The project plans were put ber and a 44-year-old chamber- curity precautions already taken to 20-yard intervals| Arthur Wishart. lat the moment about the con-|trying to bring about negotia- to injure or alarm the Queen by| of recent feuding and street bat- roused tit bailing" and ar-| Chief Justice G. A. Gale of the| Viet Nom. city hall this morning. by the public works committee. the capital Monday. |said that the 12-mile route to) Angry | bystanders, 'arrest | ail terms for defying an injunc-|servative Leader Diefenbaker|/®Ur regret at the bombing ex- St. W. and west of Stevenson|pared to make an immediate : ; ; iTdi i ».|Tilco Plastics Ltd. plant in|indication from North Viet Nam s " tiv ' .jinto the building but were re- D protest," the young plumber,|tives on the rooftops of build cin leche sthier, teeaibesna| enn And ademmias aha eae quoted by police as saying after his arrest for dropping a 12-|continued use of her plastic- pound cement block on the/topped limousine so she can be The Queen has insisted on the The Queen's only comment on} y us ual procedure which denied| peace conference. the brick-throwing incident was, 'it's' a strong car." the accused the right to a jury |trial, rather than laying a Queen's car from the fourth floor a a Seay eater teow, US. : x t c atracion. 1 dened the bod of [J SSR - Romania Battle emashed the glass canopy over | | the royal couple if it kad landed 0 P C ] expected to bring forth all evi- a few feet farther back. ver arsaw act ontro poe on both sides. | By HENRY §. BRADSHER | BUCHAREST (AP)--A sum-|ing's opening the Bulgarian,|to get a conviction." mit meeting of Soviet bloc lead- Police quickhy 'arrested Mor-| gan in the building and had to! smuggle him out the back to} protect~ him from a_ howling} | Czech, Within 1% hours of the meet-|eral in the Tilco case "was out Hungar- jian an Polish delegations had did so at a terrible price to the| jcharge under the Criminal | Code, he said in the legislature. | In a criminal trial, the Crown |attorney is not supposed to be trying for a conviction but is | The agent of the attorney-gen-| | | "He got a conviction but he Mr. Pearson also said Cana- dian policy is unchanged from a May 1 speech he delivered. In that, he. said the first con- crete step to peace is a cease- fire as a prelude to no-condition negotiations. Negotiations would be fol- lowed by a phased withdrawal of hostiie forces including North Vietnamese troops from the battleground in South Viet Nam. NDP Leader T. C. Douglas questions with a sombre view of the fighting, He said the bombing extension has in- creased the F sgge sent 4 Crowds world war. "frightening situation." He also asked whether Can-| ada has used its "moral influ-| Pp t t ence" to restrain the U.S. in' TO Ss its bombing policy. Mr. Pearson said Canada's re- e gret at the extension has been made clear ta the U.S. "'as re-} O] } C cently as last weekend" and no) government has tried harder LONDON (AP) -- "Americans cover the CNR's expanding pas- senger service to the city; --the demolition of the existing CNR station of Simcoe St. S. and the sale of :the land; --a freight classification yard with eight miles of track which will speed shipments to local industries and be capable of handling sone 3,000,000 tons of freight a year; --the closing off of Thornton Rd. S. just north of the existing CNR right + of - way to accom- operation by mid-way through next year", STATION NEEDED Of special interest in the pro- ject is the provision for a new CNR station. "It is something much needed in the city," said Mr. Gonder. "The existing building is not exactly attractive." 3 John H. Spicer, the CNR's area manager, pointed out that 1965 saw a 20 per cent rise in passenger traffic in the city. crowd. | ' ' a indi , Two minutes earlier a wousiticctione Ce tant chat eakeene| eerie. That left only the Rus-| administration of justice in this) asked whether Canada would/than Canada to end the Viet get out of Viet Nam" was the}modate the new complex; ae "So far this year we are 18 had hurled a beer bottle at the] the Soviet Union and Romania|Si208, led by Communist party| province." formally notify the U.S. govern-/Nam hostilities. Canada will) familiar rallying' cry as chant-| --and finally a full provision per cent up on last year's fig car. It burst near the wheels! over control of the Warsaw| 0098S Leonid I. Brezhnev, and) The findings made by Chief|ment it disapproved of the ex-|continue to press for a negoti-| ing crowds staged July 4 pro-|within the complex for an e€x-/ures. The need for improved but caused no damage. lPact's. military. forces |the Romanians, headed by party| Justice Gale, Mr. Renwick said,|tension of U.S. bombing to the|ated settlement. jtest demonstrations around the/pansion Plan to keep pace with! facilities is obvious'. Iris Carruthers of England,| p its oificlal fee ia boss Nicolai Ceausescu. demonstrated "'why at this time| | world. the city's industrial growth. The expansion plans provide F ne omania § ollicia' press gave) Romanians have said pri-|the courts are U.S. State Secretary Dean} "Briefly", explained Douglas|for the demolition of the old i irrelevant -- in| | the chambermaid, was quoted|no progress report on the mect-|vately that the alliance's mili jane | cd be | , cia i yal ye : y. tha a : "|matters of deciding trade union! Rusk was the target of some|y. Gonder, vice president of|building and the sale of th by a constable in court as hav-|ing of the Communist counter-!tary commander. Soviet Wan tin " t = } 5.000 it "|v. G , P g e ing told police after her arrest:|part to the North Atlantic shel anaret Th Gime, po disputes." | = er 0 er al S n ,000 Japanese leftists as he ar-|CNR's Great Lakez Regio n/land. anne eterno |rived in Japan for an economic "a lace pevenniiy a ee eae ae has no authority over their 200,- I S d U U S Aj W | conferenice, Pedine slipped him a é |Press ma ention 1S-| 000 troops and they have no in-| t jout of th have chosen the bridge + -|sension and treated the meeting| tention giving him any. 'PC Leader Asks' n eppe Es p gia Lag Ir te 'ad: ee Location Will Serve Oshawa, where she was expose to! as a reaffirmation of solidarity.| Morgan and Miss Carruthers In Paris, about 25 Americans proper view. : : The seven - nation meeting)were charged under a section | S ence Re rt SAIGON (AP) --U.S. Navy|month air campaign against the| began a march on the U.S. Em- s . The Queen dedicated a bridge opened Monday at the former of the Treason Act of 1842. The p' po fighter - bombers attacked two| North. But it was not a record) bassy to deliver a protest peti- Whitby Industrial Growth named in her honor Monday. royal palace and continued maximum sentence is seven | North Vietnamese torpedo boats/number for a single day's raid.|tion. and French Communists Both the plumber and cham- there today but there appar-| years. bermaid were bound over in ma- ently was a delay. At 9 a.m.| x OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition -|Leader Diefenbaker invited the | government Monday to table the} off Haiphong early today as the air war-against the north con- The navy planes also hit an oil storage area 25 miles west moved in and swept the group into a fist-swinging clash with Mayor Lyman Gifford expres- sed 'complete satisfaction" complex would help to attract industry to the city. |of Thanh Hoa, down the coast, | police, The crowd of 700 ap- as the intensified assault on|plauded when an American girl North Viet Nam's fuel supplies|held aloft a burning American|'#Jway station. dali ° PP: ie ae wie ir What's| 'Mt is an excellent location," rialize the west end of the city. | happening in Viet Nam--for the|he said. "You have to remem-| The city's financial responsi- gistrate's court until July 13. |and'again at 10, spokesmen said) s s raj; the meeting had resumed. But! The composure of the roya it was 11 a.m. before the dele- a S anil couple seemed jarred briefly by gation arrived, |report of the inquiry into the| tinued without letup. with the positioning of the new {Gerda Munsinger affair before) , One of ag hat at geo lthe C ' j ' its| that caught the torpedo 3 ; the cement-block aagtaa Mon | ra ssid sigaih percent gota for athe southeast of the main| continued. - Queen was all smiles again Mon- Fe WEre SirOng INGicavoOns | jai Ha 4 ; North Vietnamese port was shot}GROUND ACTION QUIET 4 3 an day night at a ceremony on Bel-|that a compromise over control| ineép te S BoB org on ae, but'the piel avex plucked| U.S. military headquarters re-| Americans to get out." ~ -- that it ee ideally lo-| bility in the building of the fast's military parade ground to|of the member nations' armies} |Spence of the Supreme Court of|from the Gulf of Tonkin by a|ported relativély little ground] British police stopped an at-|Cated to serve Whitby. complex will : be the re-siting mark the 50th anniversary of/had broken down. le a eeale i U.S. spe'-2s-| action in South Viet Nam, but|tempt to burn the American} In discussions at the press|of traffic facilities. | « ; |Canada is ready. He said there| rescue helicopter. A Pp , A ; | The Soviet Union has been! ai So the ; |man said he did not know|it apreared that the enemy may flag at the U.S. Embassy in Lon-|conference Mr. Gonder said the} «This is what we have to 'trying to obtain tighter control! e 0 e ae Um tre Me ROvEUEDY in si i |don where U.S. Ambassador|freight complex had been de- tying to 0 tain it ler Pde will not release the report until) Whether the torpedo boats were) have set their sights on isolated David Bruce wae holding 9s. dana Wik: the city's (dual consider", said Mayor Gifford. Gordon Sees it oops committed ' th ye li-| eg mal es ge eo ae i rare tbe gs eye ception marking U.S Inde end-|needs in mind. , The CNR has suggested the | roops committed to the alli-|) pacca (Reuters) -- Newspa-)this is keeping Mr. Justice] Navy and air force planes) tory that has so far been denied) g Us. P : No Deticit Also he said, to help indust- small pact members have a| woman in an East Pakistan vil-| He didn't want to see the|missions against North Viet/son. Viet Cong raiders made| British Pacifist Committee of 100) place with General Motors ov-|Stevenson Rd. S. to Thorton louder Pace lage recently gave birth to nine judge denied his holiday, said|/Nam Monday. The targets in-|four attacks on the lonely out- a the Pty ee were/er the design of the tracks. Rd. S. just south of the exis- Official spokesmen reported|habies and that all are doing|the Conservative leader. The cluded an oil storage aréa~19| posts in the last three days. | hustled out when one of them The complex will be built ting CNR property. jthat the first about 45 minutes. But actually, ance. Romania has insisted that) pers here report that a young|Spence from his vacation. | riage a record 91 multi-plane|them in the 1966 monsoon sea-|€nce Day. Two supporters of the] Talks, he said, had taken|building of a new road from dent Donald Gordon told the Commons transport committee today that the state-owned rail-| road expects to break even on its passenger service in the| early 1970s. Mr. Gordon said CNR policy| is "the elimination of the rail| passenger deficit, not the elimi | nation of the rail passenger} service." Experiments carried out by} the company had_ established there was a large market for} intercity transportation in Can-| ada. "|. , Taking into account competitive transportation serv-| ices, the railway can economi-| cally fulfill a role in inter-city transportation in areas of rel-| atively heavy density of popula-} tion and similarly, in those afeas where indications of ac- tivity in the travel market are . . . likely to produce a level of revenue which would meet] the cost of the service." Steps would be taken to seek withdrawal from, or obtain sub sidies for, unprofitable services. meeting lasted) well, COMMONWEALTH AID SLIGHT... LONDON (CP)--A diplomatic sdurce disclosed today that with the exception of Canada and 3ritain, most Commonwealth countries have not responded to Zambia's appeal for economic aid to help her cut imports from rebellious Rhodesia. Canada and Britain arg pro- viding a big and expensive oil airlift and Sierra Leone is ready to make a gift to Zambia of four oil tankers. The only other significant gift offer is-50 tons of mutton and three trucks from New -Zealand, the infor- mant said. Most other Commonwealth countries, including India, Ni- geria, Ceylon, Pakistan, Trini- dad and Jamaica, have re- ported they have goods to sell on commercia terms. Some Commonwealth countries haven't even informed the Aid- Committee of the goods they have available for supplies and economic aid dur- government kept adding to the ! The reports say the multiple| business it wanted the MPs to} ' it developed into a three-hour|birth occurred at the village of/deal with before taking a break| made the raids, a number which confrontation between the saga | Haw egy 90 miles northeast of) and one more item wouldn't do|a qualified officer said was sians and anians. re Sy f OTTAWA (CP) -- CNR presi-|! ns d the: Romanians Loon here in the Sylhet district. 'any harm. | miles southeast of Haiphong. | An estimated 250 to 300 planes Trai Bi special forces camp 65 miles northwest of Saigon under fire for 14% hours Monday until above the average for the 16- air strikes drove them off. Mrs, Hart i b Lusaka Kaunda High Commi ss to slash Rhodesia, Rhodesia's may be one 0 of alternative monwealth ment was prepared to give talks Chevrier calls another meeting of the Commonwealth sanctions committee next of the committee before Com- prime ',..BUT 50 TONS OF MUTTON These talks, however, didn't The resolve the issue, the informant said. The Zambian government a requested far more economic Zambia depends heavily on aid than the Rhodesia for essential imports, WOULD CUT EARNINGS Kenneth has indicated readi from cutting Britain and other partners would whether grounds desia m British govern- solution s to report on her factory when Canadian ssioncr Lionel Rhodesi regime, Monday. This ain last f the last meetings ministers Little Response To Zambian Appeal For Aid talks were to decide there is sufficient for full Anglo - Rho- inisterial negotiations to end the crisis by providing a which would be satis- to the 200,000. whites and the 4,000,000 non-whites in a, Informants said the Ian Smith which broke from Brit- Nov. 11, has refused to yield any substantial ground Commentators have specu- lated that the British govern- ment will seek heavier eco- ing the crisis period. Mrs. Judith Hart, junior min- ister in the British Common- wealth Office, recently held a second round of talks in Lusaka to assess the amount of aid needed and to. judge how much could be provided by Britain, meet here Sept. 6-15 to thrash out the Rhodesian issue and dis- cuss other Commonwealth prob- lems : British*- Rhodesian explora- tory talks, held off and on since May, resumed in. Salisbury Monday but indications are that no progress is likely, nomic sanctions as its prime weapon against the Smith re- gime, maintaining that the ex- isting curbs: are becoming in- creasingly effective and that it is just a matter of time before the Smith opposition to an ac- ceptable compromise crumbles. and dying in Hanoi and Hai- }phong and the American with- | drawal from Viet Nam," | British Prime Minister Wilson | yielded to demands from mem- | bers of his Labor party and }scheduled debate in the House }of Commons Thursday on the jextended bombings of North Viet Nam, Life Title Lost | By President JAKARTA (Reuters) -- Indo- nesia today struck anew blow at President Sukarno, for years its undisputed ruler, by strip- ping him of fhe title of life president. He will, however, remain "as president until the next general election. : The huge Southeast Asian re- public also imposed a ban to- day on communism, Marxism and Leninism. the People's Congress, the high- est state body, meeting in the thrown around Jakarta as a | precaution against any agita-|= tion. The decisions were made by|! giant Soviet-built sports arena|= here. About 6,000 troops were}: | About 500 guerrillas kept the| Proposed a toast "to the dead| int alongside the General Mo- tors south plant which stands between Park Rd. S. and Ste- venson Rd. S. In all the CNR had options on some 250 acres of land. "Not all of this will be need- ed," explained Mr. Gonder, "but we have enough land on which to cope with any rail expansion. "The complex," he added, "is a testimonial to industrial growth and development in Osh- awa." ATTRACT INDUSTRY James Williams, the city's in- The rail complex will go up on farm land. "Nothing has to be knocked down to build the passenger and freight yards," said Mr. Spicer. "Our only real problem is providing traffic facility to that part of Thornton Rd. S. that will be cut off by the new com- plex. "We think our suggeston of a link road between Thornton and Stevenson will cover the' dustrial commissioner, said the problem", Ann Landers--10 City News--9 Classified --14 to 17 Comics--12 Editorial---4 Financial--13 ... In THE TIMES today... Firefighters Salary Boost Approved -- P. 9 Department Official To Aid Amalgamation -- P. 5 Jones, Thompson Sharp For Gaels -- P. 6 Obits--18 Sports--6, 7 Theatre--7 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax News--5 Women's--10, 11 eit

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