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Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Sep 1966, p. 1

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-- = SE GLEE NE RO RPT pais: DWIGHT DAVIES ++ two goals BRIAN THOMSON «.» three goals hind Powless in a scoring way, Gaels would win connecting three times, while John Clayton, Ross Jones and Dwight Davies each. scored twice. Neil Armstrong, Phil OSHAWA GREEN GAELS Wednesday became the first club to win the Canadian junior la- crosse championship four suc- scoring record this past sea- son, was to the fore again in Gaels' cup-winning triumph, He scored four goals and assisted on four others. minster squad game, sayihg, best team, but we paid tribute to the New West- following "We had ps ae MERV MARSHALL + « « outstanding in six games, while Charlie the the had no doubt champs. Bishop dou Greenwood and Danny Sand- ford played. with Marlowe, Fred bur and last year's course. "Of course, the boys them- selves were wonderful and they bles as general along with trainers Frank Wil- = DON STINSON » + fourth Cup Frank Malawy, of Phillips said. "If it couldn't be one of our boys then it had to be Winzoski. He's a real good ball player." "He was the only player out A On AE i A at a Rlg HR E I TE SL SR Res a oe Mae Lys pie 0) retin bya mA ran n poten km tee ra GAYLORD POWLESS «+» eight points p.m. and will leave there at -m, Saturday. They will are rive at Malton airport at 3 p.m. Saturday afternoon. cessive years. And, for the third straight year, Green Gaels defeated New 'Westminster Salmonbellies for the Minto Cup. Oshawa downed Salmonbellies 16-6 in the British Columbia city Wed- nesday to win the best-of-seven series four games to two. Gaylord Powless, who set a Canadian junior lacrosse point- Goalkeeper Merv Marshall, most valuable player in the On- tario Lacrosse Association's junior "A" series in 1965, was outstanding in Wednesday's vic- tory, stopping 26 shots. He held New Westminster scoreless in the final quarter as Gaels pumped home five goals. Brian Thomson was right be- Clayton and Joe Krasnaj tallied the other goals. Captain Jim Higgs, selected the most valuable player in the 1965 Minto Cup win by, Gaels, came up with another strong game for Oshawa, setting up four 'goals, Coach Jim Bishop, who pre- dicted earlier in the series. that that: New Westminster had the second best team in Canada." Three members of the Gaels have been involved in all four Minto Cup wins, goalkeeper Marshall, defenceman Davies and forward Don. Stinson. Powless; Jones, Armstrong, Higgs, Thomson and Phil Clay- ton areall three-time winners manager and coach of the team, with manager Fred Whalley and assistant manager Frank Wilbur helping in the operation. of the. team. "Tt's a real tribute to Bishop and Whalley, for they were the two key people behind the win," Dr. J, M. Phillips, president of Green Gaels said today. "They, are to be fully congratulated on the win and their effort, Phil- lips added. Ken Winzoski of the Salmon- bellies won the most valuable player award for the Minto Cup series. Gaels' Higgs, Powless and Marshall all won the award in the past three years. "It was a good choice," Dr. there that could run with the Gaels for 60 minutes," said George Campbell, associate sports editor of The Times, who just returned from seeing the Gaels play in New Westminster. Gaels will leave Vancouver tonight by train through the Rockies, They arrive in Cal- gary Friday afternoon at 5 A chartered bus will take Gaels from Malton to the Osh- awa Civic Auditorium, arriving at approximately 4 o'clock, From there they will drive through Oshawa in open con- vertibles. Later they will be introduced between periods of the Satur- day night hockey game. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO, 207 She Oshawa Times 10 Je BSc Per Weak'? Worne Beltvered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22,. 1966 Weather Report Rain will clear up overnight, Sunny and cool with cloudy periods ahead, Low tonight 50; high Friday 68, Authorized ae Second Class Mall Post Office Department Postage in Coan Ottowa and for payment of TWENTY-FOUR PAGES: & Camp Blames Leaders For Voter Confusion MONTREAL (CP) --Dalton Camp, national president of the Progressive Conservative party, brought fresh winds Wednesday night -to the political storm he has raised by calling on the party to reappraise its leader- ship. * Mr. Camp, addressing the Young Montreal Progres- sive Conservative Association, blamed the party leadership for a "lack of definition between resulted in confusion of the voter, "We're becoming politi- cal cannibals and we're eating our young,"' he added in urging support for a party leadership appraisal which he suggested in Toronto Tuesday night and touched off a party controversy. He referred to 7l-year-old Conservative Leader Diefen- baker's statement that he plans to lead the party in the next the parties" which he said has general election, and said: 'I have absolutely no quarrel with that, provided there is a mandate from the party. It's important that there is a man- date, or there is a change." Mr. Camp's suggestion before | the Toronto Junior Board of Trade Tuesday night that it is an urgent matter to appraise the present party leadership brought an immediate call for the national president's resigna- tion from Gordon Churchill, de- fence minister in former prime minister Diefenbaker's govern- ment. Mr. Camp had said in a Tor-| onto speech Tuesday night that) {Liberals and Conservatives) |should reappraise their leaders} and the leaders reappraise their) positions. Their jobs weren't "a lifetime contract." Auto Makers Told Prices Must Drop Commented Mr. Churchill: OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadian)between Canada and the United| "For a national president to| automobile manufacturers are|States. j}attempt to undermine and dis- heading for a clash with the) We are taking all reasonable|Tupt his party, under the spe- federal government if they fail| measures to stop the spiral,"|cious guise of attacking the to narrow the price difference|ne js quoted as saying in an| leadership of the Liberaj party osc ong U.S. and Canadian 1967 | interview. be well, is too obvious a subter- models. z | fuge."' A federal spokesman made it| Announcements in the U.S. of But Mr. Camp commanded) Mitchell Sharp, Canadian finance minister (left), con- fers with Dr. T. Caruana Demajo, minister of parlia- mentary affairs and of jus- tice of Malta (centre), and Sir Edwin McCarthy, chair- Economic Committee, prior to the opening Wednesday PRE - MEET MEETING in Montreal of a two-day conference of the Common- wealth Economic Consulta- tive Council. --CP Wirephoto clear Wednesday the govern-| Price increases, for 1967 models support from a number of Con-| servatives. j ment expects a reduction in the |e oa gp price 'situa- . : National Vice-President Fin- differential when new-car prices | : : | are announced. Earl Brownridge, president of|lay MacDonald of Halifax said Finance Minister Sharp was| American Motors (Canada) Ltd. he agrees with Mr. Camp's sen- reported as saying in Montreal said Canadians will likely pay! timents and philosophy. He was Wednesday that Canadian car $50 to $100 more for 1967 models| ready to resign if a majority of manufacturers have been told|due to new safety devices. |Atlantic * provinces Conserva-| the government is opposed to| Mr. Sharp was in Montreal) tives agree with Mr. Churchill! automobile prices that would|for a meeting of the Common-'that elected party men have no maintain or widen the price gap|wealth finance ministers. jright to express their views. Georges Valade, MP for Mont- ' wie PS }real Ste. Marie, also expressed) bomb made up of anti-tank mis- Hellyer $ Unification Talk x: that Mr, Churchill's state-| ripped up sidewalk and turf in |ment illustrates what top men|front of the Cuban Embassy ' ms e ! jin the party do to members| here today. Rewardin Ex erience seeking party renewal. | No on was injured in the g p Plas rere te ee ~~ |blast, apparently the work of | s s persons opposed to the Fidel HALIFAX (CP) -- Defencejing the government's integta-| Strike Hits |\Csstro regime in Cuba, that Minister Hellyer described his|tion and unification policies to| punched out,windows in neigh- meetings Wednesday with|some 5,000. servicemen, but! boring -howiSes and sent up a armed forces personnel from|most- officers and men ques-| cloud of smoke over the quiet the Halifax area as a "most|tioned agreed he had received a| est en a jeast - end residential areas of rewarding experience,' buticool reception |Sandy Hill : there were indications he didn't} Several leading seamen said] |. : Investigators said the device, escape from the session un-|there had been booing at inter-| CALCUTTA (CP)--A 48-hour-|two bazooka-type military anti- scathed. vals while Mr. Hellyer ad-|Seneral strike called by leftistitank rockets with a timer The minister, who arrived in|jdressed the lower decks and/|fronts today paralyzed Calcutta rigged from a clock, may have Halifax Tuesday night, was to|then- answered questions from|Nd the remainder of West Ben-|exploded before it could be fly to Canadian Forces bases at|the floor. Another seaman said|4! State, capping a week of|placed in position close to the Greenwood, N.S., and Summer-|there had been mutterings dur-| Violence and civil unrest which|embassy building, side, P.E.L, today before re-jing the session. |plagued a dozen cities through-| One of the rockets was found turning to Ottawa this evening.| Sailors said following the|out India. qnexploded on the street in He stayed at the residence of|meeting the only cheer the de-| The strike was called by the|front of the building and was Rear - Admiral J. C. O'Brien,|fence minister got was when he|Alliance of Leftist Opposition|disarmed by army bomb ex- sea operations chief, while in|granted a "make and mend'--|Parties in protest against rising|perts. Halifax. This was his first visit}navy parlance for a holiday, |prices and food shortages, | The metal sleeve - like con- to the East Coast since Rear-| Mr. Hellyer, however, told a} In Calcutta, India's largest|tainer for the unexploded ba- Admiral William Landymore|news conference he had not runjcity with more than 7,000,000) zooka shell bore this Spanish in- was fired as sea operation chief| into any vocal opposition during|people, traffic was at a stand-|scription: "Association Nation- earlier this summer. the 'three sessions, divided up|still. Local trains and street-|alist Cubana." There were conflicting reports|between leading seamen andjcars were halted by city offi-| Piecing the evidence together, on exactly how much opposition|lower ranks, chief and petty of-|cials to prevent their destruc-|police and the bomb squad men Mr. Hellyer ran into in describ-|ficers and officers. tion by mobs. | said one bazooka shell went off, jlawn in front of the three- jing the embassy, 'Anti - Castro Group Guilty | MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- Felipe |Rivero Diaz, head of the Chris- |tian Nationalist Movement, said today his anti-Castro group set joff the explosion at the Cuban Embassy in Ottawa. | "Secret cells of the move- jment which I direct told me this morning of the 'success of the action which they carried out,"' Diaz said in an announce- jment. | "Canada," he said, "has been |chosen for the initiation of the war against communism, be- cause of the insuiting and pro- vocative attitude maintained by the Canadian government with respect to the tragedy of the {Cuban people enslaved by in- ternational communism." Homemade Bomb Blast Rocks Cuban Embassy OTTAWA (CP)--A homemadejstriking into th sidewalk and| 'The other did not explode but remained lying on the street be- agreement with Mr. Camp, ad-|siles splintered windows and|storey brick building hous-|side the scattered pieces of a| suitcase and a cartop carrying rack. A newspaper carrier boy told police he spotted a car with a suitcase in a cartop rack parked near the building entrance on Chapel Street about 7:30 a.m. The blast occurred shortly be- fore 8 a.m. é City police and firemen |hustled to- the building minutes jafter the explosion, But they jwere refused entry to the em- bassy, which is Cuban territory, Det. Carl Norton of city po- lice, in charge of the investiga- tion, finally was allowed in at 9:35 a.m, He 'said.damage inside was limited to broken- glass. He un- |derstood that only a caretaker, his wife and child and a maid were inside when the bomb went off. Other embassy staff had not yet arrived for work. Det. Norton said Dr. Americo Cruz, the Cuban ambassador, *""¥s going to speak to the ex- ternal affairs protocol officer before he tells me anything." UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- The United States today offered to halt bombing of North Viet Nam if the Hanoi government agreed to reduce its own mili- tary. activities against South Viet Nam, U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg made the offer in a declaration before the 118-na- tion United Nations General As- sembly. He asked the Hanoi government for a reply, either private or public. Goldberg also said the U.S. is ready to begin a phased with- drawal of its troops from South Viet Nam, under effective su- pervision, if the Communists would agree to withdraw theirs. Goldberg repeated once more the U.S. position that the role of South Viet Nam's Viet Cong guerrillas in peace negotiations is a question which could be solved by discussions. He said: "Our view of this matter was stated by President Johnson, who made clear that . . , \this Rusk Meets Top Russian UNITED NATIONS (AP)-- State Secretary Rusk plans to sound out Soviet Foreign Minis- ter Gromyko tonight for any signs of change in Kremlin for- eigh policy on Viet Nam and other outstanding issues. Some U.S. experts 'believe Moscow may feel freer to deal with the West now that China's purge is damaging Peking's standing in the Chinese-Soviet rivalry for leadership of the Communisty world. a rigid position toward the because of Chinese charges that munism's enemy -- the United States. Now that Kremlin's star is rising in the Red camp, these experts feel, Soviet leaders Peking's challenge. Gromyko has-shown no public softening since his arrival Sept. 18 for the UN General Assem- question would not be 'an insur- mountable problem'. .. ." REPEAT EFFORT The points raised by Goldberg dealt with the subjects raised in| a three + point peace plan ad- vanced some time ago by UN Secretary - General U Thant. Thant had urged a cessation of the U.S. bombing of North Viet Nam, a phased withdrawal of troops and inclusion of all par- ties in peace 'talks. The U.S. position generally followed previous U.S. policy, but the offer to halt the bomb- ings seemed to spell out more specifically what would be ex- pected of North Viet Nam in re- turn, In the 14 + point program previously advanced by the U.S. it-was stated'that the bombings U.S. Offers To End Raids would be stopped if Hanoi stated what would happen next. Goldberg outlined U.S. aims in Viet Nam in these words; "'We want a political solution, not a military solution, to this conflict. By the same token, we reject the idea that' North Viet Nam has a right to impose a military solution. "We seek to assure for the people of South Viet Nam the same right of self - determina- tion -- and to decide their. own political destiny, frée 'of force --that the United Nations char ter affirms for all." : ~ Turning to other questions, Goldberg 'made these points: --The U.S. will stand firm in its opposition to seat Ce nist China: in the UN, | According to this theory, the|-- Russians have been locked into| United States in recent times|= Moscow is conspiring with com-|= should feel less restricted by|-- bly, He and other Communists |= have accused the United States) = NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Communist Leaders Meet For Parley BELGRADE (Reuters) -- Leonid Brezhnev, leader of the Soviet Communist party, was due here today for'a three-day private visit to Yugoslavia and-talks with' Presi- dent Tito on the situation i other major international issues, GM In US.- Raises n the Communist world and 1967 Model 'Prices DETROIT (AP) -- General Motors, giant' of the -auto industry, today followed the lead of 'Ford «and-Chrysler' and raised, its 1967 auto prices. PO Workers Give Brass Strike Authority OTTAWA (CP) -- Members of the Canadian' Union of Postal Workers have given the National executive © authority to<order a strike i f wage negotiations withthe. post office break down, union President William: Kay said' today. ugar terete »In TH SU) Oshawa Softball Team Near Ti Ann Landers--12 City News--11 Classified --20 to.23 Comics--18 Editorial---4 Financial--7 TIMES Tod GM South Plant Workers Walk: Out--P.°11 Area Population Expansion Forecast-----P. 5 IRICEN rte oR tles--P. 8 Obits---23 Sports--8, 9,.10 Theatre---19 Weather---2 Whitby, Ajax News--5, 6 Women's--12, 13,14, 15 of aggression in Viet Nam. Vo

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