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Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Oct 1966, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. i NO. 215 'Weather Report Some moderation in temper- atures will arrive Sunday. Low tonight 38, high to- morrow 60, She Oshawa Fimes BSc Pa Week Horne "Delivers OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1966 Authorized os Sec ~ Ottawe and for poyment of ond Class Mall f3! Department Office lostage in Cash TWENTY-TWO PAGES VOL, 95 -- ' . pit, PRIME MINISTER and Mrs. Pearson were greeted by stiff winds when they arrived in Toronto Friday to open Glendon College of York University. At the university Mr, Pearson was greeted by students urging Students Picket PM On College Aid, War TORONTO (CP) -- Placard-|campus of York University's government aid for education carrying pickets calling for ac-| Glendon College to open the col-| met the prime minister and tion on education and Viet Nam scholarships. --CP Wirephoto QUEBEC (CP) -- Spotlights glimmered across the oil-slicked St, Lawrence River early today Port authorities said 13 other members of the 23-man crew of the dredge, owned by Marine as searchers hunted for nine|Industries Ltd., of Sorel, Que., men reported missing after ajwere rescued either by the tug dredge sank near. Quebec City/Rene Simard, which had: been Friday, night. towing the dredge, or by other One man was known drowned/|ships dispatched to the scene. when the dredge Manseau 101; Survivors of the sinking said was swamped by a large: wave/that they were swamped by a land sank near the Quebec City} huge wave shortly after a large lbridge, about 10 miles west of) boat passed them while they O Men Are Lost As Dredge Sinks clothing in the sinking. He said| he kept his post at the winch) until he felt that the dredge) would capsize. | "That ship--I couldn't see the name--passed us exactly like a Cadillac goes by a Volkswagen on a highway. "From the time the water started to fill the dredge and from the time she started to Jist, there wasn't more than a min- China Says Russia In U.S. War Plot. Red Bloc Diplomats Leave Peking Rally In Protest PEKING (CP)--Soviet - bloc Gage of Heavenly Peace |diplomats walked off the re-| square: viewing stand today in protest} About 5,000 goose - stepping against a National Day speech|soldiers, carrying sub-machine- by Chinese Defence Minister|guns in one hand and red book- Lin Piao charging the Kremlin|lets of the quotations and writ- with plotting with the United|ings of Mao in the other, led States over Viet Nam. ithe parade. Lin Piao told a cheering) It was the first time 'since throng, estimated at upward of|1959 that troops had taken part 3,000,000 people, that China will| carry through to the end its Struggle against Soviet "'revi- sionism" -- China's term for what it considers deviation by the U.S.S.R, from Marxist-Len- inist ideology. China also marked its 17th an-| niversary with a pledge to sup-| in the Oct. 1 parade here. After the troops came a solid mass of 1,000,000 Red Guards young shock troops of the cur- rent campaign against: Bour- geois tendencies -- each waving the same booklet. This was all most of them carried, although a few: port- |the. city proper. were lowering large pylons the|ute or a minute and a half." port Vietnamese warring/|raits of Mao bobbed above the ORDER OBEYED WITH CHINESE FORT ST. JOHN, B.C, (CP)--Ernie Carrier obeyed an order from the provincial motor vehicles branch that he display the name of his business and gross vehicle weight on the door of his ------~ dredge uses to keep itself in| place. "The minute I saw this big ship coming toward us at full }speed, I knew we were going to thave it," said John Reid, 35, of Saint John, N.B., a winch man aboard the dredge. "The ship passed about 300 feet from us and I knew there would be a strong stern wake." {LOST HIS CLOTHES re-} Mr, Reid was. interviewed in Violence Dies Down In Nigeria LAGOS (Reuters)--Calm The 135-foot Manseau 101 sank at about 8:30 p.m, under clear conditions and strong westerly| winds. The dredge was put into posi- tion to begin work on construc: tion of a second bridge parallel to the. present Quebec. City bridge. The one known death raised to 85 the number of persons who have drowned while working on bridge construction on this sec- against the United States and with a warning to the U.S. not to force China into war. Lin Piao, speaking for Com- munist Party Chairman Mao Tse-tung and the party's central committee, told the throng: "We are determined to port to the end the fight of the fraternal Vietnamese people in resisting America and saving their country, whatever sacri- | lege officially. |William Davis, Ontario educa- ambulance. jturned today. to northern Nige- the lobby of a downtown hotel.| tion of the river. fice we have to make, huge column which took more than four hours to pass through 'the square. In the main speech of the day, Lin Piao declared: "Imperial- ism headed by the United States and modern revisionism, with the leadership of the Commu SUP-|nist party of the Soviet Union at its centre, are colluding and actively reiting reas + talk swindles for purpose of stamping out the raging of the Vietnamese h : About, a dozen students bear-| tion minister, at the college) "11, wont to a sign painter |tia, scene. of renewed com-|He was wearing a waiter's|. 'The previous deaths were in| He also echoed an editorial in greeted Prime Minister Pear-| son Friday as he visited the|ing placards demanding more| Que. Young PC's Seek Convention . QUEBEC. (CP) | > "Young Cebiitvie Friday came out in favor of a leader- ship convention and a re-evalu- ation of party orientation, struc- tures and organization. Claude Harari, president of the Young Conservatives, said .ot Conservative Leader John ker: "No chief can consider him- self above the party from which he received his mandate and no chief may scorn, his obligation of taking into Account the man- date of those he represents." Mr. Harari said the 1,000 Young Conservatives he repre- sents fully support the stand taken by Dalton. Camp, Con- servative party president. "We, as young Conservatives, ask for a full re-evaluation of the party's political program, of | of the leadership . Mr, Harari, holding a press conference in French although he is Etiglish-speaking, said that "the arrogance of 'the former prime minister (Mr. Diefen- baker), who tries to prevent the national party president from expressing certain fundamental ideas which are needed to make the party more democratic, can only be treated with scorn." SUDBURY (CP) -- The Sud bury Progressive Conservative Association Friday voted its wood - gates and later lined part of the route as they marched to a formal opening ceremony. Another six paced up and down outside windows of the| auditorium where the ceremony! }munal violence in which at least and had the job done--in 150 persons were reported dead, Chinese. jacket and had a towel wrapped around him -- he lost all his in 1916, when 14 were killed. 1907, when 70.persons died, and people' 5s a the Peking Peopl h ten a i wae oe Branch officials searched their regulations, They agreed the signal was legal. hald thair nl st "Stop Canadian arms export to. U.S.A. for VietNam." 'The picketing was orderly and matured.' Mr, ~ Pearson stopped alotigside. the -educa tion aid proponents at one point; read his way through the waving cards and murmured pleasantries to the students. Later, in his speech, he spoke approvingly to the students of "your generation of restless so- cial activists." PRESENT PETITION The students presented a pe- tition deploring the federal gov-| ernment's failure to implement its promise of 1,000 student} scholarships of $1,000 each.) a was support for John Diefenbaker as leader of the national party. But) Mike Shiposh, association presi- dent, said the resolution also en- They recommended 'a federal-/ provincial secretariat on educa- tion. The Ontario savernment was {65 on Dec. 11 this year, is to CNR Head - To Retire | OTTAWA (CP)--Donald Gor-| don is to retire at the end of! this year, winding up 17 contro- versial years as president and as Nigeria marked the sixth an- niversary of independence with prayers instead of parades. Reports from the north said police and army units had re- stored order and were in trol, Informed sources said at i. persons; "were killed' ny huhdreds injured in i tribal clashes between Moslém Hausa and Ibos from the south- east, Worst rioting, said reliable oad lied iter'). FAKARTA (OP)~More thin| |10,000 Indonesian students) | Screaming "Sukarno is the Com-/ | munist leader" massed today in| Pigs front. of., President. Sukarno's reports, was in the tin-mining town of Jos, where Ibos put up palace and threatened to:storm board chairman of the publicly- owned CNR, Mr, Gordon, who reaches the corporation's retirement age of stif! ist. ke)" rat penne e against attack-| aes 2.0007 neane armed with sub-machine-guns formed a cordon between, the In Kaduna, capital of the agg Rain My 2 Ne shoving students and the palace | grounds, turn over the job on Dec. 31 t Norman J, MacMillan, 56, lawyer and CNR executive since 1937 His retirement concludes a 0} army patrols enforced an all- night shoot-on-sight curfew, satin There were no injuries, Four student leaders told the jpalace guard commander they Postal Workers oxic, ss commancer, ey Hear Cote' Plea the palace but their request was rejected, As student leaders with loud-| Jakarta Students Scream sy. Anti-Sukamo Protest Sukarno flew to his mountain palace of Bogor and will remain there until Sunday night. Students demanded he be brought back or they would wait until he returned. Scores' of signs and banners. were held by the front ranks of the crowd calling Sukarno leader of the abortive: Communist coup at- tempt last Oct. 1. Students planned to leave the} signs and portraits in front of the palace for Sukarno to see) when he returns. Meanwhile, Congress Chair- man Gen, Nasution called today on the Indonesian people not to be influenced by personality) cults. e's Daily whic! warned the United States tha' if it dared to force China into war "several millions of WHO ie We siatwaams Roms SS the liberation army" would waiting, the state and party who re; viewed a parade >in Peking's Y}manians, ON and. the North, . "neu The 59-year-old _ bespectacled minister, now the No, 2 man in the Chinese hierarchy, appeared with Mao and other leaders of The only : , mats to remain: in their | after this gg oy tng Vietnamese- trails' in the Sine * 1-9 BManube aw IMEUIV Bien See aes 2 the Yugoslavs, Cubans, and Al- banians.- 4 Kor the first time, no chiefs of sta! Lop foreign n- ment ger were the rostrum and official sent, from ..other | : countries were Coo), L SAIGON (AP) -- U.S. B - 52 bombers pounded enemy troops in South Viet Nam with two consecutive day of double strikes, * the raids hit at North One Vietnamese infiltration routes dorsed a secret ballot on the|@8ked to adjust its loan-grant question of the leadership at the| 2/4 system to put emphasis on party's »next national conven-|S8*ants. our framework, the organiza- tion In a speech Friday night, Mr. Si |Pearson said the federal gov- Agreement Staves Off CBC Technicians Strike -- OTTAWA (CP) -- Agreement On & $9,000,000 Wage-aietiimee benefits package early today staved off a country - wide strike by technicians employed) by the CBC. - The National Association of Broadcast Employees and Tech- nicians withdrew a 3 p.m. EDT strike deadline and prepared to poll its membership on a new 30-month contract worked out in three days of marathon ne- gotiations. The agreement between NABET and the publicly-owned CBC provides for a wage) in- creases of 24.15 per cent, made up' of cumulative raises of nine per cent fetroactive to last Jan. 1, a further nine per cent next Jan, 1 and 4% per cent Oct. 1, 1967. Timothy O'Sullivan, chairman of NABET's negotiating com- mittee, told a press conference that it will take at least a week to poll the 1,850 union Thomson Gains London Times LONDON (CP)--Lord son, Canadian-born publisher, Friday achieved his greatest dream, gaining majority con- trol of The Times, Britain's most influential newspaper The London daily, established 181 years ago and often de scribed as the pillar of the Brit- ish establishment, will come un der the domain of the Thomson organization igreement Thom- im an under which the morning Times} and Thomson's Sunday Times will enter into joint ¢ontrol. In effect, Thomson, whose son Kenneth will sit on the new Doard, will have 85 per cent of the shares of the new company The Astor family; headed by Lord Astor of Hever, will retain 15 per cent. jernment must maintain powers jand authority essential to the |discharge of its responsibilities. | He spoke at the opening of a} $1,500,000 recreation and library centre, the centennial project of his native North York. "We must also preserve a ,| Strong federal system, with the (Provinces and the federal gov- ernment working togetiiér con- e. pc ig be announced) structively 'within the constitu-| , : ition; with the central govern-| The agreement was slightly| ment maintaining the powers) better than the three periodic) and authority essential to dis- increases of 7/4 per cent on the charge its responsibilities--and| Same dates recommended by &| which it only can. discherge--for | federal conciliation board. |the common good and the na-| The union sought wage in-| tional welfare. This we must do} creases amounting to about 30 also." per cent. A number of other provisions jdealt with union jurisdiction, } wage classifications and sched-| ing. Clive McKee, director of tal-| | jent and industrial relations for the CBC, said that the two parties also agreed to wait un-! til the federal government an-| (oe nounces its policy on premiums! for bilingual staff and consider) their applicability to the cor- poration. Mr. McKee, the chief CBC ne- gotiator, said employees are guaranteed that the corpora- tion's bilingualism benefits will be no less than those to be pro- vided to civil servants by the federal government. CBC President J.. Alphonse Ouimet issued a statement ex- pressing gratification that the settlement "averts what threat- ened to be a most serious dis- ruption to the national broad. casting service."' He also expressed thanks to! Bernard Wilson, federal assist ant deputy labor minister, who was enlisted by both sides as a Special mediator when they were unable to agree on the} conciliation board's recommend- ations. Through most of the last ithree days, Mr. Wilson and J. Stewart Gunn, director of in- dustrial relations for the labor! department, shuttled between the two parties at separate meetings or brought them face to face for 37 hours of bargain- ing. members employed at 34 point aro le he- expects Ben AB me 28 By WG Gow } Soldiers * learning © wire- -manship at the Army's Ist ' | Training, Brigade in Ari- career that took him from a box} factory to the highest echelons} , : 'Simaster - general Cote urged of banking, a major post in di-/ postal workers in Montreal Fri- recting Canada's Second World) gay to accept a provincial wage War effort and thence to the/increase. His remarks won railway business. what one official called a sym- MONTREAL (CP) -- Post- speakers urged the students to} This appeared to be an indi- crash the palace gates, more|rect warning to supporters of | student leaders demanded that) Sukarno. who accept the presi- jarmy officials bring Sukarno|dent's commands and teachings }back to the palace. | without question. He leaves behind a railway) that has been reorganized from top to bottom since the days when it was. formed from a| pathetic hearing. | Mr. Cote addressed about 400} postal workers at Montreal's| main post office after work was | Africans Predict Success bunch of debt-ridden and bank-| suspended briefly for his ad- rupt railways and communica-| grass. Hons systems. Postal workers have threat- But he retires with a main|ened a national strike at Christ- goal --recapitalization to un-|™8S- Me fata b manne Mr, Cote brought along th the shackle the cor poration from| meeting lis: father a retired the astronomical interest} postal worker, in a bid to win charges on the Origina 1| support. debt -- unaccomplished. Gov-| The postmaster - general told ernments had indicated they ithe workers the government ' lcannot tolerate a long postal were going to do something) strike and called the situation along this line but have taken following the strike threat ex- no action yet, |plosive. elite" kee ile SB REIN SKILLS TO WIN A WAR zona display their new tal After eight weeks' training the men will be sent to field units as wiremen, The brig- ents in an "orchard" of 35- foot poles at Ft. Huachuca. 'For UN Take-Over Resolution |. UNITED NATIONS (AP)-- | African diplomats predicted to- kaon resolution ta have the | United Nations take over South- |West Africa from South Africa | will pass the General Assembly nearly all Africa and Asia will vote in favor of it. The rest of the TIN's. 119 members wonld either abstain from voting or else stay away, the diplomats predicted. The Commiunist vote was nailed down Friday when Mon- golia came out as a sponsor of the 'resolution and the Soviet Union announced its support. A vote could take place by next Friday. South-West Africa is a former German territory. South Africa holds it under a 1920 mandate from the old League of Nations. The International Court of Jus- tice in The Hague last July 18 threw out an Ethiopian-Liberian complaint that South Africa had violated the mandate by intro- ducing racial segregation in the territory. And the Africans went to work on the UN. move after that. | Indonesia, in its first speech | to the General Assembly since | returning to the United Ratens, | said it intends to continue a pol- rare icy of non-alignment. Commonwealt MPs Disagree | OTTAWA (CP) -- Common-| wealth legislators' Friday dis- cussed the brain drain towards richer members, but disagreed on whether it should be blocked or encouraged, | by a vote of at least 70 to 2. | 'They. anticipated that only /Portugal and South Africa will jvote against it, and that the jcommunist countries, and monwealth parliamentary ference suggested there should be no infringement on the lib- erty of skilled people where the money is. Two protested that educa- tional standards of their coun- tries are not adequately recog- nized in the richer nations. But others said they could see of 3,300 soldiers learning [no point in sending students) combat-support skills. overseas for training if i --AP Wirephoto 'never came back again, ade. eventually will consist Several delegates .to the Com-| con-|} to go just south of the demilitarized zone where American marines are fighting North Vietnamese forces in Operation Prairie. | This is the area hit by the two B-52 raids Friday. The lat- est bombing, at midnight Fri- day, struck 20 miles west of Dong Ha. The other raid came at nden today. The long-range bombers hit at enemy troop headquarters and supply areas 40 miles north- west of the coastal city of Qui Nhon, The heavy strike was in sup- port of U.S. Ist Air Cavalry |Division troops in Operation | Thayer. Ground action across South Viet Nam was reported small and scattered once again. The only sizeable contacts were | oi AL CN) Te SE ete i Pound. . Viet Cong Infiltration Trails made in the two operations near the B-52 raids. _ FLEW 143 MISSIONS Over North Viet Nam, U.S. bombers kept up their crij pressure Friday. Pilots flew 1 bombing missions against. oil depots, missile sites and trans- portation facilities in the Hanol and Haiphong areas and the southern panhandle, A U.S. command, in a delay- ed report, announced a USAF FC-4 Phantom plane was shot down: Thursday night during raids over North Viet Nam, the 388th such U.S. loss of the war, In Friday's raids, carrier- based. navy -pilots reported a lucrative day in strikes on cargo barges. along the coast from Vinh to Thanh Hoa. Usar pir lots similarly claimed. success against North Vietnamese posi- tions and storage areas in the six-mile wide demilitarized zone Eyersheg North and South Viet am, ; | diplomatic mission in Budape: Democrat Suggests WASHINGTON. (AP) -- Sen NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Canada May Establish Mission BUDAPEST (AP) -- Western diplomatic sources here said today Canada is planning to establish a) permanent st in the near future. Ike Aid Johnson ate' Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield: suggested today former president Eisenhower spell out to President Johnson his view on what is needed to win 'the 'Viet Nam War -- how many men. and what kind. of weapons. h, Persian Lancer Wins Top Race NEWMARKET, England Reuters -- Persian Lancer won. the Cesarewitch. handicap today. C.E.D. was second and Miss Dawn third. There were sentence Central Win Over Redmen--P. Ann Landers--10 Church--14, 15 City News--9 Clossified--11.to 13 Comics--19 Editorial----4 ..In THE TIMES Today.. Workers Ensure Roads Quality---P 3 Thankottering Meeting Planned--P, 5 In The Showeese: Coffee House Opens Doors Obits--13 Sports---6, 7 Theatre---20 Weother--2 Whitby, Ajax News--5 Women's--10 24 entries, ERT RA 6 mirgregnyentaetatn & ee RH a

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