ED FEATHER APPEAL TOTAL PASSES $211,400 Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- orio and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 --- NO, 250 10¢ le 55e Per Week Home ' Ghe Oshawa Cinres livered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1966 Authorized os poeree, Weather Report » Colder weather ahead with some snowflurries, and , cloudy tomorrow, Low tonight 28, high Sunday 38 Class Mall Post Office Department payment of Postage in Cash - TWENTY-SIX "PAGES Special features this week include: Central Girl Prime Minister Backs Equal- ity For Women. Toronto Symphony Orchestra Pays Return Visit To Oshawa. Also in the Showcase you'll find: On The Town Garden Guide Showtime at the Movies Teen Scene Television Highlights Home of the Week. Talks Halt Brings Air Strike Closer MONTREAL (CP)---Talks toj4 p.m, local standard times avert a scheduled strike that|across the country. | would close down Air Canada All Air Canada freight was! Monday for the first time in 29|embargoed at midnight Friday. years were suspended early to-/Under the arrangement, ship- day but a mediator said he will| ments destined for outside Can- meet separately with both sides} ada and those coming into the te submit proposals. country will not be accepted by! Rie Geddes of Toronto,| the airline. | -in the dispute involv-| However, at least six smaller| ing about 5,200 machinists, there| companies had applied to the + Air Transport Board for per- mission to handle additional pas- during the strike, an Air said. In addi « the CPR, bus es and Canadian Pacific Airlines said they would | be able to handle a Jarger num- ber of passengers than © nor- mally, However, reservations for travel next week on some main inter-city runs were be- coming difficult to obtain. OFFI STAY OPEN | Air Canada will keep its ticket | Offices open, even if the strike }does take place, to help trav- ve, "We had been meeting for) and could not reach an sy 'of the proposals to be and a today were given and union spokes- men declined to comment on the latest moves. SMALL TALK conference at the LBJ Ranch yesterday. Special presidential emissary Ave- rill Harriman,. right, re- President Lyndon B. Johnson smiles while en- gaged in small talk with the press following a news ported to the president on his trip to foreign capi- tols. (AP Wirephoto) Gemini 12 Pair cameramen, recording the steady movement of the new moon as it slipped across the face of the sun. For seven or eight seconds the CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) Shielding their eyes against the sun's glare, the Gemini 12 astro- nauts chased the moon across Rare Solar Spectacle | The machinists have been| demanding a wage increase of 20 per cent over one year, Their) oe s ; 3 ellers find accommodations with other carriers. Air Canada President Gordon McGregor told union negotia- tors Friday that he is not going! |to permit the company's profit South America today and snapped photographs of one of hature's most spectacular sights: a solar eclipse. For 10 minutes as their space chariot raced across the skies, James A. Lovell Jr. and Edwin sun was in rare total eclipse and the Gemini 12 pictures may give man his most revealing look at this phenomena and perhaps an- swer some scientific riddles. Before speeding out over the OFFERS 40 CENTS |position to change because of The airline has offered 40) union demands, It had a net cents an hour--about 12 per profit of $3,989,960 in 1965. cent--in wage increases over) He said the company is most three years and an additional| unwilling to accept demands 3% per cent in fringe benefits) which will amount to a $15,000,- in the first year. |/000 pay increase and put the The strike deadline Monday is/airline in the red. E, (Buzz) Aldrin Jr. were busy Leading German Cleric Backs 'Contender For Top Party Post Canada Wins Third Term On UN's Security Council UNITED NATIONS (CP)--|the council again in 1958-59, Canada was elected to a two-|when Charles Ritchie, now Ca- year term on the UN Security/nadian representative on the Council Friday, council of the North Atlantic Chosen earlier by the WEO)Treaty Organization, was the Atlantic, Lovell: and Aldrin BONN (AP) -- Kurt Georg|task" after the: dominant Chris- Kiesinger, who has been under|tian Democratic party made fire because of his Nazi past/Kiesinger ifs candidate for since he became a top con-| chancellor. | tender for Chancellor Ludwig! Kiesinger, 62, joined the Nazi! Erhard's job, today claimed the! party in 1933 and worked in the support of one of Germany's/radio propaganda section of the leading anti - Nazi Protestant! Nazi foreign ministry. For the} clergymen, last eight years he has been) A spokesman for Kiesinger| minister-president of the state) said the churchman, Provost/of Baden-Wurttemberg, a job) Heinrich Grueber of Berlin,| roughly equivalent to provincial) wired Kiesinger his "heartiest/premier in Canada, He is a (Western Europe and others) bloc as its candidate for one of eer. ae the five non-permanent seats in| the 1967-68 terms, Canada got! 114 out of 119 votes cast in the | UN General Assembiy. Other new members are Bra- il, which also got 114 Votes; | Emiopia, idv; Denmark, i08;) and India, 82. They take up their seats Jan. 1, Ambassador George [gnatieff | will be the chief Canadian dele-| gate at council meetings, which) may be called at any time. Tt will be Canada's third term | on the council; which has the! primary responsibility under) the UN charter for meeting! threats to international peace and order. Canada was a council mem-) ber in 1948-49, when the late Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton was its UN ambassador. It was on Poland Agrees To Wide Study _ UNITED NATIONS (CP) --)~ Poland, seeking a UN study of nuclear weapons, has agreed to a proposal by Canada and Nor- way that would broaden the scope of the study, Polish Am.) bassador Bohdan Tomorowicz said Friday. He told the General Assem- bly's political committee that a Polish draft resolution request-| ing the UN secretary-general to prepare a concise report on the effects of the possible use of nuclear weapons was revived after consultations with Canada and A An Oshawa man claims he has found a royal antique car, Sheco Zanoskar, 609 Crerar St. left Oshawa months ago with the fam- ily's savings to visit his homeland, Yugoslavia, and fell in love with a car he believes once belonged to the assassinated King Alex- + ander of Yugoslavia, The blessings" for 'your. difficult! Roman Catholic. ROYAL AUTOMOBILE Colombo brought the pair to the New miles across Europe four months ago, Mr, Zahoskar refused to reveal the \pur- chase price of the car\but said "it cost a lot." "The only expense has been a $43 investment in batteries, The "auto buff" says he will find a working area so the car will be com- pletely overhauled by ship Cristoforo York harbor Friday. He made the 500-mile trip to Oshawa in 10 hours. New Yorkers, overcome with the 1928, six-cylinder, Buick convertible, took parts of the car and painted wel- come home signs on the car's frame, He drove 7,006 |HAVE ANOTHER) JOB ROLLS INTO TOWN Chase pitched the spacecraft nose down in an apparently unsuc- cessful effort to photograph the giant 52-mile-wide shadow of the moon as it slid across Peru, Bo- livia, Brazil and Argentina. "We hit the eclipse right on the money," Lovell reported, "But we were unsuccessful in picking up the shadow." "Roger," answered Mission Control, 'We figured itewould be a long way off.' The eclipse over, Gemini 12 sped on toward another impor- tant task, At 11:29.a.m. Aldrin was to open his hatch for.a two- hour, 20-minute work session, the first of three he plans out- side 'the craft during*the flight in hopes of learning man's phys- ical limitations in weightless pace. To obtain the eclipse photos, Lovell and Aldrin had to steer Gemini 12 to a precise spot above the Pacifie just off the coast of Peru, Because of the possibility of eye damage, they were cau- tioned not.to look at the sun, MOSCOW (CP)--External Af- fairs Minister Martin Friday night wound up a four-day visit to Moscow with an appeal for progress on arms control and a United Nations peace-keeping force. Martin, addressing a dinner in his honor, said there is in- creased need for action in these fields 'tin the light of the dis- turbing realities revealed by the war in Viet Nam." Summing up his talks with high Russian officials, Canadian spokesmen said that Martin found the Russian leadership cool to his ideas about a possi- ble peace-making role for the three-country International Con- trol Commission in Viet Nam. But Martin said the Russians showed an obvious desire to. see international tension reduced and he was encotiraged by pros- pects. a.treaty to bay the oe nuclear weapon TIES STRENGTHEN Martin said the ties between Canada and the Soviet Union have been strengthened by his three-day visit here, adding that) "never before have our rela- tions rested on so substantial a base." Russia Tour With Appeal of "'welcome developments" in Martin noted: nificance selves discussing the greater beneficial results, some of the major problems of world af- fairs." Communist party chief Leonid Brezhnev. Earlier he had had two sessions with Foreign Min- ister Andrei A, Gromyko, dis- cussing international and bilat- eral affairs, and a meeting with persons whom Russia considers with either issue. After enumerating a long list links between the two countries, "It is also a fact of some sig- that we find our- frequency and, with ultimate Friday Martin paid a call on Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, Diefenbaker Proposed 24- OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- Cabinet Drop Blockade Plan Martin E nds Attacked Hour Sitting ment has abandoned its plan to 7) have the Commons begin 24- hour sittings Monday, Govern- ment House Leader Mcliraith said today. '. . . Unless Dief comes up = with something new," the Hous: will proceed with normal sitting hours, he said. Formal notice of motion that Commons sittings would con- tinue without a break until pas sage of an interim supply bill : was given Thursday -- before Revenue Minister Benson an- nounced the necessary funds to meet government bills had been found. Mr. Mcllraith said the original move was '"'a very good one in the circumstances." Opposition Leader Diefen- baker had denounced the pro- posed round-the-clock sittings as a Liberal move to embarrass him at the national Conserva- tive convention, which starts here Monday. Opposition Leader Diefenba- ker bitterly denounced the move GEORGE McILRAITH eos "a very good move" as & Liberal attempt to-embar- rass him at the national Conser- vative convefition, which begins Monday. at with Gromyko, a session lasting 1% hours Friday, pet Russian grievances » gainst Croada again ¢ » the surfa The Russian complained of a so-called press. campaign in Canada against the Soviet Un- ion and again demanded that Canada extradite a number of war criminals. He apparently got nowhere UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) Spain charged Friday Britain made an unprecedented claim of sovereignty over the south- ern isthmus of Gibraltar in what was 'tantamount to a se- rious act of aggression against Spain." | The charge, made by Spanish delegate Jaime de Pinies before the special committee on colo- nialism, immediately was de- nied by British delegate, Fran- cis Brown. De Pinies also accused Brit- ish military planes of repeat- edly violating Spanish air space over Gibraltar and said Spajn is alarmed by these alleged ag- gressive acts. Brown stated there is nothing "sudden or new" about Britain Spain Protests U.K. 'Aggression' ern isthmus. These rights had existed for a long time. He also denied that Spanish air space gent and vital need for Britain to decolonise Gibraltar. claiming rights over the south- was being continually violated, De Pinies said there is an ur- He said no matter ~ Brit- ain attempts to refute Spanish charges, it "cannot cloak the reality that British. military avi- ation still is using Gibraltar air- port and violating Spanish air space time and time again. The Spanish government looks with alarm on these aggressive acts against Spanish sovereignty." Britain and Spain have been negotiating in an effort to reach a solution to the Gibraltar ques- tion. HONG KONG (Reuters) -- Communist party Chairman Mao Tse-tung has spoken pub- licly for the first time at a rally of Red Guards, the New China news agency said Friday night. In a broadcast monitored heré Viets Attack spring. The wooden steers ing wheel, canvas-roofed, motor car is eyed curiously by bystanders on King Street as Mr, Zanoskar dis- plays a trophy the antique won for being the second US. Quarters SAIGON (AP) -- South Viet- namese Rangers today as- sSaulted a U.S, Special Forces building at Hon Quan, 70 miles north of Saigon, and two Ameri- cans were wounded, reliable sources said. 4 Tempers flared, informants | said, after troutle had been| jbuilding up 'during the last sev- jeral days. | i These sources said the Ran-|there was a larger proportion gers used two armored person-|than usual of civilian adult Chairman WNiao Speaks Out At Peking Red Guard Rally the agency said Mao spoke Thursday at a massive rally in Tien An Men (heavenly peace) Square which preceded another held Friday, the eighth since mid-August in China's current "cultural revolution." At previous rallies, Mao's heir apparent, Defence Minister Lin Piao, spoke on his' behalf, the agency said, The agency said more than|> 2,000,000 young persons andj? "revolutiona: "' teachers came |* from other parts of China to|" participate in the rallies, which}: it described as one continuous two-day rally rather than two separate ones, Foreign observers in Peking estimated the crowd at each rally was about 1,000,000. An estimated 25,000 troops were in the Chinese capital dur- ing Friday's rally 'at which US. Water Policy Imperialism, By Economist TORONTO (CP) -- Develop- ing North American water re-|s sources ona continental basis is in the tradition of imperial- ism, an Ontario Hydro econo- mist said today. Larratt Higgins of Toronto told the Woodsworth Foundation Conference on continentalism versus nationalism that the Co- lumbia River Treaty, ratified by Canada and the U.S. in Sep- tember, 1964, now is the blue- print for developing all Cana- dian resources in the name of continentalism. "As I see it," he said, "the Columbia River Treaty and propositions such as that which calls itself the North America Water and Power Alliance fol- low very closely the classic _., of imperialistic expan- sion. NAWAPA is a proposal by a Los Angeles engineering firm to divert 120,000,000 foot acres of water annually from Northern Canada through the Rocky * te held ae of the U.S. Canada's Ss nate study NAWAPA, ' "has duced a resolution . ... would permit the U.S. section of the International Joint. Commis- sion to study and recommend what should be done witl-Can- ada's. water." He said Sen. Moss says the Program must be long + range wirwhat Sen, Moss ts telling mn. Moss is us very plainly is that once. we star exporting water, we can forget about putting it to any alternative uses in our own country." Mr. Higgins' told the founda- tion conference, established in honor of the late J. S.. Woods- worth, founder of the CCF (now New Democratic) party, that the matter can not be regarded lightly because it has received attention in both Wa Mountain trench and into water: and Ottawa. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Diplomats Leave Chinese Reception PEKING (Reuters) -- Diplomats of the Soviet Union and its East European allies rally marking the centenary today: walked out: of a mass of the birth of Sun Yet-eon, wun "the Chinese revolutionary leader. Spain Grants Political Amnesty MADRID (AP) -- The Spanish government today de- creed amnesty on all political charges dating from the bitter civil war of 27 years ago, Observatory Picks Up Signals BOCHUM, West Germany (Reuters) -- Bochum Ob- ° servatory today reported picking up radio signals from a new Soviet space probe -- Cosmos experiment. probably a new unmannéd uae Rob dal, To Open E O'Neill Shares Title--P, 6 Ann Lenders--10 Ajax--5 City News--9 Church--12, 13 Classified---14 to 17 Comics--23 Obits--17 Sports--6, 7 ne an es In THE TIMES Pp. 9 Driving Aid Spurs Interest--P, § nel carriers to knock down part | Workers and officials although of a wall at the recreation club|they were again outnumbered used by the members of the|by students and school children |~ ia NR aes Now in its twenty-fifth day, the Greater Oshawa Com- munity Chest Drive has rea- Theatre--22 Weather--2 oldest car on the roads in Italy. --Oshawa Times Photo then fired into the building with) automatic weapons. Green Beret Special Forces| Wearing the Red Guard's arm- |= jteam stationed at Hon Quan, |band. : Mao and other Chinese lead-| jers reviewed both rallies. y Whitby--5 Women's---10, 11 ched $211,490 of the $345,- 875 objective.