2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, February 13, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Young Neutrality Abroad OTTAWA (CP)--Student Lib- erals have urged the Pearson government to move towards neutrality abroad and economic planning at home. The Canadian University Lib- eral Federation passed several resolutions during a weekend meeting aimed at reducing American influence on Canadian affairs. With little dissent, delegates advocated: --Scrapping the North Amer- ican Air Defence Command when the 10 - year NORAD agreement with the United States expires in May, 1968, and negotiating the removal of U.S. nuclear arms from Canadian soil. --Banning sale of Canadian weapons to the U.S. for the duration of the war in Viet- nam. Exports of military equipment to the U.S. hit a record $300,000,000 last year. --Working for an Asian neu- tral zone comprising Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia and Laos, and seating China on the United Nations security coun- cil in place of Formosa. Introducing a guaranteed minimum income program for every Canadian adult,: similar to the new income floor of $105 a month for the aged. Request Rejected WASHINGTON (AP)--Author William Manchester said Sun- day he rejected a request by the Kennedy family to rewrite his account of President John- son's first cabinet meeting as censorship, which '"'would have been a distortion of history. . . a threat to the integrity of my manuscript." "J was asked to rewrite my account of President Johnson's first cabinet meeting,' Man- chester said in a television in- terview. 'And I refused." He did not explain what changes he was asked to make, nor did he say precisely who made the re- quest. The author said that in the editing of the manuscript of his forthcoming book Death of a President with representatives of the Kennedy family, "'noth- ing was deleted of a historical or political nature." New Element | NEW DELHI (AP)--A new! element has emerged among the electorate in India, small but powerful enough to tilt the scales in any close contest. This is the youth of India-- angry young men and women} born just prior to independence| Aug. 15, 1947. Some 25,000,000 young per-| sons, accounting for one-tenth| of the voting population, will vote for the first time in gen- eral élections that start Wed- nesday and last for six days. How they will vote is a big question. The youngsters are not ham-| pered so much by Hindu tradi-| tion, orthodoxy, the caste sys-) tem and run-of-the-mill think-| as older voters. For them, the freedom strug-| gle and sacrifices of the coun-| try's ruling Congress party are! only history-book study. Quintuplet Dies SALT LAKE CITY (AP)--The last of the quintuplets born to a Wyoming couple has died from, what officials galled "'pre- maturity." The quintuplets were born Saturday about three months premature to Mr. and Mrs. Al- len Bradley of Big Piney. Three died at birth, the fourth died about four hours later, and the last, a girl, died at 1:15 p.m. HERE AND THERE | WRONG CHURCH | A news storyy in Saturday's} edition of The Times erroneous-) ly stated that Rev. John Pere- yma was pastor of St. John's Ukrainian Orthodox Church. This should have read St. George's Ukrainian Catholic Church. DECORATIONS | Liberals Ask In Cold Spot TORONTO (CP)--Nine teen- age boys and their leader, Laing McDowell, Toronto Ven- turer troup members, camped out in 28-degree weather in a downtown park Friday to open the first recruiting campaign of the organization. In their two man tents, the group huddled in the lee of the Expo building across the street from Toronto's new city hall. The demonstration was |staged to show interested pass- lers-by how to stay comfortable in the cold. | Venturers were organized about two years ago for senior {teen-aged boys in the scouting |movement. | Reilly's Post TORONTO (CP) -- Peter Reilly has joined the CBC's Search Monastery features' and special events de- ST. JOVITE, Que (Cp)--|Partment and will be used as) Provincial police Saturday ee sg special TV R Abies searched the monastery of ai? a spokesman said page breakaway Roman Catholic|, Thom Benson, supervisor of| sect known as the Apostles of the department, said Mr. Reilly) Infinite Love. would be offered a_ contract) A spokesman for the provin- worth about the $20,000 a year) cial police confirmed that the|"@ received from the two pre-| monastery, situated 20 'miles|ViOus jobs he held this season. lfrom here and 50 miles north-| Reilly was host of CBC News west of Montreal, was raid), eae ame ea Bleed . 'i } "ame execu but refused to comment further. Of CLV hews and public aitalte Brother Jerome, a member of]: the sect, said 25 provincial po-;!" October he left CTV and be- licemen entered the monastery | came the host of CBC's public in serch of about 50 children|@ffairs program Sunday and in apparently sent into hiding by aia he resigned from. Sun- the sect. 18 Trapped The priest said the police did} OTTAWA. (CP) sighteen not produce a search warrant college students attending the| PREMIER PEARSON «+» Gets Request when they entered the mona- stery,--and broke a burglar chain on a door. : -|annual convention of the Canad- jian University Liberal Federa- A ; \tion here were trapped in a ho- tel elevator for 70 minutes early| 25 BELOW AT MONTREAL Frigid Spell Chills The East NEW MINISTER Rev. formerly the Yukon, will be inducted at a service of recognition By THE CANADIAN PRESS Frigid temperatures gripped Eastern Canada during the weekend and continued today from Quebec to the Atlantic coast, : Record low temperatures were recorded in the Montreal area Sunday night. It was 25 below zero at Montreal Interna- tional Airport compared with the previous record low of 15 set in 1957. In Quebec City, the thermometer tumbled to near 35 below overnight. Temperatures in the Mari- times early today fell to about 20 below at Moncton, N.B., 15 below at Saint John, N.B., and five below at Sydney, N.S., and Halifax. Early Sunday, White River, Ont., recorded 51 below zero, one degree colder than a record set Feb. 12, 1914. Toronto Inter- national Airport was 16 below compared with a mark of 14 below established in 1959. | could Thomas Gemmell, of Whitehorse in LONDON (AP) -- Soviet Pre-|that {mier Kosygin in his talks with ; \British Prime Minister Wilson }emphasized three themes which, jtaken together, point to historic the Kremlin's ap- roach to the outside world. British and |said the Russian leader repeat- s edly stressed: jchange in turn. China ltensely nationalist, expanionist |state fired with the ambition to lsettle old. scores against the {Outer Barbarians--including the |Russians--with whom it has ter- jritorial disputes. The bone-chilling cold moved east out of Ontario today but the respite is not expected to last longer than 48 hours. Despite the extreme cold, 16 members of a youth club in Iroquois Falls, Ont., walked to Cochrane, 35 miles away, as a publicity stunt to promote their town's winter carnival scheduled for March 10-12, The march took them 12 hours with temperatures reaching 35 below accompanied by a 25- mile-an-hour winds--an equi- valent of 66 below zero. In Toronto, nine members of the boy scout movement camped out over the weekend in the downtown area to publi- cise a recruiting campaign. Four robins were sighted in a birch tree Sunday behind the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Gremell of Oakville, Ont. Other cold spots in Ontario Sunday were Moosonee with 47 below, breaking a 33-below rec- Soviet QUEBEC CITY 35 BELOW | WEATHER FORECAST Yugoslavia's defection from the Moscow camp in 1948 led to the logistic and political disengagement of Stalin's gov-|break down. ernment from the cause in the Greek civil war. British officials noted China officials|has hampered transit rights of Soviet suppliers to Hanoi, and they conclude that another So- Communist ord set in 1947 and 1952; Chap- leau, where a 44 below reading erased one of 43 below set in 1914, and Timmins with 38 be- low, retiring the record 30 be- low set in 1958. Earlton and Sudbury both recorded 36 below, breaking records of 26 below and 32 be- low set in 1954 and 1936 respec- tively. North Bay with 33 below broke its record of 20 below set in 1954 while Nakina with 30 below equalled a record set in 1944. Records also were set at Mus- koka where a 29 below reading broke the 1954 low. of 24 below, Sault Ste. Marie where 28 below retired the 21 below of 1958 anl Gore Bay where 26 below made the 1954 low of 18 below seem almost warm. Wiarton had 12 below, four de- grees colder than a 1963 record, and Trenton broke a 1959 mark with a reading of 14 below. ) Russ Want Peace In Viet But Not Yet At Any Price abandons German territorial de- | mands, Europe's whole post-war| political setup could begin to} | 1, The Soviet Union wants ajviet disen Vietnam settlement desperately |--but not at any price. 2. Moscow fears the power | struggle between Mao Tse-tung and his antagonists could de- \teriorate into civil war. Or it They believe this accounted for Kosygin's anxious plugs for Hanoi's offer of talks with Washington after a standoff. Kosygin freely discussed the _itlimplications of China's upheaval into an in-!with Wilson. Never before had a Soviet leader, visiting a Capi- talist state, talked about the in- ternal affairs of a Communist neighbor even to the point of siding with Mao's opponents. \during the weekend. & | ql MAO TSE-TUNG . «+ Alerts Troops Charges Traded TOKYO (AP) -- Moscow and Peking traded accusations as a series of military moves re lated to Chairman Mao Tse - tung's purge was reported in China Troops facing Russia and the Nationalist Chinese on Formosa were put on the alert; the army took control of Peking and two of Mao's opponents ousted from the Communist party's military commission. Moscow radio said China is apparently trying to wreck re- lations with Russia in an effort to prevent peace in Vietnam. But Chinese Foreign Minis- ter Chen Yi asserted that China would not take the initi- ative in breaking diplomatic ties with its neighbor. Anti-Soviet rallies drew 100,- 000 persons in Peking Saturday and 300,000 more in a number of other cities, the New China news agency reported. | The Moscow broadcast said the main purpose of demonstra- tions outside the Soviet Em- bassy in Peking apparently is to break off relations with the Soviet Union. | Guesswork Charged | TORONTO (CP) -- Syl Apps, chairman of the Ontario legi-| slature's committee on youth,| Sunday said published versions| of the committee's report in) The Telegram were guesswork Mr. Apps said the guessing | was close in some cases, but! Christmas decorations down-|didn't cover the scope of the re-| town that would be replaced port. with red, white and blue bulbs} for centennial year is consider- ed to be too expensive. Jack Mann, a member of the centen- nial co-ordinating committee, says the cost of replacing the lights is over $7,000 and hydro output for the year would cost almost $2,000. STILL IN BUSINESS Alberto - Culver of Canada Ltd., has not gone out of bus- iness as indicated in a Times' story Nov. 10. A company spokesman said today the firm has moved its entire operation from Oshawa to Toronto into | He said the report will be) presented to the legislature in about five weeks. The committee's recommend- ations are reported to include lowering of the voting age to 19 Sunday. Two girls became hysterical jafter the elevator, designed for) 110 persons, | |two floors. They were taken to} hospital and given sedatives. jammed _ between! The students were rescued| about 3 a.m. EST by elevator) |technicians. They were heading} |. \for their rooms after attending /\a convention ldance featuring a beat combo| near Guelph. with psychedelic fects. | "happening," al Sales Shortage | PETERBOR 0 UGH (CP) --| Russell Honey, Liberal member of Parliament for Durham, says layoffs in the auto industry are due to falling car sales and not because of the Canada-United States auto trade pact. | In his weekly radio report over radio station CKPT, he} said Sunday that as a member) of a parliamentary committee which visited auto plants, he learned that 20,000 new jobs have been created by the agree- ment. He added that Canada's auto exports have quadrupled and production is up 30 per cent. "Without the . . . pact, we would . . . be experiencing far greater layoffs," he said. Mr. Honey's riding is ad- jacent to Oshawa where many of his constituents are employed by General Motors of Canada. Faces Charge SARNIA (CP) -- Kenneth Maness, 27, was charged Sun- day with manslaughter in con- nection with the shooting death early Sunday of Walter Wil- liams, 27, on the Sarnia Chip- pawa Indian Reserve. The shooting occurred early Sunday morning at Maness' house, located in a desolate part of the reserve. Police said Wil- liams was pronounced dead at the scene. Maness will appear in court here today. lighting ef-| jment of labor, which mediated | at St. Luke's Presbyterian | 3. The Soviet Union is prima- Church in Oshawa on Tues- |rily a European power with a day at 8 p.m. The new _ [right to share in maintaining or- church minister has spent the last six months doing jpart of the continent but also post-graduate work at Yale |in the capitalist part. By University. The church's [Stabilizing Europe on an anti- former minister Rev. R. D, |Fascist base, Kosygin and his Sinclair has accepted a call |Successors would have their to Rockwood and Elgin Mills [hands free to meet any chal- lenge that may arise on their Oshawa Times Photo ntoseu with China. -- oo RETERATE VIEW * | _On Vietnam, Wilson was told $000 Reject |time and again in so many | "We Russians are realists. We know President Johnson may TORONTO (CP)--More than military standoff against North 8,000 United Electrical Workers|Victnam could lead to peace- | words: CGE's Off $ er reject Hanoi's suggestion tha? a | making. If he does, the war will eral Electric Co, Ltd. at six)/win. We are here to show we plants in Ontario turned down| won't a a ions ved to| 3 jisolate us. It's up to the Ameri- i latest company contract) cans, therefore, to get aca offer by more than 60 per cent/selves off the hook they made in a vote Sunday night, a union|for themselves." spokesman said. | But Wilson's men recalled Peed eainagee ge said that picket lines will be maintained My at plants in Toronto, Trenton; Soviet Envoy Barrie, Brampton, Guelph and| Peterborough. Leaves Embassy | He said the Ontario depart- | PEKING (Reuters) -- Y. N. | two weeks of negotiations be-|Razdukhov, Soviet charge d'af- tween the company and union,|faires, left his embassy here has been informed of the vote.|today for the first time since The rejected settlement off-|demonstrators began years, an increase of about 17\of siege 244 weeks ago. per cent. It included a wage in-| Razdukhov, accompanied by crease of six per cent in the|two other diplomats, drove with- first year and five per cent in|out incident to the North Viet- each of the succeeding two|namese Embassy three miles years. away to express condolences at Other features of the settle-|the death of Ambassador Tran ment included a_cost-of-living|U Binh. formula that would yield a min-| No demonstrators appeared at imum of one per cent, half-holi-\the gates of the Soviet Em- days on Christmas and New|bassy this morning for the first Year and improvement of the|time since they began protest vacation plan. parades 18 days ago against W. H. Dickie, Ontario's chief|alleged Soviet police brutality conciliation officer, said the re-|against Chinese students in Mos- sult was disappointing. cow. ered 71 cents an hour over three|the building in a virtual state} gy gee NOTED Peers | PRESCRIPTI aes za noted. lder not only in the Communist|Stressed with relation to West | Germany that "'post-war bound- aries are inviolable." Substitute China for West Germany, and Kosygin appeared to be bidding for Western backing in Russia's quarrel over the thousands of square miles of border territory Peking is claiming. While the Kosygin-Wilson dia- logue was under way, a clash| of national interests was divid- ing Russia's European Commu- Poland and East Germany fear Romanjan, Hun- nist allies. garian, Czechoslovak gdrian moves toward the West German government. suspects that if Chancellor Kurt : Georg Kiesinger's govern | employed by the Canadian Gen-/grind on until the Vietnamese |== = mal loans. Kosygin's pressure on Wilson| -- | for a pan - European security | system, against this backdrop, | | had its own special message. It was that the Soviet Union is ready to leapfrog over Europe's Red belt into a working partner- ship on all levels with Britain) and other capitalist countries. | Reversing President de Gaulle's concept, he held out a vision of Europe united from "the Urals to the Atlantic' in security terms and in the sec- tors of science, technology, joint trade planning and long - term Variable Cloudiness Due Milder Tonight, Tuesda TORONTO (CP)--Forecast is-|St. Thomas ..+.++ 18 32 sued at 5:30 a.m. London «+. Fs Synopsis: Snow is expected to/Kitchener .. 30 continue spreading east-|Mount Forest 25 ward through southern Ontario|Wingham ... 25 with accumulations in southern| Hamilton ... 32 and central regions of one to)St. Catharines 5 32 three inches before ending late |Toronto .... 15 30 today or tonight. |Peterborough . 5 20 Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,| Kingston ... 10 20 Lake Huron, Windsor, London; Trenton .. 25 Milder with light snow ending | Killaloe .. 20 by evening. Variable cloudiness |Muskoka .. 20 and milder tonight and Tuesday. | North Bay . 5 15 Winds light. \Sudbury .. 5 15 Niagara, Lake Ontario, Geor-|Eariton ... 0 10 gian Bay, Haliburton, Killaloe, Hamilton, Toronto: Intermittent snow ending tonight. Variable cloudiness Tuesday. A little milder today and Tuesday. Winds light. Algoma, Timagami, Cochrane, White River, North Bay, Sud- bury, Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy and not quite so cold with oc- |easional light snow today. Vari- jable cloudiness tonight and tuesday, Winds southerly near 15 today and east to northeast 15 Tuesday. Ottawa: Variable cloudiness |with a few snowflurries today. Tuesday mainly cloudy with a |few periods of light snow. Not so cold late today and Tuesday. Light winds. | PLANNING A.>. © BANQUET © CONVENTION © MEETING Forecast temperatures Low overnight high Tuesday {Windsor .....2.0. 18 32 First Closs Facilities For 20 to 400 Guests Quality Service Experienced Staff 1967 LICENSE PLATES DONALD TRAVEL 102 Brock St. 3.--Wwhitby Doily -- 9 to 5 p.m. SAT. 9 to 12 P.M. | RESERVE YOUR | FUNCTION NOW! | : 723-4641 nd Bul- DRUGS Moscow =a City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S 9 Simcoe N. 723-3431 CITY OF OSHAWA NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Ist INSTALMENT OF INTERIM REALTY TAX Realty INTERIM tax bills for part of the 1967 levy have been mailed and become due as follows: S COLOR OF LAST DAY TO WARDS PRINTING AVOID PENALTY No. 4,5 & 6 Brown Feb. 10th. No. 1,2 & 3 Purple Feb. 17th IF ANY INSTALMENT IS PAST DUE--Please telephone the Tax Office 725-1153 for PENALTY AMOUNT te ADD when remitting by mail to City Holl, Toxes may be paid at City Hall or for a smell service cherge et any Cc jank or Trust Office in the City of Oshawe. nA Aluminum Awnings Combination Storm/Screen Windows -- Doors Prime Windows C.M.H.C. Accepted Sliding Gloss Patio Doors --Bus --Perking Lote --Gas Pump Isiends Jelousies --_--_--- Aluminum Siding ee Reglezi id Reglezing , BUILT FOR DISTANCE | Special 10 - inch phonograph "Talking Books" for the blind can play for two hours on a single side. | Beau Valley Inserts for Aluminum Doors end Windows Baked Eneme! Finishes Optionel OSHAWA End Screen and Storm Window troubles FOREVER... Install Mev Showroom & Factory 93 ATHOL ST. 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