' Weather Report Most of Ontario in clouda Rain due to a weather disturbe ance. Low tonight, 50; high Saturday, 65, Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, pus | ~ -- : v7 | cs ad VOL. 'ogc NO. 87 85¢ sor War tere tation Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department TWENTY-TWO PAGES OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1967 | | | | | | | OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- ment has threatened--formally i--to apply the so-called guillo- tine rule to cut off the Com- mons debate on armed forces unification. George Hees, a candidate for the Conservative leadership, promptly warned the Liberals that they may be creating a "great issue" for the next elec- tion--as they had in 1956 by ap- plying closure in the pipeline debate. Works Minister Mcllraith, government House leader, Thursday invoked at the start of the ninth day of debate on ... AND MUSIC GOES 'ROUND AND ROUND' Peter Hamley, left, Patricia school assembl i es this Desaulniesr and David morning. The two-night con- Stewart. As a prelude to cert will provide funds for the city, school's senior tonight's event, an. Ottawa band to perform at an band, Lisgar Collegiate Con- Ottawa school, cert, performed for OCVI --Oshawa Times Photo cational Institute. The per- formance, to be repeated Saturday night, is part of the school's "Music Night' program. Preparing for the show are instrumentalists Two branches of music cross -- with the flute pip- ing the lead for two clari- nets at a rehearsal for a musical show tonight at O'Neill Collegiate and Vo- HEES SEES 'GREAT ISSUE' Jannouncement from Queen's the City of Oshawa. The government's action vincial council of regents. government expenditures for Stanley Knowles, New Demo- °f Governors under the chair- are added to the capital ex- ee sessions required under the rule| farms and although the pur-jcation is no doubt justified i North Locati ] _ Selected For Instituti L * ] R ] | selected For Institution Park revealed today. The member of the legisla- In a_ telephone interview, |ture for Oshawa said the capi- Albert V. Walker, member of |tal budget that the minister of |the legislature for Oshawa, said education wil aprove wil obli- caught the opposition parties by| He said Education Minister ay day to day operation of the surprise. Less than two hours|William Davis who makes the|College will be made in addi- cratic whip, said Mr. Mcliraith/manship of S, R. Alger has|penses the province will very gave no indication then that the/"ecommended that the new/quickly have an investment of unification a new rule aimed at GEORGE HEES ; chase h b 1 however in view ica but agreed to postpone discus-|' as not been completed,/however in view of the fact obtaining all-party agreement PC Candidate sion until Friday pecaice of the|@ letter of intent has been for-|that the college is being de- Ottawa ond for payment of Postage in Cash The Ontario-Durham College|community besides the college. the 1967-1968 estimated capital |gate the provincial government before notice was given of re-\final decision on all such pro-|'!0n to these amounts, government would apply. the college be located on a site at/several million dollars in the for a time limit on the debate.| [shortness of the notice of the|Warded by Winfield Farms. |signed to accommodate a total of Applied Arts and Technology It is believed that preliminary will be in operation just north discussions in this regard had the debate. This could force the|budget as proposed by the|to a total expenditure of more unification bill to a vote by April/board of governors 'has been a-- than $900,000 in 1967 and a fur- course to the guillotine, the ioc ag ge ay the recom-|MILLIONS OF DOLLARS House leaders had met to dis--mendation of the board Mr. Walker stated that when guillotine the corner of Simcoe Street and Ontario Durham Community Later, the House leaders met the Fifth Concession. The prop- College, 3 The Conservatives gave every|agreement has been reached. ; | il nage ineeting. | E jenrollment of 7,500 students If there is none, the govern-| 8 SERVICES PLANNED from the area, he said. Mr. Walker said jof Oshawa in September, an already been commenced with 25 at the earliest. proved this morning by the pro- ther $765,000 in 1968. Ontario cuss the unification debate. The Ontario Durham Board the annual current expenses for the first of the negotiating | erly is owned by Winfield) Such an investment in edu. that the) Eighteen such colleges are ee! Mr. Hees, MP for Northum-} berland, said that if Defence) indication they will not agree to| any such limit, council of regents had made it|to be established in the pr é abli 'Ove \clear that the local board ofl|ince governors is to undertake nego-|. He' was extremely pleased l | Bi R h {f] A committee representing the) the " \ ein . 4 O] I } i i LO] ar i ] 1g es u Fitive parties in the Commons|under tes i 3 : ; | |must report by Tuesday whether! session--to fix a date for ending ile own tooth, the I tberals| e * @ e Aim In Latin America igary's heads of state and gov- PUNTA DEL ESTE, Uruguay (CP)--The Western Hemisphere presidents head home today with yet another declaration on Latin America's future unani- mously agreed upon. It would establish a Common Market by 1985. They also are taking home a message from President John- son: That the building of that future must be largely a do-it- yourself job, with the United States standing by to give friendly help, but help which falls short of what many Latin American leaders sought. conference--Bolivia did not at- tend--will be the signing cere- mony today. These were the basic points) of the declaration: --Latin America expresses de- termination to create a Com- mon Market and complete the) process by 1985; | --The foundation will be laid for economic integration) through multi-national pro-|the end, coming largely from |President Otto Arosemena of --The American nations will|/Ecuador. He claimed others felt to in-|as he did, that the United States crease substantially the for-|should engage in a dollar give- eigh trade earnings of Latin |away which would be something America. {I grams; co-operate in efforts In Hungary | BUDAPEST (AP) Hun- Justice Parker To Enquire : tiations with local municipal|that efforts to have one of ti beg gaye see Wreatment at authorities to instal sewer and|first of these colleges pte a S n i%9f)|water services which will even-|lished here has been success- one year after the pipeline de-|tyally be used by others in the!ful, Mr. Walker said. | bate. lernment resigned today in a major reshuffle of the Commu- nist heierarchy following na- tional elections held last month --Latin America will try to harness science and technol- ogy to serve its people. IMPROVE STANDARDS --Latin America will expand programs to improve public health. --Latin America will elimi- nate unnecessary military ex- penditures. A discordant note persisted to one-party ticket. President Istvan Dobi, 69, stepped down for apparent rea- sons of failing health after hav- ing served since 1952. He was replaced by. Pal Lozonczi, 48- year-old farming expert and/man, recently fired as chief cor- minister of agriculture since/gner of Metropolitan Toronto. 1960. ; In announcing the appoint- Premier Gyula Kallai, wh0;|ment in the legislature today, ranks as No. 2 Communist|premier Robarts said: been named to head a royal government and senior civil TORONTO (CP) -- Mr. Jus- on a Communist - dominated/ticg w, D, Parker of the Su-|been made are most serious. . . | d inister| preme Court of Ontario has/They have no other effect than|Said the government ine tae 38 23 Year Control Of County Into Shulman Accusations "The allegations which have to create apprehensions and commission investigation into|doubts among our people as to|@8 it had during the 1956 pipe-/ LONDON (CP) -- The Labor! accusations made against the|the probity of those charged|line debate. | with the responsibility of ad- same people. "Such apprehension and doubt |cannot be allowed to exist, nor can such serious accusations go uninvestigated and unproven." leader behind party chief Janos ike a Marshall plan for Latin|Kadar, resigned to take the post The Conservatives won the| 1957 election by a whisker and} |in 1958 went on to win the big-| }gest parliamentary majority in | Canadian history. The former British Labor Party Loses judged the Canadian mood just] ene akg = Conservatives were expected Ldn : ; party has suffered a hitter re-|to wind up with about 80 of the The Liberals were again call-\buff from local council elec-/100 Greater London Council servants by Dr. Morton Shul-|ministering the affairs of those|ing on the opposition to 'get on/tions, losing control of the Lon- seats when vote « counting is with the business of the House"| a or 3 y pale preparing to force a deci. cig a after 38 ee today in Thursday's riley be bid Migr dis-| _And the Opposition Conserva-| With 28 results still out in piv elbsure p ce in AP: tives were riding high in other six districts, the Tories had won Hugh John aniemmin (Pc }county elections all across Eng- 59 of the 100 seats on the GLC Victoria-Catlelon ide ~--jland and Wales as the British) which administers the capital of a ) said unifica-lelectorate showed a. marked 8,000,000 people. Labor's total was down to 18, and poll ex- America. He also accused the|of president of the new A Declaration of the Presi- to raise living standards of impoverished farm popula- tions . . . and increase food production. .. . --Latin America will promote education for development. dents of America was the fruit) of long debate among hemis-| phere foreign ministers and two days of discussion by their) chiefs. | The final act of the 20-nation N.Y. Police Fear Friction --Latin America will trea | Johnson a "very human person' member parliament elected the new state and gov- }ernment leadership. U.S. of spending billions in Viet- nam and neglecting its Latin neighbors. Later he and Johnson met pri- vately and embraced as they |parted. The Ecuadorean called|aimed at upgrading the cere. jmonial function of parliament president under a current re- form of the assembly's role in domestic affairs. The reforms were publicized and said he believed their view- points could "easily be harmon- ied." Johnson said the talk 'improved our relationship and ramones net) Protesting Viet War Policy ..:: peace group today presented|mittee to end the war in Viet-|the services." External Affairs Minister Mar-jnam, said Mr. Martin argued| ------------- tin with a petition bearing 13,-|"with great passion that the Ca-| choice whether to serve in the navy, army or air force. Lawrence Watson (PC--Assin- \'If I thought I'd end up on the OTTAWA (CP)--A Vietnam|chairman of the Ottawa com-|water, you'd never get me a prairie farmer, said:| { M\elsewhere resulted from discon- 349- 13 504 N T P tion would discourage recruiting} cw; i | i : jswing to the right. whic | 1 ames 0 earson and deprive young persons of a) 'The local setbacks had no ef- perts. predicted. it would remain fect on Prime Minister Wilson's' there. jlarge majority in the House of} In the last London election Commons. But there was gen- three years ago Labor won 64 eral agreement the landslide in|seats. to 36 for the Conserva- the capital and anti-labor vote tives. National issues were the tent with Wilson's policies, par-|prime influence on the trien- ticularly the wage freeze and|nial elections in Greater London credit squeeze to protect the'and 58 counties. pound sterling. Victorious Tories--Jubilant a jour understanding." jin the elections which gave the 504 signatures in support of re-|nadian government is doing its | Pil R d versal of Canadian policy on the|best to bring an end to hostili- | ot escue Vietnam war. After the 25-minute private ;Communist-dominated Patriotic ties." She said the petitioners be- Conservative majorities were the first major swing their way registered in Lancashire, War-|since Conservative fortunes be- In Viet Protest March NEW YORK (AP) -- Demon-| Two hundred known agitators strators in '"'peace trains,"| were expected to attempt buses and on foot headed in| provoke incidents, police anid." Crime Clean-up NJ. POLICEMEN BEHIND BARS New York and San Francisco! EXPECT 400,000 today for what was developing) New York City police, FBI as possibly the largest mass/and UN authorities estimated protest against the Vietnam|that as many as 400,000 persons war. Police in both cities said| might participate in the demon- they were prepared to handle/strations here. Organizers pre- 500,000 "'spring mobilization" dicted a West Caost turnout of marchers Saturday. , about 100,000. Security measures tighter! Special trains and buses from than any known in New York;Chicago Detroit, Baltimore, since the 1959 visit of Nikita|Cleveland and Philadelphia are Khrushchev were being pre-|scheduled to bring marchers to pared. Authorities feared vio-| New York. In the west, about lence might grow out of ai40 San Jose State College stu- scheduled mass draft card burn-|dents are walking the 50 miles ing in Central Park or a series|from their campus to San Fran- of speeches by civil rights lead-| cisco. Other groups will travel ers Dr. Martin Luther King,/from Stanford University and Floyd MckKissick and Stokely|the University of Nevada at Carmichael. Reno. 173 North Vietnamese Die |People's Front 99.7 per cent of 'Cuba Launches *: conference, Mrs. Joan Gullen, {lieve a truce in Vietnam with-| out commitments on a political Of Spy Plane | HAVANA (Reuters) -- inte: FMBARRASSED rior Minister Ramiro Valdes, ' |Thursday declared all-out was on a crime wave sweeping Cuba| ,, PATERSON, N.J. (AP)-- and "posing a serious problem| 'Car four, where are you? for the revolution." called the police radio dis- Police vigilance will be, Patcher. -- strengthened to fight gangs of We're in Cedar Lawn |robbers and juvenile delinquents| cemetery," came the reply. jroaming the streets of Havana} 'We're locked in." 'and other Cuban cities, Valdes) _ The two police officers-- said in an article in the weekly) ©™barrassed and anony- settlement is unrealistic. Com-| LLAS VEGAS, N.M. (AP)--The mitments for a political settle-|Pilot of an air force SR-71 spy ment are a condition required |Plane was found alive today, \by Communist North Vietnam|Several hours after the plane land the National Liberation | crashed in flames, | Front. | Maj. Earl M. Boone was | The four-point petition calls|found after a night-long search, lon the Canadian government to|@Pparently in good shape," an |stop sale of. war material to the |air force spokesman said. |United States, to urge the U.S.; The other crew member on publicly to end the bombing of|the 2,000-mile-an-hour plane, North Vietnam, to back inclu-|Maj. Richard E. Sheffield, was sion of the National Liberation |Picked up Thursday night by a Front in peace talks and to urge|military helicopter soon after withdrawal of American and|the crash. other foreign troops in Viet-|~ ANONYMOUS mous -- told the dispatcher they went in to make their nightly patrol of the cemetery Thursday 'when the gatekeeper unknowingly locked them in. Another patrol car found the gatekeeper and let them out Bohemia. | jnam. | 'TRUCK STRIKE - LOCKOUT CONTINUES CHICAGO (AP)--Plant shut- eral days. One downs mounted, violence flared Violence Flares In Chicago man, however, said, "deliveries Ray Nelson, an Elroy, Wis., spokes- truck driver, told police his union ise Bice seb aed -- , q | 'Johnson Film Breaks Korea Meeting In Mekong Delta Rice Field SAIGON (CP)--South Vietna- mese troops Thursday killed 173) Viet Cong guerrillas in a battle in Mekong Delta ricefields after;province another six Viet Cong they caught the guerrillas be- tween two helicopter - borne forces, a government military spokesman said today. He described South mese losses as light. A U.S. military said an American helicopter was shot down and its three crew members injured in the area of the battle, 80 miles southwest of Saigon. The delta fighting was by far the heaviest reported .in the country. Several sharp actions were reported elsewhere. U.S. troops of the 9th Infantry Division killed 34 Viet Cong in Vietna- spokesman a dozen running battles 30 miles south of Saigon, in Long An province. In adjoining Kien Hoa were killed. The 9th had eight wounded in the series of skirm- ishes. SCATTERED SKIRMISHES U.S. marines' operating south of the demilitarized zone re-| ported killing 16 Viet Cong in 'similar scattered brushes. .One! marine was killed and 10 were} wounded. | Such scattered, inconclusive} local clashes have been char- jacteristic of much of the fight- ing in Vietnam in_ recent months, with the larger actions generally spaced weeks apart. The Communists have relied increasingly on mortar attacks. ' and reports of an impending drug shortage arose as a truck- ing strike-lockout continues in the Chicago area. More industries were feeling the pinch of the five-day-long contract dispute between Chi- cago truck drivers' unions and trucking firms. One spokesman said the situation was '"'reach- ing the paralysis stage." The Hammond Organ Co. halted production Thursday at its five Chicago-area factories, making idle 1,200 workers. Honeywell Inc., an electronics firm, closed four suburban plants, putting 750 persons out of work. Thomas H. Coulter, president of the Chicago Association of Commerce, said some . drug stores have been unable to fill prescriptions because they haven't had deliveries for sev- of drugs and medicines are be- ing made on schedule." Another official of the associ- ation warned that. the trucking shutdown imperils the jobs of more than 168,000 workers in the huge electrical machine in- dustry. TV WORK STOPS Earlier in the week, three television manufacturers--Zeh- ith, Motorola and Admiral--an- nounced production stoppages which made idle some 25,000 employees because of parts shortages. Three railways or- dered embargoes on piggyback trailer shipments to Chicago. One chain store spokesman aid incoming shipments to the firm's warehouses were re- duced by 90 per cent. Attacks on trucks and drivers increased and one shooting in- cident was reported Thursday. truck was stopped by three car- loads of men who smashed his truck's windshield with a ham- mer. Another driver said he was pulled from the cab of his truck and beaten. Seven shots were fired into the offices of the Chicago Cas- ket Co., which is being struck by members of the Chicago In- dependent Truck Drivers Union. Mayor Richard J. -Daley's offer to help settle the strike was rejected by. Edward Fen- ner, head of the independent union. Contract talks have been stalled since Tuesday night, and the deadlock had an im- pact in Washington where pol- icy committees of both the Teamsters union and Trucking Employers Inc. postponed ac- tion 'on a tentative agreement for other areas reached Wed- nesday, aq STEPS DOWN Hungarian Premier Gyula Kallai, 57, stepped down to- day as premier to become president of parliament. He has been chief of the gov- ernment since 1965. There was no firm indication of who would succeed Kallai as premier, (AP Wirephoto) wickshire and Cheshire. Even/gan to sag five years ago--pro- Wilson's own constituency of claimed the result of a ree Huyton turned Tory in the Lan-|sounding vote of no confidence cashire upset. 'in the Wilson government. TTL Li aout Nn Ne NEWS HIGHLIGHTS PC Blames Russia For Contract Loss OTTAWA (CP) -- Conservative MP Rod Webb said in the Commons today that "Russian pressure on Finland" is to blame for the Joss of a $100,000,000 Canadian deal with | the Finns. The member for Hastings-Frontenac said the | Canadian General Electric plant in Peterborough lost out | on a bid to build & nuclear power plant for Finland because the Soviet Union applied pressure on the Finnish atomie energy authority to delay the project. To PANMUNJOM, Kcrea (AP) -- An armistice commission meeting discussing the biggest violation of the armistice since the Korean War ended in 1953 broke up today after a Communist walkout during the showing of a movie of President Johnson's visit to Seoul last October, Canadian Pilot Arrested In Zambia LUSAKA, Zambia (AP) -- A purge involving arrests and deportations in Zambia has led to the detention of Capt. J. G. Bunny Warren, a 47-year-old Canadian pilot who was arrested in a security case, it was disclosed today. .. In THE TIMES Today .. Montreal Eliminates Rangers -- P. 8 Hospital Plans Mental Health Week -- P. § Centennial Buggy May Be Displayed--P. 11 12 Financiol--17 Pickering News--S, 6 Sports--8, 9, 10 Television--16 Theotres--14, Ann Landers: Ajax News--5, 6 City News--1] Classified --18, 19, 20, 21 Comics--16 15 4 Weather--2 New Editorial Obituories--21 s--5, 6 2, 13, 14, 1§ 'aa Whitby Wome a: \