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Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Nov 1967, p. 1

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At EATON'S, e to the latest rn by Neil Mcken- phy combines nar- larship in the story erick Hepburn who | in an area of high en, 8,96 0 by Yousuf Karsh, favourite portroits, dy, Krushchev, Sir the Queen and the 10.95 jenna ye Sphinx by Hugh s first novel in . dealing with the generations, set in ntreal, Vhy. 480 pages. answers to more ons asked by boys y indexed, also tach 0:90 EACH . Hounds by Mary 2, gripping story n Damascus and rended 4 65 as) EACH PHONE 725-7373 z _ ANNE ZELENYJ Winnipeg MARJORIE ALLEN Edmonton reer OH abl Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 26--NO. 276 GIRLS FROM 10c Single Copy 55¢ Per Week Home Delivered ITE. EEE PATRICIA CLARK Calgary EAST AND mn mest AHN FROM BONNIE MICHAS Vancouver nuit gn nan sgn nt WEST VIE IN LUCIE BELANGER Montreal TRO meee MY 0 NEENAH e MeN . reuKI NRE erm MISS GREY C "ANNE KENNEDY Saskatchewan LESLIE SCARLETT Hamilton Bh aA LIN " " mr rt She Oshawa Cimes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1967 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post 0 Ottewa ond for payment of Posta UP CONTEST MeN: ' | Bee a JULIE DIXIE SUE RANCE Ottawa Toronto i] nm suk tah Weather Report Sunny with cloudy periods and cold Wednesday. Low to- night, 18; high Wednesday, 80. ffice Department ge in Cash TWENTY-TWO PAGES Robert McNamara Heads World Bank WASHINGTON (AP) -- De- fence Secretary Robert Mc- Namara, for nearly seven years manager of the world's biggest military establishment, is re- signing to become president of the World Bank. McNamara's formal selection as $40,000-a-year president of the international lending institu- tion will come Wednesday when the bank's 20 directors meet at its Washington headquarters. He will succeed another American, George D. Woods. McNamara, 51, was secretly nominated for the bank presiden- cy last week. The nomination was made by the United States, which traditionally plays the nominating role because it is the largest single financial con- tributor to the bank. Woods' term expires at the end of this year. DENIES WANTS POST ROBERT McNAMARA ««.» To resign Cabinet Post JOHN B. CONNALLY + + » Possible Successor McNamara's impending de- Parture immediately raised speculation that he would be re- placed in the defence post by one of Johnson's closest political allies, Texas Governor John B. Connally, a former navy secre- tary. Connally, who recently an- nounced he would not seek re-e- lection as governor, said Mon-| day there is no truth in such ru- | mors. Envoys Attacked US., U.K. MOSCOW (AP) -- The British|des N. Harper, and U.S. Col. and American military attaches) William J. Spahr were visiting the prime minister, during BRITAIN, CANADA T OF DEGAULLE Disc PM Studies! » De Gaulle Speech OTTAWA (CP) -- The text of another verbal blockbuster by French President de Gaulle was handed Prime Minister Pearson Monday night as his first prob- lem on return from a week-long visit to England. External Affairs Minister Martin brought the text aboard Charge the prime Yukon aircraft and they talked minister's RCAF for several minutes. Mr. Pearson finally appeared and told reporters he will meet his cabinet first and reply, as necessary, in the Commons today to de Gaulle's calls for a "sovereign state'"' of Quebec. It had been a 19-hour day for There have been recurrent re-|in Moscow were attacked and/Kishniev, capital of Soviet Mol- which he received the Freedom ports in recent months thatisearched after they were/davia. McNamara was anxious tojallegedly served drugged wine of the City of London and deliv- The attaches toured an exper-jered a hefty swipe of his own in leave his cabinet post, which/while on a trip this month near|i ental wine-making farm in|the direction of France. often has days of 12 and 18 hours, some- times seven days a week. A former president of the} embassies charged demanded working|the Romanian a de ycboe! the area at the suggestion. of Mr. Pearson made his re- "1 their Soviet guide, sampled its|)marks in a speech at London's es y the Soviet abide wines and sherries and ate food.|Mansion House. An American spokesman sale' ny returning to their hotel room|Gaulle made his at one of his President de Ford Motor Co., McNamara has/today the Soviet reply "was not they became ill, vomited and|rare Paris news conferences. been defence chief since the in-|considered satisfactory" other man has held the post/ington. that long. When Johnson became presi-|British foreign office said the dent four years ago, McNamarajincident occurred Nov. 17 when t t and State Secretary Dean Rusk|the British attache, Brig. C, A./ish statement continued. and auguration of President John F.|that further protests are being fe : ; : Kennedy in January 1961. No|considered in London and Wash- the British foreign office said went to bed, a statement from "A subsequent medical exam- for suspicion that the wine had been tampered with," the Brit- became key presidential advis- ers managing the enlarged war in Vietnam. With Vietnam now a major item of public controversy and with a presidential election bare- ly 11 months away, it was be- lieved Johnson would have pre- ferred to keep this top war lead-| ership team intact. But he did give his personal NICOSIA (CP) -- the presidency of and Development. Greek Spokesman Reports Crisis Coming To Head Turkish approval | warships circled off the Cyprus to McNamara's nomination for| coast for two hours today, then} the bank,|disappeared in a fog. In Athens, | known formally as The Interna-| a Greek foreign ministry|man merely said: 'The situa- tional Bank for Reconstruction|spokesman said the crisis be- }tween Greece and Turkey over! day. De Gaulle said there must be a transformation of -Canada's political system to project Que- | The U.S. embassy and thelination gave material evidence| DPC A gt lag Splat jal existence."" The Ottawa gov- jernment had put French-speak- jing Canadians "'in a position of \inferiority." this island will be clarified be- fore the day is out with either an agreement or possible war. The statement by the spokes- tion will be clarified within the Either affirmatively |through an agreement or nega- Automation Major Issue In UAW-GM Bargaining DETROIT (AP)--The United|nary meeing with the UAW that/in Ankara and in Cyprus. Auto Workers union, with new|he was optimistic. Ford and Chrysler contracts} Seaton said: "GM wrapped up, moved on to Gen-/aware of the economic dimen- hours.- 1 eral Motors--biggest of the U.S.|sions of the Ford and Chrysler|fears that a Turkish invasion of auto-makers--Monday with indi-|settlements and is prepared to| Cyprus was imminent. that automation and/pargain within the dimensions cations uses of computers would be/of those agreements." major problems. UAW officials is well|sort of Kyrenia for about two Mee GM's spokesman added that|"a normal exercise.' He said distributed | with "hard work and a realistic they departed from the Turkish |tively. In this case, very dramat- lic developments cannot be ex- |cluded, including war." | His comment was made as all | three international negotiators | striving to get Greece and Tur- |key together assembled in Ath- 'ens with reports on their talks The ships remained off the re- Their arrival set off But in Ankara, an informant said the ships were conducting tion," release in which they accused GM of trying to remove some auto jobs from UAW category by putting them into computer- ized fields with white-collar, non-union workers. Setting the battle line for some anticipated hard-nosed bargaining, the UAW told GM: "The union never has com- plained of automation. In fact, it has staunchly defended auto- mation, often in spite of mem- bership disbelief that automa- tion is good for the economy and the total community. "The union cannot continue to defend it if it is coupled with continuous displacement and erosion of the union with the new method arbitrarily as- igned to salary." a G. Seaton, GM vice- president-labor relations, had attitude by both parties these|port of Mersin at 2:30 a.m. negotiations can reach a suc- cessful conclusion." For his part, Mr. Pearson told his warm British audience that France has fallen back "on the old and discredited doctrine of national defence by national ac- repudiating collective se-! curity through the North Atlan-| tic alliance. | Winters Replies BRUSSELS (AP) -- Canadian reaction to President de Gaulle's speech came today from the visiting Trade Minister Winters. Winters, who arrived from Geneva on his way to Paris, is- sued the following statement: "The Canadian gggernment regrettably had to express itself on a previous occasfon_yegard- ing the unacceptability of some remarks made by President de Gaulle while he was visiting in Canada. Such remarks are no more acceptable now than they ernment the text of President de Gaulle's| UN peace force observers at|+emarks and in the meantime it! Kyrenia, 15 miles north of Nico-| will Seaton said he expected it/cia, said between six to eight|ments." have no further com- would take until early next year) ,. pen . to resolve all local issues at|Stips were within Cyprus's 12- 18,000 such unresolved issues re-| When the line of vessels ap- main from an original agenda|peared from the north, two Cy- of 31,000, he reported. 2\prus navy torpedo boats sped UAW Vice-President Leonard|from Kyrenia harbor for shelter Woodcock headed the union har-,in the lee of a small island be- gaining team in the absence of|yond the breakwater. UAW President Walter P. Reu- Chrysler which wound up at 3 The Turkish ships steamed|as GM's plants. Currently, some mile limit of territoriabwater---G any th Arabia Independence GENEVA (Reuters) -- South which he Arabia will become independent) other t the People's Republic of| Quebec's proposal of a rewritten ther xe babe sleeping after & slowly toward the northwest,|Southern Yemen at midnight! constitution. marathon bargaining session a' ; ; Wednesday night, a spokesman minge & eer cree: beaten for the National Liberation|ing brief had approved the idea of a new look at the constitution} a.m. Monday with a national|back from where they came and] Front announced today after ne- : and proposed protection ofinavy and air force, but touched| bership. contract for 8,000. Chrysler of-|disappeared out of sight under} gotiations with Britain. The NLF emerged as the|French language rights in a|governmental grass roots. Even|- London replied with {ts usual! P|gage dear! Antl-poverty or fice and engineering workers. slight fog. The three-year Chrysler pact $35 to $87 a month. The 18 sal-|sure on Greece in the tense dip- told reporters earlier Monday as he emerged from a prelimi- called for salary' increases of|new threat of force, to put pres-|four years of guerrilla warfare against British rule and will|those who oppose the attain-/restricted to ministers, subse- join the market, and that he} were then. The Canadian gov- is carefully studying | PREMIERS JOHN Robarts of Ontario (left) and Louis Robichaud of New Bruns- wick hold a private con- versation Monday during 'Two Atlantic Premiers Ask New Constitution |NEWS HIGHLIGHTS New Yorkers Battle Heavy Blizzard | TORONTO (CP) -- The pre-| miers of Nova Scotia and} Prince Edward Island Said} today they are prepared to work} toward a new constitution for) satisfaction with the old one. | Nova Scotia Premier G. I. | Smith told the Confederation of Strong| Tomorrow Conference dissatis-|Quebec delegation to provide| changes Quebec had in mind. faction with the constitution in |Quebec and dissatisfaction with economic development in the | Atlantic Provinces are the two {big stumbling blocks hindering |the development of a Canadian | identity. | "It is true that many of us see jlittle need for a new constitu- tion,' Premier Smith said dur- jing a discussion of the goals of | Canadians. | 'Some of us may have a real jattachment to the old constitu- tion. But. do we not have a greater attachment to Can- | 9) the constitution won't easy one but that was no reason | for not trying. | 'With the good will evidenced around this table it should in- deed be possible for us to make a start," he said. Earlier, P.E.I. Premier Alex Campbell said he was disturbed efforts of Canada in view of Quebec's dis-| ent to the opposition stated by|Canada to alter its "traditional| a? } He said the task of rewriting, be an ' wo! to | \Fr \al w a ti th the 54th floor of Toronto's new Toronto - Dominion Centre. | its the Confederation of To- morrow conference in To- ronto. The four-day confer- PARIS (CP) -- Charles de| and Gaulle has heaped new harsh | Unite Britons, anxious for entry in the European Common Market,| takes on this aspect, this char- also were dealt the back of the| acter--to develop with its totali- jence, jress of the dollar only shows| transatlantic that gold should be the basis for|--including France, Quebec and change" of Canada's political system, de Gaulle contended ance in Canadian economic life has linked up with the "partial"' attitude of the federal govern-|remanded a 15-year-old ment to make the French-Cana-|to the dian "language, substance and | Whitby, character" : ardized. B biggpcantecr sven of the Cana-jcausing actual bodily harm to an "bestowed by the Queen of Eng land 100 years ago,"' should pro-| was |ject Quebec "to the level of a/and badly beaten in a raft sovereign state with mastery of near his home a week ago. bec, * sg = France Seeks Retum Of Gold Monetary System Isp to facepup te the tates invasion."" rds on targets from Ottawa| De/ZJraulle said "it flows from Tel Aviv. \thisf also that France is pletely ready--once Canada rench president's hand at alty the best possible relations." ittering Monday press confer-| Constitutional change was one while the United States|condition for resolution of the Canadian question. Another was as bluntly told the present du French _ solidarity new and transformed interna-|the Acadians of New Brunswick, ee system. hak "" of Canada's political Youth Remanded Whitby Hospital Oshawa juvenile court today youth Ontario Hospital, for 30 days' observa- at "Anglo-Saxon"' preponder- increasingly jeop-|tion. He is charged with ass constitution which was |four-year-old George McDonald of 215 Celina St., Oshawa, who found lying unconscious car national existence." |. The youth first appeared in 'Of course, this state of Que-jcourt last Thursday and was freely and in equality,,;reémanded to today's hearing at ence, called by Mr. i jmust work out with the rest of that time. Robarts,. is being held on (CP Wirephoto) | Canada the details of their co-| A spokesman at Toronto Sick | operation in order to master|Children's Hospital said the 'and exploit a very difficult na-|boy's condition was unchanged, the determined and dedicated,further explanation of a number two races--French|of statements contained in a and English--to build one na- preliminary brief to the confer- tion," he said. ence. | "Can we afford to be indiffer-| The brief called for English | one of these races to the consti-| approach to relations between; tution?" our two linguistic groups.'"' Mr.} However, he called for the|Campbell asked what specific| | | my De Gaulle Rebuff Sparks © Violent Market Reaction - | PARIS (Reuters) -- Violent;precipitate a boycott of market | reaction coupled with hints of a| activity by Italy and the Bene-! European Common Market cri-|lu x countries--Belgium, The} sis today followed President de Netherlands and Luxembourg. | Gaulle's refusal once again to| West Germany and_ other) open the door to Britain for members of the European Eco- market negotiations. In Brussels, market officials|}eq to vehemently criticize d speculated privately that de) Gaulle's position. But observer at some press reaction to Mon- day's conference sessions, said indicated the provinces had opposed The exercise appeared to be a/dominant nationalist group in) new bill of rights. | Mr. Campbell took issue with ary classes now range from|lomatic negotiations with Tur-jgovern the new state by gy ger of a bicultural Canada. $82.20 to $262 a week. key. agreement with London, "Our confederation involves'services. He noted that the P.E.I. open-|tries, Thousands were believed) ~~ |his news conference Monday! partners would not jeopardize = Austerit us erl y De* Gaulle contended that| 2 flation and devaluation of the| With the market and that Brit-| land services in 13 of 16 minis-/5"P- | Gaulle's rebuff to Britain might! here believed that de Gaulle at|_ . was speaking on the assumption : pain Faces that France's Common Market) ~ the community for the sake of| = British membership. MADRID (CP) -- The Span- Britain's economy, despite de-| = ish government, shaken by in- valuation, was "incompatible" peseta, embarked on an austeri- ain would have to revamp its lty drive today, eliminating jobs| °¢on°™y to qualify for member-| Instead he again proposed} fired, |that Britain should begin with|= The cuts spared the army,)some form of associate mem-|_ | |some jails were closed. optimism that de Gauile still | = Government automobiles were has not vetoed the British bid to) = \cretaries and to some ministry cannot speak for France's part-| = ners, Fi gyorg nomic Community were expect-| 2 ture, in its immense stretches|He was still "very critical." on | ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -- New Yorkers in snowbelt re- gions of the Great Lakes battled up to two feet of wind- blown snow today, and more kept falling. Some schools were closed. The heaviest snow hit south-western New York, off Lake Erie. Wilson Rejects ECM Withdrawal LONDON (Reuters) -- Prime Minister Wilson rejected today a proposal that Britain should withdraw its ap- plication to join the European Common Market. He was an$wering questions in the House of Commons from an anti - Common Market Labor member, David Winzick, UN Recognition Denied To China UNITED. NATIONS (Reuters) ----- The UN General As- sembly today rejected a bid to oust Nationalist China from the United Nations and hand over its seat to Red China., The world body defeated proposals that the UN recognize the Communist regime by 58 votes to 45 with 17 absentions. Canada abstained. wn ..In THE TIMES Today .. not, you're talking with your mouth full!" Minor Soccer--P. 8 Complex Reviewed--P. 11 Plaza Construction--P, 5 Ann Londers--12 Ajax News--5 City News--11 Classified---16, Comics-----21 17, 18 Editorial---4 Financial---20 * Obituaries--18 Sports--8, 9 E Television--21 : Theaheacc (A : = i

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