joe A Bac Bop, Ban, fom Fm. Pn ingen Oe Do wo oa Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO, 149 SSe Per Week Home Belivered Me Se ig tg ty kip Vay Hie ty Me Ky te OS RE Ny ty Ne "% ee Dies. dae tiie cline tie, titan Aiea. Ate, Aiiedii, dimeden tite eta diet Die A ¥ + li a Py + OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966 She Oshawa Times Class Mail Post Office Department Authorized os Second Ottawa and for payment of alsa? oa Sf Xplieat Sa ah dee Mee ae te ee he dee be hs he he ee ee ' Weather Report Fine, sunny weather predict- ed for the next few days. Low tonight 62; high Friday 78. TWENTY-SIX PAGES Postage in Cash. IN THE GOOD OLD SUMMERTIME Camp Kedron Susan children at swimming pool. one of 11 camp members Laracor Ave., Oshawa takes a breather from a cooling off spree with a multitude of Everybody is taking an out- doors bath these sweltering days. Here Susan Wood, 108 is who instruct 69 girls in as- sorted. activities. The camp is sponsored by Oshawa Eight Nurses Slain 'Crime Of Century Police pieced the story to-|diately. One body was found| gether thus: downstairs. The victim had) About 12:30 a.m., a tall white| Deen stabbed. Upstairs, most of the other) man, about 25, came to the door] -esidents had retired for the jof the house on Chicago's far) night in three bedrooms. They| |southeast side, one of three) were ail young, seven white| |used as nurses' residences by and one Negro. A Filipino nurse| blonde man during a 24-hour South Chicago Hospital. : escaped. | horror orgy. He asked one of the girls, | Some were strangled, some|who opened the door, for WAS METHODICAL shot and some knifed, police|money, saying he was going to Sgt. Thomas Bingham of the said. New Orleans. Pushing his way|South Chicago police district One of the nine young women) into the house, he drew a pistol| said that the killer penned the in the dormitory escaped after|and a knife, eight girls upstairs in one of the the killer's departure to tell the gps Sir en ag aes ties yee Sane le . 5 whedon cc where they were killed during Chicago Negroes Lieut, Fr an cis Clanagah, Rampage Again chief of the detective bureau CHICAGO (AP)--Mobs of Ne- CHICAGO (AP) -- Eight stu- dent nurses were butchered in their town house dormitory early today in what Coroner An- drew Toman called "the crime of the century." They were killed method- ically, one at a time, by a taken to hospital with wounds 'Strike Deadline Deferred By Que. Hospital Workers ! | MONTREAL (CP)--The dead- line for a strike by non-medical workers in 139 Quebec hospitals was deferred today and meet- ings were held in an attempt to head off the walkout which would in effect cut down hos- pital service to emergencies only. No specific new deadline was made public by the union. One report set the time as 5 p.m. EDT today. Meanwhile, a spokesman for the Quebec Hospital Associa- tion said a meeting with gov- ernment - appointed mediator Yves. Pratte was- underway: The union was holding a sep- arate meeting with no outside representatives. Meanwhile, there was specu- lation--but no official word-- that the provincial government would seek an injunction to pre- vent the strike if the talks col- lapsed. There is provision for such action under the Quebec Labor Code for strikes involy- Kiwanis Club and is six miles from Oshawa's Four Conners. Oshawa Times Photo ing what are considered as es- sential services. The strike was originally scheduled to start at midnight Wednesday. The deadline was MOSCOW (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Gandhi of India warned to- day that 'Viet Nam is a pow- derkeg"' and called for "all the parties concerned' to negotiate within the framework of the Ge- neva agreement, Mrs. Gandhi, visiting Moscow to promote a proposed solution to the Viet Nam war, earlier in the day indirectly accused China of trying to worsen the situation in Southeast Asia. China has been the most out- spoken opponent of any peace negotiations on Viet Nam, It has jdenounced Mrs, Gandhi's latest peace proposals as part of an alleged Soviet - American - In- dian plot Mrs. Gandhi's. criticism of China was made at an embassy lunch for Premier Alexei Kosy- gin of the Soviet Union. She spoke later on Viet Nam at a Soviet - Indian friendship meet- ing at thewKremlin. At the Kremlin meeting, Ko- sygin denounced U.S. actions in Viet Nam as barbarism on an international scale and said the fighting there "'dooms the U.S. to international isolation." Danger As it was quite natural in this situation, he said, for the Com- munist nations to consider in- creased aid for North Viet Nam, In her Kremlin speech, Mrs. Gandhi said any escalation of the Viet Nam war "might sub- stantially enlarge and intensify the conflict with grave conse- quences for the peace of the world,'! In her speech criticizing China, Mrs. Gandhi indirectly accused China of seeking to un- do the great power detente. Without mentioning China by name, she said: "There are those who do not like the detente achieved by the great powers and who wish to undo it by aggravating tensions in Asia, They must not be al- lowed to endanger world peace." China has denounced Mrs. Gandhi's Viet Nam peace pro- posals, charging they are part of a Soviet-United States plot to end the Viet Nam war so Mos- cow and Washington can jointly dominate the world. Mrs. Gandhi also renewed her plea for peace in Viet Nam, deferred to 7 a.m. and again postponed, the new deadline ap-| jparently contingert on the pro-| gress of meetings. | Overnight talks were held, It was reported Mr. Pratte was |given a briefing by Emile Dalpe| |of the Confederation of National! Trade Unions, to which the hos-| pital workers' union, the Na-| affiliated. | 'There...was . sone*stear that! word of the strike deferment would not reach employees in time, However, there were no} early reports of workers not; turning up at th® hospitals. Mr. Pratte, a government le- gal counsel, was appointed me- diator Wednesday and Premier Daniel Johnson said he was go- Sidewindérs Hit North Viet Planes SAIGON (AP)--U.S. jet fight- ers blasted two MiG 21s out of tional Federation of Services, is!the skies over North Viet Nam listed as a probable kill. Three been 'reported within three minutes today after downing a slower MiG 17 Wed- ay. m All three MiGs were brought. down by sidewinder missiles, As U.S. Air Force F-4C Phan- toms were blasting the MiG \downed by U.S: pilots over North Viet Nam. Another is MiG '23s "Have shot down. The air force made no men- tion .of any U.S, losses in the latest encounter with th 21s, the best fighters ever sup- plied abroad by the Soviet Un- Medicare Bill Held Until Fall India PM Tells Of War Grit Leaders Won't Push For Medicare Approval OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-|MPs said the bill should be held ter Pearson reversed ground on| where it was. the government's medical care | bill Wednesday to bail out his| House raith, from troubles with the op- position Conservative party, in-| formants say. Afterwards, Mr. MacEachen met the prime minister and Transport Minister Pickersgill, acting House leader. The result was Mr, leader, George Mcll- Mac- They say an apparent '"mis- | understanding' with Michael Starr, the Conservative House leader, might have permanently damaged Mr. Mcliraith's repu- tation with the Conservatives had the medical care bill been pushed forward to second read- ing--approval in principle. Instead, Health Minister Mac- Eachen told the Commons when it opened Wednesday the gov- ernment would not insist on sce- ond reading as he had an- nounced Tuesday night. Informants say Mr. Mac- Eachen based his Tuesday night announcement on a weekend meeting at Harrington Lake-- the prime minister's summer residence--at which Mr. Pear- son gave him the green light to take the bill to second reading HON, GEORGE McILRAITH before a summer recess. It is understood there were consul- tations by telephone with Mr. Mcllraith about this. MINISTERS DIFFER Mr. MacEachen wanted the bill put through all three stages to completion before the recess, while some cabinet ministers wanted it held at first reading until the fall. The compromise -arranged with the prime minister was to allow the health minister to take it to second reading. But as it turns out the bill now will remain at first reading until the ssion resumes in October. When Mr. MacEachen made his announcement to proceed on Tuesday, Conservative Gordon MiG)Churchill (Winnipeg South Centre) shouted "no, no." He said Mr. MacEachen was 21s, North Viet Nam's fastestjion. They can fly at twice the breaking a commitment made jet fighter, giant U.S. B-52 bombers pounded an area just south of the 17th parallel fron-| North Vietnam speed of equipped with sound and are/by Mr. Mcliraith at inter-party missiles, and the| meetings aimed at arranging a ese were thought/recess date. HON. MICHAEL STARR ing to Montreal 'with mone- tary offers in his pocket." Eachen's statement at the open tier where an estimated 5,000 ing of the Commons that the ___.| infiltrating Communist troops to have about a dozen in their Minutes later Mr. Mcliraith, air foree of about £5 planes. homicide section, said that the Filipino girl survived by hiding. gro youths, throwing fire bombs and bricks, stampeded through) The slayer left the dormitory about 3 a.m. At nearly 6, the surviving student nurse ran to the street and stopped a pass- ing police patrol car, She two Chicago neighborhoods Wednesday night. It was the second successive night of violence on Chicago's west side, gasped her story to the unbe- lieving policemen who quickly} verified it. H An official of the hospital) aid that the victims were ex-| change student nurses between! ' Here is the night's bloody! For the second day in a row, scorecard: ja gushing fire hydrant set off --Twenty Negro youths were|street fighting along Roosevelt arrested and charged with ar-)Road near the loop. son, resisting arrest or dis-| Police turned off the hydrant, orderly conduct. which had been turned on ille- --Dozens more were seized|gally--although it is a summer by police but later released. |tradition in Chicago to cool off --More than a dozen police-|with gushing fire hydrants. men were hit by bricks, rocks; Temperatures were in the 80s and boities but none suffered Tuesday's disturbance had| serious injuries. Started the same way. | _- ' ighbarhood | Sars ww pi Ma Hey tigi CHARGE 'BRUTALITY' waist-length jacket. i i ;; An FBI official said that the! ; and taken to hospital.| The onlooking Negroes) : said that bar vga ag other catvens shouted "police brutality" and| Crime was the worst in Chicago were treated for injuries or Said police hit children with|annals. Veteran policemen were ee ------ swinging nightsticks. Soon rocks|Shocked, they said, by the Rir Talks ranging from cuts to possible skull fractures. Fire bombs started many blazes. Dozens of stores were looted. Broken glass from |smashed shop windows littered |sidewalks and streets. |s 18 and 26 years of age. The survivor, Amarao Cro- zono, told Police Capt. Harold McCoy she avoided the killer {by hiding under a bed. | Miss Crozono, half hysterical, {could only be questioned) |briefly, McCoy said. She gave! ja general description of the |killer, noting his blonde hair, height about six feet onc, and) weight about 170 pounds. She| jsaid he was wearing a short, NEW YORK (AP)--A_ work stoppage by non-medical em- ployees demanding more pay spread today from Montefiore Hospital in the Bronx to Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan. About 300 of the employees appeared outside Mount Sinai Hospital and refused to report for work this morning. Dr. David Pomrinse, asso- ciate director of the hospital, which has 1,500 patients, said that if the stoppage continues a transfer of patients to other hos- pitals would start later in the morning. Pomrinse said the hospital will not open its outpatient clinic today. The surgery sched- ule will be maintained, he said. Mount Sinai has about 1,200 non-medical workers. As picketing resumed outside More NY. Hospitals Aifected By Growing Work Stoppage | Queens, attending meetings in Prince Edward Island connected with his public works portfolio, told an aide by telephone: "T did indicate to the opposi- tion that the government would only proceed to first reading on the basis of a June 30 adjourn- ment. In fact for the first few days after June 30 I took a sim- ilar view." But Mr. Mcllraith said there had been no recent discussions |°Y. about this, that all recent talks|raith to proceed further. concerned whether Stanley} One reason the government Knowles, the NDP's Hous e| decided against proceeding was leader, would agree to an ad-|4 fear that the Conservatives journment date at all. | would extend debate on medical jcare and other bills, preventing DISCUSSED ISSUE }an early start of a summer re- The federai cabinet. discussed|cess, informants Say. the issue Wednesday morning] But the main reason, they and the prime minister talked |say, was the fear of damagin, to Mr. Mcllraith by telephone. |Mr, Mcllraith's relations wi In the Liberal caucus many/the Conservatives. government would not insist on proceeding now because of an apparent "misunderstand- ing" with the Conservatives, He stated, however, that, as the minister responsible for the bill, he would prefer that all Stages be dealt with. NDP Leader T. C. Douglas asked whether this wasn't breaking a commitment made by Mr. Pearson and Mr. Mcll- 'were believed to be massing. | Ground actioi in South Viet In the dogfight Wednesday |Nam continued in a lull with four navy Phantoms battled off/only patrol skirmishes reported. six slower MiG 17s which chal-| It was the second successive jlenged them as the Americans|day that the eight-engine B-52 |were providing a _ protective|bombers from Guam pounded shield for U.S. Montefiore hospital evacuated|the Co Trai railway and high- planes bombing |the suspected enemy troop con- jcentration 20 miles west of about 150 of its 629 patients Way bridges 23 miles southeast| Quang Tri city, in the northern- Wednesday. of Hanoi. jmost province of South Viet Montefiore normally has a to-. The other five MiGs fled, and|Nam. 0 tal of 1,300 non - medical em- oa ota aa returned un-| i ia military Paige yr lovyees i 4 of jdamaged. |Sai ree regiments of Com- abet 600 are a ne om andl 7 MIGS DOWNED |munist troops = from 4,500 to SAY WILL NOT WORK. The three kills brought to 17 5,000 men--were seen operating The demonstrators -- mem-|the total number of MiGslin the area within recent weeks. bers of Local 1199 sf the Drug)-- and Hospital Workers Union Rade (all H 4 (AFL-CIO) -- said Wednesday! £LUUN Ws 28 Of Nuclear Armaments |Montefiore, Mount Sinai and three other voluntary hospitals. The three others are Beth Is- rael H os pital in Manhattan, et ee GENEVA, Switzerland (Reut-\since last year--but there has ules UOsPHAl IM ors)--The Soviet Union called|been no outward progress to- All five hospitals are volun-,at the Geneva disarmament|W@Td an agreed text, tary hospitals, non-profit institu- conference today for renewed| The chief Soviet negotiator, tions under non-public auspices. efforts to reach an East-West | Alexei A. Roshchin said today Montefiore closed its outpa- accord preventing the spread of| the Soviet Union plans to make alt To Sprea | NEWS HIGHLIGHTS mnie ontefiore Hospital today, a tient department, stopped all pokesman for the hospital said admissions and started evacuat- he did not expect any of the/ing patients Wednesday after a non-medical employees to re- six-hour work stoppage in the today. morning. and bottles began to crash in|®"0rmous quantity of blood| the police ranks. jaround the bodies of the vic-! Many of the rocks throwers | "ms. ne were adults and some were only|, Three of the victims were 10 or 11 years old. found in each of the two bed-| yy, Helmeted police charged the 'oms which had not been used) ragged lines of rock throwers, /25,2 cell, One was in & bath WASHENGTON (AP) -- Alp.| Mae wecrone Shots inte the sir. ane and ane in the first-floor| Nort for work line negotiations push forward bombs avai ! ,|living room, ee -- ; 3: gain began to arc down| toeey Amul signs thal SOmel a cnattons and out bf the al-| substantial progress finally is | being made toward ending. the strike which began last Friday. A hint of definite progress came Wednesday night when Assistant Labor Secretary James J. Reynolds, presiding) leys. Firemen answering calls were pelted with rocks. At one over the talks, met separately) with representatives of the five struck airlines Northwest, point, three fire bombs burst in the middle of a group of fire-| Trans World, Eastern, National and United. men fighting a blaze set by) They were reported to have other fire bombs. discussed the national issues in- volved in the demand of the In- Britain Acts | nternational Association of Ma- To Rid Pound chinists (AFL-CIO) for wage in-- LONDON (AP) -- Britain to-| crease and other benefits in a|day raised the official bank in-| three-year contract terest rate to seven per cent There was no disclosure ofjfrom six per cent to make the outcome of the meeting, but) money tighter at home and prop! a spokesman said today's ses- up the sagging pound. sion would be another joint The move came as Prime meeting Minister Wilson sought to check teynolds said the parties still inflation and inspire confidence are far apart. in the pound sterling in foreign The struck airlines began lay-|exchange markets, ing off workers in an attempt} The rate sets the pattern for to hold down costs interest rates throughout the More than 35,000 machinists|sterling bloc. walked off their jobs Friday} Official sources reported the after nearly year-long negotia-|Labor government also is con- tions failed to produce an agree-|sidering a still lower ceiling on ment. The strike has halted|its wage-guideline increase but about 60 per cent of the air/has ruled out a wage and price travel in the U.S. 'freeze for the present, ' THIS WAS the scene out- tory on Chicago's south side where eight student nurses side the town house dormi- nuclear weapons to other coun-|4" article-by-article analysis of tries. jthe rival U.S. and Russian U.S. and Soviet anti-prolifera-| rafts to give a clearer picture tion draft treaties have been be-|0f the chances of reaching a fore the 17-country conference | mutually agreeable text. RED sa saan meres | Roshchin said Russia is ready jto study amendments and addi- jtions which would facilitate a solution to the problem of the |proliferation of nuclear weap- ons, But he accused the Western | Powers of wanting to negotiate within a much narrower frame- work, reducing the non-prolifer- jation problem to the American 'definition of control of nuclear weapons, | Moro's Bloc. Gets. Votes ROME (AP) -- Italy's deli-| cately-balanced centre-left coa-| lition presented a new image of solidarity today after winning a lightning series of confidence votes sought by Premier Aldo Moro. j } | 2 = In the first crucial parliamen- |= tary test since it was sworn in|= last Feb. 24 Moro's third coa- lition government came up for|= three successive votes of confi-|= dence in the Chamber of Dep-|= uties Wednesday night and won|= handily each time. | were found slain today. (AP Wirephoto) | Kid To Aged Plans To Be Given Today OTTAWA (CP) -- A government plan for further aid to old-age pensioners will be unveiled in the. Commons later today, Health Minister MacEachen informed the Commons health and welfare committee. Yugoslavian Vice - President Elected BELGRADE (AP) -- Former foreign minister Koca Popovic was elected vice-president of Yugoslavia today. He replaces Alexander Rankovic, longtime associate of President Tito who was purged from his Communist party and government posts early this month. Indian Minister Asks For Disarmament GENEVA (AP) -- Indian minister of state for foreign affairs, Dinesh Singh, made an urgent appeal for further disarmament measures today "so that millions of people May cross the threshold from poverty and misery to a life of human dignity'. HI nm eT --.{n THE TIMES today ... GM Constructs South Plant Addition--P, 13 2,900 Public School Enrolment Expected--P. 5 Dixie Ties Steelers For Lead--P. 8 Ann Landers--14 City News--13 Classified--20 to 24 Comics--18 Editorial--4 Financial---19 Obits--24 Sports--8, 9, 10 Theotres--6 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax News--5 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17