Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, neighboring ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 96 --NO. 92 Pickering and centres in Ont- 10e Single Cop S5e Per Week Home elivered "OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1967 ~-- § She Oshawa Cimes Weather Report Sunny today. Mainly cloud mild Friday. Low tonight 4); high 62. Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa.and for payment of Postage in Cash Some of the hostesses of the British pavilion at Expo he federal Adult Occupational | . |Training Act may mean an end| : May Be Over' |broken bodies | ito job training for more 7,000, | IN STORM; 128 DIE |Hill Near Nicosia Scene Of Disaster NICOSIA, Cyprus (CP)--Res-|the plane was' struck by light- }cuers collected 126 burned,|ning and burst into flames. today on the Evidence at the scene indi- slopes of a hillock where ajcated the plane hit a bump in chartered airliner crashed dur- the ground, then bounced a few ing a thunderstorm. The airline hundred yards into the slope of said two of four survivors died|a hillock less than 100 fect : jin hospital, bringing the total| high. '|dead to 128. Gaily colored saris and other SWINGING. HOSTESSES a reception the at aboard "67 cavort Wednesday liner Montreal harbor. The re- REA Carinthia docked in Power Plarits Attacked ELECTION LATER' FORECAST By Jets Near Haiphong SAIGON (CP) --WU.S. Navy jets, striking closer than ever] before to Haiphong, attacked two power plants today within sight and sound of that major port of North Vietnam. One tar- get was slightly more than a mile away. Clearing weather over the North opened the way for the raid, similar to strikes last June and December near Haiphong and Hanoi that stirred up inter- national controversy. A U.S. spokesman said the power plants were hit just be- fore noon by planes from the U.S. carrier Kitty Hawk. plant was per cent of the cement manu- Cement is a key item in the North since it is used exten- sively bridges knocked out by Ameri- can bombing attacks. The spokesman said one of the power plants was located 11 miles northwest of the centre of Haiphong and the sec- ond 2.1 miles northeast of the centre of the city, The spokesman said the closer situated inside a large complex that produces 95 factured in North Vietnam. It supplies the electricity needed to produce the cement. to repair roads and The spokesman said the plant, with two 5,000,000-watt genera- tors, is separated from the city proper by a canal or a Red River Delta tributary. The electric plant to the north- east is in a waterfront and in- dustrial area that is part of what pilots call the Iron Tri angle because of intense anti- aircraft fire. The spokesman said U.S. maps used for plotting distances show that this plant is on the Cau Cam River outside of the city limits. He said the river runs 'north of the city, then bends south to the Gulf of Ton- kin. Ee ception marked the first time all the British hostes- ses appeared in uniform together. (CP Wirephoto) | 'jadult retraining programs are| , |they finish English courses they The changes, which became effective April 1, cut off a major portion of the grants enabling adults to return to} school. | Some 54 communities with) affected. | Provincial manpower retrain- ing officials estimate 3,000 of the adults involved will be new Canadians who will find when will be ineligible for a $35 a week living allowance, or $75 if they are married, to take on The estimated 7,000 who will be affected make up about one- third of the total now taking adult retraining. The regulations do not allow) job training. | | Ontario residents. : a Fy | NEW COACH Leo Cahill has been named coach of Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League it was an- nounced today in Toronto. He was coach of Toronto Rifles of the Continental Football League. He re- places Bob Shaw who re- signed last month. (CP Wirephoto) Coaches Talk under 17 or anyone who has not been "a member of the labor force substantially with- living allowances for aiyone) | CLASSED AS 'VERBAL SAND' | | TORONTO (CP) -- Premier | Robarts warned members of the Ontario legislature Wed- nesday that a provincial gen- eral. election might not be held as s0on as some seem to think, despite election talk. He said the legislature still has about $1,000,000,000 worth of departmental estimates to Pass at the current session. Speaking at the end of a de- bate on a Liberal motion of non-confidence, Mr. Robarts surprised members who have been saying an election would be called within the next week or 10 days, After the house rose, Don- ald C. MacDonald, New Dem- ocratic Party leader, said the wheels of an election cam- paign have been set in mo- tion and the premier was only throwing verbal sand. | Coppolino Helped To Car, |Spain Eases out interruption for not less than three years,' unless the person has dependents. Of Shadows This shuts off young people| MONTREAL (CP) -- Mont-|People," the rescuer said, up to the age of 20, childless\real Canadiens and Toronto ma wives who want to retrain to go|ple Leafs are both considering to work, childless widows and|the use of special shadows in the majority of new immi-|the first game of the Stanley grants. |Cup finals tonight. Manpower Minister Jean Mar-| Montreal couch Toe Blake chand introduced the act March|said he will probably use Claude 3 and it received first reading.|Provost to check the Leafs The minister had an order-in-|Frank Mahovlich in the best-of- council passed to enable him to|seven playoffs. put the regulations into effect./' Meanwhile, coach Punch Im- lach of Toronto said he is con- sidering a special policeman for Montreal's John Ferguson, Ed fe do the job, Imlach said. Gibraltar Ban The game is scheduled for 8 p.m. EST and will be televised! LONDON (AP) -- British au-|by the CBC national network. | thorities reported today the Spa-; Montreal will be at full! nish government has modified|strength, but the Leafs will be| its ban on the use of air lanes|Without the _ services of left part which remained somewhat intact. die Shack might be sent out tol In one of the worst crashes tourist mementoes dotted the jin aviation history, the four-en-|twisted wreckage with eerie |gined turbo-prop Bristol Britan- patches of color. nia airliner, known as the Whis- t . pering Giant, crashed near Ni- MUD HAMPERED SEARCH |cosia during the night as it at-| Rescuers struggling to reach |tempted to land. There were re-|#@crash scene were hampered [ete the plane had been hit by wal ty Aeateargy of bee gy 204 lightning. A helicopter directed fire en- | Most of the dead were Ger-|gines and ambulances to the |man and Swiss tourists return-|Scene. Pieces of the wings and jing from a trip to the Far East.|°mSines lay scattered in a |The plane's. crew included four|Squate - mile area around the |Britons, all killed. j|main sections of the broken fue "This is the most terrible | S¢lage. Per le ever seen," said one ee pega! ot dare were of the first persons the|'axen by helicopter to an Aus- scene. hiee" ace boilies au trian field hospital. The hospital over the*place, some of them! 'irector said one man, a Swiss, in pieces." ;Was in' "relatively good condi- tion," TAIL SECTION"INTACT The other susvivors were a The Survivors were in the|Swiss air hostess, a German plane's tail section, the only|Wwoman and a German man. Globeair, a small Swiss char- ter firm, said the flight was "We kept looking but all. we|organized jointly by the travel could find. apart from those|DUreau of a Frankfurt, Ger- lucky few in the tail were OO ee beer store and a Swiss bureau in Zurieh, Greek and Cypriot policemen oe the te Airport employees ed soldiers, British airmen and run over fey scaee Son Beg eace . 's | : 3 sa cae ies dete nraes, apparently to make a | Spotlights beamed down by hov- pee landing run, before it ering UN heli s The ph sgeosgy HO from| Avisos Wort disaster vas Bombay, India, to Cairo, Egyp jthe collision of a United Air. : , jlines DC-8 jet and a T; but was diverted to Nicosia b int ella. cause of bad weather. World Airlines superconstella- Ition over Staten Island, New The owner, Gloveair of Swit-| York, Dec. 16, 1960. It killed 134 zerland, said it heard from the|persons, including six on the air control tower in Nicosia thaf ground. World Leaders To Attend 'Heart Trouble Complaint | State Funera' 'n Cologne Wednesday American pilots! Surveyor In Lunar Crater First Blurred Pictures Hint soil is expected to indicate if the surface is strong enough to: support manned landing craft. Pictures taken after each of its jerky movements should show whether the soil is sandy or PASADENA, Calif. (AP)-- Surveyor III's first blurred pic- tures hint it may be resting in a lunar crater after a gentle touchdown in an area astro- nauts may someday explore. While the three - legged craft kept its moon - scratching claw retracted, spacecraft controllers at Jet Propulsion Laboratory said photographs radioed dur- ing the 10 hours following the landing Wednesday showed less detail than those from Surveyor I last June. But they theorized this was due to sunlight re- flected. into the camera. ; A spokesman said the horizon around the vehicle was about five degrees higher than it would be if Surveyor III had landed on a flat plain. Diameter of the crater and the height of its rim were not) known. First operation of a scoop de- signed to extend from the spacecraft and dig in the- lunar soil was scheduled for late to- night or early Friday. The shovel, on the end of a five-foot arm, can dig as deep as 418 inches, pick up small rocks, or hammer hard enough to break a brick. The amount of power needed to move the shoyel through the Union Suspends Steelworkers HAMILTON (CP)--A _three- man international union tribu- nal has suspended the union membership rights of 19 city steelworkers for one year. It found the 19 members of Local 1005, United Steelworkers of America, guilty of slander- ing an international officer, an offence under the union consti- tution, ' : The tribunal's decision will be forwarded to the union's in- ternational executive board, meeting in Pittsburgh April 26, for a final decision The one-year suspension of membership rights dates from Sept. 7, 1966, when the alleged offence occurred, showed irregular wrinkles--ap- parently part of a crater wall- gravelly.» Clearest of the photographs taken in the first three attempts North Vietnam's heartland, the U.S. pilots downed one Commu- nist MiG and probably got four more, the U.S. command §said. when U.S. planes bombed an oil depot two miles from the city. The same day they hit an oil depot three miles from Ha- noi. |stages of investigations into the In 17 aerial dogfights over The closest previous raids to Haiphong were last June 29, between the 620-pound craft an the horizon. Readings from gauges on the vehicle's spindly legs indicated, however, that it came to rest gently and did not tilt. Surveyor III's 65-hour flight across 250,000 miles ended at 7:04 p.m. EST Wednesday. The first pictures were made up of 200 scan lines. There are nearly 600 on home television screens. The landing site, 24% miles from an aiming point picked during a midcourse steering manoeuvre, is in the dry Ocean of Storms near the centre of the left half of the lunar disc. The Soviet Union's Lunar 13 soft-landed in the Ocean of Storms last December. Its only surface - testing equipment was a rod fired into the soil to test firmness to a depth of eight to FINDERS KEEP, DANNY LEARNS MUSKEGON, Mich. (AP) A boy found a pot of gold by the banks of the Muske- gon River--and got to keep it. Danny Shunta, 13, was aputtering around by the river March 27, 1966, look- ing for interesting rocks when he found a glass jar stuffed with $2,990. Danny took the money home to his father, Rudolph, who turned over the hoard to police, Now police have returned the money to Danny. Under Michigan law, if no one claims lost articles within a year, the finder gets to keep them, provided a reasonable effort has been flew through the heaviest de-| NAPLES, Fla. (AP) -- Dr. fences ever thrown up by the/Carl Coppolino, who says he has Communists to attack an army | camp southeast of Hanoi. heart trouble, was helped to his car today after complaing he did not feel well 15 minutes be- fore the scheduled noon recess in his murder trial. Judge Lynn Silvertooth unex- pectedly called a-recess at the request of lawyer F. Lee Bailey. "He's all right," Bailey later told reporters in a telephone in- terview from Coppolino's motel. "Tt didn't amount to anything." Twice in the_ preliminary alleged drug murder of his first wife, Carmela, Coppolino was taken to hospital with self diag- nosed heart trouble: The 34-year-old anesthesiolo- gist withdrew from medical practice and claimed a 100-per- cent disability pension in 1962, giving coronary artery disease as the reason. Meanwhile, Dr. John C. Smith research biochemist who Soviet Alerted To 'Spectacular' MOSCOW (AP)--Unconfirmed reports circulating here say a major new Soviet space launch- ing is imminent. Reliable sources say Soviet officials have been warned to expect "a spectacular and sig- nificant" space venture this weekend or early next week. It has been more than two made to locate the owner. years since the Soviets last sent 12 inches. up a d space flight. traced radioactive succinylcho- line injected into rats, testified that 76 per cent, of the drug stayed at the injection site. Coppolino is accused of using the paralysing drug succinyl- choline to kill his wife. Dr. Mil- ton Helpern, New York City medical examiner, said it was injected into her buttock. | The testimony of Dr. Smith for the defence was contrary to that of the prosecution's medi- cal experts, who said compo- nents of the drug were found mostly in the first Mrs. Coppo- lino's brain. Smith is chief of research in anesthesiology at -New York City's Monetfiore Hospital. Traditions Go, | Says PC Chief MONTREAL (CP)--The gov- ernment's move to set a time limit on debate of the armed forces unification bill is part of its trend toward abolishing Ca- approaching the disputed colony of Gibraltar. A Spanish memorandum) in Madrid Wednesday made) winger Larry Jeffrey, injured in the sixth game of finals handed to the British embassy|Hawks in Toronto Tuesday. the semi- against Chicago 'Black clear, informants said, that the Spanish order is designed only to prevent British military air- craft overflying Spanish terri- tory. The initial Spanish ban had been interpreted here as an at- tempt to prevent all planes from using Spanish air space in ap-jother chartered banks in intro- proaches to the Rock. ducing increased rates of inter- The British last week served/est on savings accounts, it was|; notice they planned to defy the|learned Wednesday. { ban, which is expected to Come; From May 1, when 'the re-| into force about mid-May. jvised Bank Act comes into ef It seemed clear the tough/fect, the bank will pay 4% pe British ig had ae its ef-|cent on savings accounts. fect on Gen. Francisco Franco's| »,,; See regime. leant Haak off Cael beewe A foreign office spokesman | matching many trust companies reported receiving an explana-|i, offering a 4% per cent rate tory memorandum in which thei, savings. In March the Bank Spanish - said the prohibited | o¢ Montreal said it would intro- zones will not be closed to civil) qn four-per-cent interest. on aircraft. savings accounts. | The Canadian Imperial Bank Main Street Ablaze of Commerce followed with an) Scotia Bank 'Changes Rates TORONTO (CP) -- The Bank of Nova Scotia has joined three d t a s s r nadian traditions, Opposition Leader John Diefenbaker said Wednesday. The move indicates that the government is headed for a} direction "where the word royal] has become a dirty word and where measures are taken to remove our traditions,' Mr. Diefenbaker told reporters at the opening of Macdonald House, a social work institution. eee it would raise the} jinterest rate on regular savings In Hawkesbury jaccounts with chequing privi- | | i é | HAWKESBURY, Ont. (CP)-- leges oa per cent from three Fire today raged through four/Pe? cent. : establishments, including a ho-| The Royal Bank of Canada tel, on Hawkesbury's main/and the Toronto-Dominion Bank street. No» injuries were re-|have not announced plans. | : Ont. Negotiates Firms involved in the fire | WEATHER PERMITTING... Queen May Address Open Air Session By BEN WARD OTTAWA (CP)--Weather per- mitting, the Queen will addr visits, said the Que ment Hill program ress at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, July 1 en's Parlia-- will begin west end Prince Philip to visit the Bri- tannia Yacht Club in Ottawa's July 5 ..» PARLIAMENT ON LAWNS were reported to be the King) For Air Base | Edward Hotel, Dolphin Lingerie, | Dumont Pharmacy and Bond's TORONTO (CP) -- Provincial | Treasurer Charles MacNaugh- eeeianron | been prov addit real to present Clothing Store. ton announced today that the Ontario government will nego- tiate with federal authorities for purchase of a former RCAF sta- tion at Centralia, near London, Ont. Mr. MacNaughton said the provincial cabinet has approved use of the airfield, closed last | July, as "an industrial - educa-| allowed to choose two incial capitals to visit in ion to Ottawa and Mont- stops. z | Yen an open air meeting of Parlia- ment July 1 on the lawns in front of the Parliament Build- ings. The plan was revealed Wed- nesday at a briefing on arrange- ments for centennial visits to Canada by members of the royal family and foreign. heads of state. Lt.-Gen, Howard Graham, fed- eral co-ordinator for the royal and last until 11:45 a.m. It will include a display of folk dancing, a religious service and addresses by the Speakers of the Senate and Commons to which the Queen will respond with a message to the nation. If the weather is unsuitable, the Queen will address a joint sitting of the Senate and Com- mons in the Senate chamber. The program also calls for trophies for a racing event. Lt.-Gen, Robert Moncel, who is co-ordinating visits by foreign heads of state, said there has been no insistence that they first visit Ottawa. Already the heads of state from Ethiopia, Austria, West Germany and Ja- pan have completed arrange- ments to visit other provincial capitals before coming here. Gen. Moncel said each has About 60 heads of state are expected but firm arrangements have been made for only 20 so far. Two provincial capitals have not been selected by any- one--St. John's, Nfld. and Re- gina. He said there has been no of- ficial response as yet from Cuba or France regarding invitations to their heads of state. tional complex which will serve | as a pilot project for regional development." He said in a statement that a management consultants' re port found the 767 - has the potential of pumping a minimum annual payroll of $11,-, 000,000 into the rural economy { of Huron, Middlesex and sur- rounding counties, acre site i lis UU BONN (Reuters)---Flags flew uneral in Cologne Cathedral at half staff throughout West 'Tuesday, Germany today as the country] _{mourned former chancellor! Tributes to Adenauer flowed Konrad Adenauer Wednesday at the age of 91. who dieq|i® from much of the world, but his death was treated coolly in Eastern Europe and the official ays against an influenza infec- | Bast peruen news SGCnCy Samm ion and bronchitis that gradu-|MS life "was counter to the ine lly sapped the statesman's|tcrests of the German nation, trength as he lay in his Rhine-t¢voted to the preservation. of ide home at Rhoendorf. jold and doomed principles and President Johnson, F re nc h\', Ditter opposition to anything Doctors fought in vain 'for President de Gaulle and British |"&¥-" Prime Minister among the first world leaders |tributes Wilson were! Soviet newspapers ignored paid to the former 0 announce they would attend|chancellor and reported his he former chancellor's stateideath in a'single sentence. MMM eevee | NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Hees Comes Out For Free Education TORONTO (CP) -- The time has come to provide free university education to all those capable of passing entrance examinations, George Hees said today. The candidate for the Progressive Conservative party leader- ship said a much greater proportion of the national income will have to be spent on education. Canadian Acquitted In Nassau NASSAU, Bahamas (CP) -- Gerald Robinson, Canadian chiropractor charged with manslaughter in the drug death of his wif> last October, -was acquitted by an 8-to-4 Supreme Court jury verdict. The jury returned after three hours deliberation to say it attached no guilt or blame to Robinson, former Monreal resident, in the death of his wife, 'Never Wear Uniform', Says Clay LOUISVILLE (AP) -- Heavyweight boxing champion Cassius Clay said today he will not wear an arffy uniform "under any circumstances." Clay said to do so would be a denunciation of his Muslim religion. .. In THE TIMES Today .. Another General Goes To North Stors--P. 8 County Names Education Consultative Board--P $ 13 Infant Dies In H 1 Following Accid: P, "Ann Landers--14 Ajox News--5, 6 City News--13 Classified--24: to 27 Comics --19 F Editorial--4 > ews--5 Financial--23 s--14 to | Obituaries --27 Sports--8,° 9, Television--19 Theatres--20 10 7 t - ,