Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Aug 1967, p. 1

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CY NESBITT tepresentative UN LIFE ance Company f Canada hawa Shopping Centre ne 725-4563 se? 39 725-7373 125-7373 e 25-7373 lly 25-7373 25-7373 dace t Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman« ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont. ario and Durham Counties, VOL. 26--NO. 20! it 0 5Se er Weak ieece Coliverea She Oshawa Cimes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1967 Weather Report Variable cloudiness tonight, scattered showers Wednesday. Low tonight, 60; high tomor- row, 75. Authorized os Second Closs Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash EIGHTEEN PAGES | GAELS WIN FIFTH STRAIGHT TITLE | Captain Jim Higgs, of the Ivan Davie, convener for Township 12-2 in a game and captured the Ontario Oshawa Green Gaels, re- the Ontario Lacrosse Asso- at the Civic Auditorium. championship for the fifth ceives the William Post ciation, last night, after Oshawa won the _ best-of- straight year Memorial Trophy from Gaels defeated Toronto seven finals in five games, - (Oshawa Times Photo) 16 US. Planes Lost |Ableade Disputes In Last Seven Days ToMarTalks KHARTOUM (A P)--Conitn- States suffered its heaviest loss-|today by three heavy B-52 raid juing disputes among Arab lead- | es for a seven-day period in the;on Communist staging bases ers on policy toward Israel and) air war against North Vietnam| inside the demilitarized zone. the West in 'the wake of the --16 planes--between Aug. 21! Military headquarters sai d | floated down on both bridges,|June war promise rough going and Aug. 27, the U.S. command! Viet Cong sappers blew up nine for the Arab summit conference announced today. |bridges, eight of them in the the attack t ig s' : aed ape 90 toe tng Span opening today in this Sudanese The 16th plane--a marine Ajnorthern area on a_ national near Da Nang the U.S. marine} 4 guarc¢ was simultaneously) capital. Intruder--was lost Sunday due/hignway and one in the main "We have to "unknown causes," the com-) Mekirg Delta city of Can Tho. sheiled by mortars--and some settled nothing," of the shells evidently killed|said one delegate to the foreign mand said, but announcement 'Tie B-52s dropped about 225 of tne loss was delayed for tons of bombs on concentration several of the frogmen whose ministers' preliminary confer- security reasons. sites and gun positions from bodies were found at dawn. . ence Sunday night. The two Marine flyers were|whicn the Reds have staged northern war zone was metjbridges in Can Tho, and below Da Nang in the north. Frogmen with explosives stealthily entered the water and just The other bridges destroyed) : in the north were smali struc-| "We are. still divided on sev- listed as missing in action,|heavy blows against U,S.jturer spanning little strenins Ore maior issue ioe nd oN bringing fhe total of missing!marine positions in the last few|and canals. Most ebUId: "be TMC ta Abe er ce eure repaired or replaced in a mat-| Will be plain sailing. i ter of hours The purpose of the summit is The previous high for aircraft marine fortress at Con Thien Near Da Nang also, guerril-/to forge a common policy "to! lost in one week was 15, set!which guards the main infiitra-| "9% Fbrscveaes igi oo D Blera se the between May 14 and 20. tion route south. south hisibagebes Y POstl ael pasion The week's losses brought the The Viet Cong appear to be and lust at least 15 dead in a,!Staell aggression. flyers for the seven-day period days. The three target areas to 24. Three were rescued. were all just above the big consequences of | and militant the mer of state at the Foreign Office, takes over as affairs Herbert Bowden. New Offer Best Yet Auto Industry Says PM Takes Economics In U.K. Cabinet Shuffle LONDON (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Wilson, acting in the face of growing strains on the British economy, has thrown a big man into the breach--himself. By assuming direct charge of department of economic affairs, Wilson also asserted his top cabinet status against any possible ambitions on the part of his economically-orthodox chancellor of the exchequer, James Callaghan The prime minister's move into economic affairs came as part of an extensive shake-up of his Labor government Monday night. It gave the administra- tion a decidedly expansionist air as opposed to the tightly restrictive tone of government economic policies since the cur- tain of austerity was rung down over Britain in July, 1966. Wilson, 51, is first lord of the treasury as well as prime min- ister, and is 'economically supreme" by virtue of his dual position anyway, an aide said in explaining why the prime minister did not assume the actual title of economic affairs minister That title he gave to Peter Shore, a boyish looking pro-ex- pansionist who will watch over day-to-day administration of the economic affairs department CROSLAND MOES UP Another economic expansion- ist, Anthony Crosland, 48, moves up to;become president of the board of trade. A supporter of British entry into the European Common Market, Crosland replaces Douglas Jay, a 60-year-old anti-marketeer, in the trade post. Crosland formerly was minister of education and sci- ence. Jay is leaving the cabi- net. George Thomson, trouble-shooting 46, a for- minister Commonwealth secretary in place of Troops Clash In India Pass I hospital | UAW Expected To Reject Request ToCut Back Gains DETROIT (A P)--T he auto Motors called his firm's offer industry offered the United the best it has ever made. Auto Workers union what Malcolm Denise, chief bare company termed the best gainer at Ford, termed his tract proposals ever today, bul eompany's package "responsive asked the union to cut some and responsible." one con demands won in previous GM estimated its contract years. \ i The i : package at 36 to 44 cents an eg industry presented a' pou; over the next three years. so id and united front IN Rord pegged it at 34 cents, answering for the first time Chrysler figured 33 to 31 cents. demands the union itself has) caon has estimated that termed the most ambitious it) C?'¢? past : has ever made union demands made at the : star' of bargaining in July Quick rejection of the indus-| would cost GM at least $4 an try proposals by the union was hour. expected The j E The industry also offered The industry economic offers, additional wage increases for based on a proposed three-year!skilled workers, an issue that contract, came after two|has caused some dissension in the union. Skilled workers have athe demanded increase of at least only eight days remaining $1 an hour more than the rest before a strike deadline, of the workers get, EXPIRE SEPT. 6 The three companies did not 2 s specify how much they would Contracts covering 650,000 sive the 200,000 skilled men and workers at the Big Three) said only it was negotiable, expire at midnight the night of Sept. 6 although only the com MADE DIFFENT APPROACH pany selected by the unton as a|_ Ford and Chrysler took a dif- pattern-setter would be hit by at ferent tack than GM on the strike escaltor clause. Both asked ' ; ; pied as ceilings be placed on the The three companies estimat- amount possible 'or a worker to ed their package at 33 to 51) cet--¥ord of six cents an hour, months of bargaining and with ANTHONY . + Board of Trade CROSLAND GEORGE THOMSON Chinese Wield Bats, Axe demand for parity for Canadian workers, which along with guaranteed annual income, a 'cents an hour over the next! Chrysler of seven. . three years, including a flat 13-) Nothing was said by any njure evera on oners cent-an-hour increase immedi C®mpany about the union ately and 2.8 per cent a year in| LONDON Reuters Furious who booed five diplomats sud- the following two years. Chinese wielding baseball bats|deniy eppearing at a side door.| All three, however, asked the| big wage boost and continuation and, in one instance an axe, A group of about 20 Chinese ynion to modify a cost-of-living) of the escalator clause were the {clashed with police today out-ran out of the legation's escaltor clause based on the union's chief demands . 'side the Chinese legation here./garages and pounded the roof/U.S. government cost-of-living, The UAW placed no monetary Several persons were reportediof « police car, screaming that index which has brought union' value on fits own package. injured the police had insulted Chair- members increases of 18 cents} The straight-time ave rage The scuffling with truncheon- mar Mao an hour since 1964, hourly wage in the U.S. auto swinging police preceded a pro-| Poiice tried to restrain them [aw President Walter P industry is figured at $3.41 by etatram tte Canes, Char and, whi second thers was 2iReutber hat said be wouthe burent of Inbor sais llice had beaten a member of clin: bodies S"U8"/brook no tampering with the Fringe benefits are estimated gling ; clause and that an attempt to|/by the companies to run the Chinese mission. PB rctanders: &é at jes my pe | A-Soakeenian said tlie British Bystanders said at least one change would be a strikeable| total cost to about $4.70 hourly. ans ; Chinese had a pistol, Others|issue. Foreign Office denied the alle- oi ii¢4 axe-handles, milk bot- ta iaduntie ele MUST KNOW EARNINGS gation, ties garbage can covers as|, lc wmdustry also offered the! UAW President Walter P. Police, demonstrators and) yicac and baseball bats. union an increase of from 62 Routher has called for a guar- legation ste rein ad per cent to 80 per cent in the! ante i oer legation staff were involved in : suligamen lad A pi anteed annual income, saying two violent clashes outside the mas supplemental unemployment each worker must v s outs ; asked 5 W legation. blood streaming from his head. |benefits--the benefits that sup- beginning of a le aagpal re The first was in front of the A Clunese man, his face a mass plement a- laid-off worker's! income will be for the next 12 of blood, was building. The second camé dragged along the|state unemployment. compensa-/months, any layoffs notwith- Shen drove his black Mercedes narrow alley behind the lega-'tion, standing. He also has demand: to the back of the legation ion : 1K led improvement in. practic ; as a ractically The melee ended with blood) Ov report said Shen himself BLOND MEET DEMANDE lall ob and Hane beat | streaming from one diplomat's was thought to be in the melee This apparently was far short area face and a police officer taken A blonde policewoman of the demand made by the with chest injuries. graphed a Chinese and kicked Union for a complete guaran- s. Included. also are demands to jbring wages of Canadian auto total number of Americanjconcentrating on disrupting|Piteaed battle. The guerrillas) pone mbaere Several other policemen also him to the ground. teed annual income, workers im planes . lost in combat over|trafiic along coastal Highway 1)got inside the perimeter of the|leaders have refused! {9 NTT : were reported hurt A woman hurled flower pots| Louis G. Seaton of Generallworkers, =e North Vietnam to 663, with'in the northern sector and ine} post long enough to damage one but sent representatives All 1) MADRAS, _ India (AP)--Re- The scuffling was touched off at the Chinese from the window more than half of the pilots)main paved road south from] big i55-millimeter howitzer. a eet are to be repre-| ports from Sikkim said today when a Chinese dashed down of an upstairs apartment j fae ; oo RSLs involved killed or captured, the! Saigo. to the big cities of My sented. _|that Indian and Communist|the legation's steps and waved! Then the man with the axe ; ' we spokesman said. Tho and Can Tho in the Mekong The leading Arab dove, Presi- Chinese troops are facing each)q book of the thoughts of com-|appcared, He led a group of In South Vietnam, the Delta |dent Habib Bourguiba of Tuni-|other with fixed bayonets at munist party chairman Mao,Chinese who forced their way LIGHTS stepped-up campaign of shelling) Monoay night Viet Cong sap- and bridge destruction in the'pers blew two impor tant ToN. Korea | SEOUL (Reuters )--The | United Nations Command sent |a strong protest to North Korea jover a Communist attack in the |demilitarized zone Monday in which one American and two South Korean soldiers were | killed, a UN spokesman said today. | In addition to the three men killed in the attack, 14 Ameri- cans and nine South Koreans were wounded. UN Protests |sia, decided not to come as did | Cho La, a mountain pass on the Tse-tung in front of bystanders|along the alley, ing |K g Idris of Libya and King' boroer. |Hassan of Morocco. The newspaper Hindu. published in Madras, quoted its {correspondent in Gangtok, Sik-| \kim's capital, as saying troops} lof the two nations were only lthree or four yards apart--'A nerye-racking confrontation," Torrential Rain Lashes Japan TOKYO (Reuters) -- Torrential rains lashing northern Japan killed 21 persons and left 84 others missing, police reported today, More than 67,700 persons were left home- less and more than 36,000 houses were flooded, washed away or damaged, police said. At least nine towns and vil- lages were reported to be cut off by floods 'Troops Keep Chinese Tighten Guard Nazis Out 0 ws! _ As Residents Flee Canton CULPEPER, Va. (AP)--Fed-| Tie correspondent said 8 Hong KONG (CP )--Thou E ope the will be a mass exodus of refu leral troops arrived here today |Chinese patrol came across the cands of residents are fleeing gees attempting to get out of! Trio Believed Victims Of Murder-Suicide The spokesman said the UN protest was delivered to the \North Korean representative on \the Military Armistice Commis- | sion, which supervises the 1953 armistice agreement ended the Korean War. gate of the little military ceme- er, lay in its hearse outside the|to the pass. Sikkim's ruler, Palden Thon- tery awaiting burial, soldiers|dup Namgyal, said in an inter- arrived in army buses and heli- |view that it seems the Chinese to back up a US. Army | border into the area Of the/from Canton, South China's| China to Hong Kong.' general's order to members of Press early _ this month, but jargest city, and Chinese border' He said Canton residents told CAPREOL, Ont. (CP) -- Two men and a woman, be- the American Nazi party, seek- retieated when challenged by troops have tightened their|him at least 50,000 nersons| lieved victims of a double murder-suicide, were 'found ing entry into a military ceme-,Indian troops. Later, he said.' guard to prevent an exodus to|were trying to make their way| shot to death at an isolated lumber mill five miles north tery here, that "you shall not the Chinese returned in greater) ong Kong, Chinese arriving |to the Hong Kong border. How-| of here today Provincial police said the bodies of Roland pass in Nazi uniforms." strength. Sirice then the grim from Canton reported today. ever, Hong Kong officials said) Ross. 97. his wife Cla dette 24 > sh of Hamner, 1 ile As the body of George Lin-|confiontation has continued, The Cantonese are fleeing they had "reasonably good" 'th of Sudb bea ray Mal i ai age 2S Beil coln Rockwell, slain party lead- | witn each side claiming a right pecause of almost continuous information that the Cantonese | ae of ouaowey «Bn ec Maher, 23, an employee of the lumber company, were found on the grounds of the Gau- fighting between opponents and were fleeing to their home vil- iheir Lumber Mill supporters of Communist party |ages in Kwangtung's rural Chairman Mao Tse-tung as well | areas. 3 5 Kwangtuns Epstein Died Of Unnatural Causes as among the nominally pro- Travellers from | The command also appointed a special team to investigate the incident, which took place {some 300 yards from 'the which! copters. intend to try to establish a per- Mao Red Guards, the travellers said central government sol-| At least a half-dozen helicop- |manent post at the pass. said. diers were standing guard with LONDON (AP) -- Impresari riz y i : : anent po nd, ! g gi , I ipresario Brian Epstein, the man ters flew overhead as Maj-Gen. | Sikkim is one of the so-called The residents fear true civil jfixed bayonets at all rallway | who discovered The Beatles and eo vk th ' ternational Carl C. Turner, army provost buffer states separating China war will erupt in Kwangtung|stations between Canton and ee ee ee marshal, told reporters: and India. India is responsible province,' one returning Hong|the Hong Kong border and stop-| fame in pop music, apparently died from unnatural causes, "J will have troops to enforce for mie@intaining Sikkim's|/Kong Chinese said, "And the|ping all Chinese without travel; a coroner's spokesman said today. A post mortem on this order. defence. 'army seems to fear that there permits. Epstein was held at Westminster. As a result of the pathol- southern boundary of the DMZ. 'SLIM HOPE Search TRANSPORTATION BOARD INVESTIGATES | ser sw suis o tues nt ant tne cents the stomach. "This is a normal practice, to order an anal- HURON, Ohio (AP)--"'It was really quite a nightmare," said Robert Coy, one of two known survivors of the worst~sky div- ing accident in history. "It still seems like a bad dream. Maybe it was, and Vl wake up. pretty soon and find out it didn't happen." : Coy, from Springfield, Ohio, held onto a slim hope that some of his 14 fellow Ohio parachu- MISERY LOVES COMPANY others feared there was little chance they could survive this long in the murky waters. The national safety transportation board took over the investiga- tion of the accident. The Federal Aviation Agency ordered an immediate investi- gation into why the B-25 Mitch- ell -- converted Second World War bomber -- apparently was off course, The jumpers missed their mark by 10 miles. whether the plane was 'under radar control,"' he said. The pilot, Robert Karns, of Vermilion, said he was flying on iadar fixes from Hopkins International Airport at Cleve- land and Loran Station at Amherst. Seventeen men and one woman---all expert divers-- bailed out of a converted Sec- ond World War bomber from 20,000 feet Sunday, not knowing both of Akron, were pulled out of the lake Sunday night. "I won't jump again," Coy vowed Monday night, but he added, "I can't condemn the sport."' "We were really quite elated about the opportunity to make a mass jump at a high alti- tude," said the 29-year-old bachelor. '"'We left the plane and of course we couldn't see anything but clouds below us. nf e ysis, when no naural cause of death can be found during ntin ul In M k L the post moriem," said a spokesman for the coroner's &> Tie | office, ee 'wu "ia | ce é _..In THE TIMES Today .. Green Goels Win Sth OLA Title Hospital Workers Win 25 Per Cent Pay Hike -- P. 9 | Whitby Council Authorizes Plans For Sewers --- P. S$ Ann Londers----10 Ajiex News--5 City News--9 Five - year - old Laura Robinson has the mumps and now the family Chihua- hua, Pepper, is exhibiting - similar symptoms. The Rob- insons say Pepper has swool- Jen jaws, a cough, and other missing in Lake Signs of the painful ailment. Bed rest has been prescribed for both daughter and dog. tists continue dragging today for the 14 who fell the lake Sunday. But coast guard officials (AP Wirephoto) would be found alive. Searchers operations Clossitied--13, 14,15 Comics--16 Erie An FAA spokesman said they were over the lake. "When I came out 'of the investigators were questioning Coy and Bernard Johnson, 30, clouds at 4,000 feet expecting to Editorial--4 5 into radar controllers and are study- West Richfield, survived. Bod- see land [. was shocked and shoe Whitby News--5 : ing 1adio transmission tapes. ies of Mrs. Alvin Lownsbury, stunned to see we were out = Financial--12 Women's--10, 11 a and "We are trying to determine 26, and Dorsie Kitchen Jr., 33, over Lake Erie," aw ui A NS 5 } \ t » _-

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