Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Aug 1966, p. 1

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Weather Report Cloudy, scattered thunder- showers. Not so warm. Low tonight, 65; high tomorrow, 80. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bo\yman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. Che Oshawa Sines Authorized os Second Class Mall Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1966 TWENTY PAGES 10¢ Single Copy B5c Per Week Home Deiiverea Four harness horses race down the homestretch -- and only one of the 16 flying feet are on the ground (in " the lower right hand corner), The action took place Satur- day in the fourth race at the 59th Oshawa Fall Fair. Hundreds of spectators watched the popular racing during the fair which offer- ed $1,600 in purses. Wager- ing was permitted. The three-day fair ended Satur- HARNESS HORSES HIT OSHAWA FAIR HOMESTRETCH = Chicago day attracted the largest crowd -- 17,662 -- in the past 15 years, "It was most successful," said Walter Beath, president of the iC 17,000 BACK A HAMILTON (CP)--About '17,- 000 men at the Steel Co. of Canada Ltd. are to return to work today. Union officials are piepar- ing to lead workers, members of Local 1005 of the United Steelworkers of America (CLC), across any picket lines that might be erected. The steelworkers--about 12,- 500 of them--walked off the job Wednesday night to halt opera- tions at Canada's largest steel company. It was estimated the company lost $1,250,000 a day in sales South Ontario Agricultural Society, which sponsored the fair. --Oshawa Times Photo By Bruce Jones "FRISBEES" ALMOST UNRECOGNIZED Pat, Luci Relax In Nassau Villa the $250,-| NASSAU, Bahamas (AP) -- away to "Capricorn," President Johnson gave the Patrick and Luci Johnson Nu-| 90 home of Mrs. Rebekah Hark-| bride away. gent were honeymooning today at a spacious and secluded wa- jness - Kean, socially - prominent | philanthropist After the couple were driven terfront villa. |to the villa, a chain was quickiy The U.S. president's daughter, | placed across the drive. "Capri- F who wore dark glasses, and her|corn" is about eight miles west| He or any of his associates could husband, using the name "Mr.|of Nassau, on the western side|"emember. At the end, he: in- and Mrs. Frisbee," went prac-| tically unrecognized on the jet)Thick foliage borders the estate| "¢Wlyweds, read a special bless-| e airliner they took from Newjon three sides and on the fourth|ing from Pope Paul, and made| 8) way 1S Oo York Sunday along with six| other honeymeon couples. man turned to his wife and said, "there's Luci Johnson." last passengers to board the plane at Kennedy and the first to leave the Pan American flight| place in the National Shrine of|daughters have been when it touched down here. A waiting limousine whisked them: world's seventh largest church.' fice. of New _ Providence Island. is a private, white sand beach.| the sign of the cross. 23, and Luci, 19, appar-| At Kennedy Airport only one|ently will stay at the villa for) over |tional shrine. |O'Boyle agreed to Preceded by two secret serv-| thera Island next Sunday, Eléu- shrine for the services because) ice men, Pat and Luci were the|thera is 50 miles east of New/of the national significance of| Pat a week. Their airline tickets in- dicated they plan to visit Eleu- Providence. The wedding ceremony took the Immaculate Conception, the The Roman Catholic Arch-} bishop of Washington, Patrick| | A. O'Boyle, presided at the nup-}| POLICE GET THEIR MAN PM aR me eee rT and workers $250,000 a day in wages. The decision to return to work came after a secret ballot at a two-hour meeting. A total of 4,319 union mem- bers voted to return today with 3,142 against Since the strike, 34 persons have been arrested although some were not employed by Stelco. Cars have been burned and overturned, windows smashed, policemen jostled, newspaper men roughed up and their cam- eras smashed, MNT 17,600 Vote To Return Three-week Wildcat Ends SUDBURY (CP)--Officials at|turn to their jobs as they are the International Nickel Co. of| needed. SHANNA A T STELCO At Sunday's meeting, John Morgan, president of the local, and Stew Cooke, USW interna- tional area supervisor, ex- plained the strike was illegal and suggested the men return to work pending completion of conciliation board meetings. Spokesmen invited from-rank and file members were also given an opportunity to address the meeting. Mr. Cooke said Stelco's con- tract expired July 31 and nego- tiations for a new one began in May. It went to a conciliation board, June 28. An ddfe ital AGU ANA A INCO PLANS TO OPEN WITHIN THREE WEEKS Austin Death THANKS TO HIS TV ROLE ELKHART, Ind. (AP) -- United Community Services thought they had the right man for the part in Jim Brubaker, bearded artist for television station WSJV. Po- lice thought so, too. Brubaker agreed to pose as a seedy reddler of ille- gal goods for a film to be shown during the com- munity fund drive. An Elkhart policeman and three area teen-agers also agreed to enact an illegal transaction in an alley. The actor - policeman failed to mention his new role to his buddies. At rehearsal, Brubaker followed the script and fled from the policernan--but he fell into the arms of passing officers and had a lot of explaining as they at- tempted to shuffle him off to the station. two a | Whites Jeer | CHICAGO (AP)--Some 1,500 jcivil rights demonstrators marched through a crowd of some 2,000 jeering, rock-throw- ing whites Sunday in an all- white neighborhood on Chicago's Northwest Side. Solid walls of police protected; the integrated band of marchers) |as they took their demands for) |open housing back to the streets lof the Cragin section of Chicago for the third time, It was the tial mass for the first time ae voked God's blessing on the) He Won't Shed His Beard 223 ns largest protest group to march | neighborhoods 10 days ago. Intense hostility flared in the Canada Ltd. here said today it Contract negotiations at Tor- would be three weeks before the| onto broke off last Thursday. plant is back to normal follow-| The Sudbury workers voted 3 ing Saturday's back - to - work|to 1 Saturday to return to work vote by strikers. jand complete conciliation. But More than 17,60 Inco employ-|the steelworkers rejected the ees here and at Port Colborne|Company's latest offer, a 47- voted to return to work and end|cents-an-hour wage increase in a three-week wildcat walkout|@ three - year agreement. that crippled Inco's vast opera-| tions. cal 6500, Tony Soden, president of Lo- told the Saturday Morris Keck, representative; meeting Inco's offer "provides of Local 6200 of Steelworkers of America (CLC), said Port Colborne union offi- cials will ask management to- day to arrange for the back to work movement. Meanwhile in Sudbury, back- to-work notices were sent Sun- day to Inco's 16,000 district employees, members of Local the Uniteq|absolutely nothing in the area of group welfare and pension plan." DEMANDS PACKAGE The union is demanding a package increase of wages and benefits of $1.20 an hour in a one - year contract. Basic wage for miners now is $2.524% an hour. Surface workers receive first half hour of bh hong 6500. Firecrackers expli at the : f of policemen. Rocks and PLANT OPENS "I might have shaved it off| pottles rained on the marchers. if they had asked me in the) Police squadrons charged the right way." hecklers, Several white persons _Mr, Surkis grew his beard .to| who refused to obey police and of}give an appearance of greater] fought back were clubbed and, the marriage of a presidential Canada rather than shave his maturity. He said last week! thrown into police vans, daughter, Only seven other beard. ; ; a8 j that he would, in time, shave it) A policeman fired several . "I would find it difficult liv-joff to make himself look|tjmes above the heads of the married : : while their fathers were in of-|ins with myself if I shaved it) younger again, m : mee : : A company official said last | The wedding was the first one permitted in the na Archbishop) open the TORONTO (CP) -- Computer} operator Herman Surkis, 21, said Sunday he has decided to quit his $72-a-week job at the National Cash Register Co. of expected back tonight. A company statement | ob. off," he said in an interview. | Then a summer thunderstorm -- |"'I decided to stick to my prin-|week the beard interfered with|qrenched marchers, heck- Express Men | WORLD RACE Jerome Has Back On Job | TORONTO (CP) -- Canadian National Railways express han-| this wild- diers went back morning after a five-day cat strike. A normal at work Sunday. The 425 men, members of Lo- cal 26, Canadian Brotherhood of Rail, Transport and General Workers (CLC), walked out Tuesday CNR and Cana- dian Pacific Railway handlers struck - in About 3,000 men were involved in the dispute over delay in reaching a new contract. The last contract expired Dec. 31. Toronto CNR handlers re- turned to work Thursday but walked out again when the com- to. work skeleton shift was after express pany said it would investigate! the strike. They demanded guarantees of no reprisals against strikers. The return to work was approved in a mem- bership vote Sunday Montreal.} HAS SETBACK PORTS M OUT H, England (Reuters) -- Alec Rose made an inauspicious beginning Sunday in a round-the-world race Rose, 58, set. sail Portsmouth in his 30- sloop, Lively Lady, and within @ minute ran aground, He was towed back course by a powerboat but his troubles were not over. Out came Mrs. Rose, speed- ing to the scene -in-a dinghy, She handed her husband a precious forgotten item--his toothbrush. Then off he sailed on 25,000-mile voyage, accompa- nied only by a rabbit mascot his which had accompanied him | | on two single-handed | ings of the Atlantic. In two weeks time, race opponent, ish yachtsman Francis Chi- chester, leaves Plymouth, Southwest England, in his faster Gypsy Moth VI. Each will take a month off in Syd- ney, Australia, before sailing back to England cross- Rose's veteran Brit- Air Cavalry In North Skirmish SAIGON (AP) -- American troops were reported to have regained battle contact with North Vietnamese regulars io- day in the central highlands of South Viet Nam. A company of about 150 men of the U.S. Ist Air Cavalry Di- vision was said to have run into about 500 North Vietnamese troops in the Ia Drang Valley and, surrounded on three sides, called in artillery shells and air strikes that put the enemy to flight. The cavalry company was re- ported to have killed enemy troops and captured five in the contact, about 200 north of Saigon. A spokesman said the company's miles nine; were moderate. There was no | specific accounting of the dead and wounded. About 15,000 American, South Vietnamese and South Korean troops are involved in the high- lands in a joint operation called } Paul Revere. JET CRASHES Meanwhile, U.S. Ist Infantry | Division soldiers killed five Viet Cong guerrillas in a_ firefight near Phuoc Vinh, but saw a U.S. Air Force Phantom crash and burn after a strafing run in their support. Both the plane's crew members were killed Earlier the U.S mand announced jet nilita hat Ameri an casualties |pilots encountered 24 Soviet-' missing in action on | |ciples." |the company image. Mr. Surkis|jers and police alike and took | He said he had been told by| said this wasn't so since he|the edge of the violence. an official of the company that) worked a night shift and rarely; The marchers trudged on in jhe would be fired unless he|met the public while on the job.|the rain, trailed by bands of} HAMILTON (CP) -- One man |Shaved his beard. ior "| ROOKINg white teen-agers, has been dismissed by the Steel "it is not so much the beard) | They stopped twice in the/company of Canada Ltd. be- but the way it was handled.| rain, for brief prayer vigils. | f ft hi ey eS They gave me an ultimatum By the end of the nearly four cause 0) is activities in e Strike Feared that was an infringement of my} lmiles of march, 21 white heck-| wildcat strike which ended to- | "ite In Port Hove |aiici: shea |with the gold medal in the 100. |! Hberty | n ort ope lers had been arrested and doz-/day. yard dash already in his locker, | ens were injured. | A company spokesman con- today turned » of the fast-| ; PORT HOPE, Ont. (CP) -- | firmed today that one man has ay turned in one of the fa t Dr. D. B. Robinson °°"! workers of the town of | Body Of Woman | est times registered in qualify-| | | been dismissed and = ing for the second round of the! Lf | Port Hope announced today they} management is considering tak- CSCE President |will strike at midnight Tuesday| Found In Lime (me disciplinary action against | others. MONTREAL (CP) --Police| The man, who refused to give 220-yard sprint. i : Jerome, turning in a clocking} OTTAWA (CP) -- Dr. D. B.|to back their demands for job of 21.7, easily won his heat, | Robinson of Edmonton, is the) Security. : ( : hs vho- ( 8 Ross MacKenzie of Stonewall,|first president of the newly-| The dispute involves 10 men|here remained silent during the} his name, said in an interview |Man., qualified with a 21,8 time|formed Canadian Society for|whose existing contract expired| weekend over the discovery of| today that he reported for work in a blanket finish with three|Cllemical Engineering, n - ; Mrs. Jean - Pierre Lauziere | Sunday night and was Js thet lother winners in his heat. Mac-| announced today by the Chem-| The new job-security clause} whose body was found last)he no ionger was needed by the |Kenzie was fourth across the|i¢al Institute of Canada. was recommended July 26 in a|/Thursday in a lime-filled grave|company. -- : line. The society grew out of ajconciliation board report, but! near St. Gabrele de Brandon, 70) He said his foreman told him Terry Tomlinson of Winni-|™ajor organizational chang e| turned down by town council. It| miles north of here. : Sunday that all strikers against peg, third in his heat, clocked| Within the institute and will rep-|would ensure job security for; The 39-year-old woman dis-| whom charges had been laid for 22.0 to. qualify. resent the present group in the | present employees in 'the event/appeared two years ago and | their activities in the strike Don Domansky of Port Ar.| field of chemical engineering, | of "coniracting - out" of jobs|was being sought for question-| would be dismissed. lehur. Ont.,.in a later heat, | both nationally and internation- now performed by municipal/ing in connection with organized; A total of 3 charges devel- alee | ally \crime in Montreal. oped from the walkout but not |matched Jerome's 21.7 to make | &!lY- hans jit a clean sweep into the next round for the Canadians. Top time of the first-round heats was the 20.9 by S. Allotey| of Ghana, matching the Games record held by Tom Robinson of the Bahamas, who came in| with 21.7--almost in a dead heat | with Domansky, who took third lin that heat. Unit 'Fast Time KINGSTON, Jamaica (CP)-- Harry Jerome of Vancouver, it wasltan 31 built missiles over North Viet Nam Sunday when seven U.S. | planes were shot down -- the heaviest one-day loss of Ameri- can planes in the war. A spokesman refused to say whether any of the planes were| hit by surface-to-air missiles. He said only that they were lost to ground fire rather than to a : ty : ; : By ce TWO UNINJURED IN PLANE CRASH HERE Earlier, a spokesman said. no missiles had been sighted Sun-! day. There was no explanation A small plane which crash- Gavin Boyle, 488 Winder- the first place to land. The es eh in the report | landed 6n to a field in the mere Ave., Toronto ran out plane landed but flipped niv ine 7 . ' nd were' reveued "ss sround re] 00th section ofthe ety Sune of ga8 and was forced to Sarr Demian we Ser Pane drove off. U.S. rescue helicop-| day night left its two occu iand in a field west of the included a broken propeller pants unhurt but for a few waterworks at the foot of and damaged vertical stabi Ritson Rd. §. The mishap lizer. occurred at about 9 p.m. as Boyle and a passenger, Miss Pamela Boyle, Rumsey Rd. Toranto were flying back to Toronto Island Airport from Watertown. The red light in- dicating no more fuel flash- ed on and Boyle looked for ters, a U.S. military spokesman! said. The others were listed as| minor scratches. Police said a Light Harvard piloted by -- Oshawa Times Photo About 200 maintenance, me- chanical and electrical workers returned to work at the plant today and smelter workers are said the men will be notified to re- Stelco Dismisses One Man For His Wildcat Strike Role jthe United Steelworkers $2.2214. After the Saturday meeting, union and management met to iron out details for a new bar- gaining sessions. The walkout started as nego- tiations for a new contract cov- ering both Sudbury and Port Colborne were in the concilia- tion stage. all were against company em- ployees. At a membership meeting of of America (CLC) on Sunday, when the strike was called off, strikers asked their union exec- utives to demand that no repri- sals be taken by the company against the wildcatters. ALLAN HAMILTON (CP) of assaulting police, causing Toll 17 AUSTIN, Tex. (AP)--Charles J. Whitman's reign of terror claimed its 17th victim today, one week after the sniper raked the University of Texas campus with a barrage of gunfire from the tower of the main building. Karen Griffith, 17, of Austin, died early today at Bracken- ridge hospital, a spokesman said. She had been in critical condition since a bullet from Whitman's rifle slammed inte her chest last Monday, One other person, Mrs, Mary Gabour, 41, of Texarkana, was in critical condition at Brack enridge with head wounds. Authorities expected today a report which may show whether Whitman had taken @ drug be- fore his massacre. Officers. found dexedrine pills known. as goof balls, with Whit- man's body after he was slain by Austin policemen. It was one week ago today that Whitman killed his mother, Mrs. C. A. Whitman, and his wife, Kathleen, 23, and then bar- ricaded himself on an observa- tion deck above the 27th floor of the university's main building. Armed with an arsenal of guns and pistols, he fired for 90 minutes at anyone within range, killing 13 persons and wounding 31. Besides Mrs. Gabour, 13 other persons remain in Austin hose pitals with less serious wounds, Veen Hg vn NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 33 Stelco Men Get Remand -- Thirty-three persons charged last week during a wildcat strike at the Steel Company of Canada were remanded when they appeared in court to- day. Twenty-nine were remanded to Sept. 29 on charges a disturbance, or obstruct- police. The others, charged with trespassing and breaking and entering, were remanded to Sept. 22. Not all those United Steelworkers. BOMBAY, India (AP) -- state as a separate state. LONDON (CP) -- Prime left no doubt he expects the of Ian Smith to continue in ters in London, Uo TTNN charged were employed by Stelco or are members of the Violence Erupts In Ahmedabad Violence was reported today to have erupted in Ahmedabad, capital of Cujarat, State, where leftist opposition parties broke a police ban on the assembly of more than four persons. The incidents arose from observance of 'martyrs' day' in memory of those killed by police 10 years ago during agitation for the creation of a Gujarati-speaking area of former Bombay British - Rhodesia Talks Resume Minister Wilson announced today that British - Rhodesian talks are being resumed, but he warned against expecting "early results." Wilson rebel white-minority regime power in Rhodesia beyond next month's conference of Commonwealth prime minis- gi ..In THE TIMES Today.. Near-record Crowd et Fair -- Pw Many Pickering School Windows Broken -- P. 5 Oshawe Green Gaels Eliminate Ann Landers -- 12 City News -- 11 Classified -- 14 to 17 Comics -- 18 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 19 Men Tn Brampton -- P. 8 Obits -- 17 Sports -- 8, 9, 10 Theatre -- 6 Weather -- 2 Whitby, Ajax News -- 5 Women's -- 12, 13

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