Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Boman- ville, Ajax, neighboring Pickering and centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 96 -- NO. 11 10¢ Si 5S5e Per Week She Oshawa Times le Copy jome Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1967 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottewa ond for payment of Postage in Cash Weather Report Mild spell expected to bring" some rain or snowflurries, Low tonight 22, high Sunday 25. TWENTY-TWO PAGES A GROUP OF nuns listens as union leaders outline de- velopments at a meeting of striking Roman _ Catholic teachers in Montreal, Fri- day. Some 9,000 teachers Cabinet Delays Action On Strike By Teachers MONTREAL (CP) -- Educa- tion Minister Jean Jacques Bertrand said Friday there will be no immediate intervention by the Quebec government in the strike of 9,000 English- and French-speaking Roman Catho- lic teachers. in the Montreal area. But Mr. Bertrand added that the government will not wait until the situation is "com- pletely deteriorated' before tak- ing action. Up to now, the two unions in- volved in the strike and the Montreal Catholic Schoo] Com- mission still were in negotiation as far as the government was concerned. The strike of elementary and high school teachers began Fri- day and closed down almost 500 schools attended by 217,000 youngsters. The teachers walked out after bargaining, which has been go- ling on since last June, failed to produce a new contract. They want higher salaries and im- provements in working condi- tions. International Police Work Cracks Drug-Running Ring SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters) Police and customs officials in Sydney, Washington and Lon- don today claimed to have smashed an international multi- million dollar dope - smuggling ring by raids here and in the United States. Six men and a woman were held in dawn raids today on 12 Sydney homes. Police seized documents and printing equipment and charged two of the men with presenting forged passports. The Sydney arrests were linked with police action in the U.S. this week, where eight per- sons were arrested in Miami, Honolulu and New York. Blast Kills Israeli Boy TEL AVIV (Reuters) -- A mine exploded today during a soccer match at the village of Dishon, near the Lebanese bor- der, killing one Israeli youth and injuring two others. During a match between the home team, Hapoel Dishon, and Maccabi Rosh Pina a spectator stepped on the anti-personnel mine and was killed. Israeli Army sources said the explosion bore the marks of an attack by Syrian saboteurs en- tering Israel over the Lebanese frontier, about two miles from Dishon. The sources said the anti-per- sonnel] mine which exploded this morning was made in East Eu- rope. Special features this week include: City Hockey Clinic Tutors Small-Fry National Ballet To Return To Oshawa Three of them, former -Aus- tralian policemen James Wesley Egan, 29, Bryan John Hill, 32 and Roy Lawrence Peake, 24, have been charged with smug- gling millions of dollars worth of heroin into the U.S. WAS 'MILK RUN' The international operation was described by U.S. authori- ties as a "regular milk run" on which couriers concealed heroin in corsets they wore. U.S. Attorney Robert Morgen- thau said the ring bought heroin from a Chinese source in Hong Kong at $1,600 a kilogram and sald it to wholesalers in New York at $1,000 an ounce, or about $34,000 a kilogram. A kilo- gram equals 2.2 pounds. Morgenthau said the Austral- ian ring members smuggled the heroin into the U.S. in small quantities. He said they used fraudulent passports and made frequent trips. The arrests were the climax of a year-long investigation by U.S., Australian and British au- thorities into an alleged nar- cotic ring headquartered in Syd- ney. An Australian officer said U.S. government investigators claimed the ring had shipped at least $5,000,000 worth of heroin into the U.S. during the past year. BRITISH HELP Some of the smugglers flew to London on their way to New York and British customs had co-operated with U.S. authori- ties, he added. Officials in Sydney said the narcotics were obtained in ports such as Hong Kong and Singa- pore and brought to Sydney for worldwide distribution, The Times Wethe Also in the Showéase you'll find: On The Town Garden Guide Showtime at the Movies Teen Scene Television Hig Home of the ghts feek. Mr. Bertrand told reporters| he: is looking over the situation) and plans to report to the pro-| vincial cabinet next week. Then the cabinet can decide on any possible action. GIVES WARNING - | Aime Nault, president of the/ French-language |'Alliance des professeurs catholiques de Montreal, warned that the 7,500 members of his union as well as the 1,500 English-speaking in- structors would consider it un- fair if the province decided to seek an injunction as the means of intervention. The only reason for an in- junction would be a jeopardiz- ing of the students' education, Mr. Nault told a Friday strike rally. Only a "very. long strike" could end the 1 | process, so that an injunction now would be unjustified. Suport for the strikers was come from a variety of sources --including spokesmen for the Socialist Party of Quebec and the separatist Rassemblement pour l'independance nationale. About 6,200 Protestant teach- ers in the Montreal area are not affected by the strike. In Quebec, schools are organized along religious lines. The English - language union involved in the strike and bar- gaining along with the alliance is called the Federation of Eng- lish-speaking Catholic Teachers. TALKS MAY GO ON Negotiators have said that talks could go on during the weekend. Federation President Philip Shore said Friday the teachers are determined to stay out '"'un- til a settlement is reached." With parents on all sides ex- pressing anxiety about the situ- ation, Mr. Shore found it im- possible to forecast how long the strike might last. Many areas of dispute: still remained to be resolved and "we will go to arbitration on the minor points if the major differences are first settled between ourselves and the com- mission." There have been forecasts that the Montreal stoppage could be the first of a series across the province. US. Tourist Freed On Bail MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Buel Ray Wortham, young American tourist given a three-year sen- tence on currency and theft charges, was freed on bail to- day from a Leningrad prison. The U.S. embassy said the 25-year-old former army officer, from North Little Rock, Ark., would remain free on bail until the Russian Supreme Court hears his appeal against the sentence, at the end of this month or early in February. He was released by the Len- ingrad city court on bail of 20,- 000 rubles ($22,222) collected in a public subscription by citi- zens of his home town. Wortham was sentenced to ithree years in a labor camp |Dec. 21 after pleading guilty to changing money on the black market, and stealing a statue of a bear from a Leningrad hotel. The. embassy said Wortham on strike. (CP Wirephoto) BABY ARRIVES ON 13TH - AGAIN DAYTON, Qhio (AP)--Now there are two Friday the 13th babies in the John D, Bowen | family. Mrs. Bowen gave birth to Sheryl Ann in hospital Friday morning, just about the same time another daughter, Mi- chelle Marie, was delivered Friday, Dec. 13 four years ago. LAKEWOOD, N.J. (AP)-- Lee Guilfoyle, 32, manager of | a sport parachute centre here, parachuted from a plane Fri- day the 13th. Guilfoyle said it. was his 1,313th jump. He leaped at 1:13 p.m, which in military time would be 1313. And he said he made a free fall of 13,000 feet in 13 seconds before opening his parachute. On the way to the plane at Lakewood Airport he broke a mirror, walked under a lad- der, slammed a door and let a black cat walk in front of his car. ' Home Fire Kills Nine In Family PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- A man, his wife and seven of ANTI-M ARREST! May Launch New Er PARIS (AP) President said: "We do not expect any- |Charles de Gaulle and West'thing spectacular but the reai | German Chancellor Kurt Georg ization and application of the Kiesinger today wound up two French-German treaty." days of talks that both hope The French have been cool to- will launch a new era of good ward the pro-American policies feelings between Bonn and of Kiesinger's predecessor, Lud- | Paris. wig Erhard. Bonn and Paris The visit was Kiesinger's first! still have conflicting views trip abroad since assuming of-| about what Paris calls fice Dec. 1. The 61-year-old Germany's special relationship chancellor has pledged to try with the United States. to revitalize the 1963 Franco- At the dinner, Kiesinger con- -- + |2,500,000-man West | German co - operation treaty) ceded that Bonn may well be to &* | without harming relations with' blame for the decline in rela- Washington. tions since Chancellor Konrad Kiesinger was to return to Adenauer left office in 1963. | Bonn today after a final round xiesinger said: of talks. bases ; "There has been an uneasi- Pda econ A ger a ness and Mr. Maurice Couve de | peared the emotional aspects of Murville (the French foreign I Seance German rapproche- minister) told me that, if things ment following the Second "d not always work well, the World War had given way to a|French were not responsible. more practical view. i There is no doubt, something | 'The' French described the 'Tue in this. \talks as frank and cordial. The| Earlier, at a |Germans said the discussions) Presidential p , Kiesinger were to the point and free of appeared to dissociate himself |any philosophical discourses. from the Erhard era of Franco- In a television interview, Kie- German relations. singer said he and de Gaulle) A former chairman of the were not in accord on all prob-|Bundestag's foreign affairs lems, but that there was a wide! committee, Kiesinger reminded area of common ground. luncheon "state : dinner Friday night, Ki ger years. Artillery Barrage SAIGON (AP) fighting in the Mekong Delta re-|versy. sulted from government artil- lery fire, it was learned today.j|Monday by a U.S. spokesman | in the! PRESIDENT DE GAULLE . . » hosted German Leader During that time he said he was minister-president of the state of Baden-Wuerttemberg, gained perspective and was free the French he had been absent of the prejudices and misunder- At a French foreign ministry from Bonn politics for eight standings that often handicap issues in Bonn. Killed Civilians In Mekong Delta --South Viet-|in the incident. Conflicts andjraised, he said, the U.S. mili-/ namese civilian casualties in-|contradictions in the original ac-|tary investigated again and} pe flicted early this week during|count have now aroused contro-|found that the casualties had|Mao been caused by government ar- The first disclosure was made |tillery. | _|tion Army over Mao's purge of uri their 12 children died today when fire swept their narrow three-storey home in the north Philadelphia section of the city. Police said when they arrived flames were pouring out of every opening. One policeman said "flames were even coming out the cracks." An earlier official account had said the civilians were killed when the Viet Cong used them as "human shields" and govern- ment troops had fired into them while protecting themselves from a Viet Cong attack. Ten children were killed and 25 other persons were wounded Sources who investigated the incident in Kien Hoa province | about 40 miles south of Saigon| shield while attempting to movejsaid they found nothing to show} toward a government ranger po-'that the Viet Cong had actually sition. jherded civilians in front of them A U.S. government officialjas a shield. They said all the \said today the original account|casualties occurred in a hamlet came first from South Vietnam- |of the village of Chau Hung ese military reports and was|when buildings, including a Bud- confirmed by the U.S, military, |dhist temple, were hit by artil-| who said the Viet Cong had) used the civilians.as a human and Harlan Moen, U.S. conswar officer, who attended the bail! |hearing, would arrive by train, {in Moscow Sunday morniag, and Wortham would stay in the embassy until the Supreme Court meets to consider his ap- peal, | \ Nancy Ann Simmons, 22- year-old Miss Rodeo Ameri- ca from Omaha, 'Nebr., ap- pears to have stars in her crown as she makes an appearance in the arena at Later when questions were |lery. SAIGON (AP)--Sharp fight- |ing flared up and down South | Vietnam 'today and the big {American drive in the Iron |Triangle pushed Communist Communist Losses Mount As U.S. Forces Push Drive hamper U.S. air raids over the North but pilots attacked| coastal targets and reported putting 54 junks and barges out of action. the National Western Stock- show being held in Denver The star effect is the result of an overhead spotlight. (AP Wirehoto) losses beyond 450 men. A South Vietnamese military ;| The U.S. and South Vietna-| spokesman said two battalions) |mese Commands listed many of Viet Cong--a force estimated |small clashes and these other at 400 men--over-ran a military developments: post 325 miles northeast of Sai- --A Norwegian motorship and gon and the defending platoon a U.S. Navy minesweeping of 30 militiamen pulled out. boat collided in a river 30 The spokesman said the mili- miles southeast of Saigon and|tiamen 'dispersed'? and he had| the navy boat sank with the|no report on casualties. At last loss of three of her seven-'report, the post was still in| man crew. Communist hands. --U.S. B-52 heavy bombers Elsewhere, however, South struck at a suspected concen-| Vietnamese troops reported kill-| tration of. North Vietnamese ing 38 enemy troops in four) troops less than a mile south| small clashes ranging from 54) of the demilitarized zone. |miles southwest of Saigon to 276 --Bad weather continued to miles northeast of th pit 1,| Rammed Freighter In Peril Clings To Guam Coral Reet | AGANA, Guam (AP) -- The the No. 4. and 5 holds sub- | Pacific Far East Lines freighter merged. The fate of the 10,937- Guam Bear, one hold ripped ton freighter depends "on open by a collision with a whether the engine room bulk- |tanker, clung precariously on ahead holds,' said Gmelch. "If | coral reef today, threatening to it does, there is a chance to sal- | slip into the sea. vage her." The tanker Esso Seattle | just outside Apra harbor. A hole perch, it will surely sink, said| 70 feet long 'and 30 feet high Gmeich. He said the main deck | was torn in the No. 4 hold. The and the poop deck were already | freighter, with the aid of a tug, ynder water and only the bow |: |limped to the coral beach. George U. Gmelch, vice-presi-| jdent of Pacific Far East Lines,| |said one of the 28 crew was} slightly injured. The six passen-! rested on the beach Guam Bear was fully loaded gers were unhurt. No injuries | hole in its side had caused ex- were reported aboard the tensive damage to the load tanker, whose bow was some- The freighter was sailing into what rumpled. Apra from San Francisco. The Three navy tugs pushed the tanker Esso Seattle was out- |Guam Bear on to the reef. The bound. The tanker made it back I If the bulkhead gives or if the 2 jrammed the freighter at 6 a.m. ship slips off its uncertain|~ | The U.S, Coast Guard said the | with cargo and that the gaping|= Franco-German T alks' Counter-Attack Launched By Condemned President TOKYO (CP) A Chinese| The poster said the captured military unit has stormed a officers were 'black military hideout of military officers op-|elements" loyal to Gen. Liu posed to Communist Chairman |Chih-chien, ousted by Mao's Mao Tse - tung and arrested|supporters as director of the "scores" of the officers, a Ja-|military revolution committee panese newspaper reported to-;and No. 2 man in charge of day. ideological matters in the army. It appeared to be the first re-| The officers' documents were port of violence within China's|reported confiscated People's Libera-| Correspondents,6f the Yomi. and Sankei newspapers, his opponents. quoting wall posters, in Pe- Peking radio reported earlier |King, said President Liu had de- that an "acute and compli-|/fended his sending of 'work cated" struggle involving ajteams" about the country last small but influential group of/|year. > aipecotoma has built up within | REPORT CONFESSION | Other Japanese reports said) Posters put up by Mao's Red President Liu Shao-chi, the top Guard supporters last Decem- anti-Mao leader, recently de- ber said Liu had confessed at a |manded before the Communist pay committee meeting in lcentral committee a retraction|October to dispatching Work of his "self-criticism" widely |'€2™S opposed to Mao's purge |publicized last December. "|while Mao was absent from | ; Peking for 50 days before The reports said the demand | jy, 18. = could indicate that Liu was con-|" fident of maintaining his power| According to the Japanese re- jand that he had launched a/Ports today, Liu said: "The dispatch of work teams HAPPENED IN LANCHOW work The Peking corresponeent of |*°2™S Was erroneous, the cur- |Mainichi Shimbun said the of. {rent situation is left in form but ficers were arrested last Tues-|?°tually leading to right." day in Lanchow, a city of more| The 69-year-old Liu, Mao's than 150,000 700 miles west of|comrade-in-arms and close ad- Peking on the Yellow River. |viser during the Chinese revo- The correspondent quoted ajlution, had been considered wall poster in Peking and signed|Mao's successor before the by the 750th Lantzu Regiment.|purge developed last summer. The regiment is stationed in|Lin Piao now is thought to be Lanchow. Mao's heir. Peking Radio Claims Military Rallying To Support Of Mao king radio said today anti-; In other developments, a Jap- | ists within the army were|anese report said Red Guards |"staging a counter - attack"/and workers loyal to Mao had while military units and "rey- seized the Peking central radio olutionary rebels" throughout/broadcasting station on grounds China were rallying to Mao's|that since the start of 1965 it support. had broadcast "black programs "There are a handful of au-|that siippressed Mao Tse-tung's thorities within the army who|thought and followed the reac- are following the capitalist road | tionary line." iogether with a small group of| Following reports that sup- stubborn bourgeois reaction- porters of Mao and President aries,' a broadcast said./Liu were pouring into Peking, "These authorities and stub-| Yomiuri said a bloody clash had born elements are using vari-|occurred Tuesday when anti- ous methods in an attempt to|/Mao mobs stormed pro - Mao cause disturbance." \forces protecting secret docu- Peking radio also broadcast|ments inside the State Council an editorial by the Liberation|(cabinet) building. Some of the Army Daily, the official Chi-|anti-Maoists were said to have nese Army newspaper, calling|/been armed. for a complete purge of army| Peking radio said workers leaders opposing Mao. loyal to Mao had taken over the But the newspaper warned anjrailway and a big electric "arduous struggle" lay ahead in| power plant in Shanghai. Strikes order to weed out the reaction-|and sabotage had been reported ary elements. lin the city earlier this week. ntsc et TU _) NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Second Major Fire Fought At Sudbury SUDBURY (CP) -- Fire swept through stock valued at $250,000 in the basement of a downtown furniture store early today. Two adjacent business premises suffered smoke and water damage. Cause was under investigation, It was the second major fire in the city in a week. Students Seek Voice In College Affairs LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Student and faculty organiza- tions of the University of Western Ontario here are threatening to have private member's bills introduced on the floor of the Ontario legislature to force the university to give them-a voice in its administration. Slumping Car Sales Blamed For Layoffs TORONTO (CP) -- Slumping car sales were blamed for layoffs involving 21,000 workers in four Ontario cen- tres. Robert Young, public relations director of Chrysler of Canada, said shutdowns this month at General Motors, Chrysler and American Motors of Canada plants are a sign that auto industry sales are down. oc eT nt TULUM <n ste In THE TIMES Today.. Nuclear Plant Information Center Opens -- P. 9 Ex-Reeves. At East Whitby Inaugural -- P. 5 Oshawa Generals Blanked By Kitchener Team -- P. 6 Sports--6, 7 Theatre--18 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax--5 Women's--10 Ann Landers--10 City NewR-9 Classified--11, 12, 13 Comics--16 Editorial--4 Obits--13 'bow rose high into the gir and|to its dock.