Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Jan 1967, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and 'neighboring. centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 96 -- NO. 12 SSe Per Week Home 10e Single Cop Weather Report Snow tonight, early Tuesday. Turning cold late Tuesday. Low tonight 20, high to- morrow 34, he Oshawa Gimes Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JANUARY 16, 1967 we ae wee eee ee TWENTY PAGES j "LAURLEEN WALLACE ENROUTE TO INAUGURAL Lurleen Wallace, wear- her inaugural parade route ISRAEL WARNS SYRIA "STOP AGGRESSION" a | U Thant Asks Both Sides To Restrain Their Forces TEL AVIV (AP) --Foreign|Syrian side of the border and {Minister Abba Eban warned!/by activation of their arms |today Israel cannot tolerate any| against Israel i We are nore "aggressive acts" by| compelled also to bring tanks yria and that-it has 'both the|jinto our defensive area-reluce jwill and the strength to halt the tantly, but inevitably." IN MONTREAL STRIKE 500 Schools Close Doors. eee (CP) -- About|when he was asked how long, ® 3 | peaking to foreign correspon Deployment of troops, heavy arms and armored vehicles 217,000 students' in Montreal's the work stoppage might go on. wae ec ee ne chee ue got ong eed elf, B § a | 4 4 z fs ' } a sre a area as reportec as aly 500 strike - bound ae | case apt -- sel jinformal emergency meeting of|violence continued along the olic schools are missing SS haere to he Quebec gov | : the Syrian-Israel mixed armis-|frontier. again today, Po coord night ment SS on The be gee od tice commission to discuss out-| An Israeli army spokesman brought word from Quebec City|want higher salaries and other) | . MONTREAL i § > Montgomery where she will outgoing governor can be be sworn in to succeed her seen through the windshield of the car in the centre. (AP Wirephoto) ing a black outfit, waves this morning as she rides the state Capitol - in : husband, Alabama Gov. to cheering crowds along to George C. Wallace. The of increased provincial govern- ment concern with the situa- tion. Education. Minister Jean-Jac- jwork improvements. Mr. Bertrand has promised) § \not to let the situation "'deter-| liorate but apparently wanted | standing issues, but said "'shoot-|announced today that a water ing and bombing has first stop to make such a meeting|village in upper Galilee, was possible." blown up' Sunday night. UN Secretary-General U Thant| Israel accused Syria of open- to|acqueduct leading to Idmit, a Masse, a minister without port-|crack at settling the strike with- | ' "aetns folio attached to the education|out government intervention. | NEGRO PM department, held late-night con-| The negotiators for the Mont-| _ Lynden 0. Pindling {s the sultations with other top Offi-|ea) Catholic school. commis-| now premier of the Ba- cials of the department. jsion and two unions bargaining) hamas, the first negro chief The cabinet is expected tojjointly for the teachers got to-| executive to hold the post. meet tonight to hear a report|gether several times Saturday| His selection broke an 18-18 by Mr. Bertrand on the strike|and Sunday. | house of assembly stalemate by 9,000 French -and English-| But Sunday night the teach-| in Nassau, speaking teachers, which began |ers rejected a commission sug-| that struck the Prairies Sunday | Ti9ay. gestion for an attempted strike | ~ |among the first four in China, 'and spread blizzard conditions| Mr. Masse told reporters that|settlement through mediation. | lwith Mao, Liu Shao-chi and through three provinces. |the government "will have to|The commission stipulated ina! Fast- West Chou En-lai. Ho Lung, one of! The storm was caused by a intervene when the common|the mediation, by either one Link Slated ques Bertrand and it port-|erack ats to have a good rael to restrain their military |fishing boat in the Sea of Gali- forces, warning that a large-\lee. The Israeli side returned scale clash could result from|the fire, an army spokesman continuing tension along their|Said, but there was no mention border. \of casualties, Thant's appeal, sent to the| KILLED SY MINE two governments Sunday, said|, Israel also blamed Syrian in- he had received word of a big|filtrators for planting mines in military buildup along the bor-|@ Soccer field at the village of der from Lt.-Gen, Odd Bull of|Dishon near the Lebanese bors |\Norway, chief of staff of the|"er Friday night, One of the United Nations truce supervision|™ines killed a spectator and organization in Palestine, qo two players. *ressure mounted on Premier BLAMES SYRIANS -- Irevi Eshkol's government for Eban said the buildup "was|retaliatory action. Israeli originally caused by Syrians|sources estimate there are establishing tanks and heavy|10,000 Syrian troops along the armor in defensive areas on the| border. appealed to both Syria and Is- i fire Sunday on an Israelf Liu Army Anti-Mao _Blizards China Journal Says alta EDMONTON (CP) -- Violent TOKYO (AP)--One of Manjtions recovered by the prole-)August's shakeup of the party the path of a fast-moving storm Tse - tung's mouthpieces, the tariat, (Mao's supporters) have jeadership had always ranked theoretical journal Red Flag,|yet to be consolidated, one by reported Sunday that President! one." Liu Shao-chi has formed a private army against Mao. STRUGGLE ACUTE : Mao's publication also dis- ~AP Wirephoto "ant | good is threatened. |man or three, should include a ead ) : icure f Chine e |low pressure area that swept 8g naka A | Pig -- Badin ged closed during the weekend that i egg -- " a |Aretic air into the province|, © eekend_ negotiations in/public report. beta y |counter - revolutionary forces, history, ead of the nationa i i the . from the northwest and fol-|Montreal aimed at ending. ers of red state power" andj... A : issi | * trike fizzled out Sunday night. 5 exist within the Chinese army|sports commission. \lowed the Rocky Mountains and|S'"X¢ . said it was created to protect) 114 said the struggle against! | HIS LAUNDRY | | OVER - COLORED Radio Peking reported that/foothills to the United States|There were signs of bitterness} Rn yoleetcot gramme usual "small handful" in po-|Mao's forces had won a victory | border. jon both sides. vat tnatepope ced mand | sitions of power was '"'acute and city, that brought the conflict to It gave no details and did not) complicated." It said that 'even "a new turning point." Premier say whether the army was mil-/now they are staging a counter- Chou En-lai said the "bour- itary, paramilitary or just p0-/ attack." geois reactionary line is col- litical in nature. But it said the) This had been hinted at ear-\lapsing on all fronts," the ra- 2,500,000 - man Chinese army Isijier by the shakeup of the|dio reported. "infinitely Joyal to Chairman! army's purge committee. Satur- - rit lara Mao, loyal to the people." \day and Sunday Red Guard The article confirmed what) wall posters attacked Marshal has become increasingly appar-|Chu Teh, founder of the Com- | ent in the last two weeks, thet) munist army, and 70-year-old Lin's men 'in varying degrees) Marshal Ho Lung, the one-time . still hold party, political) bandit who was one of the wm With Italians and financial power in the lo- heroes of communism's long- cast for tonight at Prince Ajbert. Temperatures Wilson Meets N.W.T., and 54 below at Dawson City. In Calgary Sunday, the storm damaged a 27 - scraper under construction in the downtown area. The Banff-Jasper Highway in Alberta was closed to traffic be- cause of poor conditions. calities and units in which they march retreat of the 1930s. ae sel Biny salen are entrenched." Chu is chairman of the stand-/ Wilson of Britain began talks It said they have to be rooted ing committee of the National with the Italian government on |was reported encouraged. | | Wilson and Foreign. Secretary | : s George Brown settled down to eat 1r an all-day meeting with Premier Aldo Moro and other top offi-| OTTAWA (CP)--A four-year- CHICAGO (AP) --.A spectac-|cause of the explosions and the gauge Britains chances of join-|Ccat early last fall has died in ular, rapidly spreading fire|fire was not known. ling the market. | hospital here. early today virtually destroyed sTARTS IN BOOTH A P -<.| The hospi i , 3 y cap aes ARTS IN \ n Italian spokesman dis- e hospital said today that McCormack Place, a giant ex-| Fire officials said the blaze\closed that Moro told Wilson|an autopsy showed rabies as the less than an hour after firemen) wares Exhibit, which had been}! arrived on the scene. A huge scheduled to open later today.| portion of the west wall col- All of the merchandise ; r ; tob vas di ved : : \Italy is deeply interested in the| October. It was destroyed. lapsed. brought into the hall for the} British * initiative to join| Authorities said~ both were fields--was a total loss, said damaged. Edward J. Lee, general man-| Some 150 persons, including : 4 eee es ; ager of the hall. cleaning personnel and security| Vice-premier Pietro Nenni, ajsistant director of the Ottawa Frozen fire hydrants ham-/ detectives, were in the building|Socialist, said Jan. 4 that if|Cvic Hospital, said Fire Commissioner Robert/nearly 10 acres, was opened in|accept Britain on their own. |symptoms appear, death always Quinn said the entire northwest November, 1960. McCormack) In the next six weeks Wilson) follows, usually rapidly. wing of the $35,000,000 structure, Place was named for the late) and Brown will visit the other; Donna was admitted to hos- was ablaze within seven minutes; editor and publisher of the SUL nem oers of the Common Mar-| pital Friday with what at first this nel sl were 51 below at Yellowknife, | today the) | A low of 30 below was fore-/LOTS TO SETTLE in Edmontén and the weather office said the temperatures could hit 40 below One union official pointed a tract clauses yet to be settled, grim picture of about 120 con- | YORK (AP) -- Rockefeller brothers and Cyrus Faton Jr., representing two of HAMILTON (CP) -- Wal- ton Vance got more color in his laundry than he bar- Seven 2° Perish In Fire | TROIS-RIVIERES, Que. (CP)| A mother and her seven chil-| dren were killed today in a fire which 'swept through a home here: : The father, Robert Alarie, es- caped the flames by jumping 'from a second-storey balcony.| |He was burned, | | not severely, | trying to save his family. | Dead are Mrs. Alarie and her children--Michel, 11, §3 H Jeannine, 7, Real, 5, Rene, 3, Robert, 2, and Rejean, 1. The family lived on the sec-| ond floor of the frame home. Mr. Alarie's mother, who} | : | | Moro, greeting the Britons on|Scratched by a stray cat at their jived on the first floor, escaped|the group will travel to Ottawa) The trade exchange plan--en-| qyaqiqnnnmmunnnnmumnnniinin their arrival Sunday night, said) home in nearby Richmond last injury. The fire is reported to|to present the letter. |have followed an explosion in a | stove. Trois-Rivieres is on the north|U. of T., will shore of the St. Lawrence River| James Steel from Carleton Uni-|feller and the almost unique re- Dr. Finlay McKerracher, as- about 80 miles northeast of|versity when they meet the|lationship the Hatons have with Montreal. i ylvie, g,,ment in the Vietnam conflict, the richest families in the U.S., plan to build a better trade bridge between the Western Hemisphere and Communist countries in Eastern Europe. d for Sunday night. Vance was watching his | laundry whirl about in a laundromat dryer when he noticed bright red-and-yel- | low streaks. The dryer was afire. He quickly pulled the B ; | flaming laundry from the jeonfirmed by Richard Aldrich; John F, Kennedy, despite ap machine, stamped out the of the Rockefeller interests, flames and managed to It will involve co - | save most of the load. between the International Basic/it the West German rights. | |Economy Corp., controlled by| It again published passages the Rockefeller brothers, and) deleted by Look from Death of Pearson To Meet Tower International Inc.,!a President at Mrs, Kennedy's Letter - Signers headed by Eaton, a Cleveland | request. industrialist. | TORONTO (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson will meet Tues- day with representatives of the University of Toronto faculty members who signed a letter protesting "Canadian involve- HAMBURG (Reuters)--Ster : : . |Magazine published today | The financial alliance, linking/ second uncut instalment of Wi \W US., Aggie Mrs. Kennedy 'asked for the Eaton's father was born in| cuts on the grounds they con- Pugwash, N.S. cerned only personal matters, Aldrich, a vice - president and| but sources close to Stern said director of IBEC, said his or-|it regarded the issue as one of ganizations objective "is to im-|censorship and resisting politi- prove the standard of living of|cal pressure. the peoplesof the world, add-| 'The passages cut by Look and t, Ing: | printed by Stern this week were a spokesman for the group said; 'An initiative that creates a| short, One described a scene in today. jcommercial and industrial dia-|a Fort Worth hotel the night J. M. Robson, associate pro-|logue between the East and the| before the Dallas assassination. fessor of English at Victoria|West cannot help but contrib-|The president, tired and suffer- College, said three members of|ute to this end. |peals from the Kennedy family a operation |and Look magazine, which sold BOTH WEARY ~ Stern Continues Uncut JFK Story rn'ing from a stomach ache, was adescribed as wearing a blue I- and white nightshirt, and em- all Street and the Midwestern|liam Manchester's book.on the bracing his wife at length in was disclosed Sunday andj assassination of U.S. president' the middle of the room before - they parted for the night, Mrs, Kennedy is reported te have told Manchester she ree membered thinking they were both so weary that they were really supporting each other "like a couple of bookends." They could not stay together ;because the double mattress |was removed and replaced with a single board to support the president's back. He suffered from a wartime back injury. Another passage said Mrs. Kennedy said good night and went out, sad that she was separated from him, The same episode was more briefly mentioned in the Look version published last week. 'compassing the United States, He said John Polanyi, David|Canada and Latin America-- Gauthier and Peter Hughes of|brings together the enormous be joined byjinvestment skills of the Rocke- prime minister. ithe Soviet Bloc. NEW YORK (AE) -- on time "for the duration." of the independent Social case-workers, Service homemakers and came as negotiations continued at the offices of Herbert Haber, city labor relations director. LLL | NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Welfare Workers Go On Strike City strike today but the welfare department assured its 600,000 welfare recipients they would get their assistance cheques welfare workers went on The strike by 7,500 members Employees Union -- children's counsellors -- out, one by one, and 'the posi-| People's Congress and until last the Common Market today, re- ne ' eae On ey ~~~" | ceived assurances of support for Giant Exhibition Hall jcials in the first of a series of | Old Ottawa district girl who was parleys on the continent hibition hall on Lake Michigan. | broke out in a booth being con-|Britain 'can count on the warm | Cause of Donna Darlene Feath- The entire roof of the three- structed in the main exhibition| support of the Italian govern-/erston"s death last Friday. The main exhibition hall-- show is reported to have been |e b ' ; i p 'the market four years after | vaccinated against rabies the \President de Gaulle of France day of the attack. pered the efforts of firefight-| when the blaze broke out. There|France vetoes British member- vaccine isn't fully protective. ers. A major water main also| were no reports of injuries. {Ship again, the other five mem-! The incubation period for ra- after the first of a series ofj}cago Tribune, Col. Robert R. small explosions. He said the' McCormack. ket--France, Belgium, Holland, | appeared to be encephalitis. She |West Germany and Luxembourg.| died within hours. Rail Operations Are Threatened |Britains membership bid, and! Rabies Cause Razed In Chicago Fi to} scratched or bitten by a rabid block-long structure caved injhall for the National House-| ment, | 'The girl and her mother were about the size of six football either destroyed or heavily vetoed the British bid. | was frozen. The structure, which covers bers should bypass France and/bies is one to six months. Once BALTIMORE, Md. (AP)--A sudden strike by 1,300 tele- type and telephone operators today threatened the 12-state MOOD SEEN HYSTERICAL China's Millions On March Tan Brodie, 31, Far East correspondent for the Lon- don Daily Express, has just spent four days inside Com- munist China, witnessing the actions of the militant Red Guards. His report, ac- quired by The Associated Press, is from the southern city of Canton. Brodie was Moscow correspondent for The Express before going to the Far East last year. By TAN BRODIE. CANTON (AP) -- For four : I have been inside Com- t China, seeing for myself antastic convulsions which 2 yaralysing the world's large est Communist state. Millions are on the march, 'he mood is hysterical and aps prehensive. And the Red Guards are everywhere. One million have taken over this city. Jammed on the paves ment outside my hotel, milling in continuous processiong along the main streets, accosting everyone and challenging. them to defy the thoughts of Mao Tse-tung. They tolerate no op- position. They are in control. The tension is bordering on mass hysteria. Everyone is be- ing told constantly that this fight against the class enemy ranks with the October Revolu- tion (The Russian revolution of 1917). As the first British reporter to get into China since the cul- tural revolution (purge) flared into violence 10 days ago, I found few troops and still less police on the streets. In Canton--where last week there were reports of street bat- tles--the guards seemed to have subdued all opposition. And yet it was possible to de- tect that opposition still exists. It is underground. It is small, but it appears to be determined. ADMIT LABOR TROUBLE The Chinese official assigned to me by the authorities--a wary Mr. Wu--admitted' there had been labor troubles and strikes in Canton From his account they were not co-ordinated or organized. \ Yet Mao opponents had been able to trigger workers' unrest sufficiently to set up a number of wildcat walkouts. I was told the influx into Can- ton has built suddenly during the last two troubled weeks-- ever since Mao and Lin Piao (defence minister and Mao's supposed heir apparent) said the cultural revolution must spread to every wort bench and rice paddy in the land. Apparently, all major cities now have a similar flood of marchers. Older men who must keep working to feed their families are growing increasingly resent- ful, I was told. So are some young workers who are'not stu- dents and who want to get on with learning a trade. In Canton every building is being daubed with quotations from Mao's thoughts. Our party was mobbed in the Park of Culture. We were hemmed in by about 3,000 Red Guards from outlying districts who had never seen white men end women before. ' CAPTION accompanying this New China News Agency radiophoto from Peking says it shows a rally of more than a mil- lion persons in Peking's operation of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. A company spokesman said early reports indicated that the walkout and picketing by members of the Transportation-Communi- cation Employees Union had not disrupted scheduled long- haul service. Toronto Chapter May Be Formed TORONTO (CP) -- Leaders of the Canadian Bulldog party arrived here from Ottawa over the weekend to ore ganize a Toronto chapter. Party Leader Colin Ross, 26, said the Bulldogs now have 300 members, mostly. federal civil servants. The party wants a_ unilingual Englishe speaking Canada outside Quebec with French culture held at the Quebec border. Ross said his party would not run candidates for office but would work quietly in the back ground to promote English in Canada, outside Quebec. sii Msc nn mit mn item ..In THE TIMES Today.. Moyor Marks Likes People, Nature--P. 9 Area Once Linked With York County--P. 5 Generals Divide Weckend Games--P. 6 Ann Landers--10 City News--9 Classified--16, 17, 18 Comics--19 Editorial--4 Finoncial--14 Obits--18 Sports--6, 7 Theatre--12 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax--5 Women's--10, 11 Today, Ian Brodie, British journalist*out of Red China after a four-day visil, says the tension is bordering on mass hysteria. 4 (AP Wirevhoto) : AUIS A Heavenly Peace Gate plaza to 'celebrate and praise the Communist revolution and Mao Tze - Tung thoughts."' Caption says the picture was made Aug. 18.

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