Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Feb 1967, p. 1

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Weather Report |" Milder tonight and Tuesday. Snowfall ends tonight. Low . tonight 15; high tomorrow 0, 13, 1967 Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottewa ond for payment. of Postage in Cash Air Crash Kills Four Area Men One Of Bodies Found 900 Feet From Crash Three Oshawa General!man at Motors workers and an Ajax!1950 man were killed Saturday when, Besides ttheir four-seater Beechcraft) survived by Bonanza aircraft crashed in a/mer Edna Smith, whom he field near Arlington, Vermont;!married in 1953; two sons, while they were enroute to a Wayne, 13, and Ricky, 8, and a : Boston-Montreal hockey game sister, Mrs. S. Stovin (Ruth), ' in Boston. all of Oshawa. Autopsies on the bodies show-| Mr. McGee Sunday they died of "ex-|row Funeral smashing and brain/high mass will be in _-- St 3 Mary's. of the People Roman Catholie--Church--at 10am, Feb, 15. Interment will be Resurrection Cemetery 10¢ Single Copy Sse Per Week Home Delivered VOL. 96 -- NO. 36 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, FEBRUARY EIGHTEEN General Motors since he is the for- his parents, his wife, is at the Ger- ed Home. Requiem tensive injurie s Dead : Henry Oliver McGhee, 34, of 14. Willow Park Dr., father of two and a foreman |N. J. Gignac will sing in the paint and trim de- |mass, partment at GM Cc. I. WOODCOCK --Charles Ivan Woodcock, | A son of Mrs. Marie Wood- 36, the pilot, of 824 Florell |cock and the late Vernon Wood- Dr., father of three and a |cock, Mr. Woodcock was born foreman in the material jin Oshawa and attended West- handling department at GM. |mount Publie School and the Ronald C. Hall, 39 of 120 |Qshawa Collegiate and Voca- Northview, father of three |tional Institute. He was a fore- and a supervisor of purchas- |man in General Motors' south ing at GM. plant. He was a member of the --Alex Yarmie, 34 of 8 Pine | Oshawa Flying Club. St., Ajax, father of three and | Besides his mother, he is sur-| A masonic service under the owner of Yarmie Haulage |vived by his wife, the former auspices of. Parkwood Lodge, and Excavating, Ajax. |Wilma Ives and three children,| will be held at the ives PLANE BREAKUP | Franklin, 15, Grant, 11, and/Funeral Home at 7.30 p.m., Richard Hurd, assistant state|ULaurie, 13. Thursday, : aeronautics commissioner and|, Also surviving are three sis-| Ip lieu of flowers contribu. one of the investigators of the|'ers, Mrs. A, Goodall (Vivi-\tions to the Grace Lutheran accident, said the crash was|@he), Mrs. G. Beauchemin|Church Memorial Fund in his due to breakup of the plane in| (Eleanor) and Mrs. B. Abram-| memory would be appreciated. flight from an abrupt change | off (Doreen) and five brothers, ALEX YARMIE in flight direction from a high|#ldon, Ross, Brian, Dale and| Mr, Yarmie, who was in his altitude at high speed. Lyle, ail of Oshawa, \ssth 'year, was a son of Mr. RONALD C. HALL . Father of Three are the CHARLES TI. WOODCOCK ... Father of Three HENRY OLIVER McGHEE » - » Father of Two Raymond Laliberte, president of an organization representing 50,000 Catholic teachers, said Sunday night the teacher strikes| would be suspended for 30 days if the bill is withdrawn. Premier Daniel Johnson, meantime, expressed confidence the teachers would obey the law when called upon to do so. Mr. Laliberte, who heads la Corporation des instituteurs catholiques du Quebec, said the strikes would be called off within three days, but he added other conditions. clared: "The road to a. solution re- mains open." Wilson was reporting on his \talks with Kosygin only hours after the Soviet leader left for Moscow. The gap between the two sides in the Vietnam war, Wilson said, "is not unbridgeable, given a realistic appreciation of political and military factors in- volved, and above all, given a belief on each side that the other desires a negotiated set- |tlement."" Johnson Rejects Teachers Bid | po QUEBEC (CP) -- Premier) Daniel Johnson said Sunday | cannot accept an "ultimatum" by 12,000 striking teachers who} have threatened to defy aj strike-ending bill if it is passed. | "No government anywhere in| Woodcock's body was trapped|in Windsor; three sons, Mark,| in the wreckage of the single-|10. Peter and Paul, an a engine craft. The other bodies Also 'surviving are two sis- both 4,|\ters, Mrs. Swede Strangberg yerald| (Helen). of Albany, N.Y. and sister, Mrs. were found in the meadow, one| Stevens (Margaret) of Owassa,|Mrs. Douglas Parker (Evelyn) of them 500 feet from the crash site, across the Battenkill) river. Friends st say the four games and other events. RECENT PURCHASE The men took off from the Oshawa airport sometime on Saturday. Yarmie who had just} purchased the aircraft recently) Mich, of Hamilton and a_ brother, The deceased is at the Arm-|E rong Funeral Home for serv-| fre-ice in Grace Lutheran Church/held at the William E. Sher- night the Quebec government|quently flew together to hockey at 2 P.m., Feb. 15, Interment/rin Funeral Chapel, Pickering, 'i " \will be in Mount Lawn Ceme-lat 2 p.m., tery. Rev. P. F. Fiess will con-| will be in Mount Lawn' Ceme- duct the service. rnie of Delhi. The funeral service will be Feb. 15. Interment tery, Oshawa. mt 'my oo | te wend cn secon sc a ie eo Kees) NEWS HIGHLIGHTS ultimatum, even if it comes |to receive his wings this Satur-} solution Toronto Students To Meet Leary TORONTO (CP) -- Two Uni Officials say a second plane, piloted by William Drew of 5 Farley Ct., Ajax,.and contain- ing three: passengers, was ac- PLANE-CRASH RUINS IN VERMONT WHERE FOUR OSHAWA AREA MEN PERISHED SATURDAY - « - Victims, All in Their 30's, Were Flying To Hockey Game In Boston, Mass. Viet Cong Wil Carl Hess, a service station|, The funeral service will be\and Mrs. Peter Yarmie. Born Protestant Teachers | Hopeful operator near the crash scene,|held at 3.15 p.m., Feb. 15, at| at Melfort, Sask., he had been h ' a e i to a jet, looked up and saw the| erent will be in Mount Lawn/and operated the Yarmie Haul- ith Attac reaten Io Resign /On Pact ka fae ts MyM te Sega i ac ' : inster United Church, will/ ; right wing were missing but it BUDE ° | He was a member of Ajax SAIGON (Reuters) -- Viet was still flying horizontally. [conduct the service. |United Church and of the Osh- their self-declared Lunar Newlestant teachers threatened Sun-|has been a bitter debate on ajcolleagues. -- iter Wilson said today he be- ® plummeted earthward. | Born Oct. 29, 1927, in Osh-|taking flying instruction last Year truce today-with a daring/day to hold study sessions dur-|strike-ending bill sponsored by| Study sessions are a form of|lieves a peaceful solution to the "It looked like a dive bomb-|awa, Mr. Hall was a son of/August and qualified for his Mr. which 14 South Vietnamese|year and to resign in June to|ment. oe a ployees who have no wish, or|reached" despite the lack of, R "Three of the men were|Windsor. A resident of Oshawalcertificate was to have been were killed. jshow their hostility gf pio PL sag Bl ge of Si to resort to formal |immediate success in his week| # sucked out before it hit the |and Windsor nee ~ Pe da ace yg at ap eg = mortarjlegislation aimed at ending/Protestant Teachers gave per-|strike action. _ ground, The plane was spiral-|@ Supervisor at General Motors.|Wings' Dinner this Saturday. shells at the central U.S, mili-|strikes by 12,000 Roman Catho-|mission to its 6,000 members| The association called the |sygin. «> jing." He was a member of Parkwood; Mr. Yarmie is survived by tary headquarters, killing 11/lic teachers. "demon- 1 any /|strably unjust.' Many Catholic 43 . eorearean ; 1 rq | Oshawa. his mother, Mrs, Nettie Yarmie : : ; jliament, the British leader said said a tape measure, camera if i | ner, o a namese paratroopers in an am-|-------- |teachers already have submitted | je believes the gap between the ALEX YARMIE and a brief case fell close | Mr. Hall, besides his par-jof Delhi, Ont.; his wife, the munition - laden truck passing] . . . » Father of Three ome 4 s f Z ; t Se WOULD STOP STRIKES is not unbridgeable and de- 13 |crashed. e former Theressa Pretzlav,/Steven and two daughters, Jan- Then three other South Viet-| Prompt Resump 10n en There was no. explosion. whom he married Oct. 13, 1951,/ice and Lorieann, namese--two policemen an wounded planted by the attackers blew WASHINGTON (AP)--Frompt, ported to have conveyed to had fired the three mortar resumption of the U.S. air war] Johnson last week the hope that shells over the rooftops. into ajseen here unless the Northjlonged to allow the maximum truck convoy, into the garden of/Vietnamese start reducing mil-|time for peace - seeking. | cial, and through the roof of a!move toward peace. Newsweek magazine said the nearby house. President Johnson ord ered|state department is studying an mounted by the Viet Cong from|following the four - day Lunarjdiplomat's report that China's inside the city, was launched on|New Year truce throughout/Mao Tse-tung has given North self-declared seven-day Lunarjended Sunday. _ jwith the United States on con-jwas that teachers would he in-| "I believe that a New our truce. It was authoritatively learned|dition that the talks be direct,|demnified for any suspension of | could now be reached." ronaia: geoun ae Ghapenianlecas day 8 000 C ti CGE St ik a ee Pea Ironically Woodcock's father, ontinue rike after an exchange of messages|the Soviet Union. Sunday saw a big demonstra-|"very much in the picture' on|the teachers," he said in a CBC cmane, ints killed x ie pene : : . 4 ; 000 United The southern allies' four-day|with British Prime Minister; The Newsweek article did not|tion in Quebee City in support/the likely reaction of North Viet- : | TORONTO (CP) -- A strike by more than 8,000 Unite | : 2 : 4 However, Mr. Johnson sald he}Chalk Lake > : Saget : xesumption of ground and air|talks with Soviet Premier Kosy-|diplomat except to say he was) cause. States bombing raids. ldbas Ahh Seve ses 'coon hig controllers at Albany. the| "ects . Ltd., covauee inay while ap ong fons dction over South Vietnam but gin. jhased in Peking. But the mana-} Opposition Leader Jean But he insisted: '{1. do not , ee : i me management discusse neir 'next moves. icket line: con-|zine quoted him as_ saying:|sage, in a speech Sunday, called|think I ought to say any more."'| ,, io 3 ; jeraft would have passed befor : North. cluded their scheduled confer-|'"The North Vietnamese have|the bill an open invitation to| He also said that for various|, © are all human. We un- ts Mis vate Dsses ad no, Zfenton, Guelph, Peterborough, Barrie and Brampton after Gen. William C. Westmore-|ences Sunday, but they met/been told by Mao that they|civil disobedience. derstand that people can make|'Ne crash, sald trey nae a °| the union turned down the latest company offer Sunday of Mr. Lesage and other Liberals |right moment to try to bring|°?\"" s and there w 0 indicati it mander in Vietnam, was in his}65 minutes at Kosygin's hotel;commence peace talks directly| objected to the legislation in the|/the {wo sides together through | anxious ee 1 oe ne cede ae in rouble . Mi h A k F H 1 launched. The building was not/uled return to Moscow. think the situation favorable for|venting completion of second/1954 Geneva conference on Indo- over they will do their duty and) oo "time. but it. was not Ho Chi in SKS Pope or € p jamaged. Kosygin and Wilson were re-|such talks." 'reading. china. go. back to work. They will rec- AHA THES Hat BOER SOW HONG KONG (Reuters) -- North Vietnamese President to be educated is more impor- |", the Vietnam war, Radio Hanoi reported today. In a mes- <i wes eee The lane went down near sf U i be fs FURTHER VISITS PLED ED tant than the right of certain| |, | Saclata press of Equinox| sage to the Pope quoted by the radio, Ho said the United e ee bh e " ee & ~~ Ihave been noted. It narrowly| of war" against North Vietnam, missed four houses when _ it ' ' a . Kosygin Visit "Highly Successful 'Six Children Die In US. Fire 5 z in a fire that destroyed the family tenant house farm in cluded a last unscheduled one- Allegan County. State police said three others -- two said he heard a noise similar|te Gerrow Funeral Chapel. In-|_ resident of Ajax for 16 years ; . 'fa He said the craft's tail and Mellow, minister of North-/the past 10 years. Cong guerrillas today broke) QUEBEC (CP)--Quebec Prot-|scheduled to resume today what|such action by their Catholic} LONDON (CP)--Prime Minis- Then, suddenly, the craft|R. C. HALL lawa Flying Club. He started daylight attack inside Saigon injing the remainder of the school|the Union Nationale govern-|work stoppage used by em-/Vietnam war "could now be} er," said Mr. Hess. Mr. and Mrs. Whitwall Hall of|pilot's licence in January, The The guerrillas fired | jof talks with Soviet Prmier Ko- i |across Quebec to hold the study government's bill In a special statement to Par- : ; % ©The service station operator | Lodge, No. 695, AF and AM,/his father in Saskatchewan and and wounding eight South Viet-| The provincial legislature isjsessions in concert with 3 resignation notices. jtwo warring sides in Vietnam him just after the plane had(ents, is survived by his wife,|former Mavis Wiles; a son, nearby. % x Se AL a GENCae | d a 'i child -- were killed and 30) Of US W I Th A when a time bomb ee ar n e 1r up the house from which they lagainst North Vietnam is fore-|the bombing pause will be pro- The shells crashed a senior British embassy offi-|itary operations to otherwise: STUDYING REPORT, The attack, first of its kind the bombing pause extended |unidentified Eastern European the sixth day of the Viet Cong|Vietnam. The 95 - hour truce| Vietnam approval to negotiate| One of the other conditions hen he said: |that Johnson acted Saturday|and not through the offices of|their right to strike. | Wilson told questioners he is ' : Hag : 4 4 } : 'let-| French-language broadcast. jof a light plane in 1948 near! fectrical work lived by the Canna G al Viet truce ended Sunday with the|Wilson, who has been holding|identify the East European|for the Catholic teachers'|nam to a cessation of United ilectrical workers employe y the Canadian Gener: vith a lull in bombing of the! Wilson and Kosygin »|will carry out their threats. [last major airport the Yarmie| Jere maintained at General Electric plants at Toronto, lreasons he thinks this is not the| : . : sa fti tact with t lane| land, American military com-jearly today for an' additional/have a green light from him to | statements when they are tired, |Tadio contact with the plane a 17-per-cent wage increase over three years. officer when today's attack was|a few hours before his sched-|with the U.S. whenever they|assembly Saturday, thus pre-|the 'existing machinery of the "When they have thought i The sky was partly cloudy at aes ij ¥ ------ | ognize that the right of children salialls satlier. however Ho Chi Minh has asked Pope Paul to help bring an end to People to strike."' Mountain where downdrafts| States must first of all stop its bombing and "'all other acts crashed into the meadow. SOUTH HAVEN, Mich. (AP) -- Six children died today gion and that if was essential hour session that LONDON (CP) -- Soviet Pre- Kosygin became the first So- mier Alexei Kosygin flew home today after what Prime Min- ister Wilson described as a "highly successful" visit during which the two leaders tried to find a solution for the Vietnam war While no joint reported, a ared: two governments will viinue to make a close study situation and will make le 'effort. with a ieving a settlement Vietnam problem, and will remain in contact to this end." : Wilson and Kosygin, pledging further exchanges of visits, said goodbye warmly at Gatwick Airport. It was generally felt that the 62-year-old Russian leader--in his first visit to Brit- ain--made an impressive show- ing during his eight-day stay. The London talks, which in- vs formula for communique began at 1 a.m. today, were thought to be part of the reason why Presi- dent Johnson prolonged the Lunar New Year's lull in bomb- ing of North Viet Nam. WILSON WON'T TELL Wilson, who was in constant touch with Johnson, declined to tell reporters what the final ses- sion was about. Lighting his pipe outside Kosygin's hotel, he joked that he had returned a box of matches which the Rus- sian leader left behind earlier at Chequers, the prime minis- ter's country residence. Today's communique dis- closed that Wilson and Kosygin agreed to the setting up of a "hot line'? communications cir- cuit between Wilson's official residence and the Kremlin This would enable both lead- ers 'to continue more vasily their dialogue on Vietnam and other world issues. viet leader ever to address both was entertained by the Queen and Prince Philip at Bucking- ham Palace, held a mass press conference and appeared in a long interview on BBC televi- s10n. On Vietnam, Kosygin repeat. edly urged that the United States halt bombing of North Vietnam as a first step toward negotiations along the lines of a proposal by the foreign min- ister of that country. Wilson re- mained firm in his support of U.S. policy but sought to fini! a middle way. EXPRESS REGRET The communique said: "Both governments deeply re+ gretted that the war in Viet- nam continues with the loss of more human lives. They agreed that these events were a danger of neighboring states and to the peace and stability of the re a to avhieve the earliest possible end of the Vietnam war." - In a farewell address at the airport, Kosygin said a great amount of work was done to- ward developing friendly ties. "We have established very fruitful contact with the people of your country," he told Wil. son. He said he believed the work done in the Jast week would go on and that Anglo-Soviet meet- ings of this type would con- tinue. The communique, issued shortly after Kosygin left Lon- don for Moscow, confirmed that both sides set out their differing views on ways to get peace in Vietnam. It restated known positions of the two governments on other major international issues, but recorded a number of moves to better relations on strictly bilateral issues. | versity of Toronto sutdents wil imeet LSD advocate. Timothy Leary at the American border} today and try to bring a tape recording of Dr. Leary's voice back to the university. | Allan Kamin, co-chairman of} a weekend festival on LSD--ly-| sergic acid diethylamide -- and! similar drugs, said he and an-) other student will meet Dr. Leary at Canadian immigration at Windsor. Dr. Leary was barred from) the country by Canadian immi-} gration officials because of a; previous conviction in the} United' States for smuggling marijuana. He is appealing A recording of one of his lex tures, which was mailed ex press from Seattle last week was to be played at the fes- tival, It did not arrive. companying the ill-fated plane. They became separated by clouds over Watertown, N.Y., and Drew flew into Boston be-| fore learning of the crash. He returned to Bennington, where the plane had been dismantled and taken for further --in- spection, to aid officials. Ben- nington is 15 miles from the crash site. Bodies of the victims are be-| ing flown to Oshawa today by chartered aircraft Dr. Richard Woodruff, Ver-; mont state 'pathologist sper- | formed the autopsies at Rut-| land hospital. | H. 0. McGEE Born in Oshawa, Mr, Me- Gee was a son of Henry and Blanche McGee. He received his education at St. Gregory's separate school and the Osh- awa Collegiate and Vocational Institute. He had been a fore-'j; i * Editorial--4 adults and one child -- escaped and were being treated for shock and burns at hospital. Troopers identified the vic- tims as Brenda Stringer, 15; Randy Bice, 10; Deborah Bice, 9; Connie Bice, 8; Marsha Bice, 7, and Steve Bice, 3, .. In THE TIMES Today .. Fire Destroys 110-Yeor-Old Ashburn Church--P. 9 County Hog Producers Meet--P, 5 Generals Win and Tie on Weekend--P. 6 Obituaries--16 Pickering News--5 Ann Landers--10 Ajax News--5 City News--9 Clossified--14, --12 13).:16 eat Comics Weather---2 Whitby Women's--10, «11 Financial--13 News--5

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