Weather Report Warm air pushing eastward will bring moderate tempera- tures. Cloudiness and some snow. Low tonight, 12; high Thursday, 80. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, . Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. The Oshawa Cimes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8, 1967 ® Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash VANIER MOURNED | BY ALL CANADA All Faiths "Faith In God His Law" Participate Cardinal Says Of Vanier At Ritual OTTAWA (CP) -- At the re- THIRTY PAGES 10¢ Single Copy BSc Per Week Home Delivered VOL. 96 -- NO. 56 BODY BORNE TENDERLY IN SUNNY, COLD - Mme for carillon in OTTAWA (CP)--The body of 'smiled Governor-General Vanier was revised version adopted by borne tenderly from the Parlia- Canadian dioceses last fall on hs G Je _|ment Buildings in sunny cold an experimental basis. rr ht gyal ato ae today to the Roman Catholic} The choir sang the offertory many faiths took part in the | Basilica of Notre Dame for the|/hymn, My Soul is Longing for state Aaieral mass celebrated funeral mass |Your Peace Near to You My today at the Roman Catholic! The coffin was met at the en-|God esta ; trance of the church by Paul It also sang the hymn, Holy Notre Dame Basilica. Rt. Rev. E. §. Reed, Anglican Emile Cardinal Leger after|/Holy, in French before the Bishop GP Oitnwa. ohered a spe-|being carried on a naval gun canon, the opening of the most cial prayer he 'wrote for the | Carriage at the slow march'sacred phase of the mass, was mass. which was conducted by from Parliament Hill read in Latin. Paul-Emile Cardinal Leger oo pela ng hymn baa PRAYER FOR DEAD Montreal, 10 Roman Catholic} a 10 diene Gees hah ane giles Father Benedict said the bishops and Gen. Vanier's son, jane i nes GIFOA Aa the oh |prayer for the dead in Latin.| Georges, a Trappist monk. apts Go wis Se Gane ia ie | The English version reads: |NAT KICKS MOUNTIE Bishop Reed's prayer thanked 1 etn nig aera' S son.) "Remember also, O. Lord,| Nat, the charger, kicked @ God for Gen. Vanier's "constant|Jean, who aids retarded chil-/your gery G , bd fo: A S cor eae we. | ant Georges Philias,|saluting Mountie in the leg faith in Thee and his. life of/dren in France, read in French) yng has gone before us with|while the procession was pre- service to his country and hu- |S. Paul's _ a the Corin-ithe sign of faith, and fests in|paring to move off, The Moun- panty, i eG |" camael Caan per ke in|the_sleep of peace. \tie did not flinch. ul familial love and of humble) | "To him, O Lord, and to all) The horse settled down once affection for his fellows. jFrench from the altar after) who rest in Christ, we beg You|the cortege began to move Th : ; |meeting the coffin with prayers j °, e@ prayer continued : jto grant of Your goodness a . " "And now, O Lord, grant, welt English and French. Iplace. of comfort, light and Mr. Diefenbaker, 71, who saw has eee ii Sahin "Georges Vanier was a con-| rence Through see sane Christ recommended | the, appointment Hee le of Thy servant may|Vinced Christian," the cardinal) our Tord Amen" Beds jof Gen. Vanier as Governors P ae * |said. 'His faith in God had been gga earisning General in 1959, walked in the move the people of this land to a Nat, the bay RCMP geld i i aged ' his supreme law and had guided : : 1. Belding | procession with other mourners, serve more faithfully Thy good il "rs : d tet g carrying Gen. Vanier's reversed Pers Se 4 purposes of unity, truth and/® S actions and set an €X-|hoots in the stirrups, pawed the ee ee ere goodness,. and of Thy provi-/@mple for his countrymen. muffs lined the procession route : ne * along Wellington Street. - » « Coffin Borne From Parliament ~ jie : ._jasphalt road and shied each dence, we beseech Thee to| Cardinal leger said that in hisitime the guns fired, h grant, that his life on earth|work as soldier and statesman,| Behind the medal - bearers|,..® Sailors, all from Nova now ended, it may continue to|Gen. Vanier had always ap-|walked three of Gen. Vanier's|S©°2, marched shoulder - to- shine as a witness to Thy Holy|Plied the golden rule. His great-|four sons--Jean, Michel and|S"ulder fore and aft of the cof- Name, that the good work which (CP WIREPHOTO) est joy had been to see his son,|Rernard. fin, pulling or restraining the Thou didst begin in him, may Georges, enter monastic life. His wife and daughter, The-|2 carriage as needed. the day of the| "Georges Vanier died the way|rese, and another son, Georges,|,/"e Parade commander was Leave Heavy ee sag dee he lived. He had accepted the|a Trappist monk, were Lone Lt.-Col. J, R. Labrosse of Mont- | | : extension of his mandate %0|procession of 10 limousines car-|"e2! 8nd Ottawa, an officer of . co ae hi that he could officiate at the|jrying the mourners. asualties Girl - Watching | meet. it , 3 i Gets The Nod |, xs, tere wou _belCout"end sont since nie unkjcarege; 2¢ was immediately jdanger to his ailing. heart -- @/out a veil. Georges held her|guard of honor. there's nothing wrong with girl/tle."' ac a Mme. Vanierjended as the cortege reached watching in the early morning r a at her eyes with ajthe Basilica for the Roman hours. vor Pov igen yp was| White lace handkerchief. [catholic mass, attended by rep- the Royal 22nd. opening of the Montreal world pening: id 'thick SHOWS FEELING on horseback and carrying TORONTO (CP)--A Toronto/danger that proved real. arm as they left the Parlia-| The saluting guns fired every Magistrate Joseph Addison used for the mass. It was placed Her daughter spoke to her resentatives of other ehurches. Vanier 13 slightly a moment The the Peace tower began playing 30 minutes before the body left. the build- ings and continued until the cortege had left Parliament Hill The central band of the RCAF preceded the two chaplains and gun carriage but was unable to play because of the extreme cold The muffled drums of the band provided the slow-march beat of the cortege. The mass rite was a greatly!and eS Ks GUN CARRIAGE PASSES PEACE TOWER IN OTTAWA Vanier's Coffin Draped In Maple Leaf Flag GM "Optimistic" No City Layoffs workers returned to their jobs on the day shift today and pro- duction was "pretty much back to normal,' a GM official in Detroit reports. In Oshawa, another corpora- tion spokesman said there is hope that there will be no inter- VAN DOOS ARE PALLBEARERS No Special Treatment For Hoffa LEWISBURG, Pa. (AP) James Hoffa will be just an- other prisoner behind the walls of the federal prison at Lewis- burg, says Warden Jacob J. Parker. Wearing a two - piece blue denim suit and black low-cut shoes, Hoffa started his first offs at 86 company plants in the United States, making idle some 196,000 workers. Also affected were the approx- imate 9,000 workers at Oshawa; some 1,800 in Ste. Therese, Que., and about 900 at GM's Windsor trim plant, All returned to work Monday. A strike at a United States' plant --a main producer of car body parts in North America-- has ended fast enough that Gen- eral Motors in Oshawa is "'op- timistic" it will not be forced to lay off 9,000 hourly-rated work- ers. SAIGON (AP) -- Viet Cong guerrillas made two deadly at- tacks on U.S. forces in the Me- kong Delta before dawn today, leaving 32 Americans dead, wounded or missing. A 15-minute mortar barrage of 80 rounds hit about 2 a.m. A detachment of the RCMP tbitio: l aga m where.all nations wil Mme. Vanier was in the first|lances with guidons led the magistrate decided Tuesday| "He died on the field of bat-jment Buildings. After entering|35 seconds so that the salute full day in this federal peniten- tiary today, Parker said he had no plans to meet with Hoffa for the first few days and that, like the 1,- 700 other convicts, Hoffa will work to earn his spending money. He'll get no special mail or visiting privileges, Par- ker said. ' Federal marshals brought Hoffa here Tuesday to start an eight-year term for jury tam- pering. Hoffa's first five to seven| days in prison, Parker said, are to be spent as a member of an "admission unit," undergo- ing a physical examination and a series of interviews with the chaplain, education and voca- tional specialists and a case worker. United Auto Workers, off their jobs Feb. 15 they af- fected car production in plants all across including those in Oshawa, Ste. Therese, Que. and Windsor. About the same number of city auto workers returned to work Monday as car produc- tion resumed after a standstill since night auto workers field, Ohio staged their second wildcat strike in two weeks. Feb. 24. But Monday in Mans- When workers of Local 549, stalked North America The first strike ended Feb. 23, too late to stop a Canadian layoff because of a shortage of imported car parts from the Fisher body plant. The latest wildcat is reported to have started ending yester- day afternoon. More than 1,000 of the scheduled 1,200 Mansfield ruption here. But he added that part of the uncertainty is, "are they really back and are they going to stay back? Sure we know there is stuff (body material) in transit, but how much has it been delayed." Meanwhile, officials of the rebellious Ohio local were or- dered to Detroit today to ex- plain to UAW leaders why workers walked out at the GM Fisher plant. There was a possibility, one report said, that the UAW would put Local 549 under trusteeship, taking the union local out of the hands of its officers and putting it under control of the. inter- national union. The earlier walkout at Mans- national executive council termed the mid-February walk- out illegal and union chiefs or- dered strikers back to work. went along on the side of union officials Tuesday and issued a back-to-work call in the latest chairman, said he was declar- international officials. The new walkout was apparent- dispute were to be fired. the first major American base established in the delta, catch- ing most of the soldiers asleep. The barrage killed two and wounded 23 at the 9th Infantry Division's Dong Tam camp some 40 miles south of Saigon. It was the first shelling of the camp since 9th Division infan- trymen moved inte it in late January. The camp is about one mile square, on ground dredged |from the Mekong River, and is |surrounded by paddy land largely controlled by the Viet Cong at night. Another 9th Division post was " hit by mortars and small-arms fire two hours later at Rach Kien, about a dozen miles from threw out a disturbance charge at the edge of the annctuaty. against Joseph Hendry Ross, 56, Cardinal Leger faced the cof- of Toronto, who was arrested fin and the mourners, assisted after he refused to give polic by Gen. Vanier's son, Trappist) his name. | Father Benedict, and the 10) Ross told the court he w S| bishops in white vestments, for) arrested while "watching the} the con caleheated aikis girls go by" at a downtown cor-| : ner about 1:20 a.m. "IT was} bothering no one, I just came} out of a tavern," he said. | Magistrate Addison said Ross| had been standing on the cor-| ner under "completely unsus-| picious circumstances--he was} ot impeding anyone." "T don't think that gives the) officer the right to do snything | except leave him alone,'"' the magistrate said. Both GM and the. UAW inter- Local president Robert Hall trouble, But Frank Petty, shop | Sergeants Pallbearers For Vanier ing "open war" on Hall and "We are the leaders here, not Reuther's men (Walter Reuther, UAW president)," Hall says. ly triggered by rumors that five of 20 men suspended in the first field, where parts are made for 90 per cent of General Motors cars, led to shutdowns and lay- Saigon. The U.S. soldiers and two platoons of about 60 South Vietnamese soldiers were on OTTAWA (CP) --Ten serg- jeants of Governor-General Van- jier's regiment, Quebec City's |General Vanier appreciated Vanier Had Deep Feelings For Plight Of Handicapped OTTAWA (CP) -- Governor-|ties and his concern for thelr welfare was sympathetic and constant; his dignity and sine cerity at commemoration cere- monies for the fallen will long be remembered." Mr. Teillet described the late Governor-General as Canada's most outstanding veteran who served his country in peace and war with devotion and self-sac- rifice. fully the handicaps and achievements of his fellow vet- erans, Roger Teillet, veterans affairs minister, said Tuesday. "He knew from experience of the great personal sacrifices lemanded of so many of his comrades," the minister said in a statement. "His interest in their activi- | outpost duty and were badly |Royal 22nd, acted as pallbear- MGM Fight Won Mao Opponent | bloodied in the two-hour battle. : s for their f lonel dur- By Management | A U.S, spokesman said the S | dB A ine his state final slay, Amerieans had four dead, two! e1Ze: y my, Two acted as hat bearers in NEW YORK (AP) -- Manage-| wounded and one missing. A the mourning group for the man a of magal Fe Goldwyn-Mayer|couth Vietnamese spokesman} HONG KONG (AP) -- Morelwho helped ind vis regiment rae a orcas said the two government pla-|than 1,000 opponents to Mao|quring the First World War. th af : aki toons suffered "heavy casual-|Tse-tung, most of them factory|fight carried his coffin on its © DIE MOVIG-MAKINg COMPANY: | ties.' workers, were arrested by Com-|last trip from Parliament Hill The management slate of di-| The Viet Cong faded into the|munist army troops in the south|and into Notre Dame Basilica rectors was elected by a mar-|darkness when reinforcements|China city of Canton Monday/for the funeral service. gin of about 700,000 votes out of|came up, and their losses were|night, Hong Kong newspapers! The sergeants: the 4,485,400 shares represented./not known. But their force was|reported today. | Louis J. Toussaint, Edmunds- The result meant that Robertjraked by artillery fire and} Quoting travellers arriv-|ton, N.B., Romeo Gray, Lower H. O'Brien, who has been pres-| gunship helicopters. ing from Canton, the papers/Sapin, N.B., Roger Deschenes ident since 1963, will continue} In Wellington, Prime Minister|said many of those arrested /and Edward Tardif, Quebec to head the 43 - year - old film/Keith Holyoake announced that/were members of the "Aug. Ist|City, Paul E. Belanger and J. company. New Zealand will double its 150-|unit,' known as opponents of|Vaillancourt, Montreal, Roger He turned back the effort of/™an contingent in Vietnam.|Mao's purge. |Charest, Amqui, Que., Roland PRilip J. Levin, New Jersey Holyoake also said that a 15-| They said sur-|Sirois, Brakeville, Que., Yvon the troops man joint services medicaljrounded the headquarters of the|Theriault, Kamouraska, Que., land developer, to wrest control|team would also be. sent to of the firm. 13- YEAR - OLD USER PERSONAL PUSHERS NEWS HIGHLIGHTS U.S. Command Accepts Police Authority SAIGON (AP) -- The U.S. Command has assumed police authority -- but not legal jurisdiction -- over Amer- ican civilians in Vietnam, including newspaper men and civilians in private employ. An order to that effect to all military police authorities was disclosed today by the U.S, command, It was dated Feb. 9 and took effect Feb. 16, Chartered Airliner Cuts Swath Of Death KARACHI, Pakistan (Reuters) A chartered air- liner cut a swath of death through trucks and a rick- shaw when it plunged on to a bridge seconds after taking off from a civil airport here today, killing 11 persons. Four of the aircraft's crew members and seven persons travelling in vehicles on the road, including the driver and passenger of the rickshaw, were reported killed. Seal Hunters Reported Healthy HALIFAX (CP) -- About 50 seal hunters who spent last night on ice in the gulf of St. Lawrence apparently suffered ito ill effects despite snow, high winds and low temperatures. Ress E, Homans, area director for the fed- eral fisheries department, said in a telephone interview Negro Leaders Seen Cool To Merediths Candidacy -- NEW YORK (AP) -- Negro| Meredith, in agreeing to op-|week, had lost his influence and leaders reacted cooly today to|pose Powell after being recom-|the people deserve more than James H. Meredith's plans to}mended by Republican leaders,|what they're getting. run as the Republicans' choice}said Tuesday he was aware that; Meredith was recommended against Democrat Adam Clay-|in running he might lay himself|by members of the Republican ton Powell in a special congres-|open to 'the fear and the scorn|executive committee from the sional election April 11. They|from fellow Negroes." He said|18th district. His nomination is gave him little chance of win-/Powell, excluded from 'he|expected to be made at a meet- ning. House of Representatives last'ing of Harlam Republican county committeemen within a week. NO COMMENT Powell, who has won the 18th district of Harlem in 12 conse- cutive elections by wide mar- gins, had little comment 'when he learned of the announce- m ary alliance." land, Ont. ents. | "We'll wait and see," he said from his retreat in Bimini, the James Meredith left who broke the color line at the Uhiversity of Mississippi, announced in New York to- * day he would be a Repub- lican candidate against Ad- am Clayton Powell for the seat of U.S. representative from the Harlem district. (AP i 'Republicans will find many in Bahamas, Powell is taking court action in efforts to regain his seat, but plans to run again should litigation fail to settle the matter by April 11. Percy Sutton, Manhattan bo- rough president whose home political district is in Harlem, said he would support Powell. Sutton, a Democrat like most Harlem leaders, said in a state- ment: '""While Mr. Meredith has cer- tainly earned his credentials as a civil rights hero, I think the the Harlem community feel Mr Meredith is an outsider, se- lected by the Republicans and outsiders to be.imposed on the Harlem community." Rev. Roy Nichols, pastor of the Salem Methodist Church, said Meredith "is unprepared and not indegenous to the Har- lem community." LSD Use Alarms BC Schools from Cap aux Meules'in the Magdalen Islands that a de- VANCOUVER (CP) -- Par- ents, police and school officials are expressing concern over growing use of _ hallucinatory drugs among high school chil- dren in British Columbia. The conviction of an Okana- gan student for selling LSD re- sulted in a flurry of. official statements indicating "acid" parties were taking place below the university level, previously the focal point. : Sergeant Don heads Vancouver police youth detail, reported that LSD had touched the minds of at least 30 students in four Vancouver high schools, some of the users as young as 13 years. His statement followed the conviction and suspended sen- tence of the 16-year-old Oliver High School boy under the fed- eral Fpod and Drug Act for sup- Bellamy, who td plying LSD obtained from Van- couver through the mail to six students. In Victoria, Police Chief John Gregory said' he planned to press for legislation controlling the use of hallucinatory drugs following the arrest of four youths who appeared "high" on a drug. Attorney-General Robert Bon- ner, who "previously thought it (LSD) was mainly used by cer- tain sub-culture groups such as beatniks,"' called for stricter controls from the federal gov- ernment, The Vancouver school board has a three-pronged plan to bat- tle any spread of mind-boggling drugs through city schools. The plan involves.distribution of pamphlets «describing drug dangers through classrooms, immediate preparation by med« ical officers of material for newspaper and radio publicity and meetings for parents and students. Sgt. Bellamy said police first learned of a growing LSD cul- ture in schools when parents called asking that sources of the drug be cut off. "This is spreading so fast IT am very concerned," he said. But police hands are tied bya lack of legislation, he said, which now allows prosecutions under the Food and Drug. Act Such prosecutions are difficult when students refuse to identify their suppliers Current legislation does not make it illegal to possess or use LSD "We should make those in au- thority aware that it is getting to the teen-age set,"' said Sgt. Bellamy. fe partment helicopte. stranded Tuesday when at | Ann. Landers--14 Ajax News--5 City News--13 Classified--24, 25, 26 Comics---28 Editorial--4 Finoncial--23 .. In THE TIMES Today .. Plans Revealed For $10,000,000 Project--P, 13 Leeman Sets Pace in Fronts' Victory--P. 8 picked up 17 of the men who were east nine planes were dam- aged in a variety of landing accidents on the ice. aut rmmm neta Dickering News-8 Sports--8, 9, 10 Television--28 Theatres--19 Weather--z2Z Whitby News--5 Women's--14, 18, 16