Weather Report Sunny, few cloudy periods. Milder today. Low tonight 40; high tomorrow 55. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario. and Durham Counties, Ghe Oshawa Times -- Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash JET CAREENS INTO MOTEL; 18 DIE IN FLAMING CRASH oi ae | Nine School Girls Perish, nation that encourage '| See §=6HuddledInCharred Room VOL. 96 -- NO. 74 10e Single Cop BSe Per Week Home OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1967 TWENTY-SIX PAGES elivered 41ST HONORARY DEGREE PM Talks Of Dream For Humans, Housing CALGARY (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson Wednesday de- scribed his "dream" for com- munity development as one with human qualities as well as hous- ing, and said Ottawa is consid- ering ways to help make it come true. He called for '"'development of neighborhood centres . . . which linquency, other social evils," | : ' | The federal government was| ; ; considering a '"'more effective role' in programs to reduce] | land costs for housing and com- munity development. He said more federal aid may be needed for community planning studies. | Mr. Pearson spoke of a} "growing body of opinion" that federal aid in community devel- opment should no longer concen- trate on housing to the exclusion of "open spaces and transporta- tion corridors." Later, he received the first honorary degree of doctor of the University of Calgary. The degree --the prime minister's 41st honorary one--also went to NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- Alwhere those eight ids were Delta Air Lines DC-8 jet on ajstaying. That's what killed training flight careered into ajthem. Not the impact from the luxury motel opposite New Or-/ wreckage. leans International Airport) "There were eight girls in early today and exploded. Nine|four rooms. You could see high school girls from Juda,|where they took refuge in the Wis., were among the 18 per-|shower stalls. One girl even sons killed in the flaming crash. |took her purse with her. The girls were on a senior} 'They turned on. the water, class outing, part of a group of | but it didn't do them any good." |32 from Juda high school who a - |had been in New Orleans since |HEAT BLOCKS ACCESS |Monday and were scheduled to! Most guests fled the flery |leave today. Eight of the dead/Scene in panic, many in their |girls were found huddled to-|Mightclothes. Some charred gether in a charred bathroom | eos ene ofthe haat for | ' of the motel. The body of the|"0Urs because of the heat. ye bere persons. erie ; ; : ninth was blown outside. We saw a real bright light," student civil liberties grow : | Five pilots and a federal in-|Said Doug Baer, 16, of Park from the university handed a |spector were on board the big|Forest, Ill. "I opened the door es Cust cat ant of han |jet, which sliced through two|@"d saw all those flames. We tices" in the handling of cases houses before plunging into the |Just ran. There was a series of involving three. members of the fee Sauer Gt highway |r girs eh eyitee ere "in ¢ ' senhue ix were| lhe girls were hyster San Francisco Mime Troupe. litle. ea a a! mr? | screaming and some throwing The petition said ball of $2,500 | a each was excessive for two JET BLOWS APART The plane--the oldest DC-8 in members of the tire company; The cartwheeling jet spilledjuse by the airline--had' been Geant jerome: st ings and |fuel as it skidded down a rail- | airborne only nine minutes be- How ee Das we ad jway track behind the motel,|fore the crash occurred. It had me cas ' |blistering the area. It blewj|arrived shortly before with pase (a japart when it hit the motel,|sengers from Chicago. The Fe eee denay Me scattering wreckage for a hun-|night was balmy with an almost i B°e5 ie Min L dred yards. The nose of the/full moon. ae ee jcraft. remained buried in the! One witness said: "The plane court last week because he had : ee : ; i : : ee building. Was covered in. flames like s been held by immigration offi- 4 is is |, rhe surviving students, many ball of fire." co ted by im \hysterical or in a daze, were, The jet smashed two houses : \placed under sedation by doc-\before striking the motel. ; baw ---- wore nay m ge Wreckage of the plane was shorts, others were dress in|scattered in small pi Garrison Man \blankets. cen + oils athe, he PP gt : cig age Marvin Leonard | part visible was an engine cow- : said, '"The plane spewed a sea|ling resting on the railway Said In Canada : OA [ot fuel sieht to thos aie | NEW ORLEANS, Ta. (AP)--| | ordon Novel, tl issing. wit-| | ; ' : : vr 4 ec a, ne a ee aN a U.S. Seen Much Interested uarantee Ua age Garrison's investigation of the : : : 2 1963 Kennedy assassination, is| | Ly 1 f p | Hardiy Noticed (S| In Canadian Army 'Drone opos ar y 0 1ceé OTTAWA (CP) -- The keenly|to August whether they intend of fuel right to those rooms|track. States-Item says. | States army is reported keen] i i ¥ will be estab- y P nly|to buy the Canadian CF-5 jet PM RECEIVES DEGREE - » + Honors In Calgary The newspaper, quoting 'a responsible source," says prep- arations are under way to seek Sie Sturt, y jinterested in acquisition of a | fighter-bomber. The CF-5 is an : | Canadian - developed battlefield/improved version of the Ameri- A lawyer for Novel said he i] i | J el : / jsurveillance drone for use in/can Northrop F-5. would ask the Louisiana Su- 8 : cs = /Vietnam. -- | The Netherlands announced The radio-controlled, camera-| reh 1 it will buy 105 CF-5s, ase equipped robot, which cost}. embled by "Canadair Ltd., preme Court to dismiss a: war- gram for a guaranteed annual/quire a great deal of study be- rant for his client's arrest as more than $35,000,000 to develop, | Montreal, for about $150,000,000. minimum income for all Cana- i a material witness in the case. dians. ke inphmenied in' Gera | eg ae District Judge Ed- goes into production this year/The Canadian government is ac- Almost unnoticed, Welfare|try." lied es Mpge ye wd de- for the Canadian Anmy for $6,-| quiring $215,000,000 worth of the Minister MacEachen, with the To | a motion by the lawyer to |600,000. planes for the RCAF. PLAN IMPLEMENTED Britain and West Germany| j | Informants said that if Bel- : "el |quash the warrant for Novel approval of Prime Minister ihe | > conti . Fearon The principle of guaranteed| Haggerty continued Novel's jwere brought into the develop-| |ment program and their produc-|Sium and Denmark buy there has been discussing) *" . Fey minimum income has already|bond at $50,000, but indicated WHO S CHICKEN? tion runs combined will amount pal eal oe ae the J i such rogram 2 : eg rAd be lmsleenied. 8 been implemented for at least|e might lower it if Novel re- : ne group of Canadians--the|'urns to the court's jurisdiction. to about $30,000,000. | NOT WAITRESS! Informants say U.S, interest) As much as 40 per cent in WINDSOR, Ont. ; ' 0 On Jan, (39 ala eh aged. The minimum is' $105 a| Garrison seeks. Novel's arrest Mr. feng age le . rie as month or $1,260 a year. as a material witness in his in- in the drone is only one example| value of the Canadian CF-5 pro- ment in reply to an opp Mr. MacEachen says: cppis | Westigation. Novel, 29, sold his (CP) --Jof increased attention being paid/gram is being sub-contracted to A heavy - set man walked |py foreign countries to Canadian|American firms, especially up to waitress Donna Crow- ley at La Poulette Take- nity', Leda is warming the kristka, or wax-writing im- question which indicated that ah a : |French Quarter tavern and left i " wi s | artes "pie e Oe ee i will eve us information whichitown last week just before a weapons. |Northrop. About one-third of the ae | Belgium is expected to indi-|Netherlands program will also : : Out Restaurant Wednesday ble tor the general population.""|ONeans parish grand jury. | UNITED NATIONS (CP) --\by the intemational commis (Thant, said Wednesday he fe aight. Payments under a guaran- Novel has repeatedly called|Canada Wednesday informed|sion in achieving the objectives) ceive r etnam's Escape Trial would be based on a single cri- fraud leral U Thant that, as a mem-|be fully prepared to use what-| But the spokesman declined ': Commission, it is ready to aid/virtue of our membership in|Wanoi's response or say pre- they could be made without sub- Fl h s |; ; po | 'sation. ; mx ; i re elgnntt at e s if eace|that organization. } , vas -eived. VIENNA (CP-AP)--Two Ca jecting recipients to various as er, ign ltrs. latest Vietnam p | MMeERG Ne" a epokSsman' for cisely when it was received scuffle of hockey fans with po- | | general's proposals of March SAIGON (CP)--Two rockets West Germany, it was learned i fill Py : today. ecient fhe PU NEOMe Ie. AMILTON (CP) -- A cor-|tin said his government wel-| [fell short Tuesday and ripped Ss, whether or not they oner's jury Wednesday recom-|comed Thant's efforts and} \through a South Vietnamese have made impossible their & J 3 t ew ea MacEachen says. Le " iniuri 9 rs US : se jequipped with driver - operated) '"'I need jand injuring 20 others, a U.S. police unless they should return) to Austria for a stay of longer|income from all sources were! ers. japentne to the text of the pro-jcans and more Communists! 'The spokesman said the heli-| 6 ; The jury was investigating the;posals you | e iring J , W h mum, he would automatically death eh, 22 of Diane Susan|North Vietnam and the United/any week of the Vietnam war, copter was firing at Viet Cong as ington be entitled to supplementary Whitewell, 7, of Binbrook, a{States, and it is our hope that|U.S. military headquarters an- ¢ S { Ngai province when the mishap ' Mr. MacEachen, in a Septem-/of here. jyour action may be positive, in| The U.S. command said 274| occurred. Money For Bingo ber speech: at Summerside,| Jurors found her death was|Whole or even in part. |U.S. servicemen died in com- NEW YORK (AP)--Union of- TORONTO (CP) -- A 36-year-lhe said might be considered in{failure {0 stop his car behind|cerned, 1 should iike to confitm record. of 240 killed in' Novem. (stuck @ fuel storage tank in|ctals and executives of the four 3 4 sidered injfailure to stop his car behind|cerned, I should like the village and turned it into a|/ Major U.S. television and radio | nt Peace Effort help us to determine second subpoena was issued for In Tha whether such a policy is feasi-|him to appear before the New| cate by mid-April and Denmark'go to the U.S, s | Two Canadians 'canada W ving : Give to ae teed annual income program "alUnited Nations Secretary-Gen-|we all have in mind, we would|reply to his peace plan. | terion: a person's income. And ----------|ber of the International ie anlar influence we command by/to disclose the substance of nadians who were involved in @|kinds of mea: h dL etn: shies can Replying to the secretary-| aa oe lice here now are in Munich, ' reigned reese aude | U 9 d 0 B . . |be avoided quite simply by hav- r e n US |14, Foreign Minister Paul Mar-} Viet Casualties son an American helicopter By their departure, the two : i mye laxable incomes, Mr. | mended that all school buses be added: village, killing three civilians trial on charges of assaulting)" : | hardly assure you) Then, if the person's 8085 | side-arm stop signs with flash-|that we have given the closest} SAIGON (AP)--More Ameri-|spokesman said today. than three days. less than the guaranteed mini-| have presented to|were killed last week than in . positions in northern Quang Housewife Needed payments." |community about 10 miles south|the response of both sides to|nounced today. Enters Strike The two rockets apparently; P.E.I., listed some approaches|caused by motorist John Goit's e old suburban housewife doub-|implementing a guaranteed in-|the bus, which had its safety|that if it were to appear that|ber, 1965, during the battle of lnetworke have been summoned ling as a prostitute in the after-|come plan for all. lights flashing at the time. la useful role could be playedithe Ia Drang Valley. to Washington Saturday by fed- noons was fined $100 Wednes- iators in efforts to set- 'ASHYUH' BECOMES 'AYESIA'... A OTTAWA (CP)--It now is be-|comes for all ing taken almost for granted|lished. | here that the government in-| He said: "The broader as-| tends--not this year or next but|nects of the matter are- still un- eventually--to introduce a pro-ider consideration and will re- ROR sereeat LEDA LEARNS TRADITIONS EARLY April 30. Having circled her egg with the 'band of eter- plement in the candle flame. (See story on Page 15.) her hand at decorating an egg in the Ukrainian tradi- tion in readiness for Greek Orthodox Easter Sunday, Six-year-old Leda Ostafi- chuk, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Nicholas Ostafichuk, John Street, Oshawa, tries --Oshawa Times Photo me id he Hn Oem ' ' * * ' id n TOTP PRP Garrison's investigation ---- monstrous fraud." 77 NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Miss Crowley quickly 11 Appeals By Automakers Rejected handed him a bucket of fried chicken. What else? "Not that,' said the man, brandishing a revolver. "I walt all' your large bills. WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. traffic safety agency rejected today 11 of the appeals by 38 auto manufacturers for changes and deletions in the initial federal motor vehicle safety standards. The agency did, however, grant a public hearing on the industry's objections to one key "You must be kidding," the 19 - year-old waitress standard, providing for interior impact protection in the event of accidents. said. | Logexpo Deposits Safe, Says Johnson Maybe he was. Speech- less, he fled from the res- taurant. QUEBEC (CP) -- Premier Daniel Johnson said Wednes- day that world's fair visitors who used facilities of the province and Logexpo to secure Expo 67 lodging in Montreal are not in danger of losing their deposits. He made the pledge and after Wednesday's session of the Quebec legis- lature while discussing reports of alleged irregularities in Logexpo, the world's fair housing service. Track Selected For Transit Test TORONTO (CP) -- A 35-mile stretch of track in the Fort Erie area has been selected as a testing site for the On- mass of flames. ... AND SPRING'S AUTUMN: day after she pleaded guilty to a a p Asie of siroateratiche. . tle a strike against the net- Why did she do it?, the of- | works. There appeared to be little ficer arresting the woman had asked her. "T just wanted a little extra money to play bingo and bet on the races." See Page 18 Today's Times for Special Want Ad Week Offer. It's A Long, Long, Long Distance Call OTTAWA (CP)--What's it like to listen in on a telephone con- versation linking London, Ot- tawa, Melbourne and Kuala Lumpur? It's fun, but it's also confus- ing. Day is night. Spring. is autumn, And Ashyuh becomes Ayesia. Such was the conversation car- ried early today at the official opening of a 23,000-mile tele- phone cable linking Britain and and Canada with Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Ma- laysia, and Hong Kong. It is a $250,000,000 project en- tirely designed, built and paid for by Commonwealth countries --including cotton tape wrap- ping the cable manufactured in Beaconsfield, Que. The Queen opened the cable with a recorded address from London after the Royal Aus- tralian Navy eastern area band played the Royal Anthem in Melbourne. Her well-rounded "best wishes to you all,' in the best of the Queen's English, was followed by John McEwen, acting prime minister of Australia, whose ac- cent marked the breadth of the globe with his references to *Ayesia," Austrayelia,"' and "lo- daye." Then Tunku Abdul Rahman, prime minister of Malaysia, came on the line with his soft Asian voice with overtones of an English school training. Fol- lowered by the more Oriental lilt of Toh Chin Chye, acting prime minister of Singapore. Trade Minister Winters, acting prime minister of Canada for the occasion, lent his Lunen- burg, N.S., accent to the occa- sion to thank the other leaders for their good wishes on Can- ada's centennial and invite them all to Expo 67, He noted the Peace Tower clock was striking midnight here while the Australian Ban played its mid-afternoon fanfare and Herbert Bowden, British Com- monwealth secretary, spoke at 5 a.m. from his home in Surrey, England. Mr. Winters thought it sur- prising that there was little more than a fifth of a second lag in time between a person's voice going into a telephone in Surrey and emerging from an ear-piece in Kuala Lumpur. "We live in a global village," be said. likelihood of a settlement be- fore then. Affected are NBC, ABC and the Mutual Broadcast- ling System. | Chet Huntley, defying a strike) by the 18,000 - member Ameri-| can Federation of Television | = and Radio Artists, went it alone} = Wednesday on his evening news report for NBC. Davie Brinkley, the other half} of the NBC news team, stayed] away from his microphone in Washington. He refused to cross a picket line. The strike over wages and commercial fees, ithe first na- tional one in AFTRA's history, | = was called at 5 a.m. EST Wed-|= nesday in behalf of about 100 local on - the - air newscasters | = whose minimums currently ex-) = ceed $11,000 a year. i tario vice. The service, known government's new high-speed commuter_train ser- as GO Transit, is to go into operation on the Pickering-Hamilton run May 23. .. In THE TIMES Today .. Oldest Church In City Will Close--P, 13 Oshawa Midgets Third Game Of Finals--P. 8 Vimy Developed Canada As Nation--P. 4 Ann Landers--14 Ajax News--5, 6 City News--13 Classified --22 to 25 Comics--20 Editorial--4 Financial--21 Obituaries--25 Pickering News--5, 6 Sports--8, 9 Televisi Theatres-- Weather--2 Whitby News--5, 6 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17