Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, . Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont ario and Durham Counties, Weather Report Cloudy with few sunny inter- vals. Cooler Friday, Low to- night 35; high Friday 45, She Oshawa Fimes VOL. 98 -- NO. 80 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1967 10 Sinole. Copy horlzed es Sécor oss Mail Po ice Deper 85e Per Week Home Delivered Author iked ge Sécopd Gloss Mall Post Office. Bapartment Ottawa and for poyment of Postage In Cash TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES nH LLAS BLOWERS "COOK OUT" CONG GUER QUEBEC STUDENTS VISIT OSHAWA A high school student cap- tured on film a hectic scene of joy and confusion, as 40 Oshawa and Rosemere (Quebec) high school stu- dents converged on Osh- awa's train station yester- day. They are beginning the second half of their centen- nial student-exchange pro- ject. Oshawa students from five high schools visited their Rosemere counterparts in early March and now the By PETER ARNETT LAI THIEU, South Vietnam (AP) -- Powerful blowers that "cook out'? Viet Cong guerrillas with blasts of air heated to 1,000 degrees are being used by U.S. 1st Division troops in the Thuan Giao jungle 10 miles north of Saigon. The hot air technique ulilizes the 30 - pound "mighty mite" blowers used normally in fore- ing tear gas into Viet Cong tunnels. The air is heated by a power generator working off a battery, and forced iinto a tun- nel entrance. The device is being used by a force headed by Lt.-Col. Robert Schweitzer of Chicago, who said the hot air technique is applied gradually to tunnels where Viet Cong are bélieved hiding. The tunnel inhabitants are warned by loudspeaker, American "tunnel rats'? can explore. the tunnels soon after- ward because they cool quickly. When gas is used, tunnels are contaminated for days. FIND DOCUMENTS The jungle area east of Lal Thieu is believed to be the base camp of a Viet Cong district company. FOR CENTENNIAL Oshawa and Toronto. The French - Canadian students will attend regular classes with Oshawa students dur- ing their stay in the city. Quebec students are return- ing the visit. The students will be addressed by Mayor Ernest Marks during their stay in Oshawa ahd will also attend various social and educational functions in --Oshawa Times Photo Air Pollution Bill Gets First Reading TORONTO (CP) --The legis- lature gave first reading Wed- nesday to a bill that would give the government the power to police all sources of air pollu- tion in Ontario, including auto- mobile exhausts. The bill, introduced by Health Minister Matthew Dymond, amends the Air Pollution Con- left most other sources under municipal control. Dr. Dymond said only four municipalities employed a full- time staff for air pollution con- trol although 26 passed by-laws under the act, Three municipal- ities continued to operate under provisions of the municipal act that has been repealed. Nurse Faces Stiff Quiz, Speck Case PEORIA, Ml. (AP) -- Publi absorbed by the provincial structure. { "All matters of trans-boundry | + flow of air pollution between the United States and Canada are referred to the Interna- tional Joint Commission," Dr. Dymond said. "A member of my staff serves on the advisory, board for the new air pollution an attempt to destroy Corazo Amurao's identification of th of eight nurses. his defence of Richard Speck én 25-year-old seaman as the killer "PRESS RAPPED - | Brief Backs | Strike | PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- |Strikes are a necessary and de: jOntario labor disputes at hear: ing today. The brief was presented hourly - rated employees of Ca nadian General Electric Co here, any democratic system." Clress. for 524 business agent. M!/Peter How, the local's €/dent, presented the brief. -|"visit Parliament Buildings and |sirable feature of collective bar-|present some 20,000 petitions to igaining, a labor union said in|government officials protesting a brief to the Rand inquiry into|the use of injunctions in labor -|disputes and calling for an end to areas former Supreme Court justice Ivan Rand by Local 524, United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers, which represents 3,200) The union said the right to strike "'is a cardinal right in The union blamed the "com-|of the big, Moose Jaw-born po- mercial press" for distortion of/liceman to the new job. Miss Amurao, 24, a@ nurse|jabor events, with an emphasis reference, covering the Sarnia-|from the Philippines, f2c¢e8/on real or imaginary violence. Right jopened in Toronto today, would} to this practice." Ombudsman |Role Seen | For McClellan OTTAWA (CP)--RCMP Com- The union feels that without)missioner George B. McClellan, this final right to wihhold labor |58, due to retire late this sum- there world be little or no prog-|mer from his $24,840-a-year job, @ industrial worker,|may become Canada's first om- efender Gerald Getty is basing|saig Willlam Woodbeck, Local|budsman by autumn. He and) Reports'from Alberta said the| Presi-/ provincial government will an- MISCHA ELMAN . . . Ukraine-Born | nounce shortly the appointment| | Violinist, Dies Meanwhile, the federal gov- ernment confirmed that Com-| x night bombed North Vietnam's| nounced 5 |South, The weekly Mischa Elman, | NEW YORK (AP)--After 70|f; Amba Mgnt on Night Jets Attack Hanoi Area Plant Heavy Groundfire Greets 'Carrier-based U.S. Planes | | however, and U.S, pilots flew only 67 missions. The U.S. command also an- that American troop most modern power station only |strength in South Vietnam rose |20 miles from Hanoi. |by 10,000 men last week to 435,- | Returning pilots reported the /000. It was the largest increase Communist ground fire was sojin many months, but a spokese heavy it lit up low-hanging|man said it resulted from the clouds and the jets as they/arrival of numerous small units, made their bomb runs. {mostly logistic support units The new raids on the Hanoi-|and some aviation companies. Haiphong area paralleled inten-| Ground action was reported sified ground fighting in the|in all the sensitive battle zones casualty re-|of South Vietnam--the 17th par- 194 Americansjallel border area, the central week, 1,679|highlands, Communist War |were wounded, and allied|Zone C near Cambodia and in SAIGON (AP) --All-weather (the North, jets from the nuclear-powered carrier Enterprise Wednesday jport showed jwere killed last : \forces killed 2,373 Communist|the Mekong Delta. All reflected troops. \the fleeting, will - 0 - the - wisp Many of the American cas-\character of the war with no jualties resulted from intensified|large battles but plenty of ac- mortar attacks and Viet Cong|tion. gunners scored again today| Communist troops unleashed with a barrage in the Tay Ninh\a series of attacks around the jungles that wounded 38 U.S.|provincial capital of Quang Tri infantrymen. \just south of the 17th parallel The power plant raided was\early today, blowing up trucks \the thermal station at Bacland freeing a number of pris- Giang, rated the newest power|oners of war. station in North Vietnam. It was} Most of the posts hit were the seventh time it has been hit|South Vietnamese but two U.S. since it was cleared for bomb-/obs¢rvation planes were badly ing by Washington Feb, 24. shot up at one airstrip. No U.S. losses were reported.| South Korean troops killed 78 Other Enterprise jets struck / Viet Cong soldiers and captured river traffic only 15 miles from /|33 in fighting along the central aiphong. jooast, a Korean spokesman re- Bad weather continued over!ported. UAW Challenges The AFL - CIO ABSORB AGENCIES Existing municipal air pollu- tion control agencies will be Windsor area. . . |cross-examination by Getty on) The new legislation will en-|her account of how the nurses | EVEN SCHOOLS BIASED missioner McClellan will retire/\ischa Elman told an_ inter. able the province to deal with|Wwere slain. |, 'The oe ees ---- : as soon as the pressure of|viewer: "I don't have the right| the problem of automobile ex-| The young woman testified| 'rade reer traea tet. al.|World's fair duties is over. [to let my admirers down, And! hausts. |for four hours Wednesday. She Canadian wea i of a ee Whe commie er himself is/S° 1, Practice every day. It is Phase one of the program will/sobbed twice but otherwise her|™0st automatically in word as- ; segs '|the duty of every artist to do cover Metropolitan Toronto,|face was expressionless. sociation strikes and mass pick-|vacationing in the Caribbean at). : [Peel County,' Hamilton and] wer yoice was mostly calm eting are equated to acts of vio-/Montserrat and could not be|"',, trol Act that since 1963 allowed the province to control indus- trial sources of air pollution but First Cousin Of Queen ears as a master of the violin, Wednesday--the day he died Earl Of Harewood Divorced' LONDON (Reuters) -- The Earl of Harewood, first cousin of the Queen, was divorced by his wife today because of audul- tery with an Australian model. "Harewood, 44, did not defend the action. The model, Patricia Tuckwell, has a two-year-old son by Hare- wood, The peer, 18th in line of suc- cession to the throne, has said he will marry Miss Tuckwell, who is 38. | Countess Harewood, a former Viennese pianist, is 39, They have been married 17 years. The countess was given cus- tody of their three sons. Harewood was formerly a di- * |because of the church's disap- ' ee HERBERT J. YOUNG, 35, president of a savings and loan association, tells reporters today how his 11- year-old son, Kenneth, was freed by kidnapers in Santa Monica, Calif., after $250,000 ransom was paid. The boy was taken from his Beverly Hills home early Monday. (AP Wirephoto) rector of the Royal Opera House and of the Edinburgh Music Festival. He founded and edited the magazine Opera. Miss Tuckwell and Harewood met at a concert in Australia. She has a 16-year-old son by a former marriage. The earl is the son of the late Princess Mary, the only daugh- ter of King George V, and the sixth Earl of Harewood. NEEDS QUEEN'S CONSENT The divorce, first in modern times for a member of the royal family creates an awkward sit- uation for the Queen. A defender of the faith and nominal head of the Church of England, the Queen must disapprove of di- vorce, And since Harewood is in the line of succession, although remotely, the Royal Marriages Act of 1772 requires him to seek the sovereign's consent to marry. But the act also provides that since he is over 25, he can marry despite royal disapproval after giving a year's notice to the privy council. Whatever attitude the Queen takes, Harewood would find it difficult to remarry in church proval of divorced persons re- marrying. A civil ceremony is considered the most likely solu- tion. London--the four centres that now employ a full-time control staff. |as she told of the night in which jher eight roommates were |/strangled and stabbed on the Phase two will take in Osh-|couth side of Chicago. awa, Ottawa, Windsor and St.| Catharines--centres that have} either a part-time staff or have indicated a strong interest in air pollution. Kitchener, Water- loo, Galt, Guelph and Halton County would be covered by phase three. Successor Named For Ailing PM KINGSTON, Jamaica (Reut- ers)--External Affairs Minister) Hugh Shearer was named Wed-| nesday night by the ruling La-) bor party as prime minister succeeding Donald Sangster who is critically ill in Montreal. The confrontation between the survivor of the July 14 mass killing and Speck in the murder trial came after prosecutor 'Wil- liam Martin asked: "Did you wake up at any time Wednes- day night, July 13?" HEARD KNOCKS "T heard a knock in our bed- room," the witness said, 'It was about four knocks. ... I went to the door and I unlocked it and I started to open it and at once there's someone pushing the door. "T saw a man." At this point the four-foot-10, black - haired nurse cried, lence."" | The brief said a 1966 strike jat Tilco Plastics Ltd. here was jan illustration of the 'misuse of injunctions and the judicial sys- tem by employers as strike breaking instruments." ers, mostly teen-age girls and women, was the scene of mass demonstrations Feb. 23-24 last year against the use of injunc- tions in labor disputes. Several Local 524 workers were among 25 union members who served jail terms as a result of the demonstrations. An ex-parte injunction, ban- ning all picketing, was granted the company at the outset of the strike, giving management an opportunity to recruit strike breakers, the brief said. A sub- Shearer, recalled from Mont- real where he was at Sangster's bedside, met party executives and reported to Governor-Gen-| eral Sir Clifford Campbell. | Sangster, suffering from a brain hemorrhage, was given no chance of survival by his) doctors. Shearer, 43, became external affairs minister in February, when Sangster succeeded Sir Alexander Bustamante. Observers said he was one of the most powerful men in the labor movement in Jamaica) and was often thought to prefer| his work in the labor unions to} politics. | McNally Charged $300,000 Theft TORONTO (CP) Mining promoter T. Harold McNally will appear April 11 on three charges of stealing more than $300,000 from treasuries of three mining companies of which he was president. McNally was freed on $10,000 bail after an appearance in ma- gistrate's court late Tuesday following his arrest which came after investigators for the On- tario Securities Commission seized company records last Friday. quent injunction limited pick- ets to 12 at any one time out- side the plant. WRONGLY USED Injunctions were never in- tended for use in labor disputes, the brief said. "Their purpose in law is in- jtended to maintain the status quo until a judgment of a point of law can be determined. "The introduction of injune- The Tilco strike by 35 work- [reached for comment. |--the 76-year-old man who had | The $20,000 - a - year Alberta/pjayed more than 5,000 concerts| post involves hearing public|;ehearsed for the customary| complaints about administra-|three hours. Late in the after-| tive rather than criminal injus-|no9n Elman, stricken with a| itices. |heart attack, called to his wife Prime Minister Pearson told|that he was unable to breathe. the Commons a decision is due|She summoned.a doctor, but at- shortly on whether to appoint a\tempts to revive Elman with federal ombudsman. joxygen were fruitless. Berlin Has Tight Security 'On Humphrey's Short Visit 11 arrested, said today that his| BERLIN (Reuters) --Vice- President Hubert Humphrey flew to this enclave city today|He said they use no explosive after police foiled a bomb plot| material in the bombs and did against him. jnot plot against Humphrey's Intense security was ordered |life. for .Humphrey's 20-hour visit} Authorities said the alleged after the arrest Wednesday | plotters also planned assaults night of 11 persons, members of|with "'other dangerous instru- a pro-Communist group, sus-|ments such as stones and so pected of planning a bomb at-|on.'"' But they declined to la- tack on the American states-jbel the plot an association at- |man. tempt. | Police later released three jgirls among the. 11. A police |spokesman said it could not be |NOT BOTHERED | Humphrey, dining in Bonn |with West German Chancellor| tions into labor disputes has cut|proved with certainty that they a wide swath of injustice|took an active part in the plot. through the trade unions, and) Police said they found parts has been particularly devastat-|of bombs, plastic bags filled ing, as in Tilco were a small|with an unidentified chemical, group of workers was in-|stones and other missiles in the volved." |homes of members of the stu- Mr. Woodbeck said the UE's dent organization. Canadian convention, which| Horst Mahler, lawyer for the} urt Georg Kiesinger when the news broke, was not de- terred. "There will be no change whatsoever in the vice-presi- dent's program," a U.S. em- bassy spokesman in Bonn said.| Humphrey, on a "'listen and learn" tour of European capi- BEVERLY HILLS FINANCIER TELLS STORY tals for President Johnson, was BOY BOUND AND GAGGED veces ozs round wet Dad Pays Ransom, Gets Son Back BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)--A Beverly Hills financier described today how his 1l- year-old son was kidnapped and returned unharmed after a large ransom was paid. Herbert J. Young, 35, presi- dent of Gibraltar Savings and Loan Association, said $250,000 ransom was asked for his son Kenneth, but he did not disclose the amount paid. Kenneth was bound and blind- folded early today in a car parked in an apartment house garage in nearby Santa Monica, After obeying instructions to wait for a half-hour, he worked loose and ran to the nearest apartment to call his parents. He had been missing since early Monday. The FBI said the kidnappers picked up the ransom Wednes- day in Westwood, a few miles from Beverly Hills, and were at large. When he was greeted by the FBI and his family at the apartment, "Kenny was. very calm, not hysterical or crying," Young said. As Kenneth was examined by a doctor and put to bed in the lavish Young home in a fashion- able neighborhood, his father described the abduction and the ransom payment. Police theorized that Kenneth was kidnapped as he slept by someone who knew that an out- side staircase on the large white house led to a glass door near the boy's bedroom. A maid discovered Kenneth's empty bed Monday morning and took Young a note she found warning him not to call the police and describing how to turn over $250,000 for the boy's return, "As soon as we read that note, my wife and I agreed that the thing to do was to call the police immediately,"' Young re- called. The family and authori- ties maintained the secret while scores of policemen and FBI agents went to work. "I had half a dozen phone calls Monday but the party at the other end never spoke to me," he said, "Last night I did as the letter said and drove to the phone booth. The call came at 6 p.m. and the man said, 'are you Herbert?' jcome in the divided city. | While the alleged plotters) jwere being arrested Wednes-| day, about 50 students planning} anti - American demonstrations | attacked a police car in West, Berlin. Police arrested two persons when the shouting Famed Columnist Cassandra Dies LONDON (CP) -- Sir William Connor, 57, whose acid writing) as the columnist Cassandra won /him. a knighthood, died in his jsleep Wednesday night after jfracturing his skull in a_ fall He had jnearly a month ago, ese in St. Bartholomew's Hos- pital since the accident. On Big Organizing Campaign DETROIT (AP) -- The United|ment in social movements such Auto Workers Union, demand-|as social rights. ing 'a labor movement that) The call for an organizing moves," is challenging the|campaign, in which the UAW AFL-CIO to inaugurate a six-/put $1,500,000 on' the line as an year national organizing cam-|"advance payment" on its part, paign costing $87,000,000. jcame Wednesday in a_ 6,000- Q yaw |Word administrative letter te The 1,400,000 - member UAW LAW: local aimibns. has made a massive organizing} Capping long - standing dif. campaign part of the price it/ferences between its president, requires to remain a federation| Walter P. Reuther, and AFI member. CIO President George Meany, a |UAW convention opening Apri} It also has demanded recon-|22 is expected to give the un- struction of the AFL-CIO hier-|ion's 26 - member international archy, more help for unions|executive board authority to struggling to gain a foothold,|pull out of the federation if and and greater federation involve-iwhen it chooses. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS | | RC Bishops Look At Civil Divorce Laws | OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's Roman Catholic bishops to- | | | clients only make smoke bombs. | day withdrew their long-standing opposition to a widening of civil divorce laws, but at the same time urged establish- ment of government agencies that would attempt to recon- cile couples bound for the divorce courts. Communists Stage Forceful Jail Break SAIGON (AP) -- Communist troops smashed at U.S. and South Vietnamese military positions and staged a jailbreak today at Quang Tri, a provincial capital 16 miles south of the demilitarized zone separating North and South Viet- nam, Hull's Playing Status Still In Doubt CHICAGO (CP) -- The playing status of Bobby Hull of Chicago Black Hawks was still in doubt today, a few hours before the Hawks were scheduled to meet Toronto Maple Leafs in the first game of the Stanley Cup hockey semi- finals, UN, it 4 | In THE TIMES Today .. Auto Museum Film Made $60,000--P. 13 All Round Hussle Gives Oshawa Win--P. 8 Ann Landers--14 Ajax News--5,6 City News--13 Classified --22,23,24 Comics--18 Comics--18 Editorial--4 Financial--26 Obituaries--25 Pickering ..ews--5,6 Sports--8,9,10,12 Television--18 Theatres---20 Weather--2 Whitby News--5,6 Women's--14,15,16,17 remit ¢