THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, June 12, 1967 3 Expo Sky Ride Halted; eeded Aid For Arabs W (Reuters)--The So- NASSER QUIT AS MARTYR TO RETURN HERO By ARTHUR GAVSHON who, in the light of Israel's vic- immediately the outcome of the Nasser told Egyptians what Yet the consensus among munist party newspa- da warns Communist will give Arab states sary material aid" to ression. atator Yury Zhukov iid will be given to en- Arab countries "to de- national independence rial integrity."' arks were the clearest given here that the ion is planning to help states restore their nachines, shattered , week's Middle East LONDON (AP)--Western dip- lomats suspect Gamal Abdel Nasser's on-again-off-again res- ignation as Egyptian president »was a carefully stage-managed act of a veteran political gambler. They believe Nasser quit as a martyr, knowing he would re+ turn as a hero by popular de- mand. Officials who have studied Egyptian affairs said they found clear signs suggesting Nasser at no time during' the crisis loosened his grip on real power. They also noted he has yielded little, if any, political ground to colleagues or allies tory, might criticize him. They see new danger for the West and for Israel during years ahead on three of Nas- ser's central hopes: --That the task of true Arabs despite setbacks re- mains to wipe out the last vestiges of "imperialism." --That Egyptians. must lead Arabs in remobilizing for yet another confrontation with Is- rael. --The claim that Egypt and her allies owed their setback to American and British in- tervention. Inforn.ants feel the farewell declaration was timed to follow last armored battle in the Sinai Desert. Nasser had just accepted the United Nations ceasefire order. His defeated troops were limp- ing home. Humiliation and frus- tration blanketed the Arab world. ACTED QUICKLY Before the feelings could be transformed into rage against him, Nasser acted to extricate himself. He knew that if. his resignation was accepted he could wait in the wings without having to be marked by ac- cepting humiliating peace terms. He could live to fight another day. they seemed to be wanting to hear--that American - British power, not Israeli strength, beat the Arabs. What the experts saw as the big giveaway was that Nasser chose Zakaria Mohieddin to be president. They said normally this would not have been within the rights or powers of a na- tional leader forced by ad- versity to yield office. Within minutes of his resigna- tion announcement, mobs were in Cairo streets demanding he stay. Within six hours the hand- picked Parliament begged him to carry on. Within 18 hours he pledged he would. Western and even some Asian diplomats seems that even Nas- ser must know things in the Middle East can never be the same after the events of the last week. The Egyptian economy is in a desperate state. Nasser's ideal for Egypt is the efficiency of the modern Socialist nation-- but Israel is the only Middle East country where he can see this working. The informants believe that for Nasser's leadership and his version of radical socialism to survive, he must swiftly reap- ig his policies and priori- ties. By DAVE MacDONALD | MONTREAL (CP)--Expo 67's Sky Ride cable car system was halted late Sunday as a safety measure after winds gusting to 26 miles an hour began whip ping across the site. An Expo spokesman said tHe ride was halted after some p sengers complained that t fibreglass cars were swaying. _|cians struggled to replace the! Expo visitors riding the Expo minirail got an unpaid thrill early Sunday when the mass transit system came to a halt because of one burned-out mo-| tor. For an hour passengers sat chatting and smoking in the} balmy night air while techni-! dud part. Expo security men brought up, ladders to take people down but) Wind Jars Gondolas West German destroyers Ham- burg and Schleswig Holstein ar- rived to start week-long visits. Fast Action HOUSE SALES! Call a Member of the OSHAWA end DISTRICT REAL ESTATE BOARD At some points the four-pas- senger gondolas soar to 120 feet most preferred to stay put. At and List Photo some points the minirail rises 40 saree eave teen Am seen a a ee een mmm above ground and water. to 50 feet above the ground. | The $800,000 system lifts visit-| It was a weekend of shipping' Eight Die In laming' Crash issn oem amusement area, across Dolphin J : Lake and down to Le Village, a ee MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Of Car, 34-Ton Transport ute tas FREE _Estimetes, Reasonable Retes, Repair Specialist. re-creation of early French Can- Saturday saw the arrival of ada. \the 72-foot Chinese junk Chang The ride lasts 3% minutes and| Feng, which was completing a} 1 + ANTRIM, Ont. (CP)-- Eight] Trees and houses hamper|broadside by his truck about 11 90 cars can handle 2,400 persons|?/4 - year voyage from Hong! persons, seven of them children, | visibility at the intersection. p.m. an hour each way. |Kong. were killed Saturday night| 'There should be a flashing} Fire broke out immcdiately| Sunday's varying overcast|_, ExP0 Commissioner - General] when the compact car in which|light there,' an investigating| following the crash and police,|eventually gave way to a solid Pierre Dupuy grabbed a rope| they were riding was rolled up|provincial policeman said. fearing a major explosion from|downpour, sending late evening| #4 helped pull into the mooring like a cigarette in a flaming) Bunnik said in an interview) the truck's volatile cargo, kept|crowds scurrying for home.|2%@@ the ungainly vessel whose} collision with a 34-ton tractor-|at hospital in Arnprior Sunday |the area cleared for several|However, by midnight 298,491/"@me, Said an Expo official, trailer. jthat the Brown car--a Corvair| hours. |had gone through the turnstiles, S'ands for Strong Wind. (NING A.*. BANQUET The snub - nosed transport, {--was going "straight across | An inquest has been sched- topping Expo's expected 202 300) py Gundey> bis Me ee i bs Installed CONVENTION carrying a load that included| the road' when it was hit|uled for Tuesday. |for the day and buildinng up the Matti Kurki and the paren Vask Weghdidabla hada. Slapkiebia shotgun shells and propane gas, | |total-to-date to 11,399,611. frigate Ingolf left for Halifax Plumbing Service, MEETING left a trail of bodies for 1,000) SERVICE MADE US. BAND GIVES CONCERT after a six-day stay at Expo. feet after rolling over the car 43 Di I T {fi Mi h Atow ¥ fter. th f Call 723-1191 n intersection on Highwa p The band of the Royal Nor- ew hours wa er, the roar 0 - Class Facilities : le Sy cites wat te Ot 1e n Ta IC 1S a Ss. wegian Guard gave a concert | 21 gun salutes was heard as the (scams 20 to 400 Guests tawa. | Sunday in an unusual bandstand | lity Service Killed were seven of the 12| 2\ Drowned On Weekend | pe teasretn Leake an eee sso erienced Staff prea yy tyes Pig Omar] Island. Afterwards they gave a of Kinburn, and their 21-year- military tattoo performance in RESERVE YOUR old aunt. Slorence Brown of: Ot- By THE CANADIAN PRESS |senger train while walking) Place des Nations on St. Helen's Y 0 i UNCTION NOW! tawn. owner of the-car. The! * total of 43 persons died injalong CNR tracks. Island. : Aith Gordon Franks, 18, Ancaster| ; » Edi g. | traffic mishaps and 21 persons | gem Prag eotgy tone Judy | drowned during the weekend as| Township, and Janice, 12, Blair, 10 and|Canada's accidental dea Blake, 9. ere to ig ge 74. pees . ' | survey vy ne vanadian ce pte Konner Bun-| Press from 6 p.m. Friday until nik, 49, of Portage la Prairie, midnight Sunday, local times, 723-4641 HOTEL veeauihu: drowned while at-| toll|/tempting to swim across a ae | jsmall lake at a private park 10| MOSCOW (AP) -- A Russian| miles west of Hamilton. mother whose baby was born Charles Stewart Kennedy, 18,| Prematurely at home cannot Winchester, Ont., drowned while|get bureaucracy to recognize RED TAPE MONEY EARNS §% ON TERM DEPOSITS GUARANTY TRUST FEDERALLY INCORPORATED AND SUPERVISED Man., - his pgs -Ray| also included 10 deaths in mis-|swimn.ing in a quarry near| its existence, the government acne posed bi - of winnipeg, | cellaneous accidents, Quebec re-|Smiths Falls, Ont. jnewspaper Izvestia reported. escaped without serious injury | ported 28 deaths -- 23 on the| SATURDAY The newspaper says she has although the cab of their truck cia "Hemolaned and exploding | "0245 four drownings and one ; ~ =| death from asphyxiation. aS a a giant) "among Ontario's 19 dead were ; |five drownings, a man killed by They were on their way to/a train while he was walking Winnipeg from Montreal. along the tracks and a woman BODIES SCATTERED electrocuted when a radio fell Bill Hooper, 54-year-old owner oe Be ib) me: AP ae of an Antrim general store, athing. i said the battered bodies were Hah tito Midlatealioadeatoe scattered 'all over the place"| jin Ontario were recorded Satur- and "most of them were blasted | day when a family ranging in jage from nine to 21 years was Tight out of their clothes." \killed in a car-truck crash near| He said the empty car looked! ottawa. like a "'rolled-up cigarette." been touring government offices land seven of her nephews and| Vainly explaining there was no Inieces from Kinburn, Ont.,| d0ctor present at the birth. But Edith Johnston, 18, Kirk, 14,|the answer is the same: no Carson, 13, Judy and Janice, 12,| birth certificate without a docu- Blair, 10, and Blake, 9 in a car- ment from a doctor or hospital. truck collision near Antrim, 30/g proces miles west of Ottawa. eon SRA Michael Auger, 16, Eastview,| PRESCRIPTIONS Florence Brown, 21, Ottawa, Ont., drowned when he fell from a canoe into -the Rideau} River near Ottawa. Douglas Quail, 20, and Donald Beach, 22, both of Manotick, | |Ont., when the car in which they| PRESERVES PRESERVED This large collection of preserves was rescued from the Kitchener, Ont., area home of Milton-Martin Sat- Capital and Reserve $26,000,000 the second floor of the two- 3 Deposits over $400,000,000 storey home. (CP Wirephoto) urday after lighting struck his home. The lightning started a fire that destroyed Manitoba had one drowning,|were riding crashed into a : Provincial police said las man crushed by his car/guardrail on the Champlain) Rein, Hermarare, ance ha bd crash site, where an old section| while he was repairing it, an 18-|Bridge that links Ottawa and/f Tel. 728-1653 ova cotia Trew nhjoys of Highway 17 joins a newer|month-old boy run over by a/Hull. | 22 K %. EL, Osh section, is "'a real bad intersec-|farm truck and three executives| Lyle Lumsden, 31, Levack,| ing St. ©, Oshawe tion" with a stop sign that is|of Office Overload killed when|Ont., when his car went out of MENT te be part ef en c, often contein- positioned under es as @ pully, mey fill up with ts, which can be stages it cannot ually two out of nt usuelly saves hen you need @ hopping nearby, otra charge. A sir prescriptions. [ RMACY reet East a 25-3594 torized Delivery en, B.Sc.Phm. 'Under-Dog' Role In Pageant By RON MacDONALD SQUAW RAPIDS, Sask. (CP) A dose of adversity is making life interesting for the Nova Scotia crew in the centennial voyageur canoe pageant. The Nova Scotians are short of money and equipment and are running last in the 3,300- mile race from Rocky Mountain House, Alta., to Expo 67 in Montreal, but their captain, John Bothwell of Baie Verte, Nfld., says they are having as much fun as any of the other crews, First Canadian Conference On Arts, College Concludes = KINGSTON (CP) -- The first Canadian conference on the arts and the university concluded at Queen's University Sunday after four days of discussion and pas- sage of resolutions calling for fi- nancial aid, recognition and study. About 300 representatives from 45 Canadian universities attended the conference, devel- oped by the Association of Uni- versities and Colleges of Can- ada and supported by the cen- tennial commission and the Can- ada Council, Resolutions included requests for grants from the Canada Council and private investors to permit univerisities to hire pro- fessional artists "to provide stu- dents with examples of excel- lence." Delegates also asked for in- creased travel grants to allow students and faculty to study original works of art rather than rely on slides and reproduc- tions. ADDED GRANTS REQUESTED Additional grants were re- quested to finance an investiga- for professional musicians in Canada and a resolution was passed asking that the Canadian Association of University Schools of Music study training methods of music teachers for secondary and elementary | schools. heavily-subsidized CBC produc- tions should be made available to universities for educaticnal purposes at a special rental fee. It was decided universities jshould do more to serve as a jtraining ground for professional artists and that promising art- ists should be developed in uni- versities through a studio pro- gram leading to a degree. The conference agreed universities should provide graduate and un- dergraduate programs in the arts for students wishing to pur- sue professional careers in that area. Critical consideration of radio, television and film should be jincluded in any study of the arts, delegates maintained. They also suggested that a study| of the relationship of these new media and the traditional arts The conference decided that} "We're having lots of fun," Bothwell said in a telephone in- terview from where the 10 pageant team stopped over Sunday Sake "We're running last and we Squaw pee haven't a real chance of catch- ing the leaders, | pressure on us, "T think we get to meet the | people more out here. We have bs eagierg a bit for equipment, that just makes it interest- We"re enjoying being the underdogs. Le Bothwell's crew is the: only one in the pageant not formally sponsored by its home province. The other crews are the lead- ing Manitobans, second - place British Columbia, and teams from Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario, New Brunswick, Que- bec, the Northwest Territories and the Yukon, Bothwell said the Nova Scotia government turned down a re- quest to sponsor his crew some months ago at a time when the government apparently did not know what was involved in the pageant. By the time it became appar- ent the canoe pageant would be a major centennial event, Both- well said, it apparently was too late for the Nova Scotia govern- ment to reverse its decision. The crew then began search- ing for another sponsor so that they could enter the event. . E. JOHNSON, 0.D. OPTOMETRIST so there's no} difficult to see and no lights. The centre white line from the old road runs into the new one. their light plane crashed int a control and left the road near lake north of Winnip British Columbia reported five Both Feet Lost In Car Crash QUINCY, Mass. (AP)--Joan | Pellegrini, who lost both feet in an auto accident but was deter- mined to live a normal life, walked down the aisle for her wedding Sunday. A stolen car crushed the plucky 24 - year - old blonde against a stone wall at her home in West Quincy last August. Doctors had to amputate her left leg just below the knee and ankle. that she would learn to walk un- aided and come down the aisle at St. Mary's Church in West Quincy for her marriage to Jo- seph M. McDonald, 25, of Arling- ton. She was successful. "But leave it to me to pick a church with a lot of steps," she said. BE WISE FUEL DX FUEL OIL PH. 668-3341 her right foot just above the | But Joan made up her mind| . « » ECONOMIZE! SAVE DOLLARS ! Save on Premium Quality | SERVING OSHAWA -- WHITBY --- AJAX and DISTRICT drownings and three traffic deaths, Three of New Bruns- wick's five fatalities occurred death and two drownings while|Highway 7 near Sarnia. 'Andre Chassay, 30, Montreal, drowned when he fell into Lake| Ramsey near Sudbury while at-| tempting to get water from the on the highway. Two persons! lake. drowned. Stephen French, 33, Warren, Saskatchewan had one traffic|Mich., in a two-car crash on Nova Scotia reported one person | | 1 Subscribers To ane | NEED NOT PAY CASH! @ BLUE CROSS @ P.S.I. @ GREEN SHIELD killed in a shooting incident and| one drowning. | Alberta recorded one drown- ing and one death by suffocation when an eight-year-old boy fell into grain on a farm. Newfound- land had one highway death. The only province to report i deaths was Prince Edward Is CALL OR SEE FOR OIL FURNACES 723-4663 Menachim M. Golden, 22,| Windsor, drowned while swim- Ih DIXON'S SERVING OSHAWA OVER land. The survey does not ene dalas es industrial or natural deaths, 24-HOUR SERVICE known suicides or slayings. | 313 ALBERT ST SUNDAY | | You Give Us | The Doctors Prescription . We do the rest. FREE City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simcoe N. 723-3431 ming in Lake Erie off we Beach, Point Pelee. Jane Elizabeth Milligan, i was electrocuted in the bathtub of her Toronto home when a radio fell into the water while she was bathing. | Joseph Alexander Steele, 49,| Oakville, when struck by a pas- $ $ OIL DUPLEX. U; Upper \ vaca "for 3 bedrooms, 14% King St. East 723-2721 room, den. Fireplace in 207 ey roo Excellent income plus gracious I NOTICE TO ALL EX-SERVICE MEN WOMEN and DEPENDENTS All ex-service personnel and their dependents are invited to take advantage of FREE LEGION SERVICE W. R. BUCK Assistant Secretary, Service Bureau, Toronto NEW LEGION HALL 471 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH -- BRANCH NO. 43 Wednesday, June 14th From 2 P.M. to Completion of Business To give skilled advice on Veteran's Benefits. Any- one with questions on War Disability Pension, War Veteran's Allowance (Burnt Out Pension .. . Treatment or Hospital Care is urged to call or write to MR. C. A. BRISEBOIS, Business Manager of Royal Canadian Legion, Branch 43, 471 Simcoe Street South, Oshawa, who will arrange an appoint- ment. Be dining r 17 a KARN'S PHOTO Priced tor >: discussed. | | sp | juickly. Hl n now +0001, uick sale, Terms rincipals only. Be os 45 § 4 tion into the supply and demand| would be useful. cs there will OLDER HOUSE ON QUIET STi 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms. Ne! nace, 220 wiring. Modernized kit | High basement, suitable for fint: | nents to the If you are a property taxpayer and have not received a tax bill kindly contact the Tax Office immediately, (unless your morte gagee or bank pays your taxes). Phone 725-4841 Office. mmission Phone 723-3533 . . . Residence hawa 303 Hillside Ave., Oshawa FRANK M. SMITH | pate cn sien | Pay Early To Avoid Waiting In Line-Up ON DUE DATES Civie Administration Bldg. Cor. Centre and Athol Sts. Morigages | A 723-4621 Open Evenings till 9 P.M. Cc. L. COX, Tax Collector pace, ns of water | - SALE imcoe St. N. H. KEITH REALTOR LTD. : . "a - ere! ; bere | Fes A Yn ossland Rd. | PERFECT FOR EXPO SHOTS \ e West APPOINTMENT ANNOUNCEMENT RS | en e ouse ! Argus Carefree Instant Load Outfit with case er a iar - A 3rd instalment of Realty Tax Due | ee Arous Model Instant Load, Auto exp sa ue ' | Plan--to er Wit! our Koya. anker-- uto Pak "500" 2.8 lens with fi oe cub 59.95 49.67 gton ve. : : : ong vssho pablo ep has up! the -- of the 1967 ff type | amount | pail ia you need SehiA Malewien ALS Auto a* tf, 1.9 ts " nat 99.95 79.67 Lloyd G. Lee, F.R.I. Vice-President wishes vy n mailed and become due as follows: | (NEA fer new hale, Conven atal OD ieee eee eee a i -h interrup- COLOR OF INK LAST DAY TO f st ase | Cas Meter W. cote... a 11995 99.67 # to announce the appointment of Frank M- WARDS PRINT ON BILLS AVOID PENALTY | oo ae ipo |. Polercid Swinger... is 24.95 18.67 OK IOT, @ Te. rnoon for a Smith, as manager of their Oshawa Office. Ln 4, : an : te June Hh iL ee vant cha ns i sates | CENTENNIAL SAVINGS ON MOVIE CAMERAS soda J ft | * * | us Sui utomatic Zoom 1.8 lens w. gr 94.50 67.67 ur. Mr. Smith is well qualified to serve your IF ANY pies ALMENT 1S pee nie pike pe she } you know: The Royal is behind you--all the way! richie Lid oo -- { of no +4 Reet bed it needs in the Residential, Commercial, Mort- eg ot Na aaa aaa Sa | 7 POWER CARL WETZLAR BINOCULARS 3 i : xtr le Ww. eas . 0 Agi bee gage, Appraisal, Rental and Industrial TAXES MAY BE PAID BY MAIL, OR AT ANY CHARTERED | ROYAL BAN K (iS pede veral rear- Field BANK OR TRUST. OFFICE IN OSHAWA for 0 small service | I $558 Neviciel w. soe 3150 19.67 |