Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Jul 1967, p. 1

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KER Toaster , meets the eye! » you tone your read. Beautiful Has slide-type nelled Bakelite ove but toasts ... 21.00 PHONE 725-7373 KNIVES en cutting blades, les ere of smooth plete with nickel- the storage case "... 39,95 10-120 volt A.C. plete with detach- -- E MIXER durable and Chromium- -tip ejector. Attractively high-impact nium-plated 17.98 NT aner ease and ans, deep mes com- '. 1.00 ' HONE 725-7373 itil 9 p.m.) 'Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, ville, Aj Bowman. ax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and VOL. 26--NO. 160 Durham Counties, S5c Pe Reuther Takes UAW Demand To Chrysler DETROIT (AP) -- Walter Pp. Reuther takes to Chry. sler Corp. a Z today new contract demands o lead orn enpoutiy end of the fiscal the United Auto Workers Union.) dends. They include profit with the threat of a s get it. pacts run out Sept. 6. He previously scribes as the union's "onges mands. eral Motors. sharing,| Reuther re trike to|to gain profi Reuther Tuesday| _ |Big Three in past negotiations jget it this time. |how we are going to get over emphasized this as essential to|#',the moment." & peaceful settlement at -- Asked about possibility of a A guaranteed annual income previously had been given top| billing among union goals. Under a guaranteed annual income plan, Reuther says worker must know at the begin- ning of @ year what his income for the next 12 months will be, ALSO WANT BONUSES On top of that, the UAW pres- ident disclosed as new baignie. ing opened that the union wants bonuses based on profits at the Former Justice | Minister Dies In Montreal Hospital MONTREAL (CP)--Mr. Jus- tice Guy Favreau, 50, formerly the leader of Quebec's Liberal MPs, died Tuesday. "'T have lost a dear friend and Canada has lost a great pa- triot," said Prime Minister Pearson in a tribute. Once a justice minister in Mr. Pearson's cabinet and govern- ment leader in the House of Commons, Mr. Justice Favreau was appointed to the Quebec Superior Court bench after re- signing from the cabinet April A long bout of illness had kept him from full-time work in the two portfolios he held prior to his resignation, those of Privy Council president and registrar- general. He entered Montreal's Notre Dame Hospital June 18 for treatment of uremia, a blood condition. Funeral arrangements were not immediately announced. The late judge was justice minister from February, 1964, to June, 1965, resigning the post after publication of a report by the Dorion royal commission on strike over the profit - sharing issue, Denis said he is '"'an eter- nal optimist," and that any comment on the issue |would be made at the bargain- ing table. | Reuther, asked if the UAW would strike to win profit shar-| any layoffs not withstanding. |ing, said that "in a free society! |workers have the right to with- |hold their labor power to | achieve equity" and that "'vrofit |Sharing is an essential part of equity and we intend to win lequity this year.' GUY FAVREAU « « « Dies at 50 justice minister had been im-) paired by the report. His integrity was never ques- allegations made in connection) tioned in the conclusions with Lucien Rivard. reached by Chief Justice Fred- The then Mr. Favreau said at|eric Dorion of Quebec Superior the time that his' usefulness asiCourt. Algerian Premier Returns ToCairoSummit Talks CAIRO (Reuters) -- Algerian Premier Houari Boumedienne decided to return to Cairo to- day for a new round of summit talks with Egyptian President Nasser and Iraqi President Ab- del Rahman Aref, the authori-| tative Al Ahram reported. | Boumedienne flew to Damas- cus Tuesday to confer with the Syrian head of state, Noureddin Atassi, after Cairo meetings with Nasser and Jordan's King Hussein. The intense Arab diplomatic activity was aimed at mapping out joint strategy to dislodge Js- rael from the territory it occu- pied in last month's brief war. Al Ahram also reported that} Sudanese Premier Mohammed Ahmed Mahgoub would arrive in Cairo Friday for what it de- scribed as urgent talks. Hussein returned to Amman Tuesday night. - Aref, who arrived in Cairo Tuesday, met Nasser privately. Nasser also received Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Jacob Malik Tuesday when he arrived for a two-day visit. Twelve Soviet warships, in- cluding two armed with guided missiles, were anchored in Al- exandria and Port said as they met. year, just as} es get bonuses! and stockholders get extra divi-| } Peatedly has failed t sharing from the! here have been no indications _ At a press conference preced-| 'P anions on ne his Tuesday visit to the Ford| in bargaining tables at General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. similar sets of what he de | bargaining table, Reuther em-| |Phasized his determination to! f After a three - hour meeting, and most ambitious" list of de- Malcolm L. Denise, Ford vice-| president for industrial relations| The profit - sharing goal came|S#i4: 'There are a lot of hurdles| as a surprise Monday at Gen.|i? front of us that I can't see first Ohe Oshawa Cimes 10c Single Co py + Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 Weather Report Cooler tonight and tomor- row with possibility of show- ers Thursday. Low tonight, 58; high Thursday, 70. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office De: ttawa and for payment of Postous A on THIRTY-FOUR PAGES : | With thoughts of the Far East -- as far east as Grand Falls, Newfoundland--play- ing in their minds, four participants in the Youth Travel Program wait im- SAINT JOHN, N.B. Queen Mother Elizabeth will spend six hours in Fredericton today during the third day of her centennial tour of the At-| lantic provinces. She will arrive in the New Brunswick capital by air at noon, meet descendants of the province's Fathers of Confeder- ation and visit the Canadian forces base at Gagetown. The Queen Mother _ was cheered by a crowd of some 5,000 here Tuesday when she broke away from her official schedule to meet children. As she mingled among the crowd at Rockwood Centennial Park, the Queen Mother looked polered and happy, stopping to Queen Mother Visits Fredericton Today patiently today for the 10:39 a.m. train to whisk them away. Among the 24 Osh- awa and District high school students making the trip to around her. DAY TO REMEMBER | The Queen Mother made sure) |that it would be a day for the|ment of veterans affairs hos- jchildren to remember all their! pital earlier in lives. | "Now, where are the chil- dren," she asked Saint John Mayor Joseph A. MacDougall after unveiling a plaque to offi- cially open the park. Wearing a dress and coat of coral and lime-green organza with a diamond maple leaf pinned to the lapel, the Queen Mother made her way through waiting officials towards the large crowed. It was a boisterous, warm- @ DISTRICT STUDENTS LEAVE ON EASTERN TOUR Ottawa, Expo and a week in Grand Falls, are from left: Linda Puckrin, Pickering, Linda Nicholson, Ajax, An- drew Hiscox, Whitby and (CP) --jwomen and children, gathered) Public Landing, N.B., for a spe-| cial word of encouragement. TALKS TO PATIENTS During a visit to the depart- the day, the Queen Mother made a_ special point of trying to shake hands and chat to each one of the 200 patients waiting in the hospital John Bradley, Oshawa. The program is sponsored by the federal and provincial gov- ernments --Oshawa Times Photo A forecourt to greet her. At a civic luncheon earlier, she said how happy she was to be among her "Canadian friends' and to take part in some of the centennial celebra- tions. In the evening she shook pressed forward to greet her. The security men looked wor- ried as the crowd, mostly 'of it, e ' crippled children like eight- year-old Christine Paisley of nia, the Queen Mi Afterwards there was a small! dinner party aboard the yacht} -- -- HONG. KONG (CP) -- Police ordered a dusk-to-dawn curfew for Hong Kong island tonight for the second night as pro-Peking gangs began forming in Chinese sectors wracked by three nights} of terrorist attacks. dered With Communist pressure on the British colonial government mounting, the most severe wa- ter rationing since 1963 was or- to conserve the local supply should Peking refuse to resume deliveries of water from. the mainland in the fall. Armed police vans, filled with riot squads armed with rifles and shotguns, patrolled the streets of Wanchai, North Point, and the western district--three explosive areaS» where hit-and- run terrorists have killed a po- liceman and two civilians, and) three rioters have been killed) since Sunday. | Cross - harbor ferries, street-| cars and buses stopped running. DRIVERS STAYED HOME Two thirds of the colony's public transport never started) today. Hundreds | Dusk - To - Dawn Curfew Ordered In Hong Kong least of rorist threats, did not show up for work. Public Works Director} Michael Wright said the water should be turned on for four hours every fourth day, instead of every second day. He said) this would guarantee the water| supply until the rains next year) even if China does not resume} water deliveries on Oct. 1. Cessna Pilot | In Hospital WASHINGTON (AP) -- Re-| ports to Washington and Miami said a. single - engine Cessna 208 plane which a Canadian pi-| lot was ferrying from Florida} to Kenya was shot down by the| Congolese army Monday north-| Kisangani near the} Uganda border. The pilot, George C. Moore, Jr., a Canadian who has been) living in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., of drivers,|was reported in hospital about frightened by attacks peep oll miles from the Uganda bor- buses and streetcars and by ter- der but not severely injured. INTERVIEWED ON TV DISLIKED NIXON Khrushchev Threw Election NEW YORK (AP) -- Nikita Khrushchev, in retirement, claims the Kremlin thwarted Richard M. Nixon's election in 1960 and "made" John F. Ken- nedy president of the United States. He calls Nixon, former Republican vice - president, a "good for nothing--an unprinci- pled puppet." The former Soviet premier says Nixon sought to gain votes by obtaining the release of U-2 spy-plane Pilot Francis Gary Powers from a Soviet prison. Khrushchev maintains the Rus-| Khrushchev reserves his greatest praise for Kennedy, and says were he alive today "he would never let his coun- try get into such a sticky situ- ation as-it now is-in Vietnam." Speaking from, his dacha, or jcountry. house, near Moscow, Khrushchev recounts a conver- sation he said he had with Ken- nedy in Vienna in 1961: "T told him, 'The fact that you became president was due to us. We made you president.' derstand that. I said, 'I'll tell He asked me how' should he un-) shown that Nixon could have es- tablished better contacts with the Soviet Union. "But we guessed his plans. We decided not to give him any answer, and just to give it to you when you moved into the White House. So what do you think of that?' I asked Kennedy. "He said, 'I agree with you jentirely. If you had not acted votes.' the way you did, Nixon would|the program, | definitely have got his 200,090 | Exile--His Opinions and Reve- board and we will have an ex- cellent relationship with you.' |But I didn't believe it." | Actually, Powers was not re- leased until 1962. NBC says it was the captured RB-47 flyers iwhom Khrushchev released jwhen Kennedy entered the White House in 1960. | Edwin Newman, | narrating Khrushchev in lations, said Nixon declined "So I said, 'That is the way Comment on the story, and that I voted for you and our votes|Henry Cabot Lodge said he sure he never made the ded by Lt.-Gov. J. B. Mc- Nair, Premier Louis Robichau and their wives. The Queen Mother will sail for Halifax late Thursday where she may be faced with a picket! line when she officially opens| Dalhousie University's Sir) Charles Tupper medical build- ing Friday. ENMITY STRANDS MEN ON RED SEA ADEN (AP)--Three men | stranded on the Red Sea is- | land of Camaran said Tues- | go for- | sail day: "We cannot wards and we cannot backwards."' They are American film producer Luke Lane, 39, and two Britons, reporter Tony Hughes, 35, and camerman Irvine White, 25. They left Mombasa, Kenya, with an African crew of 13, intending to sail to Expo 67 in Montreal via the Suez Canal. Lane, leading the expedi- tion, said: "We arrived at the canal on June 5th to find that a war was on. We came back to Camaran and now we still cannot get through the canal--and we can't get back to Mombasa because the wind is against us. 'Maybe we will go trading to Bombay and after that try to get back to Mombasa." hands with more than 280 people! a Mp ae: who were guests at a cocktail' earted rece On and shejparty aboard the royal yacht } yal _yaci eo sians saw through the plan and |you how "You collected 200,000 more ignored Nixon's request. In a National night, easily swayed by advisers. Broadcasting Co. television program Tuesday Khrushchev assesses President Dwight D. Eisen- hower as a good man, but too votes than Nixon. Nixon asked us for Powers, the U-2 pilot, to be released . . . and if we had done it, he would have received half a million votes just for that + a » because that would have "Lodge, Nixon's mate, told me_ straight pulled you over the line.' And| Was this is a fact. And Nixon wanted |remar'! it. There were all sorts of hints. |Kfrushchev. running} The tape and film for the one- out,|hour network program were ob- 'Don't you pay any attention to|tained, NBC said, from private what we say during the elec-|sources inside the Soviet Union tions. It will all be thrown over-|and other countries. k attributed to him by NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV « « » Former Soviet Premier | 20 - MILLIONTH | Celine Bouthillier, 19, of Chicopee Falls, Mass., the 20,000,000th eager visitor to Expo 67, waves to the et rephoto Congolese Cannibals Eat Whites BUJUMBURA, Burundi (AP) Congolese Interior Minister Etienne Tshisekedi reported to- day that Congolese have eaten several white settlers in Lubum- bashi | Tshisekedi said he fears simi-| lar cannibalism: might occur in| Bukavu because of the mutiny | jthere last week by white mer-| jeenaries and Katangan troops| of the Congolese army loyal to | former premier Moise Tshombe. | Lubumbashi is the former Elisabethville, capital of Ka-| {tanga province and Tshombe's |former stronghold. | | "The life of white settlers in |Lubumbashi is in danger,"' said) |Tshisekedi. 'Several |have been eaten by Congolese. |I ordered the local population to |stop such barbarism and repri- |sals. | "I am going to Bukavu where isimilar acts could take place, fall the more since the local }population is still furious jagainst mercenaries who muti- inied there last week." | Bukavu is on the eastern bor- wider of The Congo 650 miles jnorth of Lubumbashi, White refugees from there who es- caped to Rwanda reported that Congolese army forces who re- turned to the city after the mutineers pulled out ran amok and killed a number of white settlers. Wrecked Plane Found In Lake SCHREIBER, Ont. (CP) Wreckage of a plane carrying four young men home to Ed- monton from Montreal has been found of Port Arthur. A search for the occupants of the planes is continuing. The plane, chartered from Caribou Wings Ltd., Edmonton was piloted by Glen Wheeler, J. Stevens, were all early 20s and unmarried. :|strength in Vietnam stands at | and House of Representatives In Jungle "ace Seek Censure in Lake Superior near this community 150 miles east MORE EFFORT, M°NAMARA AIM WASHINGTON (AP) -- De-/son will a leet ayetecyg McNamara is|more divis keeping secret his recommenda-| possibly 70,000 men, spre: i mak es eo troop) over a period of rhonths, a on ee igen ie , but hinted) Army officials Said they could| gon | Seen te ee strongly at plans to get morejhandle such an. incr and bd shay been oe reduce U.S. combat power out of the forces possibly even a bigg ay arene' aha' ths "i --_ ' us permi ¢ y ger one, by already there. increasing the draft rather than' some Viet Cong to return to sec tors from which they had been pprove possibly twolagainst No ion forces, totalling probes rth Vietnamese ase, In advance of a luncheon to- calling up reservists day with President Johnson at The strongest possibility ap the White House, McNamara re-| pear: driven » MACE peared to be the addition . ae ogee disclose what measures division force, totalling mone Peri sen ---- a he "4 propose as a result of his 35,000 men, to plug gaps left by/ine manson 0 ae more fight- ninth on-the-spot checkup of the army troops moving into the NIPGAAe sis ds etd pe psd > ' ad) am--and, it ap- U.S. military effort in Vietnam "IT can't comment on what ad- ditional troops, if any, will be sent," the defence chief told re- porters when he arrived from Saigon just before midnight Tuesday night He refused to give any idea [about the course of the air war, jSaying: "I never comment on 'future operations." The effectiveness of the bomb- jing in North Vietnam was a prime topic during McNamara's conferences with Gen. William C. Westmoreland, U.S. com- mander in Vietnam, and other key American military leaders there. central highlands and the north ; : ands n-, pared, out of the -too- ernmost provinces to bolsteric es s ful South "Waites other army and marine troops' forces. ne Congress Foresees Gloom If Vietnam War Intensified WASHINGTON (AP) -- Con-! j Fi i gressional critics paint a dark wet ee picture of increased taxes,| But Senat i price-wage controls and mobili-| Everett M. "ie mane zation of reserves if President| voice the general view of hawks Johnson intensifies the Vietnam that if Westmoreland wants Westmoreland is reported to War: more troops, he ought to have have asked for up to 140,000 The doves are telling Johnson what he needs more men. Present U.S, |through speeches in the Senate « CITES EFFECTS about 466,000. that he also will be risking a| Senate Democratic Leader Current Pentagon speculation | third world war if he pours in|Mike Mansfield, who wants a centres on the possibility John-|2 huge complement of ground| renewed effort to reduce the - |forces and expands the bomb-|present level of U.S, involve- U S T ing of North Vietnam. ment in the Asian war, cited the .». Lroops The hawks, diverted at the possible domestic effects of ex- moment by the alarms of pos-|panding the conflict. sible American involvement in| Mansfield told the Senate African conflicts, are otherwise | Tuesday that a third world war relatively silent while awaiting|may be "already incubating in Johnson's decision after he con-|the ever-deepening and expand- fers with Gen, William West-|ing struggle in Southeast Asia." moreland, the U.S. military|He said every escalation thus (semmanter in Vietnam, and|far had failed to bring the con- |Defence Secretary McNamara.'flict nearer an end. Israel - Arab Forces Clash, Threaten Shaky Ceasefire TEL AVIV (CP)--Israeli and|Egyptians repulsed the Israeli Arab forces clashed on land andjattacks, destro; two enemy sea in renewed hostilities as the/armo fighting Nations seeks to f SAIGON (AP) -- U.S. troops| were locked in heavy combat today with a Viet Cong force at- tacking in the rainswept jungle of the Ia Drang valley area of South Vietnam's central high- lands. As fighting erupted in the central highlands, guerril- jlas struck in force against two} Mekong Delta outposts before dawn but were back US. fi carried the war to North Viet-|2 Shaky ceasel i i i come undone. ie Caneenaist Bi pode to An Egyptian communique is-|Arish at 11:30 p.m. Tuesday = to' |.{sued today ann a fresh| night. alg i a ce me ee outbreak of fighting in the canal] He said the Israeli vessels-- MiG-21s were reported sighted. |20"€ and said two Israeli arm-ja destroyer and two The U.S. command said they re-| 9rd cars were destroyed. boats--returned safely to base, fused battle. | Israeli and Egyptian navaljbut eight sailors were wounded, U.S. headquarters said a unit| "nits battled off the Sinai Pe-/most of them slightly. of the U.S. 4th Infantry Divi-|Minsula Tuesday night and the} Observers noted that the bat- sion was fighting off Viet Cong Israelis said two Egyptian pa- tle took place only about 25 fire from three sides, accord-| 'tT! torpedo boats were sunk. |miles from Port Said, where ing to the last report 'from the The fighting in the Suez Canal! Russian warships are at anchor. Ia Drang battlefield. The size 2°4 broke out at 9 a.m. today; It followed an Israeli report of the American unit was now|When Israeli troops stationed |said its anti - aircraft gunners known in Saigon j east of the canal opened fire|shot down an Egyptian fighter- The fietiting raged in a moun-, With machine-guns on Egyptian|bomber over Sinai Tuesday. It tainous naa' close to the Cam-| forces south of Ismailia, the was the second Egyptian plane Be |Egyptian communique said. reported downed in the area in bean tronuer where, fresh e "commaniaue sid the thre day have been braced to drive into South Vietnam during the pres-|™r . ent rainy season. neue eee.o.vs NEWS HIGHLIGHTS namese war was fought in the Ia Drang Valley two years ago : Postal Workers, Ottawa Talk On July 1 with heavy losses on both sides bed TORONTO (CP) -- The Canadian Union of Postal Diplomats Workers says its 12,000 members may refuse to work statutory holidays unless July 1 and 3 of this year are classified as statutory holidays and pay is adjusted accord- ingly. Union representatives are meefing treasury offi- cials in Ottawa today to try to have the weeks of June 25 to July 9 declared 32-hour weeks. ' Princess Grace Arrives In Montreal MONTREAL (CP) Prince Rainier and Princess Grace of Monaco and their three children arrived here today aboard the Empress of Canada to begin a two- week centennial state visit to Canada. After spending the first few days privately in Montreal, the couple will drive to Ottawa Sunday for an official welcome by Governor: General Michener and Prime Minister Pearson. San Quentin Escapee Caught TORONTO (CP) -- Wallace Clayton Hakes, | 50-year- old escapee from California's San Quentin penitentiary, was arrested Tuesday night at his job in a suburban Malton aircraft plant. Police said they were acting on a tip fron: a pilot who met Hakes a few days ago and later noticed his picture in a detective magazine. Hakes was being sought by the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation on a warrant stating he escaped from San Quentin in Sepiember, 1964, On Israel | UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- |Moslem diplomats are working jon a resolution today to censure) iIsrael for refusing to rescind its | 'annexation of the Oid City of! | Jerusalem. | The censure move led by Pak-; listani Ambassador Agha Shahi! overshadowed behind - the- Iscenes negotiations on other | possible resolutions as the Gen-} eral Assembly prepares to re-| 'sume its emergency session on \the Middle East this afternoon Jat 3 p.m. after a one-week re- on any proposal to break the jassembly's tight deadlock on} 'withdrawal of Israeli troops | {from the terrilories of Egypt, | Syria and Jordan occupied dur- \ing the June war. | Israel touched off the censure move Tuesday by informing = Secretary - General U Thant that it was going ahead with |cess. | No agreement appeared near} | en .. In THE TIMES Today .. Mimico Mounties Push Goels--P. 14 Mr. Wheeler and passenger's Ray Lewis, Fred Conway and in their measures to unify the Israeli |z One Dead, Seven Injured In District Accidents--P. & and former Jordanian sectors | Decision Reserved On Amalgomation---P. 17 of Jerusalem despite the. assem- ' 's 5 bly resolution July 4 calling on) Ani Landers---18 pickering WN Israel to rescind all measures | Ajax News---5 SO ai Be which would "alter the status of |= City News--17 be ade" Jerusalem." Classified--26 to 29 eatres-- Israel has contended that its Comics--7 Weather---2 A Sa Editoria!--4 Whitby News--S measures simply provide for ad- | = Finnnciala23 Women's---18, 19, 20 ministrative unity and could not | Geuches: 29 dei be correctly described as annex- | yer yas Ali UNDE ation of the Old City.

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