oo 74 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 17, 1967 a FOR NATO SET - UP PENTAGON SOURCES SAY ' Multi-National Naval Force Asked CONDUCTED TEST By FRED S. HOFFMAN WASHINGTON (AP) -- The NATO military committee has recommended a multi-national naval force for the North Atlan- tic Alliance, Pentagon sources say. Member nations would con- tribute ships manned wholly by their own crews. The United States was under- stood to be non-committal on the idea, even though the pro- posal was reported to have been d by US. Admiral The small force, ing perhaps a half-dozen destroyers or other warships, would be somewhat similar to a NATO brigade-size mobile land force naval element, with a com- mander rotated periodically Thomas Moorer, LEAVING NATO Sources said Moorer acted in his capacity as Supreme Allied tee, which considered the idea and recommended it in prin- tary officers of the member na- tions. The NATO navies have co- operated previously in anti-sub- marine warfare and other exer- cises. The main reason for a multi- national force would be to have a NATO naval presence, though small, ready to move in an emergency and -- perhaps equally important demon- state solidarity and unity among ern Scandinavian and southern Greek and Turkish flanks of the There has been one experi- ment in multi-national naval ae- tivity under NATO. This involved the staffing of a U.S. destroyer, The Ricketts, with sailors from a number of NATO navies to find out how they would work and live to- gether. This experiment was carried On as a possible forerunner to a sea-going NATO nuclear force comprising missile - launching in existence for almost six Commander Atlantic, a job he the sometimes differing allies. years. will leave soon to become chief The land force, called the Al- surface ships. The proposal includes forming of naval operations, heading the lied Command Europe Mobile The idea was dropped. How- a more or less permanent NATO U.S, Navy. we : Force, has conducted multi-na- ever, U.S. naval officers said The NATO military commit- tional manoeuvres on the north- the Ricketts experiment showed a multi. - natioral crew could DONALD DUCK function efficiently. among the participating nations. 12,000 See Coo] Expo Welcome Royal Pair A 'At Ottawa Awaits B.C. Cyclists : ; ; ze jan ad for a' partner on thejand touring several pavilions |f death |, OTTAWA (CP)--Prince Rain-| MONTREAL (CP) -- When| cross-country trip," said Ken.|with his wife in a private capa- jier and Princess Grace of Mon-|two cyclists from British Colum-|whije | was in I saw Steve|city Sunday. | bia arrived at the gates of Expo/had an ad in for the same, By chance, the duty Boy Scout) 67 Sunday to end a 3,200-mile thing, and it was on." Ose ; nia troop on the site this weekend} = iM gas bate bese ried hs The sun-blacked pair took a|WaS made up of 30 B.C. boys GaPeRsk cial satias ec a Riel Wore| week to pedal through the Rock-| drawn ion troops all over that} : lies, battled 30 m.p.h. winds,|Province. GeLe Basta Ls Ja Dns revees 1.0 gul = not immediately forthcoming. lrain squalls and snow across|__ Police had to be called to the| JOSEPH £. LEVINE whe | The passes came through the Prairies and handled half a/United Arab Republic pavilion| shortly afterwards and the|qozen punctures and blow-outs|Sunday night after what a pa-| cyclists were allowed to accom-|soming through Ontario. vilion spokesman described as'| in Pathe COLOR AN EMBASSY PICTURES LEASE ciple, is made up of senior mili- NATO perimeter. BLONDIE Grand Chief Don Marshall of the 7,700-strong Micmac band Princess Carol Moore, 19, both from Sydney, N.S. Officials of Expo and the In- dians of Canada pavilion said they hoped the canoeists might turn up for their welcome to- day. They said a delay in ar- rival was "understandable" after an 850-mile trip, "I went into the shop to place, British Columbia Day Saturday, | BODY REMOVED FROM RIOT AREA police and National Guards- in Newark today. The man men were battling snipers had apparently been shot Box Office Opens 8:00 P.M. of his weren't immediately known. jaco drew a traffic - jamming but details Police stand by as a body is removed from a home in an area where 52 Deaths By Accident Blamed On Traffic By THE CANADIAN PRESS |two others drowned. Ontario b jalso had two plane deaths. Columbia each reported five ac- Traffic accidents accounted) John Ringler, 44, of North/cidental deaths, four in traffic for 52 of the 77 accidental/ pay and Ronald Ernest Goetz,)and one by drowning in each deaths reported across Canada/35 of Hannon, Ont., were killed|province. during the weekend. jwhen a home - made plane! One person died on the high- (AP Wirephoto) | 19.999 spectators to Parliament | Hill Sunday for an official wel- |come opening a two-day visit. e | The crowd was the biggest by ' |far in the round of Centennial Year ceremonies for heads of |state. With the exception of 0 scape | Queen Elizabeth's appearances, At Biat t la. Ta | Rainer stepped from a limou- jsine after the motorcade trip LAGOS, Nigeria (AP)--About|from Montreal. Hundreds broke |crowds have not exceeded 5,000. There was no doubt about 3,000 Europeans and Americans|into cheers when his wife, the were trying to get out of seces-|former movie star Grace Kelly, LI'L ABNER pany their bikes into the 1,000-|~ ,, : jan incident which involved two! acre exposition. On our best day we did 120 noys "touching statues and| | miles, st 20 miles," said} At ray 4 Steve Aderneck, 19, of Rich-|grees pi a a ce in other exhibits. | mond, B.C., and Ken Richard-| ; condition s The spokesman said no -| son, 23, of North Vancouver | Cuslly, poor condition go Laas age was done, the Beige cycled into the site during the| They plan to'spend a week in|When the police came and no} evening to top off a 46-day! montreal before pedalling 1,000|harges will be brought. | marathon that began June 1 in| more road miles to Halifax. A Maritime Indian chief and| |whom they came to see, New Brunswick and British : Few reacted when Prince PONT A Canadian Press surveY/crashed at a "fly-in" at an air-|way and three drowned in Nova A from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight!port near Orillia. Scotia while Manitoba reported|sionist Biafra today as federal|stepped out. s -- : | Ken, a history graduate of the|@" Indian princess arrived at OSHAWA inseiisaiadinia Sunday, local times, also showed) Alberta had five highwayj|two traffic fatalities, three|Nigerian troops advanced to-| The motorcade's escort was| They headed straight for the University of British Columbia, |£XPo Sunday to welcome two 16 persons drowned, one died in/geaths, two drownings and one|drownings, and one killed by a|ward the rebel capital of Enugu.|put on special alert after anjWestern Canada pavilion where/ wil] then fly to London, Eng.|Centennial canoes from Nova LO a fire, six persons were killed in|nerson died in a fire. train. | Sir David Hunt, the British|Ottawa newspaper received an/they were able to leave their land, where he is enrolled in a|5C°tia--but the canoeists did not plane crashes and two died : : Saskatchewan had two high-|high commissioner in Lagos, | anonymous telephone threat that/bikes while they went for a one-year course in international|'Urn up. PRIC when struck by trains. __ 4 DIE IN PLANE ..|Way deaths and one drowning; |told 2,200 Britons in Biafra to|'Princess Kelly will come to/meal. history at the London School of| The dozen Indian paddlers Quebec recorded 19 traffic + sees vip -- in Prince Edward Island recorded|gather at Port Harcourt, Per- wba Nothing unusual hap-| 4 pavilion spokesman said the| Economics. were to have been greeted by iti i Newfoundland when a lightltwo , j is mission was being sought from|pened. two cyclists telepho p vho i ini SERS ARTO PT EIGE - talities and three drownings jtwo killed in traffic mishaps. | g 8 The tall princess, her blonde yl g § telephoned before; Steve, who is training to be a survey ate jthe rebels to allow planes to| The nate a ths reo net include |iand for lifting the Britons out.|hair in an upsweep, wore a : slayings nor di it list in-| Automobile convoys were|cream-colored A-line tunic over pe rt Lote Sa doa bringing an estimated 200/a black skirt. She wore a small single - engine aircraft crashed sages : = and "we got on the i i i while, in Ontario, 12 were killed minutes after takeoff Saturday {commercial pilot, will return to Phone to arrange for their en-|Montreal to spend some time in try to the site. Quebec province before return- "For some reason we got the|ing home. | THIS WEEK dustrial mishaps. [Americans out of Lt.-Col, Odu-|black petalled hat and carried ruling allowing their bikes on the site before getting the OK for them to be given special Passes to get on themselves." COINCIDENTAL TRIP B.C.'S DAY AT EXPO | It was an all-British Columbia | weekend at Expo, with Premier W. A. C. Bennett presiding over In an interview, the cyclists) said they met through an adver-| in traffic mishaps, one person/at Williamsport. One other per- died when struck by a train andjson died in a car crash. . . The Ontario dead: Prtsd Ojukwu's breakaway|® long brown mink stole. More Mountains Climbed SUNDAY eee a ts region in PIRAT, WITH FAMILY | Vivien Varschin, 17 months,|dependent of Nigeria on May 30,|.12 2 We!coming address, 7 lof Toronto, killed when he was, Sources in Lagos sald' the Prime Minister Sogg pal said \struck in the driveway of his|forces of the bearded Biafran|the visitors were the first ones n en ennila ange jhome by a car carrying his|leader were retreating before pr near Mig Marg their family mee gry pone Mathers, 76. Wis eet nie ne Princesses Caroline, 10, and KLUANE LAKE, Y.T. (CP)|peaks of Mt. Yukon and Mt. of Cobalt Ont. killed ia Lateh.|sight. Stephanie, 2, and Prince Albert, Several more of the peaks in|Northwest Territories had been) ong abnit 70 wiles northeast of 9, are staying with their nurse the Centennial range of the St.|reached. dSudbury when her husband's|"42 TURE 'TOV at the Seigniory Club in Monte- Elias mountains have been con-| Reports also indicate that Mt. ruck rolled down a hill and|__ 1here were reports of plans to|bello, Que. a quered by climbing teams of the|Newfoundland Mt. Nova Scotia) «1c her move the rebel headquarters| Prince png rn y re. Yukon alpine centennial exped-|have been climbed. r Raymond Hickock, 17, brother from Enugu to Umuahia, 49|ing and be -- e Fs --_ ition. Mt. Yukon and Mt. Northwest| 1 istopher hath of Rochester miles to the south. Enugu lay ee E -- ha ye The 12,200-foot summit of Mt./Territories are at the extreme! New York and Robin Pal.| directly in the path of federal | his a. tor hs eu saa and Ontario was reached Saturday | west of the Centennial range. mena? of Dwight, Ont., in a forces after they captured the ent ful 'sens warm afternoon, shortly after the/ At 10,600 and 10,796 feet TESPEC+Hh eo car' collision near Hunts: university town of Nsukka Fri-|wonderful we: come, tively, they are among ile e-em sade Boag og priccoes 8 - Le lowest of the 13 peaks being F , monito in| ready at home, : climbed by Seeetitien members. te -- Pedogg eg > Lagos, reported the retreat of| with a slight English accent. en ennla Mt. Nova Scotia, the eastern-|1, yas driving crashed into an|/>v7ans from Nsukka but! At one point the Peace Tower most peak in the range, is 10,800) ver ae cilae i CGA | blamed the defeat on saboteurs feet high and Mt. Newfoundland P 4 |who gave Biafran plans to fed- carillon played a medieval ren- dition of True Love--the song Shipyard Men Vote -- COLLINGWOOD, Ont. (CP)--| About 900 Collingwood Shipyards Ltd. employees will vote se- cretly Wednesday on what com- pany officials said was their final contract offer. If the workers--members of e e @ 70 Horses of all Types @ Western and English Style Riding V-BAR-S STOCK RANCH HORSEBACK RIDING STABLES 160 Acres of Land Indoor Arena Trail Rides Horse Rentals -- to groups, clubs, etc. -- Daily, We Monthly Basis -- Special Rates. HANCOCK RD. N., WELLS BROS. From Calgary, Alberte AT THE ESTABLISHED HOME Of Country & Western MUSIC IN OSHAWA SPRUCE VILLA HOTEL ekly or 3rd and FINAL WEEK KITTY LANIER REVUE FEATURING... NUBBIN be has an elevation of 12,041 feet.| Gilbert Pauwenly, 3, killed on| eral forces, the Princess sang as Grace : eS Response Mt. Albert was the first peak|2 trip with his Manitoba par-} More than 20 roadblocks be- Kelly in the movie High Society. Local 630 of the United Steel-' 1 mi. ok. No. 2 EDDY wood puUO in the range to be conquered|ents when he ran in front of a|tween Enugu and Port Har-| Before the royal couple left|workers of America--turn down . Pisa, when climbers reached its sum-|truck on Highway 17, 18 miles|court slowed the evacuation of| for Government House, the band|the proposed agreement, a 728-7768 WHITBY AFTER SUCCESSFUL mit Thursday. he of Blind River. ,,,|oreigners. Bedraggled Ameri-lof the first battalion the Cana- strike could follow. all € None of the mountains in the] Daniel Oakes, 10, of Hamil-jcans reaching Lagos Sunday re-|qian Guards played the polka- Sa vitibne ENGAGEMENT Centennial range had been|ton, drowned in more than 14]ported they were not mistreated|time national anthem of Mon- JOHN, NB. (cP)--|¢limbed previously, nor had/feet of yee as his oe a by the Biafrans. aco. bea a306 AT BROWN DERBY SAINT JOHN, N.B. SR me brother tried to reach him with| Ojukwu's declaration of inde- incess Grace, who is t- i Centennial Commissioner John | they been named. la pole in Georgian Bay near Princ race, who is expec IN TORONTO. pendence for his 30,000 square- Thornbury. |mile region, which holds 14,000- SATURDAY 000 of Nigeria's 56,000,000 ing a baby in January, rolled down her window, and all the Fisher said Saturday that the poor COMMUNICATION i photographers scrambled for spirit of the young competitors) Poor radio communication| or in the Centenary Festivals of|has prevented more word on the ., |People, threatened the whole-|pictures, as Prince Rainier and Music was the symbol of Can-|climbers' progress from reach-|_ Mrs. Richard Ullman, 27, kil-| sale dissolution of Africa's most|Mr. Michener rolled out of ee CHRISTINE ada's centennial. jing the expedition's main camp|!ed when a train hit a car/nopulous state. sight. Moment Mr. Fisher, addressing the/o+'Kiyane Lake. It is known, |Griven by her husband of two closing concert of the nine-day | however, that the team assault- Weeks near Port Colborne. Well Known national competition, said "'it's Ronald Ernest Goetze, 35, of Hannon, Ont., and John Ring-| ler, 44, North Bay, killed when | great the way people haye re- sponded" to the centennial. John D. Rapson, 18, a Toronto clarinetist, was named winner of the Centenary Award, valued jing Mt. British Columbia has! |been unable to approach its tar-| get and is waiting to be moved) by helicopter to another point|@ homemade plane built by| from which to begin the ascent.| Goetze crashed in an air show] HELD OVER te EXOTIC DANCER MARK Entertainment and Dancing Nightly BEST FILM OF 1966!" JULIET JONES Saturday Matinee 4 to 6 p.m. French Buffet Daily 12-12:30 and 5-9 p.m and the Sunday Dinners 5-8:30 p.m. F LIVING DOLLS Se wer snday Entertainment Nightly--Soturday Matinee All of the 13 climbing parties|4t St. John Airport near Orillia.| should be out of the Centennial) Frank Corner, 66, of Peffer-| range by the end of this week.|law, et. ent dead by pea cade és Meanwhile, in the third phase pinned under his car on High-| winning the wind instrument] or the expedition, 100 climbers|way 11 near Newmarket. class in festival competition. | arrived at Kluane Lake Friday| Gerald Prout, 34, of Oshawa, | The final class compentoy and Saturday and have been|killed in a two-car collision just | the junior and senior choif!figwn to the general camp on|west of Picton. | class, finished Saturday. Steele glacier for the first of The 38-member Fort William, |two 14°. day general climbing FRIDAY Ont., male choir, soon to leave camps. John Tallen, 37, of Napanee, | for a three-week concert tour of) "Kiyane Lake is about 109| nt. when he was thrown from Europe, won the class. The miles west of Whitehorse and|2 car after it ran into a utility) chorale Les Roitelets of Trois-| shout 1,100 miles northwest of Pole 14 miles west of Kingston. Pistoles, Que., placed second. |Edmonton : i | Mark Steven Forsythe, 20, of| First place winners in each| _______s§==s_s/Kemptville, when his car left class were awarded $1,000 and! JOINS ORIOLES jthe highway 25 miles west of} second place finishers, $500... BALTIMORE (AP( -- Balti-|Cornwall. Three prizes were awarded in|/more Orioles announced Wed-| Douglas Clarke Wolf, 15, St. the senior.vocal solo class, a) nesday that outfielder Curt Mot-|Clair Shores, Mich., when he first prize of $1,000, second $750/ton of their Rochester farmiwas hit by a Toronto-bound | and third $500. _ |¢lub will fill the vacancy cre-|train at a private crossing 2/ During the concert, winners in|jated by the trade of pitcher|miles east of Essex County centenary classes which ended) Steve Barber to New York Yan-|road No. 5. at the provincial level were also|kees. Motton, 26, is batting 336 Christine Brunet, 18 months. announced. First place was!for Rochester with 11 home| drowned in a bathtub at her worth $500 and second placejruns and 41 runs batted in. 'Ottawa home. $250. Other winners included:. og FOAGARRRAGGGARRRRAG NATIONAL ICCC AC Senior vocal solo: 1. Connie WOWRED heey unwns JOHN WAYNE ROBE Be 18 THE SHERIF Newland, Ottawa; 2. Colleen 1S THE GUNFIGHTER: Se tee tie tasers pe and Marion Harvey, Saint John. IT S THE ~~~ BIG ONE y WITH THE Notional Society of Film Critics at $1,000 as the outstanding in- dividual performer in the festi- val. He also received $1,000 for A Carlo Ponti Production | Antonioni's . Vanessa Redgrave . David Hemmings * Sorah Miles ~ cook Gp : "Tao Banquets -- Weddings -- Parties DUNDAS ST WHITBY Crowd at EL OL OY A Premier Productions Co., tne. Releore : Today ot: 7:10 & 9:15 x~) ODEON iS 39 King St. Second Week! tee 8 THE GOLD RUSH LOUNGE ln, ' THE &, S. % MICKEY MOUSE Ve atre 725-583 BOBBY J. NEWMAN AND THE CHECKERS goct' Rock Rock k Rock, "cK, CK, SATURDAY AFTERNOON MATINEE "JUNE PETERS with ANITA SCOTT PROVINCIAL Junior bands: 1. Burnaby 5th Secondary School Band. Burn- aby, B.C.; 2. Barrie Collegiate Band, Barrie, Ont. Junior orchestras: 1. Greater Victoria Schools Orchestra, Vic- 'toria; 2. Riverdale String Or- chestra, Cornwall, Ont Junior wind instruments: 1. Richard Steuart, Regina; 2. James Spragg, Kitchener, Ont. 'tHe WAR WAGON" MEE TECHNICOLOR'/ PANAVISION' sum TIMES -- 1:30 - 3:30 - 5:30 - 7:35 - 9:40 = iZZA Phone 723-0241 ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY & SAT. AFTERNOON rue GENOSHA tore SIMES CAAN CHARLENE HOUT PAULFD ARTHUR HUNNICUTT MICHELE CAREY sac "TRINA TAS NELSON ROLE -TECIMICOLORT- A PARAMOUNT PICTURE fewest me to Fa we CORR te eye FOF AI I TTR AAR IIT TSE tte te te he te thet te OOOO OO OOOO OOOO OOOO OC PLAZA "Vad x MUGGS AND SKEETER or 728-0192 et KING. ST Lf : ce 2:15 - 4:35 OSHAWA EPI'S 7:00 . 9:20, ' HII IIA III IIA IA IIA IA IA AIS