ys 99 pecial too good to 4red cotton hop- s. Slim, trim tap- wide belt loops. 6 inches in tasty , relish (greenish and thunder blue. PHONE 725-7373 nce JAMAS NLY Orders) vear tailored by polyester-and- Fashioned for ibove-the-knee tngth_ sleeves. of plains and inating shades r yellow. Plain izes A (34), B (48-50), but ade. 00 719 30 TRE i. until 9 p.m.) Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. 10¢ Sin, VOL. 26--NO. 168 S5c Per Week Home 'Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 19 67 She Oshawa Sunes Weather Report Warm weather firmly estab- ished for a few days. Low tonight, 62; high Saturday, 82. Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash EIGHTEEN PAGES De Gaulle Gift, New Trawler To St. Pierre ST. PIERRE (CP) -- French President Charles de Gaulle left a calling card Thursday after his 10-hour visit to St. Pierre Miquelon territorial islands 12 miles south of Newfoundland-- a promised $2,000,000 trawler. His wife's nephew Jacques Philippe Vendroux, newly elected deputy of St. Pierre, said this was the only hard promise de Gaulle made during private talks with Governor J. J. Buggia and local government of- ficials. The trawler will be based here and government owned. Mr. Vendroux declined to say when it would arrive. Vendroux, asked about ru- mored development of a gambl- ing casino on the island, said this was possible. He would say no more. President de Gaulle, aboard the French cruiser Colbert, was headed for Quebec City today. The Colbert and its destroyer|dows along the parade route. escort Bouvet will be met by/Ships in the harbor were be- |Skeena and Terra Nova thts |morning in Cabot Strait. The president will review the Canadian ships and men as they pass astern the Colbert. A 21-| gun salute will greet the French| leader from the Canadian war-| ships as he enters Canadian! waters, headed for Quebec City and Montreal's Expo site. | | President de Gaulle received a tumultuous welcome here} Thursday as he 'paid his first | visit--and the first by a French) head of state--to these small is-| lands. He mingled freely with the crowd. In contrast to reports) earlier of strict security pre-| jcautions, his visit was informal! jand his speech to the people in the townsquare--la Place de |General de Gaulle--was a per- |sonal chat in which he assured them he understood their prob- lems and wanted to help. Tricolors flew from the win- ee 4 Two-Point Plan Interests Russia | Recognition Of Israel | Linked To Withdrawal UNITED NATIONS (Reuters);day, but members agreed in a Russia refused today to aban-/five-minute meeting to meet don hope of General Assembly again at 3 p.m. EDT today agreement on the Middle East). Finland, Sweden and Austria despite Arab reluctance to ac- are co - ordinating discussions ' Decision ' On Tshombe ™ Delayed §& wee, ALGIERS (Reuters) -- Al- Kil to z cept any solution recognizing on a procedural resolution to ¢ @ \seria's Supreme Court kept the existence of Israel transfer all Middle East ques- Moise Tshombe waiting today The Russians are reported to tions back to the Security Coun- as it delayed announcing its de- cision on whether to extradite the former Congolese premier to his homeland, where he faces a death sentence for treason. The court said its announce- ment would be delayed until 11 jam, EDT. It originally was scheduled for 5 a.m, EDT. The delay followed secret \de- be showing new interest in a cil from the assembly, along Latin American formula to link with the full transcript of the the crucial issue of Israeli assembly debate. troop withdrawals with the Arab' 'This would permit the session jcountries ending their state of t9 cone to a halt, but on the war with Israel and acknoW- understanding that the assem- ledging the Jewish state. Can- ply would be reconvened "as ada supports this formula and when necessary" after con- Two days after the Russian- syjtations among the member- valled emergency Middle East . after f gency € ship. ee | | the Canadian navy destroyers|decked with colored pennants. | ; liberations Thursday closed-doors hearings on The |Congo's request for Tshombe's extradition. Tshombe held here since his| _ |plane was forced down after be- MOISE TSHOMBE - . . faces extradition - deny Israel's debate begins June 17, Premier Alexei Kosygin said in the as- sembly that Russia does not right to nation- hood, but the Arab states have Soviet Foreign Minister And- rei A. Gromyko had a long talk with U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg at the Soviet delega- tion office Wednesday and Washington Sees de Gaulle As Possible Troublemaker WASHINGTON (CP) -- Presi- dent de Gaulle's Canadian visit starting Sunday is expected by U.S. officials to produce another round of anti-American blasts. By now, they're used to it. But some quarters here suspect that the French leader intends to roil up both internal Cana- dian divisions and relations with the U.S. "The trip is seen as having trouble-making possibilities not only in Canada's internal affairs but in Canadian relations with the rosie id a more in sorrow than in anger. Some turtles have all the turtles earned first prize pil gd U.S. News an it says: | luck. These two snapping in the "most unusual pet port. "It is sad to see a certifiably| turtles were the "hit" of a competition" for four sis- "Some dipldmats say here that the French leader's self- arranged itinerary -- which cre- ated knotty problems of protocol --appeared designed to give hini opportunity to whip up trouble." Adds the right-wing weekly publication: 'There is belief among diplomats in Ottawa that de Gaulle deliberately is dabbl- ing in Canada's mixed-up po- fitical situation in order to strengthen his hand against the U.S. in Europe." The general is not among those world leaders who have slipped a quick visit to Wash- ington and President Johnson in with their attendance at Expo 67. A number have. If he did, his welcome would be tinged with the sentiment voiced by the Washington Post, great man on the world scene turn sour and small-minded and senselessly vidictive in his ad- vancing years. . . . Sad to see France cutting such a mischie- vous and malicious figure in the world."" 380 Commun SAIGON (CP) -- South Viet- namese and South Korean/in coastal Binh Dinh province,|Shootings and a dozen small ist Soldiers About 100 miles to the south! pet show at Veterans' Park ters in Oshawa yesterday where 40 children entered an as- sortment of 20 pets. The Janet, 9, %, "PET COMPETITION STARS SNAPPING TURTLES and a brother. Legere, 10 and her (standing) along with a sister Monique, 6, and y a oe c ally refus + '0- : : ing hijacked over the weaver Rebels Asked arb Man g Pri nnke Thursday night the Soviet Am- ess : ES 5 ues bassador in Washington, Ana- jranean three weeks ago, spoke is non - existent. | : Bon, jon his own behalf at the hear- e | Informed sources aaid the di: toly eatery spent an hour jing. ' {lemma confronting the Russians| "th Goldberg. 7 He was reported to have said 0 egls er is whether to concur in a resolu-| On both occasions the pro- afterward that he is confident! tion which the Arabs would not posed procedural formula was he will not be sent back to Kin-! pagos (Reuters)--Ibo tribes- approve or allow the assembly understood to have been dis- shasa. . .men from Nigeria's breakaway to adjourn without making any cussed. But both Soviet diplo- A supreme Coyrt ruling | oastern region living in Lagos| decision. mats were reported to have against extradition wouid he| were urged today to register \stressed that Russia still would binding on the Algerian govern-| with federal authorities "in their. MEET AGAIN TODAY much prefer a substantive res- |ment, but Premier Houari Bou-| van interests" following bomb! The assembly was expected olution and to have indicated a medienné could veto a court de! eentonions in the Nigerian capi-|to wind up its business Thurs-|readiness for a compromise. cision to send Tshombe to The} +g) ena Congo. | Radio Nigeria broadcast a call | : : -- |from Ibo community leaders \telling members of the dominant tothe nase' west Daly Of Official Ceremonies three centres in the capital. | ' | In another broadcast, the ra-| dio described a bomb attack on} Ends Queen Mother S Tour xecute a Lagos suburban telephone ex-| change Wednesday night, in) sp JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--jher 13-day visit to the Atlantic care of the pets. The pet + ps) Which at least five persons were Queen Mother Elizabeth' today|provinces Saturday when she show was one of the special Piassosay POuae Haitan oft led paced yy piping wad ere Starts her last full day of offi-|flies back to London aboard an events of the summer play- | ¢jais have been executed by ie posers ed act of irresponsible |cial engagements during her RCAF Yukon aircraft. ground program of the city. jing squad and 15 others dis- pela iinclties Orawiunie centennial tour of the Atlantic' 'Thursday, the streets of St. missed, says reports reaching], .°Oe'@! authorities previous'y | provinces. John's, were bedecked with Haitians | res brother Arthur, 5, admire the turtles after the show. Susan Legere, 8, also takes Betty sister --Oshawa Times Photo Earlier, Sporadic Riots Flar Reported Killed In Battle 22 Several Negro Areas sets at tl Winner Di [By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS deaths from the shootings but}march to the city hall to under. Prefect of Port au Prince an | Winner 1eS Rock throwing, at least two/two injuries. Mayor Arthur Naf-/housing and other social re- the Dominican Republic capital |eamen rere 12 0 cel the 66-year-old Queen Mother,| Union Jacks, the new Canadian lamid continuing rumors that/Dreakaway east, which pro... hocan her- tour July 10 in|flag and the red ensign as more | President Francois Duvalier has|Cl@imed itself the independent| i oiiray" wil leave the royalithan 30,000 Newfoundlanders | President Fran republic of Biafra six weeks ' é A wv, t yachi Britannia anchored at the turned out to welcome the government wharf here, at 11'/Queen Mother. | overthrown and killed by a dis- __.|a.m. NDT and drive through the! This island province is enjoy: sident faction within the Haitian streets of this venerable old 82" ing one of its hottest summers regime. M . port to Bowring Park. A The reports of the executions | Peace Prize ' There she will plant a tree tol!" recent history and temper. named Lucien Chauvet, former commemorate her visit, not far|@tures reached the high 80s from the spot where she and her| Thursday afternoon when the husband, King George VI,/Queen Mother attended a troop- planted a tree during the?r visit ing the color ceremony at the | been assassinated. The rumors say Duvalier was ago, for two other attacks in the last three weeks. Luckner Cabronne, former, min- | ister of public works, as two of these shot. jline their demands for better DURBAN, South Africa (Reu troops reported killing 380 Com-|troopers of South Korea's White] fires were reported as violence|talin blamed the Wednesda | forms. fers) -- Albert Lutuli, Nobel/in 1939, when Newfoundland was munist soldiers in two savage|Horse division overran jungle flared up in Minneapolis, Minn., night outbreak of street fights! A battalion of national guards- battles today. headquarters of the Viet Cong's Thursday night and early to-|and firebombing ona few "'law- men were dismissed after the Over North Vietnam U,S.)95th Regiment and reported kill-| 44Y- : : less" individuals and said the}march, but a small number of Navy pilots shot down three|ing 140 guerrillas. They cap-| 'A Police inspector said the/Negro community was not at)the guardsmen remained on. the MiGs from the sky and prob-/tured 70 weapons. {second outbreak in two nights | fault. scene where policemen, sheriff's ably downed a fourth. A U.S. military spokesman | occurred on the Negro north} In Durham, N.C., 300 Negroes | deputies and state highway pa- The aerial action was the|said all four jets downed were | side of the city. There were nolstaged a_ relatively peaceful | trolmen -- all heavily armed-- first significant dogfight over|MiG-17s, encountered during a jlined the route of the march. the North in six weeks when|bombing raid on a_ gasoline! | FORECAST MORE VIOLENCE U.S. pilots claimed to have|storage centre at Ta Xa about! Bl k P C { A group of Negro leaders i downed 27 MiGs in a month. /|20 miles northwest of the port ac ower on erence Cairo, ill. wanien city officials South Vietnamese headquart-|city of Haiphong. ' : : | Thursday to expect more racial ers said an élite airborne bat-| There were no immediate re-| violence if demands were not s talion killed 240 soldiers in|ports on U.S. losses. | T St U t d St t met by Sunday afternoon, | northernmost Quang Tri prov-| Military sources said it is be-| 0 ress nl e Ta e | -icalen will" look dike Rome| ince along the coastal plain in aj lieved the North Vietnamese air| : lburning down," if the Negroes| fight with what was evidently|force is concentrating on re-| NEWARK, N.J. (AP)--About Some _ speakers pointed out don't obtain satisfaction, one of| a battalion of about 500 men.|placing its losses and retraining|600 delegates to the first U.S.)what they considered absurdi- {hele abOk@NinAn AaiH: » The Communists were reported|its men, besides being harassed/national conference on Black|ties in the way the United Wha dlhola tity was hit by | to have abandoned 89 weapons|by regular American bombings| Power are gathered here today) States expects its non-white cit- firebombing 'and sniping 'Inst on the field. of its major MiG bases, intent on making the once-de- izens to behave. Sunday night aiid fires were ie: agit base' a working symbol) "If whitey thinks he's going to| nited Tuesday night despite al 15 All whites eincuain report-| Sead me to Vietnam to risk my|strict police surveillance. | less were excluded ean all | life for instant freedom for a} At the Black Power meeting; working sessions and delegates,, man who looks more like me|'n ahaa sae H. aa 7 including H. Rapp Brown, chair-| than he (whitey) goes while my | Brown, national chairman 0} ; jthe Student Non-violent Co-or- | the Student Non-violent |. . A si : ; fs Cee i ve paso Dorr nities wife and kids back home get) dinating Committee, said Presi- were asked not to give individ- freedom on the instalment plan, |dent Johnson was ready to help | ual news conferences. he's got to be sick," Gregory "racist authorities" stop vio-| United States Quaker organiza-| August. But the tone of the orientation Said to a storm of applause. {lence in Newark but made no tion which recently transported| Scott said the organization has| session Thursday set by Negro} 'The main question, to be de-|™MOve to improve conditions for a cargo of medical supplies t0/chartered for a year's use a 50-|comedian Dick Gregory and|bated during the three days in|Negroes. | North Vietnam in defiance Of|foot U.S. ketch, Phoenix, which|Los Angeles black nationalist{a series of 14 concurrent work-| 'He ignored that vote for the U.S. government madel/carried an initial $10,000 medi-| Ron Karenga, was not so much| shops, is what sort of action and 1968," Brown said, charging the | known today it will try to make/cal shipment to Haiphong last|anti-white as pro-black and anti-| organization Negroes should president had virtually written another shipment soon. March. white exploitation. junite behind. loff Negro, voters. | American Quakers Announce Preparation Of Second Cargo PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Ajdate is expected to be in late " Nineteen officials promoted in| neace prize winner, died today |place of their leagues were reported to have lous embassies in the capital, Port au Prince. | The reports of events in neigh- {boring Haiti have been brought jhere by. travellers from Haiti and spread by spokesmen of exiled Haitian groups in Santo | Domingo. Meanwhile, official informa-|Stanger district hospital where | tion media in Haiti have been extolling Duvalier and denounc- ing the spate of rumors as a campaign to discredit Haiti. Reuters Man Restricted HONG KONG (Reuters) -- China decided today to restrict the personal freedom of Reut- ers' Peking correspondent, An- thony Grey, as a reprisal for the "unjustified persecution" of Communist reporters by British authorities in Hong Kong. Peking radio said the Chinese government told Grey that he will 'not be allowed to leave his residence in Peking until fur- ther notice. said Lawrence Scott, 58, leader of the project. "When people are s a matter of conscience BY PORT CREDIT DOCTOR GIVES NEW FREEDOM being bombed and are bleeding it's a religious right and duty to help them, whoever they are." Despite a tightening web of federal pressures and road- blocks, the undeferred task group is going ahead with iis planning gathering funds, screening volunteers, awaiting a, go-ahead from the North Viet- nam Red Cross. A Quaker Action Group oper- ates from a scuffed three-room office on the second floor of a Quaker meeting house in mid- town Philadelphia. About 40 persons have offered their services for the outlawed mission, aimed at helping civil- ian war casualties. Tt stilt is contingent on ap- proval from North Vietnam, Scott said, adding that arrange- ments are being made through correspondence handled from abroad to avoid government in- terception. However, the sailing 4 Three-Dimensional Submarine Tested PORT CREDIT, Ont. (CP)-- Dr. Joseph B. MacInnis does not book appointments, treat fallen arches or push pills from nine to five like some doctors. His office is in the Jules Verne world of the deep six. Dr. MacInnis is medical di- rector and diving physician for Ocean Systems Inc. of Tona- wanda, N.Y. He has just re- turned home to Port Credit from two-week trials of a unique underwater vehicle that gives man new freedom in the ocean depths. Dr. Macinnis was an ama- teur swimmer and diver before he graduated in medicine from the University of Toronto five h years ago and has combined both skills as a specialist in underwater physiology -- the study of the effects of water pressure, cold and isolation on human beings. His office is the Deep Diver, a 23-foot submarine designed as° a combined underwater vehicle and a diving chamber, CRUISES. AT 4 KNOTS The 8'%4-ton battery-powered vehicle is the only submarine in the world with three - dimen- sional movement. It can move up, down, sideways, forward, backward or turn around. Sub- merged it has a cruising range of 12 miles with a top speed of four. knots--about 344 mph. The submarine carries a pilot and observer in the forward compartment and two drivers in the after compartment. When the submarine wants to detach the two divers, the after compartment is pressurized to equal the pressure of the ocean depth at which they will emerge. When this, is reached, a hatch opens and 'they can slip out into the sea. In such an operation, the divers become Dr. Maclinnis's patients. STUDIES CARIBBEAN During the Caribbean tria!s where the submarine made 35 dives, Dr. MacInnis took part in two; One to 120 feet where the craft sat on the ocean floor for 25 hours while two marine biologists studied fish and one to 415 feet. He is experienced in working with men under pressure and can easily judge whether the diver is going well, working too hard or having trouble breath- ing. He also had the responsibil- ity of analysing the gas they were breathing for oxygen and carbon dioxide content. The undersea experiments were sponsored by the Smith- sonian Institution in the U.S, and directed by the submarine's inventor, Edwin A. Link, noted for his Link air trainer long before he switched his interest to the sea, executed cOl-/of injuries received when he was struck by a freight train sought political asylum in vari-| a; Stanger, where he was con- fined. Stanger is about north of Durban. | Lutuli was knocked down by jthe train on a railway trestle. |He had been under confinement in the area since 1959. Lutuli, 69, was rushed to the 30 =miles he underwent an emergency op- eration. Hospital doctors wanted to 'send him to a hospital here but ---- had decided against it because jof Lutuli's condition. | It was not immediately known |how Lutuli came to be hit by |the train, but he has recently | been reported in danger of los- |gone an operation on his eyes earlier this year. | Lutuli was chosen by the |Zulus to be their chief, but was dismissed by the South African' {government in 1952 when he re- | | fused to resign from the banned! African National Congress, of which he was president. Mountain Pick - up Tried GLENNALLEN, Alaska (AP) An Anchorage bush pilot plans} to make another attempt to} pick up a Japanese woman at-| tempting to climb 12,002-foot! Mount Drum alone. Pilot Mort Clement. said he} attempted to pick up the 32- year-old woman at a pre-desig-! feet per minute" landing. Clement said he saw Miss Sakae Kishi's yellow nylon tent! at the pre-arranged point near the 4,000-foot level. "The wind at that point might be blowing as high as 70 knots, and it would be most likely she prevented a tion of her cover," he added. He said he dropped notes wrapped in a large, orange plastic container with stream- | ers attached advising the} jclimber to stay Ispot until he could land, *" {O'Dea at still a British colony. It joined Confederation in 1949, Pleasantville parade ground, site of a former American air force base during the Second 01 During the afternoon, she will) World War. attend a provincial government Univer- luncheon at Memorial Sity. Later, the Queen Mother will in her attend a garden party honor given by Lt.-Gov. Fabi The Newfoundland Regiment, which fought in both the First and Second World Wars, per- formed the trooping ceremony. |The Queen Mother was wel- te a0/comed to the parade ground by Government House. | the honorary colonel of the reg- She will give a small farewell! iment, Sir Leonard Outerbridge, dinner party aboard the royal yacht. | the first lieutenant-governor of | Newfoundland after it became a The Queen Mother concludes| province. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS ning pee pe eg Oshawa Girl Injured On Wilson Road A 9-year-old girl, injured in a traffic mishap near the Wilscn Road South shopping plaza this morning, was taken to Oshawa General Hospital with suspected internal injur- ies. A spokesman at the hospital said later her condition was "satisfactory," Red Cross Seeks To Rescue Hostages KINSHASA, The Congo (Reuters) --- The Red Cross launched today an operation to rescue a group of hostages, including at least 20 Europeans, held by rebel mercenaries in their jungle retreat. A Red Cross transport plane was due to land today in Punia, a forest town about 150 miles south east of Kisangani, formerly Stanleyville, in the sec- ond attempt to rescue the hostages, Weekend Weather Outlook Bright TORONTO (CP) -- Southern Ontario weekend weather outlook: Weather prospects for the weekend in southern nated spot on the mountain Thursday but high wind and "downdrafts as great as 2,000 * . 4 would remain under the protec-| - at the picky Ontario are about the brighest of any weekend so far this summer. Mainly sunny - skies, afternoon temperatures in the 80s, generally light winds and mild night-time temper- atures are anticipated both Saturday and Sunday. .. In THE TIMES Today .. College Sewers City Headache--P. 9 Whitby Man Restores Antique Vehicles---P. § Ron Taylor Fans 17 As Gales Win--P. 6 Ann Londers--10 Pickering News--5 Ajox News--5 Sports--6, 7 City News--9 Television--17 Clossified--14, 15, 16 Theatres---12 Comics---17 Weather----2 Editorial--4 Whitby News--5 Financial--13 Women's--10, 11 Obituaries --16 4 abbibidaatiii, ui ?