Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Aug 1967, p. 1

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Copy 55¢ Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1967 Weather Report Saturday mainly cloudy and much cooier. Low tonight 58; high tomorrow 72, --_, Authorized as Secorid. Cluss Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash EIGHTEEN PAGES Crime Gives U.K. Press Field Day LONDON (CP)--Bren guns in a basement, bomb detonators in a teapot, bullion on the high seas, immigrant-smuggling| across the English Channel and| honeymoon plans. | These were the main topics of | conversation for Britons today | as crime with a capital C occu- pied Scotland Yard, baffled bobbies and gave British news- papers a field day. The biggest investigation was| Scotland Yard's hunt for hijack-| ers who stole 144 bars of gold! bullion worth $711,000 ($2,-| 133,000) in London four months} ago. An anonymous telephone call to the Yard Thursday sent investigators scurryin g to} France. Officials later! announced a mysterious smug-| gling ring has been operating between obscure French and English ports. SMUGGLE IMMIGRANTS Police said the smugglers! hire motor cruisers and launches to carry illegal Indian! and Pakistani immigrants into| Britain from France. Payment was £100 ($300) in gold bullion| for each immigrant. Police} think the gold may be connect-| ed with the London robbery. | When the immigrants arrive! during the night at deserted| beaches in Kent, they are! picked up by buses and taken| to London and Birmingham. The smugglers receive thé) gold and return on the next tide | to France, depositing the| money in anonymous bank! accounts in Switzerland. How the smuggling is con- nected to the London robbery was not disclosed by the Yard,| but officials say £20,000 ($60,-| 000) worth of bullion has been! seized and may be part of Bes & & NEW MISS UNITED KINGDOM lis any indication, this should be} one of the biggest and most col-! She won about $3,000 and a |Orful editions of the exhibition Jennifer Lewis, 20, poses with her sash and tiara after her selection last night in-Blackpool, England as Miss United Kingdom. Genre Open At CNE | TORONTO (CP) Workmnen Syracuse Thursday labored into the early hours in preparation for the rush of visi- tors at today's opening of the 89th Canadian National Exhibi- | tion SEAFARERS' UNION STRIKE DELAYS LAKES SHIPPING nn TORONTO (CP)--The merger of the Canadian branch of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.) with the United Steel Workers of America was con- firmed Thursday by the official tally of ballots cast Aug. 3 in a national Mine-Mill vote. The 13,000-member Mine-Mill And if the CNE's advertising ever presented. It runs for 17 chance to compete in the aaa Miss World contest. --AP Wirephoto |on a major facelift for the 350- London haul. TOKYO (Reuters)--China's|cal-industrial areas, also was main oll refinery centre at Lan-jshut down. It gave no further chow was paralysed by clashes | details. between supporters and oppo- nents of Mao Tse-tung, a Japa-|duction at eight major coal nese report from Peking said|mines at Fushun in the north- today. eastern province of Liaoning, The correspondent of the|was suspended for six days fol- Daily Sankei Shimbun quoted| lowing similar clashes between Peking wall posters as saying rival groups. half the oii refinery plants in LACK KNOW HOW Lanchow, capital of the north- western province of Kansu,! were forced to stop production. cal, machinery, and rolling one of China's biggest chemi- admitted today that Mao's The report added that chemi-| youthful Red Guard supporters were too inexperienced to run stock repair plants in the city,|the country single-handed. Other wall posters said pro- Meanwhile, China's leaders Peking People's Daily, offi- Muzzled Press In Peking Has "Defiance Edition" HONG KONG (Reuters)-- . ; : 4 'Three pro-Peking newspapersjcarry & joint statement issued) comweiad under a court orderjby 14 Communist publications) produced a combined "defiance|and printing houses condemn- Other pro-Peking newspapers) its i diate with- edition" today pledging to con-|ing the suspension ordered and bs ht of A ry tinue presenting the tl Mao Tse-tung by "'all means." drawal. The three Chinese-language newspapers--the Tin Fung Yat Pao, the Hong Kong Evening News and the afternoon News --were ordered Thursday to suspend publication im m ed i- ately pending court proceedings against five of their publishers, printers and editors who were The five were charged with alleged violation of laWS| oom; that two emissaries against sedition, inflammatory| ame here recently from reports and the spreading Of) bering to investigate the fail- | jure of leftist campaign against The 'defiance edition," which! the Hong Kong government. false reports, was handed free to morning rush-hour passers-by, demand-|newspaper says the two men ed the immediate release of the} were only on a fact-finding mis- sion and would not take part in It was not known where the organizing subversive activities "defiance edition" was printed. |in the colony. five men. The pro-Nationalist New Life Evening Post claims, however, | was to.see how the "struggle that the edition came off press-|fund" was spent. China contrib- es in Macao and was then uted 200,000,000 Hong Kong dol- smuggled into Hong Kong. |lars (about $3,000,000) toward dl lit, the Mail adds. China Demonstrators Enter Russian's Peking Embassy MOSCOW (Reuters)--The | the embassy's consular depart- Soviet foreign ministry con-)ment Condemn charges firmed today that Chinese dem-| onstrators broke into the|broke windows in the mission's grounds of the Russian embas-|main building but did not enter it during the hour-long demon- But a ministry spokesman stration. sy in Peking Thursday. said no details were immediately | available. : The Yugoslav news agency Tanjug reported that the dem- Gregg meanwhile warned nine schools and their branches premises for dissemination of inflammatory propaganda or) subversive teaching. leaflets and documents were |found by police in recent raids arrested Aug. 9. on some of the schools. quoted Soviet embassy officials as saying Chinese troops and police around the embassy took instrators smashed furniture no measures to stop the den }n- Director of Education W. D. gainst the use of their ames --jacre site, including a paint job| in yellows, reds, greens, mauve! and pink Maoist Rioting Puts Crimp ™ In Key China Oil Refinery cial organ of the Communist | pole, Even the exhibition staff has! party, reprinted an article from a Shanghai newspaper saying the Red Guards were politically immature and lacked adequate experience . Quoted by Radio Peking, the article said the Red Guards might seize power one day and lose it again the next. struggle between rival revolu-| tionary groups had almost halt-| ed production at some 100 fac-| tories around Fushun. Four Hong Kong newspapers reported fresh troubles in the! ed--was quiet. said arrivals from Canton told | was continuing Thursday. SOME GO TO MAO A right-wing paper, Tin Yat) Pao, said militiamen were| deserting and joining the ranks! of opponents of Mao. | A third paper, the right-wing) New Life Evening Post, said Cantonese forces had united to battle troops brought to the city from north China. The British-owned South China Morning Post quoted jother arrivals as saying that} Weapons and anti-government| several families, includ ing) The British-owned China Mail Quoting informed sources, the One of the mission's aims Tanjung said the Chinese The Yugoslav agency also young children, had been shot | to death or stabbed in a Canton! residential district. | The arrivals said they were | all believed to have been killed by political prisoners who recently escaped from labor camps and sought vengeance) on their accusers . | Grey - List Plan | To Be Simple | TORONTO (CP)--Ontario's women elementary public school teachers Thursday voted \to simplify the method of "grey-listing" schools, a proce- jdure which in the past has delayed the issuing of grey let- ters by up to a month. | Under the new system, the} | federation will be able to issue grey-letters without consulting the Ontario Federation of Teachers or the Ontario School |Trustees Council. Teachers tak- ing jobs with grey-listed boards are deprived of federation bene- | fits A report presented to the annual meeting being held in Toronto said school boards often use the cover of the delays to stall negotiations with teachers until agreements have and burned files in a building of' strators, Toronto, the bandshell has over by a 30-foot McCutcheon Says: | Ignore Doctors jleadership, said: The old midway, all 1% miles has been dressed up to een Cove! igh centen- union voted "better than two to of which will bring together more than 90 per cent mining workers produc. ing 95 per cent of the country's SYRACUSE, Toronto Lawyer Ordered About $300,000 has been spent) To Leave Court, Apologize | TORONTO Bazos, one ot jcourt Thursday and instructed nial birthday cake, and le ye age dhnoetin tong banners and flags have been! : i : strung from every available | mursday's fourth day of testi- mony before a preliminary, hearing to a beating Rush suf- sr/the date of a document he was! A | Louisiana Walker. Rush, 48, referred during! discussing with a Crown wit- jsons at his home the move membership. of Canada's peace with Actual vot- in the fall. in favor, 2,522 opposed and 58 ballots spoiled. represented a little 'Police Key Targets In Syracuse Rioting (AP)--Ra-|band of Negroes through Ku in Klux Klan territory \the situation (CP)--Anthony| Magistrate David Coon said) lawyer representing|he was not interested because Toronto menj|the matter was not at issue in! charged with conspiring tothe preliminary hearing. cutor Clay Powell would prove down on his desk. KANSAS --The glass and its armor plating sat at the curb, and three uni- _ formed men ; PETERBOROUGH, Ont! inscribed on their chests tried south China city of Canton/(C P)--Senator Wallace) vainly to open the doors. today, but a fifth said the situa-|}McCutcheon says Liberals : tion in the city--where shoot- agree with Progre. ings and hangings were report-|servatives that the social serv- ice structure in Canada is due The pro-Nationalist Ming Pao|for an overhaul, Speaking Thursday to dele- it today that "civil war" had| gates to the national PC leader- broken out there and shooting | ship convention, Senator! A news reporter and pho- McCutcheon, a candidate for : ; Bystanders tried to find a sive Con-) way to help the Brinks driv- ers who haul all that money to and from' the banks with guns bristling at their sides, No one came up with a suc- cessful idea. tographer arrived. The ish. Brinks men wouldn't talk and we got out." A tow truck arrived and its | marching driver thrust a long steel rod | 45 into a gun porthole and | Bogalusa-to-Baton began eight days ago The marchers planned to living room Thursday. 1 The wounds were not serious; On the Atlantic coast, offi- |Baton Rouge, Saturday -- a day, anq Mrs Joseph Good, 82, and|cials were not expecially cun- set aside for a Klan demonstra-, Mrs. Alice Cassels, unlatched the door. A telephone call to the | Brinks office brought only | this reply: "We have no com- ment,"' IRON CHURCH CONTROL EASED been signed in eo RC Curia Drastically Revamped VATICAN CITY (CP)--Pope jon a pontiff's death. The incom- MSGR. GIOVANNI PINNA secretary of the Commis- sion for Curia Reform, an- cree for sweeping changes in the central government of the Roman Catholie Church in Rome today. The Pope loosened the Roman Curia's influence by cutting nounces Pope Paul VI's de- Curia five years. BY HISTORIC DOCUMENT. .!2",2in!ot3" more than 60 per cent Local 598 ,which opposes the merger ,reached an agreement in court Thursday union pending a trial of issues SOUGHT INJUNCTION The Sudbury-area local, with Hundreds of police and sher- iff's deputies sought to enforce The second night of racialja dusk-to-dawn curfew imposed| early today. with more than ajunrest in 'Syracuse, a central|/by Mayor William F. Walsh, | | score of persons arrested, while|New York city of 220,000, | in Louisiana 650 nationaliincluding 17,000 Negroes, w "Sf " ith | guardsmen and 175 state troop-| brought police tear gas info use ee ee ere ee ers were mobilized to escort a|to disperse unruly gatherings. Jeering mobs smashed store| rocks and One police- man was reported hurt after| being struck in the head by a| rock. Scattered looting was reported. | "As of early this morning, | is under control and has improved," said Syra- cuse Police Chief John F. He promised to have set up) "police peace} whose Negro members| patrol the streets The Negro march through| today at The demonstrators ness halted there two days ago after : "That's it!" Magistrate Coon Sng Se tial cavtane ef hist bine, ™™ at the hands of four per-|said, slamming his notebook |\'Ne red, yellow and white. Included in today's ceremo-, nies is the opening of the Indian} isis Yeates' Qevcier BRINKS TRUCK DOORS FIRM. lof Canadian Indians, along wit : a record of their recent accom-| _Reports reaching Tokyo ear-|pjishments, will be presented. | THRE ; jlier this month said a power |------------____________ | charged them with Wednesday. | Governor John McKeithen| activated two battalions of| national guardsmen to reinforce 59. state police |marchers through the Ku Klux) Joint Distribution Commit- jore from Labrador and Quebee Klan bastion of Livingston Par-| tee, a relief organization |mines is moved-port authorities no other choice," ' they objected to being photo- | McKeither said Thursday, graphed. |we don't let One of them did say: "'The |we might bolt must have slipped when | and everything like that." of Negroes varied between) wINGHAM, Ont. (CP)--Two| On the Winnipeg Grain 106-mile ejderly women' were stabbed) Exchange, trade was a little jarrive capital, | ition there mn vn me MINE-STEEL MERGER NOW CONFIRMED $2,500,000 in assets, went to the Supreme Court of Ontario for an interim injunction to have the merger halted The lawyers agreed in hearing before Mr. Justice W, A. Donohue that there would be no transfer of funds, except for necessary daily expenses, from the Sudbury Jocal's treasury. | Firms Say Cargoes Abandoned MONTREAL (CP)--Shippin along the Great Lakes ant ot Lawrence River began grinding to a halt Thursday, while nego- tiating teams met into the day jin an attempt to bring about a , |quick end to a major seamen's strike which began at noon. About one-quarter of the 181 arm| |, __ MISSING Czechoslovakian authori- and! ties are reported to have begun a nation-side search to locate Charles H. Jordan, who disappeared in Prague Wednesday night. Jordan, | BANS SIU SHIPS has been executive ships owned by 32 Great Lakes | hipping companies were reported tied up in Ontario and Quebec ports late Thursday as 5,400 members of the Seafarers' International Union started | halting operations, mainly in |protest against the companies' refusal to grant them a 40-hour week |. Charges and counter-charges |began pouring in and out of the Montrea' headquarters of the SIU soon after the noon strike deadline was passed, Shipping companies com- plained that some ships had been abandoned and that some cargoes were left unloaded. However, longshoremen in most ports were refusing to unload struck ships and the SIU had several requests from shi- powners to extend the strike deadli while loading pro- ceeded. The union complied with one request and ordered members to sail the tankers Edward bases from northern ports. The mining and grain indus- tries, both heavy users of the Great Lake-St. Lawrence wat- erway system, will probably be the first to feel the pinch of the strike. About 70 per cent of the lakers are bulk carriers which transport ore, coal and grain, On the north shore of the Gulf the chairman of the American /of st. Lawrence through which for needy over-seas Jews. ag Cg them march and Women Stabbed have federal troops In Living Room |placed a) ban on all ships mane (AP Wirephoto) [ned by SIU seamen. | In Regina, the Saskatchewan |Wheat Pool said a prolonged strike would harm Canada's wheat exports and export of other important commodities. trek several times in the arms and|less active than would normally shoulders as they sat in their)/be expected, but nothing crit!- |eal developed. are|cerned about the strike. Port reported in satisfactory condi-|and union officers at Halifax tion, said the strike would have only jite-/a minimal effect on the port, church has been charged with|one of Canada's principal deep- wound. }common assault and intent to|sea terminals. The strike is not expected to Wingham is about 50 ante any effect on the West {northwest of Stratford. Coast. Cee. | Paul today shook loose four|ing Pope then can choose his | NEWS HIGHLIGHTS centuries of iron control by the | own staff Roman Curia in governing the Roman Catholic Church by sacred congregations which reducing Curia terms from life-| deal with time to five years and revamp- | church ing the Curia from top to bot-' their number to nine from 12 The cardinals presiding over! The Pope set up the equiva | each congregation would hold lents of Vatican foreign and'periodic meetings in what finance ministries. Mser. The changes were outlined in tary a 15,000-word document entitled | Curia tom. the main branches of down secre- the South Viet "Corruption" Charged GIA DINH (Reuters) -- South Vietnam is "rotted by corruption" and there can be no talk of ending the Viet- nam war until this is remedied, a candidate in the coun- try's presidential race said here today, "We cannot talk about peace with a country rotted by corruption like this," for; Thuc Ky, a 48-year-old Buddhist, told a crowd of 1,800 at journalists) the third joint rally of De Romana Curia--On the was "rather like a council of} glection. Roman Curia. The document, long advocat- tives, was four years in the in Pope Paul's reign. ally conservative and Italian-| dominated Curia. The reform! was recommended by the Ecu- menical Council. In the document, Pope Paul promised to end Italian domina- | tion of the Church's central! governing body and make it} truly representative of "the uni- versal church." He ended the tradition of life-| time jobs for Curia cardinals} and their subordinates, depriy- ing them of the tenure that kept the Curia members in positions of long-term influence and| power. | The Curia terms were fixed} ministers or cabinet." : "foreign ministry' ed by Church progressives and|has the title of Sacred Council bitterly opposed by conserva-|fo, the Church's Public Affairs. | A | It will work alongside the sec-| making. It took longer to pro-|retariat of state, which now | duce than any other document) ajcg deals with foreign affairs! A and in future will concentrate | It is part of a continuing pro-|on being a secretariat for the| cess in reforming the tradition-| pone . The same cardinal will have both portfolios. The Pope ordered a new sys- tem. of budget control to regu- late the purse strings of every | 2" Vatican denying individual agencies the} operations without specific authori- Some observers said Cardinal Amleto Cicognani, the present might be = : Cardinal City News--9 Maxmillan de Furstenberg, who | Classified--14, 15, 16 would head the new Council for | 2 throughout the night to thus | own|= Trike By Iron Workers Ann Landers--12 Ajax News--5 Comics--17 at five years, renewable at the| Observers thought Tlalian Editoriol--4 Pope's direction. All Curia car-|C ardinal Angelo Dell'Ac ua|s Finoncial--13 dinals, the document stipulatesQ probably would take over the|- 3 automatically lose their posti|Prefecture of Economic Affairs, | dumausiemsnsi, smmunanaunaiy _In THE TIMES Today .. the campaign for the Sept. 3 | Youth Flown To Safety By 'Copter HALIFAX (CP) -- Nelson Potter, 15, of London, Ont., was flown to safety by helicopter today after spending more than 10 hours perched on a crumbling cliff ledge at a park near Parrsboro, N.S. After being rescued, the boy said he was tired but unharmed, He became trapped on | the ledge, 75 feet above the sea, while climbing at Five | Islands Park. He lay on the ledge while rescuers struggled reach him. May Halt City Project--Page 9 Ontorio County Buying More Forest Land--Page 5 Scugog Cleaners Defeat Scarborough--Page 6 Obituories--16 Sports---6, 7 Television---17 Theatres--12 Weather--2 Whitby News--5 Women's--10, 11, 12 } i

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