ae PUSHES F tracts covering workers at the Big eral Motors, Ford and Chrysler peiene vat' midnight 'Wednes- at Ford resume 'Waiter P. Reuthery UAW president, led his 'some 650,000 'Three--Gen- into the union's target, Ford, at 9 p.m. Friday, but the session ended two hours later with both sides reporting little progress. Reuther said when he announced Ford as the target that if no contract is reached by the deadline the UAW will strike all Ford plants, Ford employs some 160,000 UAW members at its 45 manu- facturing plants, 17 assembly plants and 39 parts depots in 27 States, Among the top items on what the unvon calls its "longest and most ambitious list of demunds" are a substantial pay increave,- some form of guaran- teed annual income and equal pay for American:and Canadian workers. REJECTS OFFERS The union has rejected the companies" first. offers,. which included an hourly. wage inereare of 13 cents to be imovroved by 2.8 per cent each year, Toe average worker now makes about $3.41 in straight- time wages, but this figure has been put as high as $4.70 when _ fringe benefits are included. _ Reuther said it was "'reason- ain) able to assume' t after reaching an pre at Ford the union would go to Chrysler, then take on GM, the largest poe veeetaeias company in the To prepare for a possible strike, the union has called a special national convention ment OR FORD PACT AS PATTERN FOR INDUSTRY Sept 23 to supplement uhion strike funds. The UAW now has $67,000,000 which would provide strike ben- efits to workers for 18 weeks at Ford, six months at Chrysler, but only about seven weeks at GM. GM employs about 375,000 had men, Chrysler some 100,- Home Newspaper - Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, Weather Report Light variable winds by to- night. Fair weather forecast, Sunny and warmer, Low to- night 50, high tomorrow 78, ) port, with 312 °¢oileprings.. iver felt padding end extre ed to the handsome ¢otton- sides. for extre eushioned g for proper mattress construction and rein- 2 39" sizes. 54.95 ce ee weees PHONE 725-7373 VOL. 26NO. 204 he Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2,. 1967 1 ' S5e Par! Weak Liorse Delivered Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Offi Ottawa and for payment of Pottecs Cash ae Seneiene TWENTY-SIX PAGES is: Aaicttomn: 'The con- {began five months ago "longest al pad a : " is Howa Davis, R.R.3 Oshawa, and winner of the "neatest beard" is Joseph Fehren- bach., Gordon also won 'the 1955. Whitby centennial beard contest. About 500. people, half in centennial costume,. attended the ball last night. Ball Chairman Steve Melni- chuk said despite the small attendance, the: ball was a "great success", --Oshawa Times Photo VIET GONG TERRORISTS ROAM SAIGON STREETS Banks NEW YORK CP . Efforts to free Hal Banks - at least on bail failed Friday and the former head of the Canadian Seafar- ers' International Union remains in custody awaiting extradition hearings next week. Hearing on the bid of the Province of Ontario to return Banks to Canada where he is charged with perjury was set tentatively for next Thursday in federal court in Brooklyn. Banks' lawyer tried twice Fri- day.to have the extradition pro- nical eat "oat aa : s. ail ca chief judge of Fails In Bail Bid Banks is charged with per- jury in connection with testi- mony he gave to the royal com- mission into Great Lakes vio- lence in 1963. If Ontario is suc- cessful in having him sent to Canada, he will go on trial in Ottawa. Conviction carries a maximum sentence of 14 years. FLED TO U.S. Banks was convicted in 1964 in Montreal on a charge of conspiring to beat up a rival union leader, He fled to. the' U.S. while awaiting appeal. He had been sentenced to five years but could npt be extradited 'on 850 Vietnamese Civilians Slain, Kidnapped, Shot SAIGON (CP)--Viet Cong ter-jin the South. Most of South rorists took their campaign) Vietnam's 700,000 men in arms against Sunday's presidential|were deployed to guard the elections in South Vietnam into|polls, and observers believed the streets of Saigon Fridayjene my terrorism would cut night, killing an American and| voter turnout only slightly. " wounding 11 other persons. In' Tam Ky, a terrorist car: The incidents were part of|rying 20 pounds of INT wag what one U.S. official said|shot down during an attack. | could turn out to be the worst] The attack on the capital of week of terrorism in South|Quang Tin province, in the Vietnam's: history. politically sensitive northern Up to midnight Friday afght}war zone which has been the terrorists killed, kidnapped' or|main target of pre-election ter- wounded more than 850 Viet-jror, was thrown back with four namese civilians, the official) South Vietnamese killed and six said. This is more than three|wounded, Simultaneously the times the weekly average of|Communists mortared a military terrorist incidents. dependent's camp on the out: A spokesman for an Austral-|skirts of the town, wounding jan task force stationed in Nuijtwo persons there. Dat said terrorists were pass- c es wee a rperpiracy Ror amag He P| could no! =gh Bape 0 rile aE cia = tle put bi 8.7. Abruzzo after ® confus ing pair of hearkigs. Beginning Tuesday, a bright new daily feature will be added to The Oshawa Times to shed a shaft of humorous light on the news headlines of the day. The new daily feature is the Ben Wicks Cartoon, 'a U.S. Seeks Opinions At UN On Viet Nam Peace Talks UNITED 'NATIONS (CP)-- The United States is asking friends on the United Nations|m Security. Council whether. they|on think the council should take' up the war in Vietnam' again and try-to promote a settlement. Bo yong sources said Fri- day:the United, States has, not decided, whether to ask for 'another 'council meefing on the subject, is not seeking' support for other members for any: such 2 rg and is not suggesting : the cauneil: should do if it meet. 'reporter the U.S. 'einai is to find out what the vf the council members is the matter. "He faid 'council delegations generally are: waiting. for word from their governments. Another source said his impression. is, that. the Ameri- cans are thinking seriously abuut asking for another coun- cil 'meéting 'on Vietnam. He' expressed belief that it is doing so only because several U.S. senators we said it should ask Bee: inform; man it expressed the view that if the council met now, it could no more do any- thing than 'it could when: the United States set up three coun- cil meetings on Vietnam in February, 1956. On that occa- sion @ U.S. resolution: calling for steps to set up a new Gene- va peace conference had to be shelved for fear cf a Soviet or French, veto. Secretary-General U Thant holds that the United Nations can do nothing about it because neither North Vietnam nor China 'has any UN representa- tion hable but pointed car- toon that comes from the pen of Ben Wicks. Ben Wicks is a Calgary car- toonist. His wit was first stropped to a keen edge in England, where. he was hir- ed 'as a political cartoonist for the Socialist Leader, whea he was only 18 years old. He later was hired as car- toonist for the London Daily Mirror during the early 1950's. He came to. Canada eight years ago, working as a com- mércial artist, then in 1963 joined a Toronto paper. He switched to the Calgary Al- bertan; where he started his caustic cartoon . comment feature, First Call. His feature is now syndi- cated across Canada by the Toronto Telegram. News Ser- TAUGHABLE BUT POINTED CARTOON DAILY BY WICKS BEN WICKS . To Join Times vice, and his cartoon com- - mentaries on the news now come to the pages of The Times. Don't miss it! AS FIRST SPEAKER ON TOESDAY who would take part in commit- tee workshops. Mr. Davis said party policy 'was decided by a vote of com- mittee memibers, not by a vote of convention delegates, Each party riding association was represented on the committee. "DECISIONS NOT. BINDING Mr. Goodman said the com- 'mittee's decisions are not bind- ing on members of Parliament or the party. leader, The luck of the draw detre- mined that leadership candi- address the policy } padecetiveerys in this order: Former labor, minister Starr, mer -agriculture. minister! 3 Alvin Hamilton, former trade minister : Hees, Premier rt Stanfield of Nova Sco- tia,' car rental agent John "Maclean of Brockville, Ont., for- mer justice minister Davie "Pul- ton, Senator Wallace 'Meteor, former finance ald Fleming and Latecomers, would be to the bottom of the list, Nomi- nations for leadership candi- dates close at 10 a.m, Friday. The policy committee. has sessions scheduled Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday - more will be held Friday if needed, Mr: Davis. said. The committee: would 'break into study groups, open to the press, to discuss such topics as the constitution, the: quality. of life, urban environment, rural nomic development, bureaucra- and the world, Mr: Diefenbaker is to arrive here Tuesday and stay until after the "leadership election Saturday. A Youth-for-Dief Committee under co-chairmen Bill Hatton and Keith Martin' has been working here since last April to get youth organization dele- gates to back Mr. Diefenbaker if he-decides to run as:leader. be. added}. and regional, development, eco-| | ey and government, Canada 'Ise Koch Hangs Self AICHACH, 'West Germany;husband 'was @. member .of the (Reuters )--I1se Koch, the/fighting SS-Storm Troopers-- "wiich of Buchenwald" concen- tration camp who had lamps- hades 'maée from human skin, hanged herself in prison Friday night, a Bavarian. justice minis- try official said today, Mrs, Koch, 60, was serving a life sentence in the women's prison here for atrocities, com- mitteed at Buchenwald, where her late husband Karl Koch was commandant. The Bavarian justice ministry rule¢ in September that Mrs. Koc should remain in prison after a regular review of her ease produced no grounds for clemency. A month later she unsuccess- fully sought a court order to force the Bavarian state to grant her a pension, She claimed she was entitled to receive a pension since her and not the general SS Nazi force which was condemned as a criminal She was sentenced to life in prisen at hard labor by an Allied war crimes court in 1947. The sentence was reduced to four years imprisonment a year later, but a retrial before a German court was ordered fol- lowirg @ public outcry. NO PAPER DUE ON MONDAY There will be no edition of The Oshawa Times on Monday, Sept. 4, which is Labor Day. Publication will resume. on Tuesday. ing out grenades to little chil- dren. In Saigon, an American secu- rity guard was shot 4 the main US. office was shot.and killed, ARMY PROTECTS VOTERS | Protecting the voters was the mission of many of the 30-odd battalion-size ground operations announced guerrillas Bes a information|; "tt ¥8 the period I can when today's figures are in it may prove the worst week ever," he said. MILWAUKEE, Wis, (AP)-- Police, caught in a barrage of botties and bricks minutes after cracking down on a forbidden civil rights march Friday night, rushed a Roman Catholic schoo! yard and showered it with tear gas, The police sweep climaxed a night of racial tension that resulted in 13 injuries and 14 arrests. A spectator collapsed and died of natural' causes, authorities said, Among those arrested was Rev. James E. Groppi, a white Janet 'Oleson of Daysland, 'Alta, won the' Canadian Dairy Princess title at the Canadian © National .. Exhie . ALBERTAN BEAUTY WINS. bition in Toronto Friday, Tt was the second year in a' pastor at St. Boniface Roman Catholic Church, in the heart of the Inner Core. where most of Milwaukee's 86,000 Negroes live. Police Rush RC School Yard In Milwaukee Racial Riots Fatner Groppi, who led the attempted march from St. Boni> face, is adviser to the Milwau- kee Youth Council of the National Association for the auaaanseg of Colored Peo- ple. It was the second straight night in which the priesé& was arrested and the second night in which police have broken up a youth council demonstration that defied a ban. The ban on nighttime demon- " strations, originally in effect for 30 days, was declared Wednes- day after two pights of violence that accompanied youth: council marches into masses of heck+ ling whites on the predominant- ly Polish South Side. HONG KONG (AP) -- Rail metropolis.of Cantun to the tung's backers *hat they. have and enemies_of Mao, set a world swimming record days when he won the men's NEWS HIGHLIGHTS China Rail Traffic Halts traffie from China's southern Hong Kong border halted today, casting doubt on the. claims of Chairman Mae Tse- wrested control of the city from Mao's foes. Canton radio reperted Thursday Maoists -- had installed a "revoluntionary committee" scene of reported savage fighting between Red Guards in. the. city, U.S. Swimmer Sets World Mark TOKYO (CP) -- Mike Burton. of the United States today for the second time in three . §00-metre freestyle in eight - minutes, 44 seconds. The University of California at Los Angeles student improved the listed world mark of 8:47;4 © set last year by Semen Belitz Geiman of Russia while-com- peting in the World University Games. Thursday Burton won the 500-metre event in world record time, » Ann'Londers--11 Ajax News--5 ene 2 City N 'tated 17, 18, 19 row an Albertan had. won the title. "(CP Wirephoto) ..In THE TIMES Today .. Family Counselling Part Of Children's Aid Society Whitby School Enrolment Increases --P. 5 Junior Legionneires Tie Semi-Final Series -- P. 6 Service -- P. 9 Obituares---19 Py : Sports--6, 7, Televiston-22, 23 In Thua Thien Province, about 50 miles to the north; South Vicinamese headquarters