NTS > 4 ee . 1.85 jint that covers rying, low odour, inish for interior bathrooms. seve BOD .. 14 ;, in either Latex SEMI-GLOSS 700 701 702 704 706 707 708 709 710 vA 713 715 717 718 719 720 723 728 729 732 733 , applies smoothly oe, B00 we TG PHONE 725-7373 'Home Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman« Ajax, neighboring centres in Ont. ville, ario and VOL. 26--NO. 206 Newspaper | Pickering and Durham Counties, 10e $i S5c Per Week tone livered MR. AND MRS. JOHN Diefenbaker, surrounded by supporters, arrives at the Royal York hotel in Toronto OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1967 -- She Oshawa Times Nuthorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Depart Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cosh mere Weather Report Pleasant sunny weather is expected to continue Thurs- day. Low tonight, 55; high tomorrow, 78, TWENTY-BIGHT PAGES aX : teday for 'the Progressive Conservative leadership con- vention.. Several hundred persons mobbed the couple 4 as they arrived from the airport. (CP Wirephoto) Milwaukee Negro Walks | Continue MILWAUKEE (AP) -- Negro demonstrators pushed their marathon marching past the 100-mile mark early today and promised to keep on walking until the city delivers an open- housing code. After marching _ until 1:30 a.m., the marchers' dis- banded prom: within hours demonstration in the business district. For the second straight day, demonstration leaders, Rev. James E. Groppi and Negro comedian Dick Gregory, sug- gested that Negro youths join the march instead of going to school. Milwaukee school attendance on opening day Tuesday was 2,350 students below the num- ber on the first day of school last year. The decline was par- ticularly sharp in schools in the Inner Core where most of Mil- waukee's 86,000 Negroes live. The marches, which turned into virtually round-the-clock rotests Saturday--the day eay began participating-- are designed to wear down resistance to voting a city code that would bar discrimination in the sale or rental of housing. Four times the common coun- cil has rejected such an ordi- nance. The council refused to recos- ider the proposal Tuesday despite a march on city hall led "by Father Groppi, a white Roman Catholic priest. The marchers. seemed increasingly antagonistic to white Tuesday night as they streamed into the main busi; ness district. Negroes Pelt Brooklyn Police NEW YORK (AP)--Groups of Negro youths pelted police and firemen with rocks for several hours Tuesday night and set a truck afire in the same Brook- lyn neighborhood where disor- ders followed the fatal shooting D (FOR 'DIEF') -- DAY IN TORONTO Huge Crowd 'Hails Chief! TORONTO (CP) -- "Wasn't alent an address Thursday|Stanfield of Nova Scotia and former justice woncerful," exclaimed Johnjnight te the Conservative asso-/Davie Fulton Diefenbaker today about his! ciation "and to the nation." : reception at the Royal York : | minister. He did not elaborate, He had) Mr. Diefenbaker Conservative leadership con-jannource his candidacy Thurs-|very touching." vention. |day | "Was that the biggest recep. There have been reports that/his Thursday tion?" he asked reporters when|Mr. Diefenbaker will support) Many a he reuched his 16th floor vice-| Mr. Fleming for the leadership'dates had reg@l suite. speech. iefenbaker candi earlier he was delighted. He said he was concerned about his wife, Olive, in the| crusk of people at the hotel! entrance. | Mr. and Mrs. Diefenbaker,| were caught in a jam of several! hundred persons when _ they| stepped from the car which had| brought them from the airport.| They were met by EF. A. Goodman and Roger Regimbal,| Manitoba, Premier Robert!moment. Hint Fleming Favored Heightens Excitement TORONTO (CP)--The pace of, The convention pace built up GnceHRIETIBA: OF dhe "convention, the Conservative leadership | throughout the day with first- convention quickened Tuesday|time appearances of Mr. Roblin who had to clear with exhorta- vith ieee 4 tions a path through the photo-| With a flurry of demonstrations |and Mr. Hees. Both were graphers and reporters. | The first caller at his suite! was Donald Fleming, one of the nine contenders for the party| ¢p, getting pitch by the nine candi-|ized lobby receptions. Mr. Hees : |drove up in a red, double-deck- Reports of a possible behind-/er bus eadarchin, | e-scenes arrangement fo r| At night the hoopla developed P. |John Diefenbaker to throw his {into a good-natured Gehan as WILL MAKE SPEECH | support to candidate Donald | the candidates arrived to make Mr. Diefenbaker said he will Fleming added excitement to/their pitch to the policy group's FOIE AS HEN BELA AT tg -|the atmosphere. | plenary session. ~ | Competing bands and shout-| Young people were up on jing supporters of leading con-|tables dancing as the candi- jtenders marked the start and/dates threaded their way into finish of speechmaking in the|the hall. The Hees and Alvin concert hall of the Royal York|Hamilton bands provided the Hotel, scene of the convention's) accompaniment. There was : HY a described Hotel upon his arrival for the/beer asked whether he will|his reception as '"'very nice, He said he will work today on expressed in an effort to head off three|concern that an ovation for the Assured that it was, he said candidates the Chief is said to;Chief might persuade him to oppeve: Premier Duff Roblin ofjenter the race at the last adding spice to a group vote-|accorded noisy, carefully-organ- | -- ' (right) one of the nine con- fenders for the leadership of the Progressive 'Conserva- | DONALD FLEMING was the first caller after ¢ Diefenbaker's arrival for the PC leadership con- vention. (CP Wirephoto) tive party, talks to Diefenbaker in his suite at Mr. the Royal York Hotel in John Sought | GANDER, Nfld. (CP)--Inves. jtigato 'Ss, working under the jslare of spotlights on a dismal THESE ARE THE faces of the men on the spot as a possible Ford Motor Co. strike looms closer. With a strike deadline of midnight tonight, the United Auto Workers Union and Ford UAW Strike Imminent "2. Gadesis| Mr, Hianitton fevered « poll As Negotiations Wane DETROIT (AP) -- Barring the unexpected, 159,000 United Auto Workers will go on strike at Ford Motor Co. plants in 25 stages at midnight tonight. Qn this, and little else, the company. and union agree. The anticipated walkout would support the UAW's quest for a new, pattern-setting con- tract that the union will ask Chrys!er and General Motors to match or better. Negotiators resume work today, just hours before the current three-year pact expires. UAW President Walter P. Reutner predicted the i policy discussions. jmore of the same as the candi-/rainswept bog early today Each candidate delivered aj dates filed out. brief policy rundown, but none set the audience of 2,000 on fire.| ALL GOOD TALKERS searched through the wreckage of an airliner for some clue to| Toronto today. Mr. Fleming Clue To Airliner Crash In Soaked Bog |gency flights to Halifax for 18; The four-engined plane was of the 36 survivors. They later|so badly broken up that most sent seven others to Montreal|pieces of wreckage strewn where mechanical kidneys were|about the bog could be picked available. up by a man of normal Assistant Administrator Glaa-| strength. why she plunged into the swam- themselves far apart when final talks started. Left "is Malcolm Denise, Ford's top negotia- tor, explaining the com- pany's position, Right is UAW President Walter repurted The consensus was that the candidates at the convention|the high points of their policies was a political saw-off for the|Most exceeded the 1 leading contenders. time-limit. Premier Duff Roblin of Mani- toba had the choicé final spot|wnknown, drew a laugh on the speaking order, but his|iMviting delegates to pond: !as some of his chief rivals such ste talent in the party." a RP "G . Bp. oF poy see MEE' fs ARRANGED Whet! ing arrangement is may be known today after the two former colleagues meet,|said there is no place in Can- Mr. Diefenbaker flies to Toron-|ada for two sovereignties, one to from Ottawa to make his|French and one English. There convention entrance. An aide of|may be a place for two differ- Mr. Fleming said a meeting|ent cultures. has been arranged. Informants said Mr. Diefen-|for order and priority in Cana- concentration 6 brewing/in several fields. Reuther, emphasizing a union point. The man in the middie is William Simkin a fedeial mediator and Presi- dest Johnson's top labor troubleshooter. (AP Wirephoto) | first group appearance of the|8ave well-worn rundowns on 0-minute John Maclean, a relative applause was on the same ecale | Whether "they were overlooking r. ton fayored a move who really need it. There was a * a Diefenbaker-Flem-|need for major policy changes|these recorders often deterio- rate in damp conditions. It was Senator Wallace McCutcheon |possible the recorder from the Tlyushin-18 In the hall, the candidates|py ground on takeoff about 24 ; hours earlier--killing 33 of 69|his list of 36 survivors con- -|people aboard, cials, who arrived from Ottaw: late Tuesday Ispells out in detail the fun te ne Czechoslovakian was buried in the dark brown muskeg where the plane destroyed itself less than a mije from the end of the cunway at) Mr. Roblin talked of the need |Gander International Airport. | The worst air disaster in the) Transport department o ff i-| boys and three girls. could not be| CREW REPLACED Tt was' also Understood "hal stone Lester of the hospital said) Communist Chinese liter a- ture, printed in Spanish, lit- tained 18 women, 11 men, four|tered the bog along with chunks of metal and upholstery from the airliner. Czech by. ; An. eyewitness, whi reached for comment, but it), The crew _ which A , e"\was reliably learned that the|tought the plane from Praguelil sepa AN could , i as replaced 'by another, ' _ ; \plane's flight recorder, «which Hetore the aircratt took off onl™ Bar when we went in was peo- «| the ill-fated. flight, to. Cuba..Noj Plc. crying... Anti-US. Banners Flutter As Poland Greets De Gaulle WARSAW (Reuters)--Red,Poland's Unknown Soldier banners with slogans attacking| shortly after flying in. ibaker, who hasn't announced|dian administration. Mr. Hees whether he will be a candidate,|promised a trade crusade to might support Mr. Fleming to|expand markets if he gained history of the air base, the/the U.S. and West Germany; This banner was left over crash of the turboprop at 2:40/fluttered among French and/from a rally last week marking a.m. NDT Tuesday killed 33/pojish flags as Warsaw pre-|the 28th anniversary of the Ger- answers from General Motors and Chrysler to a union query of whether they would extend current agreements with the union if Ford is strikebound and they are not. Reuther said Tuesday, how- ever, that UAW members would remain on their jobs at GM and Chrysler, if the compa- nies let them, even without an extension of the agreements. This is traditional in the auto industry, and the companies always have paid wages and benefits under the expired con- tracts. The arrangement also adds to would be "merely academic, marking time." Malcolm L.@ Denise, Ford's top negotiator, said: "I am not bittes, I am extremely unhap- py. The outlook is extremely dim." William E. Simkin, director of the federal mediation und conciliation service, told report- ers' "There is always hope, but I would not want to overempha- size thet. hope." Aiso expected today were the d Ford, second larg- est producer in the highly com- petitive industry, would suffer if a strike knocked it out of pro- duction while GM and Chrysler} contiaued to roll their 1968 mod-| els onto the market. | At usual selling rates, buyers) wouid consume Ford's current} inventory of cars--85,000 new modejs and 175,000 1967s--in aj} month. | TALKS STARTED IN JULY The UAW opened talks July vote Saturday--Mr. Fulton, Mr.je¢y which he termed expansion- Roblin, or Mr, Stanfield. ist economic nationalism. July 12 at Chrysler, presenting | Separatists And Hecklers eater etl e loeet te Battle Two Hours In Que. in UAW history." | | Tae companies estimate the) MONTREAL (CP) -- Fight-|singing O Canada in Frenc demands would cost them moreling, ir sults and tear gasjduring a speech by Pierre} than $3,000,000,000 in wage and|marked a two-hour battle Tues- Bourgault, leader of the Ras- benefit increases in the next/day night in suburban Pierre-isemiJement pour three years. ltonds involving separatists|l'independance nationale, Que- Tiey say it would nearly dou-|demonstrating in favor of the) bec's largest separatist political ble the average $4.70 workers|construction of a French-lan-| party. now earn hourly in wages and guage school and English-| Mr. Bourgault told about 500 benef.ts. speaking hecklers. demorstrators that Quebecers Counter-proposals from the} Meanwhile, the Pierrefonds ee Caan to French-language Big Three offered general wage! municipal council announced)" aay - ia increases of 13 cents an hour|that following a meeting with Habbo og Fg saewicia immediately, plus 2.8-per-cent|owners of property in the area/ ponte Claire were called in to boosts in the last two years of ajof the school it had been decid-|) 41, restore order three-year agreement. led ty take necessary steps to he demonstration was called| Reuther told reporters: "My|Permit completion of work ON). "ine RIN for protest an hone: evaluation is that Ford|the school, located in a largely|iniinction taken out by a Pier-| Moter Co. has made the deci-| English-speaking area. refonds home owners associa- sion there is going to be a| Three policemen and 10 parti-\tion to block further construc- strike and that a strike will/ciparts were injured in the bat-|tion work on the elementary 10 at GM, July 11 at Ford and | commence at one minute after|tle which police broke up short-|schcol, scheduled for comple: | o¢ their bodies, arranged emer- midnight Wednesday." lly after 10 p.m, by using tear! tion in January. | He declined to predict a,8as | The home owners said traffic lengthy strike--the longest in| Police said the fighting began|in the area would increase and auto industry history was 113\after a small number of pe ange values would drop if days at GM in 1945-46. Htah-epeaking persons began|the school were finished. of a teen-aged mugging r by a detective the previous night. Mayor John Lindsay, top police and city officials, com- 'munity leaders and police rein- forcements poured into the area and established an uneasy calm before midnight Tuesday night. About 200 youths coming from a rock 'n roll show at Prospect Park threw bottles at cars and buses, Firemen could not get to a panel truck hit by a firebomb because of a barrage of rocks. Shortly after that Chief Inspector Sanford Garelile said the situation was under control. Two patrolmen were injured. Police arrested 12 persons on various charges. Hundreds of Negroes poured into the streets Monday night hurling bricks and bottles at police after Richard Ross, 14, was shot in the back of the head by Detective John Rat- tley, 42. Both are Negroes, FIRST ELECTION PLEDGE ISSUES CLEAR-CUT Liberals To Shun Muck- Raking TORONTO (CP) -- Liberal rogressive Conservative gov- Mr. Nixon told reporters his that a -research and develop- people and severely injured 36 others. | HAL HALF-HOUR STOP | The plane, bound for Havana) from Prague, made a half-hour} refuelling stop. After it was) serviced and her 61 passengers| and crew of eight had refresh-| ments, the plane taxied down) the runway and apparently lift- ed enough to clear about 1,500; yards of open ground before it picame to tHe CNR's main 1ail-\the Bonn militmrists and way line. | Then it dipped into the shel-| low ditch through which the rail) line runs, tore off at least one) of its four propellers and spun} across 1,000. yards of spongy) marshland known as Union East Bog. went up in a blinding flash, seen three miles away in the centre of Gander. In the four to five-hour fire that followed vir- jtually all the dead and injured) suffered severe burns. Medical personnel at the 150-| bed James Paton Memorial) Hospital, fearing survivors might suffer kidney failur e| from burns of up to 70 per cent Rrabs Order British Out . was faced today with an ulti- matum from the South Arabian National Liberation Front demanding the immediate with- form a government start. ADEN *(Reuters) -- Britain} = drawal of British troops from| >= the area before negotiations to Leader Robert Nixon launched his party's campaign for the Oct. 17. Ontario election today with a pledge to avoid "muck- raking." Mr. Nixon. told a news confer- ence at Toronto Island airport the Liberals will concentrate during the 42-day campaign on offering the electorate a choice in governments. "The issues are clear-cut," he said, "and there should be no need for muck-raking on either side," he said. The leader'said that while the Liberals won't hesitate to pin- point the failings of the ernment of Premier John Robarts "our main job will be to tell the people what we would do in office." BEGINS TOUR The 39-year-old politician left at 9 a.m. aboard a twin-engine chartered Beechcraft plane for a tour of Western Ontario. His itinerary for today called for stops at Hamilton, Kitchener, Goderich, Windsor and London. Tomorrow he will fly to Tim- mins for a nomination conven- tion at which he will deliver his first major policy speech of the campaign. speech will outline a Liberal platform for the economic development of-Northern Ontar- io, which he said the Ontario government has left entirely to Ottawa. PROPOSE COUNCIL The Liberals would establish a Northern Development Coun- cil with headquarters in the north, staffed with economists who would recommend new. roads and secondary industries for the area. He said the provincial gov- ernment had flatly rejected a proposal by a Lakehead MP ment program be instituted in Northwestern. Ontario under the federal Agriculture and Rural Development Act and its Ontar- io counterpart, the Agricultural Rehabilitation and Development Act. The Liberal leader said his party will have nominated a full slate of 117 candidates--it now has 97--within two weeks. He admitted the main reason for starting his campaign out- side the Toronto area was the *preempting" of local news by the federal Conservative par- ty's leadership. convention, The front, which claims con- Tuesday night rejected a Brit- government. The NLF said no talks would be held "unless Britain starts taking practical steps to liqui- date its economic, military and bia." : But Britain first had to with- draw all its military forces from the area, an NLF'spokes- man said in Beirut,, Lebanon. trol of 12 of the 17 states in the |= South Arabian Federation, |= ish offer for negotiations follow-| = ing the collapse of the federal} = political interests in South Ara- pared to welcome French Pres-|man attack on Poland which ident de Gaulle today on ajheralded the start of the Second week-long state visit. | World War. A-banner saying "American| But it also underlined Polish aggression in Vietnam threa-|fears of Bonn and showed the tens world peace" decorated|problem facing the French the wall of a house in Howy | president's aim of melting hos- Swiat (New World) Street'tility toward West Germany. where de Gaulle lived as aj| In his talks with Polish Com- young captain attached to the|munist party chief Wladyslaw French military mission. Gomulka, the president was "Never again September, | expected to urge Polish partici- 1939" and 'Warsaw says 'no' tojpation in. French efforts to improve East-West relations. revenge-seekers" glared down| But observers felt that from a huge banner in Victory|despite his high political stand. Square where de Gaulle was tojing here, de Gaulle was iil. place a wreath on the tomb of ly to have any success, i name, NEWS HIGHLIGHTS | Death Toll Reaches 163 In Floods NEW DELHI (Reuters) -- The official death toll in floods sweeping vast areas of northern and central India rose to 163 today with reports of ferries overtuning in swollen rivers. Eight of India's 17 states were hit, with deaths reported in seven. Que. Premier Asked To Intervene MONTREAL (CP) -- Mayor Andre Theoret of suburban Pierrefonds said today he plans to ask Quebec Premier Johnson for direct intervention against separatist demon- strations of the kind that widened into a violent two-how battle Tuesday night. MU gn Se AA In THE TIMES Today .. Brooklin Takes Lead--P. 10 Parking Plans Proceed--P. 13 School Work Questioned--P, 5 (ii mr Ann Landers---10 Ajax News--5 City News--13 Classified--21, 22, 23 Comics--25 Editorial---4 Financial--20 Obituaries--23 Sports--10, 11 Television--25 a : : Theatres--18 All '68 models include Weother--2 4 corners complete with Whitby News--3 stick for easy handling!" Women's--14, 15, 16 nth Saag POU INU EMM MUA TUL Ce 'lid iD RS 0