Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Sep 1967, p. 1

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-, pair 99 r 31.00 ther uppers with light- Black in B to E widths; Black or brown French ed vamp. Single leather ch calf leather uppers heels, Black in B to E n Vamp Blucher. Black her grain leather upper ather soles and heel. D PHONE 725-7373 N Specials 'Home Of Oshawa ville, TWOL. 26--No. 207 Ajax, 'neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. Newspaper , Whitby, Bowman. Pickering and She Oshawa Fines 10¢ Single Copy S5c Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1967 Weather Report Mainly sunny and warm today and Friday. Low tonight, 58; high tomorrow, 82, Authorized os Second Class Moil Past Offi $ ice Department tawa and for payment. of Postage in Cosh TWENTY-FOUR PAGES UAW Paralyses Ford No New Talks In Sight TORY CHIEF TO Meme iergtne neta eae mm BEOR NOTTO BE?| Walkout Could Damage TORONTO (CP)--Tonight's | the night. But don't count on it. John Diefenbaker . addresses the Conservative leadership jconvention in Maple Leaf Gar- |dens. It may be his last speech as party leader. On the other |hand, it may not. | Mr, Diefenbaker has about come down to the wire without |saying whether he will run for jre-election as leader. He | doesn't tonight, |however, The deadline for sub- |mission of nomination papers is ll q A i {10 a.m. Friday. ; oi * | If Mr, Diefenbaker decides to NS |run -- and the generally-ex- pressed view of delegates is have to say FULTON FACES FA RS Conservative leadership greeted b ; that he will not--he will bi i- < y a hoard of plac- Hotel , , . e will be enti & candidate Davie Fulton and ard - waving supporters in Saag ce -- ee to make another speech his wife (top left) are the lobby of the Royal York (CP. Wirephoto) | ee night as a candidate. Voting for the leadership begins at 1 p.m. Saturday. Mr. Diefenbaker whipped on to the convention scene Tues- day. RECEPTION SAID GREAT He described the reception as Artillery Duel Breaks Hiss CONVENTION | PROGRAM 45 ' is Tagedar Dac CAMP DETROIT (AP)--The United Auto Workets Union went on strike against the Ford Motor {Co. today, paralysing opera- tions in 25 stages. Negotiations were in recess with no new talks scheduled. _ The walkout stopped produc tion at Ford, which normally |produces 8,000 cars a day, and | raised the possibility of damage to its standing in the. highiy |competitive market that Gen- jeral Motors and Chrysler will continue to feed, | As it lengthens, effects of the| strike could spread through the steel, trucking and railway} industries which Ford uses heavily for materials nad trans- port of its cars, The company, second in size to GM in the auto-making field, has not had a companywide | strike since 1961. | Just 30 minutes before the Wednesday midnight expiration| of the old three-year contract, | Ford Market Standing ment would be far more perva- sive, longer lasting, and, in the final analysis, even more cost- ly," Ford said in a statement. The gap between the opposing Positions was reflected in another news conference when Ford's top bargainer, Malcolm Denise, was asked if the two sides ever came close to a set- tlement. "IT think I can answer that with a flat no," he said. REFUSE EXTENSION General Motors and Chrysler, the other members of the Big Three, also stiffened Wednese day to the union demands. While agreeing to continue pro- duction and pay wages and benefits to workers according to contract provisions, they refused to extend the three-year pacts that expired with' Ford's at 11:59 p.m. Reuther renewed his charge that "'there is a concerted effort 2 RR aE and photographers formed a Arab-Israeli C easefire ties, 'earns cameramen By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Arab-Israeli cease fire was broken twice again Wednesday night and today by firing across the Suez Canal and the River Jordan. Israel and Egypt each blamed the other for the fiting across the canal, An Egyptian communique said five civilians were wound- ed slightly and several build- ings hit in a two-hour machine- gun and artillery duel near Ismailia, midway along the canal, No Israeli casualties were reported. The shooting ended at mid- night Wednesday night after intervention by UN ceasefire observers, FIRE ON PATROL An Israeli spokesman said Jordanian troops opened fire on an Israeli patrol today about De Gaulle Asks Poland Aid To Oust U.S. From Vietnam WARSAW (AP) -- President de Gaulle after a tumultuous welcome from nearly 500,000 Poles called on Poland Wednes- day night to join France in get- ting the United States out of Vietnam. The 76-year-old French lead- er, a longtime critic of U.S. pol- icy in Vietnam, suggested that} France is ready to undertake a) bigger role in bringing peace to) the Southeast Asian battle-| ground. "If an opportunity arises one) day," France and Poland could| join forces toward "bringing about an end to the bombing, fighting and presence of foreign armed forces," the French president said at a Polish state reception soon after he arrived! for a six-day visit. De Gaulle's speech omitted past criticism he had made of the U.S. He said Poland and France might join in efforts for) peace because Poland is a member of the International fontrol Commission for Viet- nam while France has "numer- ous ties and possibilities" Yfink- ing it with its former Indo- chinese colonies. The other members of the ICC are Can- ada and India. Poland's last known Vietnam peace effort was in late 1966. Polish officials charged that efforts to arrange contacts between the U.S. and North Vietnam in Warsaw were sabo- taged by U.S. bombing of Hanoi suburbs in mid-December. Speaking to Polish Commu- nist party leader Wladyslaw Gomulka, President Edward Ochab and about 300 Polish offi- cials and diplomats, de Gaulle restated his support for the present Polish-German bound- ary, which he said 'must stay." | He went on to suggest for) Poland a course more inde- pendent of the Soviet Union. "Regardless of the weight of the world superpowers," he} said, Poland and France should co-operate to "preserve and develop the essence of both our nations, their influences and power." | Wilson Summons Cabinet For Morale Booster Talks LONDON (AP)--Prime Min-| ister Wilson summoned his cab- inet today for talks on a host of economic troubles plaguing Britain's Labor government. Morale among Wilson's sup- porters was at its lowest ebb in} three years of Labor rule. Even} organized workers, fearful © | soaring unemployment, were in open rebellion. Meeting for a review of its unpopular economic _ policies, the cabinet faced pressing prob- 9,000,000 workers at the Trades Union Congress. By a majority of 1,381,000 votes in the bloc voting, dele- gates at the convention in Brighton slammed the govern- ment's policies of economic austerity and demanded meas- ures to restore full employ- Bridge in the Jericho region. The Israelis returned the fire, he said, and there were no Israeli casualties. | Egyptian and Israeli forces fought for seven hours across the canal Monday, and Egyp- tian authorities claimed that the Israeli shelling of the Red Sea port of Suez killed 44 civil- ians and wounded 170, wrecked 40 homes and damaged many more. canal Tuesday night and by a duel between Jordanian and Israeli forces across the Jordan River Tuesday. At the United Nations, Egypt blamed Israel for starting Mon- day's naval and artillery battle despite a report from a team of UN truce observers that the Egyptians shot first. Egyptian Ambassador Mohammed A. El-Kony wrote} the president of the Security| Council that two Israeli motor- boats and a tug tried "to force) Czech Experts Investigate GANDER, Nfld. (CP)--Avia- tion experts from Czechoslova-| kia were heading for this cen- tral Newfoundland air terminal today to join in the painstaking investigation into Tuesday's fiery crash of a Czech airliner. Thirty-four persons died when the aircraft skidded into- a swamp just off a runway at the) international airport. Another 35 survived, all were severely injured. A top-ranking accident inves-| tigation committee from} Prague, headed by director-) General J. Karlik of the airline involved, was due to join Cana- dian transport department offi- cials sifting through the shat« ered remains of the big Ilyush- in-18 plane which plunged into a marsh and a railway line, 4,600 feet from where it took off. Survivors lay in hospital here and at Halifax and Montreal Wednesday night as a Cubana airliner of the type which crashed took off with the first of the dead to leave Gander-- the bodies of six Cubans bound ment. This battle was followed. by! Bia pers cxchanze of fire 'across. the on Mr. Diefenbaker. solid phalanx around him and 3% miles south of the Allenby|police had to clear a path for him and his wife, through the crush. The only candidate to greet the chief at the door was Michael Starr, former labor minister. A small group of supporters chanting "We want Dief" was drowned out by the "'We want Bob" cries of supporters of Premier Robert Stanfield of Nova Scotia. le: Olive, Mr, must come from the chief. direct comment on thr "rumor." > : > Fleming told reporters (1Gery ot) that any comment on reported backing from Mr. Diefenbaker Mr. Diefenbaker declined Ford rejecte ' UAW Prcihad Walter Benac, PY the Big Three to thwart free for binding arbitration to dis.| Collective bargaining." Spokes- solve the impasse. jmen for the companies said the \charge was groundless By then, a ' i . M progress in Mahi oboe tig of! The 60-year-old union chief gaining, many of the UAW's| S2id the strike could have been 159,000 members at Ford plants|2verted if Ford had accepted already had walked off the jon| the union proposal for letting a anticipating the strike. third party set economic terms in the new pact through bindin; REUTHER DISAPPOINTED _ {atbitration. : Minutes after the strike began, Reuther told reporters at Ford headquarters in subur-. 'e. om = ae : ite aig union is going to be tested e it has never been tested before," and he told the news IKVILLE, Ont. Sg conference: "I think Ford be sag vf les aaa at P lay that assembly and manu- renee are able to stand thé facturing operations Ra be Henry Ford, board chairman, Lenn Fe "the baledee oF assailed the walkout as "'totally|the strike against Ford in the unjustified jan @ completely| United States. unnecessary. The extent to which opera- > a ve @ A NEW LESSON? & , am jm ni T mntenmscget srmmnicnieeImnnnTeeARMNAMNNNNMET some of the eight subcommittee meetings Wednesday at the centennial convention of the Progressive Conservative party. | The policy groups' reports) were sent to a plenary session| this afternoon and will be} passed on to the leadership con-) vention later this week. The rural and regional devel- . Policy Groups Ponder cihiaacase" Urban, Rural Growth TORONTO (CP)--The growth|and supply, industrial promo-|Canada" and stress "a national] of cities and towns dominated|tion, housing, schools, tionatthlis| provision of open space for rec-| ada \this is primarily a provincial opment subcommittee suggest- ed a new level of government ment, the constitutional would foster growth mainly rural areas the and tee recommended a urban affairs ministry. In its report the rural and |regional development subcom- mittee called for a regional local and provinces some of the functions of both. Regional governments would municipalities rural for Havana. transport, water to co - ordinate urban develop-|incentive to new industries <et- sub-/ting up in committee was told building/instead of large cities; new cities in frontier regions| relationships in noW]and provincial agencies work- urban environment subcommit-| federal jland - use level of government between|mittee Canadians "must the|ten up or we could find ,our-) and _ incorporating|selves in a civil war or with bureaucracy co - ordinate the efforts of adja-| i aN ' he' victim ee : k ist, cent. cities, towns, counties anal arsine, of. Regina which! over some of the tasks now per-, Gazette report from Toronto) George Brian - reel, 20, ah pa hogete oe areas to solve commonjurged that the constitution be|formed by ministers' executive] which au the cog aid pig the o a re cn ue 2d san Bie. § itan| i uage that would|assistants who are not mem- expected to arrive at the lead-| An au apsy revea inecy was wi et water pee Seen jg tre | by the Mercel vehicle and died of head injuries. Delhi conservation|show a He called it "a bludgeon/tions can continue will be deter- against the public interest,"|mined by the availability of and "tragic in its implications! parts from the United States. for the whole nation." If assembly and manufactur- But he added he had nojing facilities are closed as a lregrets about the decision toj}result of the strike, approxi- face the strike "rather than|mately 5,400 hourly-paid TORONTO (CP) "-- Ray |surrender to an unrealistic set)employees in Oakville, 4,400 in Williams of Chatham, dele- |of union demands." Windsor, 230 in Niagara Falls gate to the Progressive Con- | "The strike will be costly, but| and 70 in St. Thomas will be servative convention, came |the effects of an unsound settle- affected. out of the Diefenbaker room purpose and destiny for all Can-| Wednesday to see a man with " | a Hees boater on his head and his rear end aflame. "A guy wearing a Roblin SWIFT KICK KILLS FLAME snennmshanN NE NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Woman's Leg Saved PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- An Apsley, Ont., woman whose rignt leg was almost completely severed below the knee in a car accident last month, is expected to regain the use of it, an official of St. Joseph's Hospital said today. reation and regulation of land| The subcommittee on urban) use. |environment proposed that) , Y Committee members agreed|building materials for housing) tag ran into the elevator with be exempted from the il-per-| & lighter in his hand," said matter but felt Ottawa should! cent federal sales tax. | Williams, who promptly act as a catalyst, especially in| The subcommittee held that| kicked the Hees man in the carryout out research leading|the cost of housing is becoming) pants--to put out the flames, to solutions, \prohibitive and 'the federal| of course. EMPHASIS ON NORTH government should recognize) § \the right of every Canadian to aay The subcommittee also} fs Dr. John Martyn and Dr. Donaldson Whyte operated on urged: Renewed emphasis on |be cde a are | Drapeau Florence Morton's leg two weeks ago, the tenth such oper Accommodation At BCoel Wit ation performed in Canada. Mrs. Morton lost her left leg, northern development; greater people can afford." | centres; The subcommittee also decid-| better| ed to recommend a federal| s a Not Coming federal|urban affairs ministry; a feder- jal government review of nation-| MONTREAL (CP) -- Mayor ing in the same fields; federal|al building standards; long-|Jean Drapeau said today he support for local zoning and term federal loans and OEE ae not attend the Progressive to face charges of perjury was adjouned today to Sept. 14. regulation; federal|financial assistance to various| Conservative leadership 'ce 0 n-| The adjournment was due to the illness of U.S. Commis- Fee bagiien Sti Hocagp reminisces agent momhaian | sioner F. T. Abruzzo, who is suffering from shingles. jacquiring land for community] In a statement issued through | ee Frank Law of Welland, Ont.,| development; and federaljhis press attache, Mr. Drapeau| M : : B d otorist Discovers Body DELHI, Ont. (CP). -- A Delhi motorist discovered the told the constitutional subcom- assistance in urban develop-|said that he will not be in| smar-| Ment and redevelopment. Toronto at any time during the) body of Wilbur James Kennedy, 46, of Vanessa, Wednes- day after his car struck "an object" on the road and drag | The subcommittee on leadership convention. He has al and government full schedule of activities in his) ged it for 300 feet. Police could give no explanation why the victim had been lying on the highway. The motorist, below the knee, in the accident. | Banks Hearing Postponed NEW YORK (CP) -- The hearing on the Canadian application to extradite former labor leader. Hal C. Banks smaller between aid for education; rural and farm housing. lagreed on steps to train future Office here and at Expo 67. | having MP The statement was issued as} ecomment on a Montreal] two countries." | si The meeting adopted ajcabinet ministers by motion sponsored by Grant|parliamentary secretaries tak "meaningful pride in'bers of Parliament. jership convention early today. | | -- | The newspaper reports 'high-| is about 10 miles west of Simcoe. NOISIEST NIGHT lems apart from loyment --an outcry over higher elec- tricity charges, a threat of chaos on the state-owned rail- ways and the likelihood of high- er gasoline prices. Wilson's troubles accumulat- ed only two weeks before two byelections to fill vacant seats in the House of Commons. Both seats, previously held by Labor members now dead, are in dan- ger of being lost to the Opposi- tion. : This would be in line with a massive anti-Labor voting trend that was. demonstrated in county and municipal elections last spring. And since then, the public opinion polls show that Wilson's administration has lost even more support. The -biggest blow to its pres- tige was delivered Wednesday by, fepresentatives of nearly % '>' ' Whoop-de-do Sends PCs Into Orbit SORT OF MADHOUSE \ly reliable sources" as saying | |that Mr. Drapeau had original-| ly been expected to arrive) = Wednesday afternoon, Quake Rocks. unit ..In THE TIMES Today .. New Shopping Centre P. 13 Five For Reeve? P. $ 'TORONTO (CP)--A stranger who wandered into the Royal York Hotel Wednesday night could be excused for thinking he had entered some sort of madhouse. Brass bands blared, a--gogo girls wriggled, old ladies waltzed, old men jigged, wan- dering minstrels played and sang and bagpipers skirled. Political fever touched a peak at headquarters of the Progres- sive Conservative leadership convention. Supporters of the rival candi- dates, bedecked with ribbons, buttons, badges, placards, pos- ters and stickers advertising 4 iw ii their man, paraded through the din shouting feverishly. "We want Stanfield! We want Stanfield!" one group yelled.' ) "Go, Duff, go! Go, Duff, go!'* shouted another. "Fulton now! Fulton now!" "We want Dief! Keep the Chief!" "Go, George go! Go, George, go!" And on it went. The hotel's main lobby was packed at times with hundreds of people watching or contribut- ing to the general uproar, which extended up two ficors to the convention registration area. From time to time the shout- --_ ing rose to a higher pitch as one or another of the nine would-be leaders made the rounds, smiling and shaking hands with all who came within range. It was the noisiest night of the week so far, exciiement building up with the arrival of most of the 2,429 delegates, plus alternates, observers and plain hangers-on. Hundreds jammed a_ hotel ballroom for a reception tend- ered by convention co-chairmen Edwin A. Goodman and Roger Regimbal. As seen as that was over a country music group, Don Messer and his Islanders, moved in to provide the musi® for a "Stanfield jamboree." Upstairs in their "'hospitality suites" backers of the candi- dates offered free drinks to all and the parties went on far into the night. In other rooms, however, the atmosphere was deadly serious. There the idea men, the public relations experts, the old-+hand politicians talked ear- nestly. They mapped their strategy for the rest of the campaign, now little more than two days from the climax, and worried whether their man had "peaded" too soon or to late. San Francisco earthquake rocked San Francis- co today at reports of injuries or damage. ing 15. or 20 telephone calls about the quake but no report of either damage or injury. Telephone switchboards department in San Jose, some 50 miles south of San Francis: co, but. no report of serious trouble was made, \ SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--An| i 5:42 a.m. PDT.) There were no immediate|= The police department,|_ moments later, reported receiv- | = Ann Londers--14 Ajax News--5 ~ buzzed busily at radio stations, |= newspapers and the police, City News--13 Classified--19, 20, 21 Comics--23 a Editorial--4 z= Financial--18 4 Obituaries--21 E 3 Sports--10, 11, 12 2 Television--23 Theatres--17 Weather--2 Whitby News--5 Women's--14, 15, 16 Bw Rehm gh eh he mire ghee genet

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