Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Sep 1967, p. 1

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Low tonight, 40; high Thursday, 55, Ghe Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1967 Authorized os Second Close Mait Post Office Deportment Ottawa ond for payment of Postage in Cash A pretty girl, a miniskirt, an umbrella and determin- ation artistic contributed to this leap in a rain- CANADA URGES U.S. H NORTH VIET! Independence Plan Drafted . Policy Publicly Revealed In Martin's Speech To UN _UNITED NATIONS (CP)--, from Sweden and Denmark in m : : External Affairs Minister Paul urzi that the bombing step aly ue sage SF dead Mr. Bertrand, a 30-year-old Ma 1, for the first time in/but went a. step further th t 'or Quebec independence! lawyer. and Mr. Caron. a 45- public, today urged the United Foreign Secret: ge | 2 7 3 Mr. Caron, 5 4 ; 8 I ign S$ ary Ge bee Loge: Sapa roe esta stock broker, said the} 5 eae ae stop the bombing. of Brown of Britain who Tuesday , a party was made|plan was not included in the| * North Vietnam. He did not set said he joined with "those w , : 2 tal E SE id h v wh «, |\Public by a newspaper Tues-|Union Nationale program| any prior conditions would dearly like it (the bonibe day, but a government Delivering Canada's major ing) to stop." j 80 repre- because 'the plan wasn't feasi-| @ sentative said it does not repre he: ble electorally." sent government policy. policy speech at the UN Gen F however, added Mr. Maltais was among only eral Assembly, Martin said: re t that the leaders of North E Nortt wita The plan, conceived undera handful of Union Nationale "It seems clear that all Vietnam had "nev ' as Peon of two members of a cabinet ministers present in the| attempts to bring about talks they. mage Pgh ed ome | Que! ec separatist club, was provincial capital Tuesday! between the two sides' are from doing to help the process disclosed in the Quebec daily/ when the story broke. | doomed to failure unless the of peace if it is stopped." : iF Action as the Union Nationale) In the absence of Premier) bombing is stopped. This is a Ba aie government's "secret plan. ior;Daniel Johnson who {s on al matter of first priority if we U-S. APPEARS UNMOVED jthe political independence of month-long holiday Mr. Maltais| are to start the process of de-| Martin is believed to have | Quebec." became the highest-ranking| escalation and to open the door al apy in private talks with ; to the conference room... . |S. officials the view he pre- Prime Minister Pearson had Sented today but it was obvious earlier called for a "pause" in|from the statement of U.S, the bombing and Martin last Ambassador Arthur J. Gold. berg last week that the U.S. is nccnmniiaa | But Tuesday night Associate) government spokesman in the | Justice Minister Armand Mal-| capital. | tais, acting vice-chdirman of; The acting premier, Finance | j : | the cabinet, denied this, saying:| Minister Paul Dozois was! fe has -- to do with the) absent on official government| April urged termination of the di d policy of the present govern-| business ¢ PAE (aay bombing, but linked this to unmoved in its decision to con+ ment." yoy vithog Rett hal eh restoration of the demilitarized tinue the bombing unless the | Mr. Maltais described the} yy, zone separating the two Viet-| North gives firm indications it Maltais explained the presence of separatists on the nams "to its intended status|WOuld go ahead with "meaning. plan as a working document of BRITAIN'S BROWN, PRESIDENT JOHNSON a study committee formed to | ; subject to effective internation-|{¥! talks" if the bombing ; .'°| committee by saying the party | ; n a flooded downtown Kansas of the man in the right |™ake proposals on party Policy| had invited views on poaaihie -++Discuss Vietnam, Other Issues ji supervision'--thus | calling se aa City street yesterday and backsréund {prior to the campaign for thel policy by a number or pi for a commitment from North! Canada has been reluctant, : |June 5, 1966, Aged : : Vietnam. because of its position as a contrasts with the unimag- inative, foot-sloging path provincial elec-| alists and movements having --AP Wirephoto | tion. no link whatever with the But today he simply asked) that' the" bombing' be: stooped jmember of the International Raging Rio Grande ' Threatens More Ruin HARLINGEN, _ Tex. Flood miseries piled up on bot! tides of the Texas-Mexico bor-| fer today as the raging Rio Grande put @ people to flight and thréatened even worse depredations. Torrents gushing downstream tent water creeping higher in Harlingen, already hard hit, and the swollen river spreadjage overflowed to pollute drink- ing water. The rotting carcass- es of hundreds of farm animals/Th In desperate attempts toldrifted across the flooded Jahd.|ther measurement was impossi- across ever widening areas in northern Mexico. theck what officials said would be the worst flood in Texas his- jory, thousands of volunteers pushed old car bodies, rocks and other heavy debris into a fam breach at nearby Mer- redes. Bulldozers threw jikes and sandbags up earth) (CP)--|which battered through hjarea more than a week ago, to|homeless. 54 fatalities.. That figure inciud- ed 11 deaths in Texas. dr The floodwaters brought with|from their homes in the city of|/plan for 'a confederation ofjeign state integrated economi- them the threat of typhoid, tet-|41/900. Tuesday, troops moved|two autonomous states." anus, and food poisoning. 41 to dysentery, encephalitis) pe, this.000 inhabitants were made|Le Club Fleur-de-Lys, and|as co-operative federalism, par-| out to be "primarily a sozial| policy statements to the Gen-|ties in Vietnam." In igen, flor TS|club's past president, sured at 43 feet above sea level a He said it is obvious the | party." Union Nationale did not include : this five-year plan in its pro-| Mr. Maltais, asked whether = e Four Ministers gram for the 1966. election in|M@ personally would endorse a m4 wich he pry upeet te tr Program dor guamee nterne' PGE Viet Issue It was unthinkable the Union|Ple- | \ without qualification. '\Control_ Commission, for Viet- PROBLEMS ARE COMPLEX |"°™ ¢stablished by the Geneva However, Martin added: pcre meniss to say anything "But let us not for a moment Ab Taig Suggest Canada was pretend that a halt in the bomb- i ees ing would, in itself, bring the|, Canada places great value in Nationale government would be| "I am not in a separatist| UNITED NATIONS (Reuters)|versations ranged over the Mid-|war to an end, There are no\her relations with the U.S. and promoting secession 'without a\Party." --The first meeting in two|dle East and UN peacekeeping|magic formulas;. there are no|her channels to Hanoi and did mandate from the Quebec peo-| Guy Bertrand said the com-|Ye@"S_ of foreign ministers of| operations in Cyprus. \simple prescriptions for the set-\"0t want to do anything that ple to do so. mittee considered several possi-|'"¢ U.S., Russia, Britain and) Thant said before the meeting|tlement of problems as complex | Would disrupt either, Guy Bertrand, presid of|ble politi alternatives such|France Tuesday night turned|there was nothing new in the|as the issues behind the hostili- Georges Caron, occasion," a UN aspokesman'eral Assembly of either the! Martin noted that Hanoi had ' U.S. or Russia. refused to budge on any of the if by the oiled gath-/ Observers concluded the sec-/U.S. proposals tik starts e or lobster, led steak/retary-general did not raise/meaningful talks and said he and ic@ cream in Secretary-/Vietnam in the talks because/recognized that there was no, U_ Thant's 38th-floorj/both Gromyko and Couve dejhope of progress in 'appeals or suite in the UN headquarters,/Murville say it's no business of|proposals which place the total steered clear of the hottest/the UN as Jong as China is not}burden of responsibility for the separatist) ticular Status, associate state- said lee and. sovereignty. It decid- 'ove 56,000 to 10,090 2<sidents| interviews they helped draft thejed Quebec should cally with the rest of Canada. safety the patients of a 500- d state tuberculosis hospital. WASHINGTON (. ~ fence Secretary McNamara said today he is still opposed to details of what--if anything--jnied by his UN ambassador at "If, therefore, we are to rec- Flood waters in the wake of N B s k A , di | Be i WwW WwW topic of all--the Vietnam war. |a member. making essential concessions on/ hitting the B rciead & collar ditee eee, Sarah "were eae e runs Ic Ca lans | An official statement gave no} Each minister was accompa- only one side."" [No of the "lew af Gee ro A mass program of injectiuns/ble as the gauge became inac-/ | against typhoid was begun and 'cessible. stocks of serum are being flown| as the crest of the in. Persons from flooded areas| narced on toward the Gulf of | Brunswick city's French-speak-| Nova Scotia by British colonia who had cuts or scratches were) Mexico, Brownsville and Mata- given anti-tetanus shots. /mo Unofficial reports were |Mexico City placed the number sweeping tide. stacked along highways and|f homeless at 1,000,000 actoss streets that intersect the over-|the Rio Grande, now five miles flowing Arroyo miles north of the Rio Grande. MORE DEATHS REPORTED Reports of 10 more deaths in Colorado, 15|Wide ii stretching from Reynosa down- Ss river's mouth, in places, in an area tream to Matamoros near the Mexico, meanwhile, boosted the| ENTIRE TOWN HOMELESS toll from hurricane Beulah, Almost all of Reynosa's 110,- Interest To Five Percent OTTAWA (CP)--The Bank of|the rate increase is regarded) T Canada raised its interest rate|more as a signal of what the|'Edith is a small storm in an|French heritage and learn to|budge in its current wage dis- took the evening off for @ Pri-\jined in the eight - page pam-| Tuesday night to five per cent|Bank of Canada feels thclearly stage of development,|use a French language of good| pute with 6,000 striking bus and vate dinner and to travel to phiet was the proposition that! from 4% on money loaned to/short-term interest tevel should | 159 { chartered banks to bring it in|be on the best securities. line with a general rate upturn. It restores a half-per-cent cut] ment noted that the money sup- interest/ply had been rising substan-|is tially in Since. chartered banks rarely|s hort-term market interest borrow from the central bank,|rates had also risen to the point 4 where was "no longer appropriate." made April 7 when rates generally were falling. War Focus Shifts To North SAIGON (AP)--North Viet- namese slackened their month- long artillery battle of attrition along the demilitarized zone Tuesday and the focus of the war shifted to North Vietnam with U.S. planes stepping up their raids despite swarms of Communist jets and missiles. North Vietnamese gunners fired 50 rounds to harass U.S. marines at Con Thien,, the key to American defences. But the heaviest shelling--850 rounds-- fell on two South Vietnamese airborne battalions a few miles away. U.S. planes mounted a near maximum effort over North Vietnam after a week of bad weather and encountered _blis- tering defences over the port of Haiphong and the vital north- east rail line that links Hanoi and China, _ Of the 35 jets North Vietnam is believed to have operational i the Chinese frontier, at least half and prob- ably more were in the air. : ment had to offer six-per-cent interest to sell some long-term bonds. The sale was to redeem other bonds coming due Oct. 1. The central bank's announce- recent the 414-per-cent level] Ni Last week the federal govern- reaching inhabitants, braced to meet the) Xchanges with France. MIAMI, (AP)--Tropical| gping a better quality culture,"| 5 z e storm Edith, brewing up what a! igle sai : if ot {political leaders spent most of|it should happen when provin- : Mr. Daigle said k na a Rai es 'could' be the season's fifth : Tuesday wooing students for)cial economics allow. | an a |AUaoHe hurricane, accepted quickly enough in the t jlessly at sea today moving at 12|2¢° y a D dl k d miles an hour towards the| French-language world and ea oc e |warm seas that spawned killer), We tend to become anglicized| Hurricane Beulah. |50 to 55 m.p.h. near. the centre. A gradual increase in intensity months, butjreaching hurricane force by Savoie of late Wednesday." or direction was forecast today Edith was about 1,100 miles|l'Evangeline east southeast of San Juan, Puerto Rico, and miles east of Barbados. 7 7 North Vietnam. as achieved at the meeting|the 2%%-hour dinner. Thant and/ognize a halt to the hombing for bed Ww Seek French Cultural Ties attended by U.S, State Secre-/another. UN official were the) What it is, namely the key to Sine dane ee ge ah aa tie tary Dean Rusk, Russia's only others present. ane the oe a in| Treaty Organinetion neater "4 ea ae rei Gromy i in's e process of so fiet-| ,, : | MONCTON, N.B. (CP)--Fivelin the Maritime provinces. The, Andrei Gromyko, Britain's) There was no interpreter) e P ving the Viet-| vurkey that action to neutralize ; ; ' by i Fn George Brown and Maurice|since all speak fluent English)nam problem, let us be very) / , » floog| leading members of this New/expulsion of the Acadians tree Couve de Murville of France. |and Thant wanted to emphasize/Clear in our minds that it is North Vietnam's chiet port. 1s Wha anhte | seawall only one side of a military) 4 Tisk that I don't believe we The spokesman said the con-' the informality of the PERE cation era thats we ranact| should undertake at this time." proceed, if we are to have any | The defence secretary thus lhope of success, and if the|underscored his differences ing Acadian population are authorities in 1755 became|_ seeking expanded cultural|almost legendary through the STUDENTS WOOED other side did not exist." | with the joint chiefs of staff on Martin thus echoed the enr-| the question of bombing or min- Libs, Fs Debate Se Federal-Provincial Rules NEWS HIGHLIGHTS of the Acadian Education Asso-| Mr. Daigle said he could not} s ciation, said today the froup elaborate in the 12 items }met with French Education|, > ; 1 iMiniater "Allain included in the letter to Presi- ANADIAN PRESS ed hould h | : | By THE CANADIA! ESS ,ed it shou appen immedi-! Q | White two ot Ontano's major|ately, Mr. Nixon would only sey| Japanese Quadruplets Die TOKYO (Reuters) -- All the quadruplets born Sunday Peyrefitte in| Quebec early this month and/dent de Gaulle, but all related| has sent a 12-point letter to|to culturalexchanges with| President Charles de Gaulle. | France. | "We want France to supple-| in Fukuoka, southern Japan, died today. The quadruplets, all girls, were born about a month pre-maturely to Mrs. Matsuko Munakata, 28, wife of a merchant. A spokesman for Fukuoka Central Hospital described the cause as "premature heart and lung conditions." ment us in retaining and devei-| Quebec Seeks Vote On Separatism QUEBEC (CP) -- Le Soleil says it has learned the Union Nationale government plans to introduce legislation calling for a province-wide referendum through which taxpayers would vote for or against independence for Que- bec. The Le Soleil story, published today, says legislation calling for a referendum would be introduced near the opening of the next session of the legislature, "perhaps even before the end of Expo 67 in Montreal." ey continued to rise, but fur- ros, with more than 200,000 Brews Fla. He said Acadians are not was harm- the Oct. 17 provincial general) Mr. Nixon also made public a election, the third was busy pamphlet abridgement of a 22- establishing a new set of rules page policy manifesto outlining) because of the environment we| MONTREAL (CP) The for federal - provincial discus-|"certain guidelines" for voters. __ |live int." |Montreal Transportation Com-|S!0"- ___|PLAN FOR UNITY he weather bureau said:| "But we want to protect our| mission says it does not plan to| Liberal leader Robert Nixon| Among the suggestions out | | quality." |subway workers--and that it|Owen Sound, but before 'he left «Canada's federal - provincial! | Other members of the group} has the people on its side. be toured the bow gs gd of machinery must work better so are Dr. Leon Richard, presi-| Lucien L'Allier, chairman) pbs pcan hee! Id some€'that we shall survive as a dient of the National Society ofl snd censral. manayer of thel oe junited nation with two chief; storm| Acadians: President Adelarl| ae peg Both Premier John Robarts/languages and many cultures. | the University of) Commission, paid in a state- and Donald MacDonald, leader' «pecrimination between the Moncton; Gilbert Finn, general|ment Tuesday night no' newjof the New Democratic Party, yarious levels of government| : manager of the F an-|Offers by the MTC are planned put in full days, Mr. Robarts in t cease," th letl o important change in speed] mae Ot ine societer igid|to end the strike that' began|Sarnia and Mr. MacDonald in\wuyq' Cae 'he PAmPhIet y; | Simon Bujold, presid ent of| Sept. 21. the Guelph - Waterloo area. | y : | 4 5 Moncton's| "We feel that we have the) Both Mr, Nixon and EASY opine aa aig or Be PM Reprimands Cabinet Colleagues French-language daily news-) support of a very large majori-|MacDonald told their student Robarts, Progressive Conserva-| OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Minister Pearson verbally paper. : ty of the population and we are audiences that they favored tive premier, at his evening) spanked some of. his cabinet colleagues Tuesday for their The Acadians are descen-)determined to continue to be abolition of university fees, but rally in Sarnia attended by, absence from the Commons opening Monday, informed : sources said today. The sources said the prime minister hest winds are. estimated at indicated with the about 620 34 BELIEVED DEAD Pesticide Blamed In Tijuana Deaths pobre tg eretnngs TIJUANA, Mexico (AP)--The death toll of Tijuana's mass poisoning mounted today as scientists said a pesticide found in bread may be the killer. The pesticide, parathion, was blamed tentatively by seven U.S. chemists working at Sac- ramento, Calif. A spokesman said enough poison was found to kill children but not adults. The dead--whose numbers as given by officials varied from 14 to 34--were almost all chil- dren. The report of 34 dead came late Tuesday from Pedro Mireles Malpica, district feder+ al attorney-general. In Mexico City, the attorney - general's \\ dants of early French settlers' deserving of this support."" |where Mr. MacDonald suggest- ahout 270 persons. was particularly upset about the absence of Labor Min- | In his speech, Mr. Robarts Pipe 7 ister Nicholson, the minister responsible for housing. 250 OTHERS STRICKEN jlaid most of the blame connect-| ed with provincial and munici- pal financing at the door of the H ane OTA a | _In THE TIMES Today .. He said Canada is in grave 'the formulation of \ priorities, Spending, » Candidate Wants Forum--P, 17 office said it had learned offi- one cially of 18 dead. Cc North Stors Tie---P, 14 In addition, about 250 others were being treated at hospitals and clinics. PARENTS CARRY DEAD and residents of Tijuana stopped boiling their drinking water. Fred Roth, chief of the resid- ual pesticide laboratory of Cali- fornia's department of agricul- Throughout the night, doctors worked to administer antidotes --apropine and a drug nick- i s 1 named "pam." fe chon | Mid East | A young doctor's quick action | Peace Plan Ann Landers---18 Ajox News---5 was believed responsible for City News--17 In the grieving border city, ture, said he and six other saving scores of lives. | Classified--32, 33, 34 A 7 : " chemists found parathion in the 5 | Comica-36 stricken since Sunday, crying n "The first Ment: Bhowi STRASBOURG, France (Rev omics = ts carried their young stomachs of two of the stricken e rst patient showing b AS URG, France (Reu- Editorial --4 2 paren' fines tn thel children. symptoms. of poisoning came in ters)--Israeli Foreign Minister | aito : dead to clinics in their arms. about 9 a.m. yesterday," Dr. |Abba Eban today proposed a Financial---30 An amount of parathion smaller than an aspirin tablet would kill an average-sized man, Roth said. It is widely used in agriculture, particularly on vegetable crops. "The people, they keep com- ing; we do all we can, but there are too many," said Dr. Jorge Salas of the Red Cross clinic. The disclosure that parathion had been discovered in bread Obituaries--34 Sports--1!4, 15, 16 Television--36 Theatres--28 Weather--2 Jorge Salas Zepeda said Tues- |Middle East peace plan based day. jon a Mediterranean community|= +--~ "One of the first things I did in which Israel, Jordan and|= was call one of the radio sta- |Lebanon would be linked eco- i tions so they could warn the. |, omically but retain their)" people. The first broadcast was jrights as sovereign states. "You might just as well brought release of 19 dairy offi- It was theorized that the liq- + | He made the proposal while |= : Whitby News--5 cials and street milk vendors uid pesticide spilled into flour out by 9.15 a.m. laddressing the consultative | = come quietly, Banks!"" Women's--18, 19, 20 held for questioning since Mon- later made into bread in Tijua> Tijuana, a city of 265,000 pere jassembly of the Council: of|2 : day. A ban on milk was lifted, ba. sons, touches the U.S. border, iBurone here. Fe Ua Mm ul li | »

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