Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Oct 1967, p. 1

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wing for 5 5 5 5 P) F) 0 0 0 5-7373 Sateen: ee gamer rere ene UAW WON'T RESUME B DETROIT (AP)--Ay tiators ended a 14-hour sess today and the striking United Auto Workers said they would not return to the bargaining table until called by Ford Motor Co. "Apparently the compan y wanted to think some pvt to nego- they have for the | ast few days, The spokesman said he -- pects bargaining to resume Sometime today. The fifth near-marathon talks t hing tng Tow came as the UAW President Walter P. Reuther and his top aides wired the leaders of Ford locals that no meaningful progress had been made on most key money issues in a new contract. The telegrams said most of the bargaining in the last few days has been confined to non- ire eA money matters, although "meaningful progress" has been made in the area of "pen- sions, insurance and income se- curity during periods of layoff." When asked if the wires were to prepare members--some of them restive over the lengthen- ing strike--for a possible break- nnn rm down in talks, a union spokes- man would say only "they were to inform the membership." Some 160,000 workers went on strike at Ford Sept. 7 on expira- tion of the old three-year con- tract. The strike was in its 43rd day today. There was no elaboration of . eT reteenenenmenerereeapnt the term "income security." But Reuther's main goal had been a guaranteed annual in- come that would assure a work- er who starts a year employed that he will get 100 per cent of his wages for the year even if laid off. Pensions also had been a priority goal. Insurance im- provements were listed among union goals, but without empha- sis, Reuther has said he wants a big wage boost with something more for skilled workers, plus parity for Canadian workers who make about 40 cents an hour less than their U.S. coun- terparts, Auto workers average $3.41 cents an hour industrywide and get another $1.30 in fringe bene- fits, ARGAINING UNTIL CALLED BY FORD HH eRe NGKMN RY Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajox, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and VOL. 26--NO. 242 Durham Counties. ve Ghe Oshawa Gunes 10 Single ¢ 55c Per Week Home 'Balivered incertae NU TUT sir OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1967 eee nei NN TRAGER Tenn | Weather Report Very cool tonight. Friday sunny and warmer. Low to- night 35 .High tomorrow 55. Authorized as Second Class Mal! Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES BRITISH INTELLIGENCE Espionage Leaders Identified NEW YORK (AP)--The Sat- urday Evening Post in an arti- cle in its Nov. 4 issue publicly! The Post article is excerpted i from the book The Espionage| * Establishment, by David Wise] , reveals for the first time the names of the heads of the two most secret British intelligence agencies. The article says that MI-6, England's espionage arm, is run by Sir Dick Goldsmith White and that MI-5, the counterintel- ligence division, is headed by Sir Edward M. Furnival-Jones. In London, the Daily Express publishes the names of the two intelligence chiefs despite a vol- untary arrangement between publications and the British gov- ernment to protect national se- curity, A spokesman for the news- Paper, a Lord Beaverbrook daily with a circulation of 4,- 000,000, said the names were printed because the . Post [planned to use them in the |forthcoming issue. and Thomas B. Ross. The book will be published by Random | House. White was deputy chief of the counterintelligence subdivision of G-2 on the staff of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's Su- preme Allied headquarters in the Second World War, the arti- cle says. Elsewhere in the article, the authors say that the U.S. Cen- tral Intelligence Agency spends $1,500,000,000 a year, "flouts" Congress with a domestic divi- sion a block from the White House, and that an agent said it once had a plan to blow off Cuban Premier Fidel Castro's head with an exploding cigar. A RIOT STICK-SWIN Jury Resumes In Klan Case MERIDIAN, Miss. (AP)--The ©.S. government charge that 18 men conspired in a Ku Klux' Klan plot to execute three young civil rights workers in 1964 was in the hands of a feder- al jury today. After six hours of delibera- tion, the all-white jury of seven women and five men was locked up in a hotel Wednesesday night to resume their deliberations today. Judge Harold Cox of U.S. dis- trict court ordered the jury to bed after a marshal brought him a note from the jury room. The men were charged with conspiring to violate the civil rights of the three men who were slain. Maximum punish- ment is 10 years and $5,000 fine. No state charges were filed. In final arguments, Assistant U.S. Attorney John Doar, head of the justice department's civil rights division, recommended Wire Ripped Circuits Off OTTAWA (CP)--Almost a mile of wire was ripped from Canadian Pacifictelegraph poles west today, cutting off service to Pembroke, Brockville, Smiths Falls and other communities. Canadian Pacific said 5,000 feet of copper wire disappeared at a point near Stittsville, 12 miles west of Ottawa, about 1:30 a.m. News was cut off to the Pem- roke Observer and Brockville Recorder and Times, both served via Ottawa by The Cana- dian Press on Canadian Pacific circuits. |the three civil rights workers jwere arrested in Philadelphia, |troops to augment the Penta- Miss., June 21, 1964, by Deputy) gon's civilian guard force in of Ottawa _ earlyjner. that one defendant, Travis M. Barnette, 39, be acquitted. But, Doar added, acquittal of the others "'would be saying there was no night-time release by Deputy Cecil Price, there are no White Knights, there are/of anti-war and anti-draft pro- no young men dead, there was no murder." DELIVERED TO KLAN The government contends that Sheriff Price, held in jail until night, then delivered to a band of waiting White Knights of the|in & planned massive anti-war demonstration Saturday. Ku Klux Klan. Defence lawyers pictured the case as an effort to use "'centralicjals moved to oust leaders of a intimidate _ Missis-|.ampus anti-war sit-in Wednes- power to sippi" and described Doar as "the man who put James Mere- dith in Ole Miss." Madison police officer beats back an angry throng of University of Wisconsin pro» By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS congin and California have moved against student leaders tests after demonstrators in Madison and Oakland clashed with police. In Washington sources said the U.S. Army may use para- preventing disruption or worse University of Wisconsin offi- day which was broken up by University authorities in Wis-| 'Wednesday on cams pus. Squads of riot officers broke up a sit-in intended to disrupt Dow Chemical Co. At least 65 persons were injured the melee. Demonstrators discussed classroom strikes as a possible retaliatory measure. They were supported by several hundred sympathetic faculty members. The demonstrators were pro- testing the presence of repre- sentatives of the Dow Chemical Co., manufacturer of napalm for the war in Vietnam, on cam- pus to interview job applicants. On the west coast, Arleigh Williams, dean of students at the University of California's Berkeley campus, said his office will charge at least 20 students with violating university rules in the on-campus anti-war ral- lies. | Russ Claim | Johnson Seeks > End To Strike © Solid Rock On Venus MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Rus- sia's Venus IV space capsule sent back messages indicating job interviews. Dow makes napalm for the war in Viet- nam, (AP Wirephoto) U.S. May Use Paratroops To Curb Demonstrations sieged Oakland army induction tinued their protest at the be- SS and the arrest of 91/#e that the surface of Venus con- sists of solid rocks like those on earth, the Soviet news agency Tass reported today. Dr. Viadimir Siforov, a prom- inent Soviet specialist on long- distance communications, told Tass that radioed reports as Venus reached the planet Wednesday indicated the sur- face rocks have physical pro-| perties like the silicates of the earth. | Before the landing there had been many theories about the surface hidden behind the shroud of clouds that veil Venus. Experts' ideas about the sur- face ranged from a scorching inferno .ef, dusty desert without a scrap o covered with ice and water. NEEDS CHECKING Tass quoted Siforov as saying report on a rocky surface squatters at the door brought to|"@eded checking by an automat- more than 300 the numbers of]: / persons seized since the protest|iformation from the surface of began. Governor Ronald Reagan, at ence on a cruise to the Virgin Islands, warned that if demon- strators step up their protest, California could use the national guard. In Buffalo, N.Y., 200 anti-war demonstrators paraded peaceful- ly outside the local draft board chanting "We won't go." Ten riot-trained Madison city police. Meredith is the Negro student who desegregated the Univer- sity of Mississippi in 1962. The civil rights workers were Michael Schwerner, 24, a Brook- lyn social worker who was in Meridian for the Congress of] 5 Racial Equality; Andrew Good- man, 20, a New York college student who had just arrived for a summer of civil rights work; and James Chaney, 22, a Merid-| & ian Negro who assisted Schwer- Farmer Killed In Collision KINGSTON (CP)--Ralph W. Thompson, a 56-year-old Syden- ham farmer, was killed in a two-car collision Wednesday night, one mile out of Elgin- burg. Elginburg is 9 miles north of Kingston. Robarts Cabinet Changes Must Wait "Some Weeks" TORONTO (CP)--Premier John Robarts said today it will be "some weeks"' before cabinet changes are made following Tuesday's provincial general election. Municipal Affairs Minister J. W. Spooner (Cochrane South) and Mines Minister George Wardrope (Port Arthur), both defeated, will remain in the cabinet until replacements can be found, Mr. Robarts told a news conference. The premier said he _ will study the qualifications and the margin of success at the polls of every Conservative before an- nouncing new cabinet appoint- ments. "T am assessing the whole sit- pation. Mt will be some weeks before an announcement can be made." The legislature will open in late January or early February. He described the new balance of political forces as "healthy." The Conservatives won 69 seats compared with a high of 78 during the last session of the house. The Liberals finished with 28, an increase of six and the New Democratic Party 20, an increase of 12. Redistribution added nine seats to the 108-seat house for Tuesday's voting. "We have a good solid work-, ing majority," Mr. Robarts said before attending the first cabi- net meeting since the election. "The size of the opposition isn't everything. Quality will have Shirley Temple Black's startled expression came as her "leading man," Sen. Everett M. Dirksen, (R- something to do with it." Il.,) prepared to kiss the THAT'S SHOW 'BUSINESS, SHIRLEY ! former child motion picture star for the benefit of pho- tographers during her visit te the Capitol yesterday. Anti-draft demonstrators con- draft registration cards. t the national governors confer- men, including one clergyman,}| turned in what they said were|book, tells of de Gaulle's report- ic station which would transmit the planet. moisture to a waste Quebec Premier Holds Tram-Subway Meeting QUEBEC (CP)--Premierjures will be taken against the Daniel Johnson met in his office |strikers if they decide to re- with both sides in the Montreal|sume work. Mr. Johnson said he transit strike Wednesday night| would like this promise in writ- in what he called "an ultimate/ing. effort" to end the 29-day bus} The special session is also to and subway tie-up. consider another provincial dis- The premier met first for two|pute--this one with 208 radiolo- hours with Marcel Pepin, presi-|gists most of whom have re- dent of the Confederation of Na-|signed their positions with Que- tional Trade Unions represent-|bec hospitals. ing the 6,000 strikers, and then| Back-to-work injunctions were with Lucien Saulnier, chairman|issued last week against most of of Montreal's executive commit-|the bus and subway workers but tee. they have refused to return to A panying Mr. Saulnier|their jobs pending an appeal into Mr. Johnson's office was|against the court orders. 'Lucien L'Allier, chairman of the} Mr. Justice Frederic Dorion Montreal Transportation Com-\of Quebec Superior Court post- mission. poned until Oct. 25 a request for The premier, who summoned|injunctions against the radiolo- the officials to Quebec City for|gists, saying he needs to hear the talks, told reporters he is|more witnesses in the case. not acting as mediator. | Dr. Rene Robillard, vice-pres- "I want to get information," |ident of the Association of Ra- he said. "I want to know under|diologists, said Wednesday his what conditions both men wouldjorganization has worked out be willing to restore bus service new proposals for presentation jin Montreal immediately." |to the government but there has Mr. Johnson said Tuesday|been no decision for a work re- that a special session of the leg-/turn. islature set for Friday to deal| The bus and subway workers, with the strike will be called off/who walked out Sept. 21, last if the MTC workers go back to/asked for $3.32 immediately and their jobs. six. The premier said, following the talks with both; The MTC sides that unless the strikers re-/diator's proposal for a raise to sume work today the legislative/$3.05 from their present wage of session will go on as scheduled/$2.77 an hour. PRIZE WINNER Aguel Angel Asturias, 68, Guatemala's ambassador to France, is shown in a Paris restaurant today after learn- ing he was awarded the Nobel prize for literature. Asturias is a writer of epics about the poor Indians of Guatemala. "(AP Wirephoto) | | i V 1 t M. 1 G ; : | Friday "and we will adopt a/ The radiologists' dispute cen- | Police Blamed | 1e 1 |law" to get the employees back tres on who will set rates for x- | In JFK's Death | | PARIS (AP)--A French jour-| inalist has quoted President de) Gaulle as saying that "the po-| lice' were at the bottom of} President John F. Kennedy's as-| |sassination. | Raymond Tournoux, in a/downed their first MiG in more te 7 than a month Wednesday, but ed opinions on the assassination.|raids on the heavily-defended f the book, La port of Haiphong cost the 706th Tragedie du General, were|U.s, published by the magazine|North Vietnam, the U.S. com- Paris Match. Tournoux quotes}mand announced. Excerpts from de Gaulle as saying about the assassination: e always happens 'in a country|d or oppressors and oppressed, or than the oppressed, or the po- 'lice, or at least certain of its "The police did the job, or| where Russian missiles and hel- else they pulled the strings orjicopters arriving by sea are as- else they let it happen, In any|sembled, the North Vietnamese case they were involved. That|kept up pressure just below the where there are racial hatreds,| North and South Vietnam. the oppressors are more afraid|the rear platoon of a U.S. ma- to work. jray services and examinations Mr. Saulnier promised that no}/--the government or the radiolo- reprisals or disciplinary meas-}gists. Bagged In Fight SATGON (AP)--US Rn a eynenine nn | NEWS HIGHLIGHTS DOSCO Ottawa Agreements Studied HALIFAX (CP) -- Nova Scotia's Deputy Attorney- General John A. Y. MacDonald, said today his depart- ment is investigating Dominion Steel and Coal Corp. financial agreements with Ottawa and Nova Scotia to de- termine whether any contracts have been broken. Mr. MacDonald said: "All aspects of anything related to this thing are under inquiry." He did not elaborate but said the attorney-general's department has had no direct con- tact yet with the justice department in Ottawa regarding the inquiry. West Berlin Has New Mayor | BERLIN (Reuters) -- Klaus Schuetz, 41-year-old state secretary in the West German foreign ministry, was elect- ed governing mayor of West Berlin today. The Social regen nn pilots combat plane lost over As U.S. Navy planes bombard- d the sprawling compound emilitarized zone between Communist troops ripped into| rine company with small-arms and machine-gun fire. Ten ma- Democrat received a two-thirds majority from the city parliament -- 81 votes to 38, with three abstentions. Schuetz, a right-hand man of Foreign Minister Willy elements, work with the oppres-|rines were killed and 19 wound- sors."" ed. Brandt, succeeds Heinrich Albertz, 51, who resigned last TORONTO (CP)--An Ameri- can physician says every moth- er who kisses a child's bruise to "make it better" is practising hypnotism. Dr. Calvert Stein, a specialist in neurology and psychiatry, told the annual meeting of the Ontario Chapter of the College of General Practice of Canada that hypnotism works on the mind and creates emotions that effect the body through nerves, hormones and enzyme systems, Dr. Stein, iate pr Child - Kissing Mothers Accused Of Hypnotism -- | month after internal party crises and months of student | unrest. Schuetz took over a job once held by Brandt. | Hunt Pressed For Extortionist | HAMBURG (Reuters) 'The hunt for West Germany's most wanted man, extortionist Phantom Roy Clark, was stepped up today after a newspaper received a_ letter | saying he killed the only witness who could have recog- do so as a reflection upon them- patients dislike their wives tak-| ing the pill because they feel women ought to get pregnant. They take the wives' failure to selves. tients accept the pill and contin- their husbands. BERATES 100 MM FAG In another address, a Toronto p of clinical psychiatry at Spring- field College, said hypnotism is destined to join vaccination and anesthesia as an accepted face of medical practice. Techniques of hypnotism, which lead to relaxation of mus- cles, are simple enough to be absorbed by 10-year-old chil- dren, said Dr. Stein. Mrs. Black is a candidate for California's vacant 11th district seat in the House. (AP Wirephoto) Later, Dr. Brian Little. of Cleveland said husbands who doctor d the tobacco in- dustry of a "callous disregard a 100-millimetre cigarette. duce cigarette smoking. set limits for tar and nicotine jhide their wives' birth control |pills can confuse studies of the |pill's effectiveness. Basing his observations on a ipo of Negro men in Cleve- land, Dr, Little said many of his |tising and physicians should set jan example by not smoking in 'public, the doctor said. content. The tobacco industry. should} stress moderation in its adver- But he said many of his pa-|e ue to take it secretly. Others | = stop taking it of their own voli-| = tion or give in to objections of| = of public safety" by introducing |= Dr. Norman C. Delarue, as-} = sistant professor of surgery at|= the University of Toronto, said] = government, industry and physi-|= cians should take steps to re- He suggested the government 4 ban the 100 mm cigarette and|- nized his voice. The extortionist, thought to be behind five explosions on railway property which injured four per- sons, demanded 300,000 marks ($75,000) and threatened to blow up the Hamburg main railway station if he did not get the money. ni ..In THE TIMES Today .. Population 80,475--P. 13 Assessment Work--P. 5 Donevan Tops O'Neill--P, 10 st i 3 f= 5 Lawyer Ann Landers--14 Ajax News--5 City News--13 Classified--22, 23, 24 Comics--27 Editorial--4 Financial--26 Obituaries--24 2 Sports--10, 11 = Television--27 Theatres--21 Weather--2 Whitby News--5 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17 ial i wicks "We want to secede!"' Braun ni silt lL

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