Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Oct 1967, p. 1

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Jointer pulley, belt and stand 119.50 ; on all jointing operations abbeting, bevelling, taper- utting head assembly lub- endently adjustable front y double tilt fence, with reset stops. Tilts left or e Clearance ' Doors plete with steel track and pening 32" x 80'. Availe oft beige. 4.99 PHONE 725-7373 } : end the foreign minister in Ja- Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, ville, neighboring Ajax, Whitby, Bowman. Pickering and centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 26--NO. 243 Ghe Oshawa Zimes 10e Single 55c Per Week Home Dellversd OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1967 Weather Report Warmer today and tonight, cooler Saturday. Low tonight 40, high tomorrow 50. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Offi ice Depart ttawa and for payment of Postage in Cosh oe TWENTY PASES MERVILLE BRIAN, 22, shot in the left leg by a Montreal police constable, is disarmed following a wild shooting spree near a down- town Montreal club. Dozens of policemen were held at bay with a machine gun. One other armed man was killed by police. Former Japanese PM Dies Yoshida Friendly To West OISO, Japan (AP)--Former, -- Shigeru Yoshida, who Japan back to prosperity from the ruins of the Second World War and firmly allied it with the West, died in his sleep today. He was 89, An aide said Yoshida died while taking his afternoon nap at his seaside estate in Oiso, 50 miles southwest of Tokyo, Doc- tors said a gall bladder inflam- mation and general deteriora- tion of his condition overburned his heart. Yoshida, a pre-war diplomat pan's first two post-war govern-| ments, became premier'in May, 1946, and headed the govern- ment until 1954, three years after the U-.S..occupation: ended with the signing of the San Francisco peace treaty. He headed the government MOSCOW (AP)--Soviet ports of Venus IV's space re- landing on Venus. The planet's that the. device made a soft surface condi- not those of readings of the atmosphere and VENUS LANDING QUESTIO the planet itself. But there has been no Soviet claim that the instrument pack- A: Ee NED ar MAN, 30, KILLED. KIN HURT IN MONTREAL GUN-BATTLE Cafe Dispute Has Fatal triumph indicate that the instru- ment package radioed back in- formation from the atmosphere of the earth's sister planet not from its surface. The reports also raise doubts tions still may be unknown in detail. The highest temperature recorded by Venus IV, 536 de- grees Fahrenheit, and the great- est pressure, 15 times the earth's at sea level, could be A brief Soviet announcement Wednesday said data was ta- dioed to earth while the instru- ments were floating toward Venus on a 15.5-mile, 90-minute course through the planet's at- mosphere, age, a rounded object 35.4 inches in diameter, was still transmitting when it reached the surface. Just where and why it stopped transmitting has not been disclosed. Aftermath MONTREAL (CP)--A 30- year-old man was killed by po- lice and another, believed to be his brother, was wounded early nn) q MM Ford-UAW Settlement Seen Near DETROIT (AP) -- Negotia- tors for Ford Motor Co. and the United Auto Workers, locked in marathon bargaining for more than 20 hours, were reported today close to settlement of a strike that began 44 days ago. "When I leave here today I expect it will be after an an- nouncement," a _ bargaining table source, caught .in a brief subcommittee recess, told The Associated Press. Asked if he meant after an- nouncement of a settlement, the source said "Yes."" The 12-storey Ford headquar- longer than anyone else since the parliamentary system was established in Japan in 1870. During his first months in of- fice millions of soldiers had to be demobilized and resettled, a ocratic constitution was (promulgated, food had to be im- ported quickly to stave off' fam- ine and aid was needed to re- construct shattered industries. | SIGNS TREATY Five years later Yoshida signed the peace treaty in San Francisco, then signed a secu- rity treaty with the United States firmly tying his newly-in- dependent country to the West, ters in suburban Dearborn, scene of the talks, was a bustle of activity in the pre-dawn hours and it was learned that a free-lance broadcaster had been roused out of bed shortly after midnight to record advertise- ments for Lincoln-Mercury models would be plentiful. None of the commercials have been aired. Wednesday the union sent telegrams to the presidents of Ford locals: telling them that no meaningful progress had been made on most key money is- sues, but that there had been oncannennnnN A ing the strike was over 'and 1968 , TARPIE DISPLAYS AFFECTION Just alittle lovin' will go @ long way, when it's with Tarpie, an 18-month-old, 48- young primate, captured in Spanish Equatorial Guinea, gives her master, Robert Noell of Tarpon Springs, Fila., hug. a very -affectiénate. (AP Wirephoto) ALN Hes , Paris Silent On Book PA RIS (AP)--Silence and skepticism were the main reac- tions today to a French journal- ist's book reporting that Presi- dent de Gaulle believes police were involved in the assassina- tion of president John F, Kenne- dy and the slaying of Lee Har- vey Oswald. De Gaulle's office refused to comment on the report by Ray- mond Tournoux that the French president said of the assassina- tion: "The police did the job, or today in a mid-t - battle 'own cafe gun: The dead man was identified as Richard Murdock. The wounded man was in hospital agg a bullet wound in the left eg. The wounded man held dozens of Police officers at bay with a machine gun from the second floor of an apartment building near the Country Palace Cafe on Sherbrooke Street West near Park Avenue. Police said the shooting out- burst was preceded by an argu- ment between two men and Manager Peter Demarcos of the Country Palace, a "western en- tertainment" night spot. The two men had been attempting to get free drinks at the club early today when Mr. Demarcos decid- ed to have them ejected. The two men said they would return with machine guns and kill him. Mr. Demarcos notified police and two plainclothes constables were sent to the safe, Shortly after 2 a.m. two men walked into the club and were pointed out to the policemen. The constables then ordered else they pulled the strings or else they let it happen. In any case they were involved." ce Po 1 D r) comment on the sta at- tributed to General de Gaulle." JUST HEARD had ever told the U.S. govern- ment he had such a view of the assassination, Press Secre George Christian replied: "I The White House also refused comment, Asked if de Gaulle other customers in the night spot to 'take cover." Taiiataaial cand welll Bien oe one man reach under his coat tements a and the barrel of a machine gun "I didn't have any time to argue .with them, I just shot at them three or four times." Murdock slumped to the floor, dropping an M-1 U.S, Army-type machine gun. The other man, injured in the tary|ieg, ran outside and up the stairway of an adjoining apart- ment building. Police said he had a similar type machine gun. At the top of the apartment some in other areas. The strike, which started Sept. 7 and has idled 160,000 workers at Ford plants in 25 states, entered its 44th day pound baby gorilla girl. The EIGHT OTHERS ACQUITTED Political enemies accused Yo- shida of high-handedness and one-man rule. His square, thrust-out jaw, ever-present cigar and pince-nez delighted never heard of it at all until this moment." Excerpts from the 700-page book, The General's Tragedy Tram Strike chen. A represen- ardware Dept at pplication ... will laminated plastic 16" thick. Choose ibles etc. leets for remodel- PHONE 725-7373 Hits Hard MONTREAL (CP) The strike of bus and subway work- ers has affected in some way virtually every Montrealer and visitor to the city since the sub- ways and busses stopped 30 days ago. The strike has caused finan- cial woes for downtown stores, restaurants and movie theatres as well as for many workers who have to pay for taxis each day instead of two 25-cent bus or subway tickets. Strike effects include: --Traffic havoc every working day as workers try to get to their jobs by car, taxi, motorcy- cle, truck or shank's mare; --Reduced attendance at Expo 67 normally served by a subway line and several bus routes; --Declining sales at downtown department stores and smaller shops; --Increased sales at suburban shopping centres and neighbor- hood stores; MAIL MOVE SLOW --A slowdown in mail delivery} because mail pickups have been delayed by traffic jams; --Increased overtime work for traffic policemen, taxi and truck drivers; --More money for the city of Montreal as police hand out thousands of $5 parking tickets to motorists hard-pressed to find a legal parking spot. King-size bottlenecks have be- come routine since the 6,000 workers employed by the Mont- real Transportation Commission walked off their jobs Sept. 21. The police department: from the outset relaxed its enforce- ment of parking regulations. They have ticketed some cars left in no-parking zones on main streets but many motorists have said they would rather pay the $5 fine occasionally than leave their cars at home. SHIGERU YOSHIDA, prime minister of Japan from 1945 until 1954, died today in his sleep in Oiso, Japan. He was 89. He led Japan back to prosperity from the ruins of World War II and firmly allied it with the United States. ~ (AP Wirephoto) cartoonists, who portrayed him a wide variety of defiant atti- tudes. But no one questioned his integrity and honesty. statesman. University in 1906, he became a He remained a member of the Diet, Japan's parliament, until he resigned in 1962 at the age of 84, After retirement, he contin- ued to be influential as an elder After graduation from Tokyo career diplomat and was am- bassador to Britain from 1936 until he retired in 1939 to spend his remaining years--he thought --at his seaside home at Oiso. Yoshida was jailed for several months near the end of the war because the military suspected him of plotting for peace. MINI-SKIRTED TAYLOR TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP)--About 200 par- ents of children in Brake Jun- ior High would like to see just | a bit less of Hope Palmer. | It's' not that Mrs, Palmer isn't attractive. She is. And it's not that the 24- year-old former model who teaches art isn't talented. Her superintendent, Simon. Kat- chaterian, says she's one of the best around. But Hope wears mini-skirts to school. And the 200 parents demand- ed to be heard Thursday at an executive session of the Tay- lor school board. HAS MUCH TALENT, BUT -- TEACHER, 24 The board told the group's leader, Carolyn Kalnins, that only she and six others would be heard on the issue of the exposed knee. The board told them, too, that they would not be heard in public. Katchaterian has remained non-committal, but has said she would talk to Mrs. Palmer about the length of her hem. "Tt wasn't a mini-ekirt," the superintendent says of the striped dress Hope wore. "Maybe six inches above the knee." Said Hope: "'I'll continue to wear what I please." DUBLIN (CP)--A total of 368 Canadian-held tickets were Premiers Meet On 54th Floor TORONTO (CP)--The Confed- eration of Tomorrow conference will be held onthe 54th floor of the new 56-storey Toronto-Do- drawn Wednesday and Thurs- day in the Irish Sweepstakes based on Saturday's running of the English racing classic, the Cambridgeshire Handicap. Tickets in the international lottery held three times yearly to aid hospitals in the Irish Re- public were drawn on all 8 minion Centre, highest buildi in the Commonwealth. The Ontario goyernment, which is sponsoring the confer- ence Nov. 27-29, confirmed the bridgeshire, alt hou g h fewer than half are expected to start. A final callover of starters will be held in London today. No Canadian tickets were "a 368 Canadian-Held Tickets Drawn On Irish Sweepstakes horses eligible for the Cam-|¢; drawn on two of the eligibles. Phantom Jet and Fab. Only holders of tickets on starting horses have a chance for the big prize money of $150,000 for each ticket on the winner, $60,000 on the second horse and $30,000 on the third. Holders of tickets whose horses do not start, or who run out of the money, win a prize based on the total pool; usually about Irish Sweepstakes are also held on the Lincolnshire Handi- cap run in England in March, and the Irish Derby, run in today, becoming, along with a 1937 walkout, the fourth longest in industry history. The 1937 strike agained the then-fledgling UAW bargaining rights at 17 General Motors Corp. plants. The UAW is seeking at Ford a pattern-setting contract it will take to Chrysler and then GM for matching or bettering. Among demands were a big general wage increase with an even bigger one for skilled workers, guaranteed annual in- come, improved pensions, par- ity for Canadian workers and other items. U.S. Population At 200,000,000 WASHINGTON (AP)--About ll a.m. Nov. 20, the United States will reach a milestone achieved only by three other countries in history--a popula- tion of 200,000,000. That's the time pinpointed by the census bureau, which is al- ready arranging a round of cer- emonies to mark the event. Only China, India and the So- viet Union have populations ex- ceeding 200,000,000. It took the United States until 1915 to reach its first 100.- 000,000; 52 years to reach its second 100,000,000, but the third 100,000,00 could come in 35 years. Carmichael Lauds "Che" ALGIERS (AP) Stokely Carmichael, the militant Ameri- can advocate of Black Power who is touring Africa and Asia, said Thursday he will follow in the revolutionary footsteps of Ernesto (Che) Guevara. "Chee's blood will nourish )ib- eration movements throughout the world," Carmichael de- clared in a press statement in tribute to the guerrilla leader who was reported killed last week in Bolivia. "T will join this struggle my- self, and I hope that when my death comes it will be like that Dublin in early July. of Che," Jury Convicts Seven In Trial At Meridian MERIDIAN, Miss. (AP)--Sev- en white Mississippians were convicted and eight others ac- quitted by an all-white federal court jury today on conspiracy charges resulting from the 1964 backwoods slaying of three young civil rights workers. Harold Cox, U.S. District Court judge, declared a mistrial in the cases of three of the 18 on trial. The jury of seven women and five .men, which deliberated more than 14 hours and at one point declared itself 'hopelessly deadlocked," convicted the Neshoba County deputy sheriff, Cecil R. Price, 29, and Sam Hol- loway Bowers, Jr., 42, identified by the FBI as the imperial wiz- ard of the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. Others convicted were Alton Wayne Roberts, 28; Jimmy Arl- 30; Horace Doyle Barnett, 31. The jury found Neshoba County Sheriff Lawrence Jimmy Snowden, 33, and|man loose on a civilized soci- ety." The judge accused Roberts of A.|saying: "He gave the jury the Rainey, 44, innocent along with|qynamite charge. Well, we've Olen L. Burrage; Herman Tuck-| got the dynamite for him our- er; Travis Maryn Barnette; James T. Harris; Frank J. Herndon, and Bernard L, Akin; The judge declared mistrials in the cases of Edgar Ray Kiil- len, Jerry McGrew Sharpe and Ethel G. (Hop) Barnette, the Democratic party nominee for © sheriff in Neshoba County. Cox ordered Price and Rob- erts taken into custody immedi- ately and held without bond. He accused the two of "'loose talk" after he delivered a new charge Thursday when the jury told him it could not reach a verdict. "Tf you think you can intimi- date this court you are sadly mistaken,"' Cox said to Roberts. edge, 29; Billy Wayne Posey, "T'm not going to set any wild Anti - War Rally Erupts Into Bloody School Feud By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 'An anti-war rally at Brooklyn College in New York erupted Thursday in a bloody clash be- tween demonstrators and police after more than 40 of the pro- testing students and two faculty members were arrested, In Oakland, Calif., police braced today against a threat- ened resumption of demonstra- tions at the Oakland armed forces induction centre at the end of a sometimes violent Stop-the-Draft Week. University of Wisconsin fac- ulty members, meanwhile, gave a reluctant vote of confidence to Chancellor William Sewell who initiated a get-tough policy with unruly student demonstrators on the Madison campus. Defence officials in Washing- ton airlifted troops from as far away as California to counter a threat by anti-war demonstra- tors to ignore government res- civil disobedience" in laying siege to the Pentagon, head- quarters of the U.S. defence de- partment. The military policemen were the vanguard of what could grow to 5,000 regulars to handle the 70,000 demonstrators spon- sors hope to muster for the weekend demonstration, Leaders of the National Mobi- lization Committee to End the War in Vietnam accepted a per- mit specifying ground rules Thursday but a spokesman said the group intends "to engage in acts of civil disobedience" which would go beyond the scope of the permit. _ A demonstration in support of the war is planned in New York City this weekend by the Nation- al Committee for Responsible Patriotism. A two-day vigil will be held in Battery Park and five parades will step off in the greater metropolitan area Sun- selves." Cox said the statement was made in the hallway of the Meridian post office building where the courtroom is located. pestres & HORACE. DOYLE. BAR- NETTE, one of 18 men charged with conspiracy in the death of three civil rights workers, peers from the second floor window of the' Federal building at Meridian, Miss. as he waits gc} scyunguni 0aN TR ..In THE (La Tragedie du General, were published in the Paris Match, The Warren commission said Oswald killed Kennedy and there was no evidence of a con- spiracy. Tournoux, whd has access to persons close to de Gaulle, did not present the passages as an interview with de Gaulle and he offered no explanations of the origin of the direct quotes at- tributed to the president. mutters as he was shopping. His ni troops, preparing to pull out militant National Liberation and her after effects killed deaths on the Nationalist Chi sons are homeless after the ut for a verdict in the case. The jury, consisting of seven women and five men, goes into its third day of delibera- trictions and employ "acts of day. tions today. Wks "Did you get LBU's rE autograph?" TIMES Today .. stairs, he sat down on the land- ing of the second-storey hallway and began firing at people open- ing their apartment doors in cu- riosity. None was struck by the bullets and most of them fled through windows to the rooftop of the cafe downstairs. While police ambulance rushed Murdock to hospital doz- ens of officers arrived and sur- rounded the building. Some tried to charge up the stairway, but bursts from the machine gun kept them pinned down. TT LL PML} NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Five Killed In Aden Shooting ADEN (Reuters) -- A British high commission official and four Arabs were killed today in an outbreak of shoot- ing incidents in Aden. The commission official was shot ame was not released. The four Arabs were killed in separate incidents by British of Aden before Jan. 9. The Front claimed responsibility for the murder of the British official, shot twice in the neck. Typhoon Kills 69 Filipinos MANILA (AP) -- Delayed reports from northern re- gions of The Philippines said today that typhoon Carla 69 Filipinos. The storm's winds and torrential rains accounted for at least 44 more inese island of Formosa and 42 persons are missing. Filipino' Red Cross reports, slow- ed down by communications breakdowns, said 44,900 per- typhoon. inne nn TT tna, ital Regional Plan--P. 9 Escapee Caught--P. 5 Crushmen Beat Steelers--P. 6 Ann Landers--10 Ajax News--5 City News--9 Classified--14, 15, 16 Comics--19 Editorial---4 Financial--18 Sports--6, 7 Television--19 : Theatres--17 z Weather--2 : Whitby News--5 Women's--10, 11 dite a gE juan

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