Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Oct 1967, p. 1

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ber 26 ail Orders) ind-green, beige and 105", 1.29 » 99 2.29 VOL, 26--NO. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. 248 10¢ Single Copy ~ BSc Per Week Home Delivered She Oshawa Sines OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1967 Weather Report Mainly cloudy and not quite so cool Friday. Low tonight 35. High tomorrow 50, Authorized a3 Second Closs Mall Post Office Department Ottawa and for poyment of Postage in: Cash TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES r 1.00 ocket. Various collar Pp 19 2 3,50 entre POPE PAUL VI and bearded Patriarch Athena- goras, spiritual leader of Pope Holds Historic Meet With Orthodox Patriarch _,,, VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pope/for the Vatican synod, Pope and|than 900 years, since the two fires in Egypt's Suez refineries|ents the damage was extensive. Paul and Patriarch Athenago-|patriarch vowed anew to do all/churches separated in 1054 be-|under control Wednesday night,|He also said some shells hit ras prayed side by side in St.]in their power to make reunion cause the Orthodox refused to/40 hours after Israeli shells set/houses, schools and factories. Peter's Basilica today, repeated- ly embraced in the kiss of peace and pledged unceasing efforts to|applause as the Pope and pa-|pealed reunite Christianity. | Never in the history of the, two churches had such a meet-| thg occurred--the leader of the world's 500,000,000 Roman Cath- olics and the head of the 150,- 000,000 Orthodox praying togeth- er inside the largest church in Christendom. It was the first visit by a lead- er of Orthodoxy since the church split in 1054. It marked a giant step toward future reu- nion, Before cardinals, Orthodox metropolitans and the 200 bish- ops from around the world here/Roman Catholic Pope in more) Se Orthodox Churches, gesture as they the world's meet at the door of St, a reality some day. The vast basilica echoed with triarch, standing before the main altar, embraced again and again. Then leading Roman Catholic cardinals came to the patriarch to exchange the kiss of peace'!- with him, EMBRACE AT DOORS Before the religious ras embraced at the doors to St. Peter's. The Patriarch of Constantino-| ple (Istanbul) had arrived an hour earlier for the first visit by an Orthodox patriarch to a Camera In Stomach Held Cause Of Woman's Death KINGSTON, Ont. (CP) -- A H, B. Cotnam, Ontario supervis- camera designed to photographling coroner. the inside of a patient's stomach IN USE 10 YEARS was blamed by a coroner's jury Wednesday for the death of Emily Elizabeth Merritt, 54, of; Deseronto, Ont., about 27 miles| west of here. She died in Kingston General Hospital Aug. 2 following a se- ries of complications which Dr. L. S. Valbert, assistant professor of medicine at Queen's University and _physi- cian to the dead woman, testi- fied that the gastric camera has been in use in Japan for the last 10 years; five years in the United States and at Kingston arose after a relatively new|hospital since July, 1966, Risk of gastric camera treatment was administered. | The device is a camera mount- ed on a foot-long tube. The tube} can be inserted into the throat injury with the camera tech- nique is about 10 times less than with a conventional instrument. Dr. E. Kamura, now practis- ing in British Guyana and Dr. and esophagus so the camera|Mansour Jabbari, a licensed en- can photograph the throat andjterologist trained to operate the stomach. camera, performed the camera A coroner's jury agreed with|procedure in early March. Dr. Stewart Patterson, Fronten- ac County coroner, that | camera was responsible for her|when he returned to find the pa-| Itient in some difficulty during death. thejout of the Dr. Jabbari testified he was room a short time The inquest was called by Dr.|the operation which had been Patterson at the request of Dr.|started by Dr. Kamura. IN THE Former Vice - President Richard M. Nixon waves to admirers as he arrived in Manchester, N.H., where he indicated -he will enter the first - in - the - nation presi- RUNNING primary dential election next March. xon said he did not expect to lose if he runs in the New Hamp- 160,000 READY TO RETURN AT FORD IN US. service began Pope Paul and Athenago- * af Peter's Basilica in Vatican City today. (AP Wirephoto via cable from Rome) |NO ISRAEL CENSURE UN Blasts Peace End THE Firefighters brought the oil [Suez told visiting correspond- ASSOCIATED PRESS| Governor Hamid Mahmoud of accept the primacy of the Pope.|them blazing. As the bells of St. Peter's! iy ey | | | | DETROIT (Reuters)--More seven weeks--will be producing immediate 20 cent-an-hour pay Canadian workers make 35 production and.the strikers near than 160,000 Ford workers were ee again. ' rise for production workers and a less an hour than their ly $170,000,000 in wages es Mis ' SNe The new work contract ending ' 1.8. counterparts, rkers in Ford plants ready to return to factories the nationwide strike. was an additional 30 cents an hour ae F . © ole Ghrine across the U.S. today after ap- cepted overwhelmingly, Walter for skilled tradesmen. COSTLY WALKOUT the strike because of a lack of proving a strike-ending agree- P. Reuther, president of the The union also did not achieve The strike, fourth longest in car parts for assembling in Cane ment described as the richest in United Auto Workers, ane one major goal--wage parity for the US. car industry history, ada. the history of the U.S. motor in- nounced Wednesday night. The Ford workers in Canada, but began Sept 6, when a three- The unio pes to make the dustry. agreement ratification made it year contract expired Ford agreement the model for But it will be several days be- effective immediately. Reuther has said the union It was estimated 40 have cost agreement: ) with fore the Ford plants--idle for The contract provides for an would continue to press for this. Ford about $1,000,000,000 in lost General Motors and Chrysler 1 Four GM Canada Firms Affected By New Move TORONTO (Staff) -- In an!corr McKinnon Indus- exceptional move to keep bar- tries , General Motors Die- Zaining alive, four General!sel Lt nd F daire Prod- Motors companies in and the United union today ment that signed an expiry date of October 3 Representatives of Canada! uct Auto Workers agree wa Ss will extend a three-|a UAW year contract beyond its normal! tative both GN nada Ltd. For the UAW, the agreement ned by Clifford Pilkey, international represen- and MPP for Oshawa ng, along with Mr. Courtney rion. officials and other u and the union signed a memor The UAW, which opened bar- andum of understanding at enininge w GM July 31, is about 11 a.m. as they went into| renrecentine workers at GM Z their second @ay of negotiations! niants in Ste. Therese, Que., : : At the United Nations, the So- here this week on a master|Qchawa Catharines Lon: The United. Nations Security| yiet Union had asked for a reso- contract that would cover allldon Windsor and Toronto. a welcome, the two | Council reacted to the artillery | ution condemning Israel and GM company sites in Canada spate jchurch leaders walked toward|duel--which each side accused|demanding reparations for dam- land six UAW locals STILL TALKING con-|age caused by its guns. A U.S. Richard Courtney, a ast single body of work- leach other at the entrance tolthe other of starting--by the largest basilica in Christen-/demning all violations of the |dom with their hands clasped in|ceasefire which ended the June prayer. | Arab-Israeli war. It did not cen- \------ ----|sure Israel as the Russians de- . |manded, |ESCALATION DENOUNCED -| UN. Secretary-General Uj} The 10 non-permanent mem- Thant asked the Security Coun-|bers of the 1l5-nation Security 'icil to increase the number of|/Council, which include Canada, e itruce observers to-90 from 43])worked out a compromise, con- jand requested four patrol boats|demning ceasefire violations jand four. small helicopters for|and expressing regret over cas- them. ualties and property damage. It | The semi-official Cairo news-|Was approved unanimously. |Ppaper Al Ahram reports the! The resolution appealed to fires under control at the Nasr|both Israel and the Arab states and Suez refineries, which filled|to "cease immediately all prohi- Esai three-fourths of Egypt's|bited military activities in the |domestic petroleum needs. Thelarea and to co-operate fully and |flames were not expected to be promptly" with UN peace ob-! gee until some time today-|servers. | SHELLING KILLS 16 The compromise sidestepped resolution condemned all viola- tions of the ceasefire and insist- ed on observance of the truce, : MF |and 60 civilians and 32 military|@uthorizing Thant to name al men wounded, special representative to seek a ACQUITTED Al Ahram says 17 storage | Peaceful solution of the issues tanks were set on fire but gave left by the June war. Stephen H. Kessler was no further details on damage. Council members have been| found not guilty by reason si trying for weeks to find a per-| of insanity in the slaying of manent solution. They have con- his mother-in-law, Mrs. lcentrated on a_ statement of Florence Cooper. A jury of { jbasic principles, such as Israeli ll men and a woman de- |withdrawal from captured Arab liberated for 12 hours be- and an end to the Arab fore reporting their verdict Tr |soil | s 1; A i |state of belligerency toward Is- yesterday in a court in New | On Strikes lrael. | fetta York's placed in the custody of the State Mental Hygiene Au- thority. Kessler is shown at the time of his arrest in ment to amend the labor code | jto forbid strikes by public serv- ice workers. Labor disputes involving such Near $4,000,000 TORONTO (CP)--Last week's!" Lone U.K. Worker Sparks | Ford Walkout Of 9,000 CORONATION GUEST Egyptian officials reported/@2Y @ction that might be Crown Prince Reza, six- monies for his parents In j jeight civilians and eight mili-|Comstrued as a move toward a! . 42. q14 son of the Shah of Tehran today. (See story | tary men killed in the shelling|Petmanent settlement, such as| } ; \ + . Iran and Empress Farah, listens to his father's speech at coronation cere- LONDON _ on page two.) --AP Wirephoto (Reuters)--Ford| About half normally go for ex- Motor Co.'s assembly lines halt-| port. This stopped the daily output|crushing blow at Britain's econ- |Zodiac. and | of about 2,500 Cortina Zephyr,}omy. Anglia models.) |£150,000,000 1 \ ready are piled on quaysides at | NEWS HIGHLIGHTS main ports in London and Liver j Various exports worth about ($450,009,000) -- al- April, Paes (See story on |workers should be submitted to) provincial election will cost the | Page 3.) jcompulsory, or binding, arbitra-!taypavers ; i ay bea Na) aS axpayers nearly $4,000,000, % a ' __(AP Wirephoto) tion, the association said in a'chief election clerk Mary Brand pool ane Sones NOre men are Dea anHR ~ brief to Fernand Lizotte, Que- said : refusing to'load ships "ee Wednesday. bec minister of transport and Mrs. Brand said the election | communications office is in the midst of settling, The association is composedjaccounts with returning officers} Pickering Gets Simcoe, $101,700 for similar pro-|of a uniform set of regulations incial treasurer to place a fur-| jects in Pickering Township and,governing highway transport to|ther $1,000,000 in the election ac-) $100,000 for a watermain exten-|eliminate current differences in|count, bringing the total fund so shire primary. (AP Wirephoto) | The motor {the machine head he row , that Wednesday has hit Ford's huge} factories on the outskirts of the que for a higher grade entitling him! ito an extra sixpence an hour He was sent home and 109 co 1- UAW .international tive based in Oshawa, sai telephone interview that ous contracts have been extend ed beyond normal jdates -- but only by agreement. | Under the 'terms of the orandum, either party cancel the jabout three days' notice. IWAGE PARITY representa termination| GM understanding esented at the master ng table would be in where more than 10.000 auto workers are employed at production. They are mem- ers r d in ajbar previ-| Ost verba bers of Local 222, UAW. Mr Courtney.was asked how ons are going. His only was: 'We're still talk- men ma On ing | Master contract talks, which resumed here yesterday, are The UAW is seeking a stiff;expected to break off tomorrow The four involyed in GM the New Federal Constituencies jdemand of wage parity with/4nd start up again next Mon- |U.S. auto workers for some day. 23,000 Canadian GM employees.| Meanwhile, local agreements companies;must also be hammered out by memorandum! each of the six UAW locals in- | Signing are: General Motors of; volved in contract negotiations {Canada (the big auto-making! with GM. Said Already Out Of Date OTTAWA (CP)--Ur growth has made the new tribution of federal const jcies out of date before its firs election test Populations are already out of, In Ontario, line in at least 64 of the 264 toral districts, the Dominio reau of Statistics has rey Brooklyn. Justice -- -- ed today. and 9,000 men were, The dispute over who shouldji, 9 yenort on the 1966 in Edward Thompson ordered QUEBEC (CP)--The Quebec out of work because one ma-|change the cutting head of Binanwue. Kessler, who had admitted |Truckers' Association today | Election Cost |chine operator refused to make/machine in a Ford crankshaft The Commons taking marijuana and LSD, [asked the provincial govern-| a tool change department threatened another was based on the 1961 but since then some city ri OTTAWA (CP) -- year-old daughter died The decree, | | redistribution census which will go into effe technicians 34 to 45 years old sub banjin every province but Prince redis-/Edward Island have jumped ituen-|above gins set to provide er representation in Parlia- ment. 21 of the 88 new ngs are bigger than the Re- bution Act permitted. At ame time, Prime Minister terim!Pearson's own riding of Algoma d to a population of 48,- vhich compared with an al- vable Ontario minimum of dings 149,056, elec- n Bu ealedit started, Mother, Child, 3, Die In Fire mother and her three- in a fire that burned A young early today of about 1,000 owners of truck-|in the 117 electoral districts Same two cities. | their wooden frame house in Otta s west snd, be vi Grant ing firms. "and there's every indication' IVES WARNING : | Sms_ were Mrs. Charlotte O-Han sided and ne eae i . GIVES Wi ; ter Karen. Mrs. O'Handley's husband, Allan, 3i, was ine The brief said no strike should the costs will run beyond the Ford warned today that un-| aes anaes: 25 bs ee TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario,he allowed outside the field of $3,682,000 spent in 1963." less there is a quick solution| ured and taken to hospital. cabinet has approved the ISSU-| public service, unless 80 per, In the 1963 election there were| there could be a progressive ' : ance of debentures totalling/cent of the workers involved only 108 constituencies. At that shutdown involving all the| South Vietnam Lowers Draft Age $761,000 for sewer and water |yote in favor of the walkout. time bills sent in by returning) firm's 40,000 workers at 23 oe : oe aga projects in three communities. | The association called for the officers ranged from $12,482 in| | plants. SAIGON: (AP) --\ Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu Approved by order-in-council|establishment of an automobile,Glengarry riding to $60,931 in | The dispute is over a month lowered South Vietnam's minimum draft ¢ e to 18 from released Wednesday were issues|insurance control board, obliga-| Peel. | old pay and productivit 21 and ordered deferments from the military se rvice of $560,000 for sewer and water- tory inspection of all motorized| An _ order-in-council released| The wanker ede aac tightened in a decree of t obilization" made pub- works prejects in the town of|vehicles and the establishment Wednesday authorized the prov- ae lic today. The maximum draft e of 34 was rete Jan, 1, also made ect to the draft. " oe 4 | : sion in Chatham. the laws between provinces, far to $3,000,000. ieaclied lo ie ame departiie | ! walked out in sympathy. This "4 = closed the vital crankshaft and os In THE TIMES Today | tarr Tre its onvention camshaft departments | Today, officials of the Amal Strike At Ajax--P. 13 amated Engineering Union f bd te . be were at the factories trying to Scouts Name Officers--P. 5 With P S Po ularity Rise =} |patch up the argument. Leafs Beat Kings--P, 10 Z : | The wildcat dock strike con-) een MARINE HERO tinued with workers showing no| nn Landers: OTTAWA (Special) -- The|tion in Toronto did a great deal|mons since the fall session 4 : {sign of heeding calls from their | Ajox News--5 Conservative party leadership/to instill confidence in our,opened. Alastair J, Livingston is a |union for a resumption of load- City News--13 convention in September was/party," acting Opposition Lead-| He expressed the hope that} co mbat-tested and deco- jing and unloading. Clostified---22, 23, 24 credited today by Michaeljer Starr said in an interview.|the work of the opposition| rated U.S, Marine sergeant | Liverpool and London wharfs| Fo ae Starr with having a great deal|"As a result of that convention,|would continue to result in| in Vietnam but his military jare lined with idle ships. Many| > oe to do with the sudden upsurge|the way it was conducted andjfurther gains in support in the} career didn't begin with }of those being worked by steve-} t qa fo in the Gallup Poll strength of|the high calibre of our leader-|months ahead. his 1965 enlistment in the |dores not taking part in the Financia 8 the party. \ship candidates, people have a| Mr. Starr said the sudden| Marine Corps. In 1962 he |strike are undermanned, mak-| C 4 The poll, published Wednes-jdifferent feeling about politics)upsurge in support for the] was an officer cadet in the jing operations slower than|- ¥ S 0, 11,12 day, showed the Conservatives |and about the people who are|Conservatives was probably a! British army. Livingston,. |usual je Weeks . P with 43 per cent of the popularjin politics." jcombination of their improved} 24, holds a Silver Star for | The dock workers are object-| 2 vote compared to only 30 per} The Ontario MP said alljperformance and image and] bravery and is to be award- ing to certain terms of their 5 s th t on the cent in. August. The Liberals|members of the Conservative |the recent performance of the! ed the Navy Commendation |new employment charter and What's the latest o \ dropped from 41 per cent to 34/caucus were grateful to the|government which. was show-| Meda! shortly. He is a de- jsay they will stay out till harbor} RMR BA \ y 5 per cent, the Canadian Institute'people for the confidence ex-|ing itself increasingly unable to| scendant of three genera- jemployees and the dockers' f fa 18 44 47 of Public Opinion reported. pressed in what the party wasjcope with the many problems] tions of British officers. junion sign a negotiated agree- "I am sure the fine conyen-idoing in opposition in the Com-|facing the country today, (AP Wirephoto) Iment, 'a : } \ , t |

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