Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Oct 1967, p. 1

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hades to er quart 2.95 2.95 7.95 GREY 2.95 GREY |.69 A self. | colours throoms, ATONIA d design strongly for vinyl > special marbles, 1 effect, me.. Let 725-7373 the Greater Os $50,000: NEED A final $50,000 must be rais- ed within the next five days for hawa Community with no extension of the or re-c anvassing, deadline about 13 agencies of the Com- munity Chest's 20 organizations five more days to show they 'care' by contributing the $50, said will be canvassed this week, he y Chest to reach its $358,000 tar- The campaign drive started held 'Open House"' so the public 000 needed," he said. "We're in better shape this set, four, weeks ago with a kicks could see "how the Chest dol- He said many employee year than last year,"' said Mr, ' Terence Kelly, campaign off dinner at Simcoe Hall Boys' Jar is spent'. groups have given more to the Kelly. "'The campaign was ex- chairman, said today ; tended last year and we had has been collected. He sa campaign will end Sat Home $308,000 Club for volunteer canvassers, id the Sponsored the di urday linner, Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pic kering and neighboring centres _in Ont- orio and Durham Counties, VOL. 26--NO. 251 DEFICIT SEEN $2 10¢ Single Coy Dy BSc Per Week Home Delivered General Motors of Canada Ltd. Mr. Kelly said it will be a they did in 1966. Most plant Prior to the kick-off dinner, TIGHT SQUEEZE Community Chest this year than "tight squeeze' to meet the objective. "'Residents have just canvassing has been completed. Business and professional men to recanvass some donors raised $336,000 last year.' He said the Community Chest will announce the total amount Ghe Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 They of money received at city coun- ED TO PUSH CHEST CAMPAIGN OVER THE TOP drive was started in 1940 and Z spran up throughout Canada cil's meeting next Monday night. was known as "Oshawa Win the following a lead made by Van- The drive this year is for ap- War and Community Fund', couver 3 proximately $23,000 more than That year, the fund was over- Today, Os! Community FIRS last year's objective. Mr. Kelly subscribed in a two-week cam- Chest is hon 2ise almost attributes this to a growing pop- paign for $85,000. The first chair- $359.000 for it 2 agencies and ulation and bigger programs man was Harry J. Carmichael, to raise $20,009 by within the agencies, vice president and general ' T DRIVE manager of General Motors of We've got to make it aid The first Community Chest Canada Community Chests the chairman. Weather Report Milder today and little change on Tuesday. Low tonight 45, High tomorrow 50, ¢ Authorized 98 Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottewa and for payment of Postage in Cash FIFTY-FOUR PAGES 50,000,000 Expo '67 Closes Doors: GEORGE BURT CLAIMS 90,306,648 Saw Show By DAVE MacDONALD MONTREAL (CP)--An unac- customed stilmess lay over Expo's 1,000-acre site Sunday night a few hours after the 1967 world's fair came to an end. Blackness cloaked most of 74 pavilions that for six months rang to laughter, chatter and tears - In 185 days Expo admitted 50,306,648--a record for fairs of this type and duration. Expo's probable $250,000,000 deficit will be paid 50 per cent by the federal government, 3714 per cent by the Quebec provin- cial government and 124% per cent by the Montreal municipal government. The highlight of Expo's last day was an official ceremony held in the Place des Nations, an open amphitheatre on St. He- len's Island. A crowd of 15,000 gave Mont- real's Mayor Jean Drapeau a tremendous ovation as he gave his thanks. There was a subdued air and eneral disappointment that the fair was over. Montrealer Liliane Azar said, H. LESLIE BROWN, com- missi + general of Can- "TI feel as though has died." About 1,500 police and secu- rity men were able to clear the site without the last-minute loot- ing feared by officials, The last visitor was admitted at 2 p.m. and the day's admis- sion total was 221,554. Governor-General Roland Michener arrived to start the ceremony with Pierre Dupuy, Expo's commissioner-general. ada's $21,000,000 pavilion at Mr. Michener received a 21- gun salute and 100 men of the Royal 22nd Regiment presented arms while the British and Ca-| nadian national anthems ve) played and his personal stand- ard was raised. Expo visitors, who had been| |the terraces. Ships Joined MOSCOW (AP)--The_ Soviet Union said today it had success- fully joined together in orbit two unmanned space --another first for Soviet space scientists. 1 Cosmos No. 186, launched Fri- day in what appeared to be a test of an unmanned spacecraft} of the Soyuz type that carried a} {Soviet cosmonaut to his death valle: last April, and Cosmos 188,} gs jlaunched today, joined in orbit, for the world's fair Sunday. jan official announcement said. (See story and picture on The announcement termed the page oe Wirephoto |0Peration as "automatic dock " is ing The operation preparation for space program has long been Expo 67 receives a gold medalion from Governor General Michener during official closing ceremonies vas an obvious told they were barred from thejatives of all national pavilions ceremony, were pleased when/As he did so the flags of the; GEORG «.. Gives Views * of Burt, Canadian UAW i BURT hat the Soviet} Strike Thwarts |security men let them flock to/participating nations were low-/expected to do next in manned Expo Exhibitors Joined-together craft | res* i e flag-poles w jventures: ered from the flag-y here to form space _plat- | Within 30 minutes the crowd/they had flown since Expo pg of 4,000 invited -dignitaries|}opened April 27. ne: oe ee swelled to about 15,000. | Mr. Pearson then presented| When Soyuz 1 went up The governor-general present-|silver medallions to representa-| ed gold medallions to represent-/tives of private pavilions. was supposed to be joined bi ----- janother craft. But Britain Firm About Mart ond time in 24 hours the British/many. and--recognition of the! policies for $1,000 each were not! government during the weekend|Communist regime of East oer iin force because their father\are migrant or. denied it would consider a dis- engagement from Europe many and of the Oder-Neisse ne as Poland's western fron-| apparently went wrong before |the final crash that killed cos- }monaut Vladimir M. Komarov. Seven Children Buried devices | Moscow said it) movec |April, reports in by| Expo's closing MONTREAL (CP) -- Pavilion|that corporation might involve, EXPIRY DATES last / Officials anxious to get displays |General Motors workers in the| One of the main things the|a?@ So closely integrated that a JUAW is reaching for at the|Strike in the U.S. pretty well } J layoff of Canadian something piepenves facing a trucking /at a time (one automotive cor-|negotiations this year (the last|/Workers in any one auto string Strike, About 1,400 truck drivers en-'not changed." gaged in local cartage and mis-| A d to safety following!ys§ and Canada, he said: Sunday The announcement said com- cellaneous hauling service went/would raise one point within eae: ters helped to bring the twojon strike Saturday to support; UAW policy that will remain . " ae togettier successfully demands for higher pay significantly historical. The Edison Marshall, found! PARITY WIN ON WAY . Chrysler Seen As Keynote In Current Negotiations WINDSOR (Staff) George regiona! parity may be settled in Chrys-jin the future. director, says wage parity willjler talks and accepted by GM-- strike action) with the Chrys- over ler Corporation. other "important day, Mr. Burt told The Times|"aS it has happened in the past, | that after the union and Chrys-|4 strike could still occur. Parity| ler come to an agreement on/in Wages is not the only Issue |piration date for whole works. expect to apply it at GM with-|Want parity in company pen-|*hargaining out any trouble."' sions. | The master contract between) op» " the UAW and Chrysler in Can- er oa oceania ' ada expires Nov. 15 (in the e cee Says also that like U.S. it was up in September) |G'c nad gre and the UAW international ex- apainst Chrvsler tf the UAW jecutive board is expected to se- (> : red if the ry liect a atrike date seainst|° ould decide to go on strike AT GM simultaneous}; ane ; aster ag strike action\,2 03) master agreement there are "things peculiar "s---~ Chrysler at a Detroit meeting mean Cad auto inci Since U, tonight earl Mibidelrage bd ol eneanntel MART ev eo ind ia ada would walk out as well. gration of bargaining NQ SYR C ULATION ould not|~,/f it is necessary to strike ig uae rx 2 tained in os ee gated not'GM there is no doubt we will bin ed in view of speculate on what the strike 5 j " date against Chrysler 'might pee simultaneous strikes," he be and asked if a strike against)" * "Our policy is to strike one!conclusion of U.S. - Canadaj™Means a poration), and this policy has/talks were three affected. to have master co TS ago) is acts of the strike against tions of a s s . Victims Of Insecticide tala Frank Kenwood, chief nego-|strike would be on both sides of ( - la re tiator for the 48 trucking com-|the border -- a move by the i s _/Miler a@ master settlement in panies hit by the strike, said) UAW that has never occurred Author, 73, Dies jCanada, which would probably Sunday the strike will delay before. follow the U.S. settlement. the young wietitns of insecticide pol (About, half that' amount' has! ROUTE CLAIMED jclearing away of Expo pavilion Mr. Burt looks at UAW nego-. AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)--Edison chance exists that there may LONDON (AP)--For the sec-jof Britain's army from Ger-)soning--whose life insurance] been donated to a fund jcontents. tiations with Chrysler as being Marshall, author of The Viking be problems in negotiations Both Richardson and his wife} FOR INDIANS It also affects shipping enter-|the sort that could clean up and other historical novels, diedover 'local agreements" be- ze pickers, | MOSCOW (AP)--A Soviet (!98 and leaving the port ofimaster contracts between the Sunday after several years of tween GM and six UAW locals 'couldn't borrow the $4 premium) The children--ages 2 to &-- cl Aiesiet Baye proof has |Montreal as shippers wajt for/union and the big three in Can declining health. Marshall, 73,/in Canada. If there are dis. --were buried Sunday after ajdied Wednesday after eating a 2" se re! ered that the In- \Cargos to be delivered or hauled|ada (Ford, Chrysler and GM)_)2!s0 wrote Benjamin Blake and ; 0 settling these con- /$2,000 funeral. lunch of grits, beans, rice and, been discover : Yankee Pasha. The Viking was/tracts, then UAW members in France blocks Britain's entry into the Common Market. The development came afterjeign office Saturday--one day covered coffins were lowered Lord Chalfont, Britain's chief Common Market negotiator,| was summoned home to explain| the circumstances and content) of an informal talk with British) reporters in Switzerland Thurs- day. | Following the background} chat, British newspapers car-| ried reports Friday that Brit-| ain's exclusion from the Com-| mon Market might be followed by a radical revision of foreign tier. Chalfont returned to the for-; ahead of schedule. He conferred with Foreign Secretary George Bdown as a full scale political and: diplomatic storm began to} rage in British newspapers. H Associates reported Chalfont's explanation was accepted by Brown and Prime Minister Wil- son. The foreign office al statement strongly denying that| Chalfont, in talking with report-| ers, had at any time suggested} policy that could result in with-)a change of British policy is| drawal from NATO--withdrawalibeing contemplated. Mrs. John F. Kennedy pauses prior to, boarding plane Saturday at John F. Kennedy International Air- port in New York City. Her plane, stopping at Paris, will take her to Rome for the first leg of an 18-day trip. After two days in STARTS LONG TRIP Rome she is expected to fly' to Thailand where she will begin her visit to Southeast Asia. Others are expected to join Mrs. Kennedy. in Europe, -- including Lord | Harlech, former British am- | bassador to the U.S. --AP Wirephote, {|for the recessional, Mrs. j|the dead children, shrieked and Held By Ex-Boyfriend, 23 took Lida Caldwell, 19, to hisjin his bedroom with the girl man dians of North America set- tled the continent by taking a route 'through northeast white satin|hog's head, -- we Betty, 8, Alice, 7, and Susie, 5.) es,|were stricken in school, Doreen,| 5, Vanessa, 4, 3 As their small into two rows of open grav oe gab seni | the children's grandmother, Dianne, 3, and) Margaret Bivens, cried: |James Jr., 2, became sick while "Goodbye, little darling s!|at home alone Goodbye little darlings!" . ina Be About one-fourth of the 6,000 ead Ql ES reenp Boe people in this small southwest], Investigators have questiorec Florida citrus and cattle town|?9 Persons in an attempt to crowded into the weltering high|!earn how the children obtained school gymnasium for the funer-|the deadly insecticide para- 3 thion. N. N. Dikov, chief of an | archaeology department of | the Siberian branch of the Academy of Sciences, says remains of those people | were found by an expedition | to Lake Ushkov in northeast Siberia He says the discovery was for semi-circle of coffins. specimens to determine if the When the coffins were opened |parathion was swallowed or ab- chardson led the mourners past|both ways. Schaub said results may not collapsed screaming before the|be known for more than a week body of six-year-old Susie. Two} Cline and Richardson had Tel Aviv Claims TORONTO 600 persons gathered Sunday at Lotz, president of the Eastern Anglican St Lutheran away from the dockside i '600 Attend Anglican Church As Reformation Rally Held (CP)--More James Germany, 'in "one. ball of wax." = : a it ~|made into a movie which is list-'a troubled district w mld take ed among Hollywood's all-time;whatever action they deem box office hits. 'necessary, NEWS HIGHLIGHTS thanjin enmity," said Rev. Albert W Cathedral) Canadian Synod of the Lutheran Syria Says Israeli Jet Bagged door of the castle church in Wit- Ri-|sorbed through the skin. It kills; ; jtenberg, attacking, Lutheran official of New York,| to base. it said | Infiltrators Busy |practices of the Roman Catholic appealed for "'local initiative to follies Church. St. James Cathedral was'/rent dialogue between Luther Reformation Church in America j first. made in 1964 and sub- jrally service marking the 450th He told the co tion they) DAMASCUS (AP) -- An army spokesman announced an James Richardson, 32, father) Dr. Joseph Davis, Dade; ¢¢ quent study has es- ,anniversary of the beginning of, were not here to gird them-| ereen jet fighter was shot down today in the first aerial of the children, sobbed during)County medical examiner, 1S) tablished that it constitutes |Protestantism. selves for "some encounter be-| clash between Syria and | since June Middle the service. His wife, Annie|making studies of stomach 2on-) },oof of the Indians' migra- On Oct. 31, 1517, Martin Lu-/tween those of Christ's people} Kast war. In a brief communique the spokesmé id four | foe ' Bee ; : "YS . Zs : y 'all Lutherans and! Israeli planes penetrated Syrian @ pac id Svyri ic _jMae, 29, stared blankly at the|tents, meal leftovers and other! tion route. si = : whom men cal 1 é d) Israeli planes penetrated Syrian air space and Syrian jet ther posted his 95 theses on the those whom men call Romans. fi iters shot down one of them in an aerial battle which lasted a fe mir Earlier, Rev. M. H. Lundeen,} s. The Syrian planes returned safely é communique said the Israeli plane ig at the southern base of the Jabel el Sheikh mountain near the Syrian-Lebanese frontier. was seen fa continué and intensify the cur-} TEL AVIV (AP)--Arab infil- loaned to the Lutherans for Sun- ans and Catholics in efforts to . men carried the mother fromgiven him a sworn statement in trators bombed an Israeli farm\day's rally, heal the breach of the 16th 160 Children In Foster Homes the funeral but she was com:| which he told of arranging for building, fired on an army vehi | |posed again for the burial serv-|$1,000 double indemnity policies cle and wounded a collective ice at Oakridge Cemetery. on each child's life Tuesday farm watchman with a grenade Funeral Director Eugene,night. Richardson, Cline said,jin a valley near the Jordanian' Hixson said the costs of the fu-|believed the policies were in ef-/border during the night, the neral, including five hearsesifect. army said today. Terrified Bride Abducted the/shoot her,' Detective Alan CLEVELAND (AP) --A ter-|shots were heard from Schultz quoted, Batch as saying rified young bride abducted by house about dawn, police said, 1 a former boy-friend the day, After the first shots, a few po-/in answer to pleas Sunday that after her wedding remains allicemen were allowed into the he release young Mrs. ¢ aldwell. hostage, sometimes with a' pis-lapartment by Batch. They re-| Roman Catholic priests and tol pointed at her head. ported that they talked briefly abet i gain ages un- b i rt Batch, 28, | with Batch, who sat on the floor Successfully to ta he - young Police said Robert Batch, Ww 0 inty ending the houre 'of . 'ey e terror apartment after wounding her|lying over his lap. He held his "A es q Bee husband Charles, 18, in the new-|pistol at her temple part of the Caldwell, wounded in the face, lyweds' apartment Saturday.|time, the policemen said, but/"@S taken to prpottal He bs The Caldwells were marriedjshe appeared to be unharmed, age in ce condition, i Friday. | Sunday, Batch threatened to BCE Sala He ienune cn as ithe person who shot him. About 4 a.m. today, police| kill the girl if police attempted) Batch's mother, Martha said, three shots rang out from|tg rescue her. Police Chief Don-|Smith, 50, said her son tried to the apartment on the top floor ald J. Stehlik said she had one kill himself in April, 1966, when of a three-storey suburban good chance to run from thea girl he had dated said she house. One shot knocked out a apartment Sunday night but ap-|would not marry him searchlight set up outside the parently was too frightened to She said Batch then stabbed house and the other two shots move himself in the chest and under- a were unaccounted for. Six more! "If you don't get out, I'll went psychiatric care, MRS. bride land, sits in "We are here in charity, not.century MARTHA SMITH, mother of the man holding hostage grief-stricken TORONTO (CP) -- More than 160 children of low-income families have been. placed in because g shortage, Lloyd Ric dson, director Aid Society, said to foster homes of the city's ho Cleve- of the Children' ay should never have to happen,' he said in an_ intervie The foster homes may better for the children ph l but nothing can replace the love and affection of t true parents." 4 ,.In THE TIMES Today .. Hills and Doles--P. 9 It} Whitby School Board--P. 5 i} Generals Win and Tie--P. 6 Ann ie andere 10 Aic 5 Ne 9 Clo ed 1A tO 1a Edit 4 Financial---~-18 € ories--16 R ': Television--| % Theatres--12 wicks ' " fat. > Weather a2 ' " local airport. awailing for "Don't call me, I'll call you! Wh Ne 5 plane to take her to her son Won 40, 11 ins --AP Wirephoto * sn rm ry Although the issue of wage)date on both sides of the border However, if the UAW Is suc- be won in negotiations (or by there is a chance of a strike|cessful in getting the nod-on o mat-|this idea from the automotive ters of bargaining that would!chains it- would not mean one In a telephone interview to- Still have to be cleaned up|general master contract for the The idea of having one ex- : z +4 main con- pay parity for auto workers on in dispute,' Mr. Burt said, add-\tracts -- which set out pent both sides of the border, "we,ing that Canadian workers also|working rules -- is to. allow altogether" and \"'settlements altogether," mak- ing it more advantageous for all negotiators, Mr. Burt says. He adds that he is not suggest- anada and the U.S. because gainst GM in the U.S. it will Sanaa that are not to the the auto pact." Mr. Burt says the industry has become aI one {market under the controversial Jpact in that the auto makers Mr. Burt says even with a Chrysler big three expire on the same settlement in current negotia- s sitet rane es master agreement |for GM in the U.S., "there is still a possibility of a strike in

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