' Nee r. G. C. Monture of Otta- n enginéering consultant ' rew up on the Six Nations - e near Brantford. : \ ' rear Bago, Home Newspaper ito the problems of Indian gs h i s facing the technological shy : i pee hig: 6 le, jax, ring an neighboring centres in Ont. rio and Durham Counties, Weather Report Cloudy and turning colder Wednesday with occasional nvestigation of problems snow. Low tonight, 32; high the Indian family forced ve from the reserve bé- there was no 'viable left would prove "start- y best... only fully when we oose rugs. repairing, "Only 10.80 VOL. 26--NO. 270 10¢ Single he Oshawa Times Copy ? 5S¢ Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1967 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Departmeng Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash tomorrow, 35, TWENTY PASES FIRST FOR 'NEW' TOWN Acclamation Won By Whitby Mayor ---By A DESMOND NEWMAN oo ne cclamation Premiers To Probe WHITBY (Staff) -- Desmond Newman will be the first mayor of the new town of Whitby. He won by acclamation last night after the last minute with- 18 SURVIVE JET AIRLINER CRASH CINCINNATI (AP) --A Trans World Airlines jet passen- ger plane crashed and burned in an apple orchard about a mile and a half from the Greater Cincinnati Airport Monday night, apparently killing 64 of the 82 persons aboard. 'We counted up all our pas- sengers again, and now find there were 75 passengers and seven crew members," said don't have muct hope for find- ing any more survivors." Six of the survivors were re- ported in serious or critical con- dition in various area hospitals, RETURNED TO WORK Most of the injured were taken to St. Elizabeth Hospital in Covington, Ky. Two-thirds of the nurses at the hospital re- is in an orchard about 1.5 miles north of the airport and not far from the spot where an Ameri- can Airlines passenger plane crashed in 1965 with heavy loss of life. Greater Cincinnati Airport is built south of the edge of a pla- tea. above the Ohio River. The Arerican airlines plane smashed against the hillside 50 Woodrow McKay, chief tower controller at the airport, said "a pretty good fire broke out' after the plane hit, More than a score of persons were waiting inside the airport restaurant for the arrival of friends and relatives. Mrs. Maude Cuneo of Hebron, Ky., said she saw a "great ball of fire," that it looked to her as though the plane had "exploded burgh and Boston. It was about two hours late, TWA said, be- cause a faulty door of another plane caused passengers to be shifted in Los Angeles to the one that crashed. Mrs, Peggy Ball of Muncie, Ind., missed the flight because a thief snatched her purse at the airport. Her ticket and all cash and drawal, in his nomination TWA district mana signed last week in a dispute ; , 7 ger A. B, i Be feet below the edge of the pla- in the air," : a \ speech, of Dr. Kenneth Hobbs. Krueger, "There are 18 survi- ge they management--but most teau. The TWA plane that travel | cheques were in the Recalling his previous defeat papiceg of them reported back to work crashed Monday night . came TWO HOURS LATE purse. Mrs. Ball was returning in the mayoralty race, Dr. Hobbs said he had decided to head back into the running to make sure there was a selection of candidates for voters to choose from. be "But I'm no fool," he said. | "T realize the amount of work that has gone into the amal- gamation, so may I be the first to vote for the new Mayor of| Whitby, Mr. Des Newman." However, Dr. Hobbs did suc-| ceed inhis nomination for coun-| cil and becomes a west ward | representative by acclamation. MAJOR EXPERIENCE In his. nomination speech Mayor Newman said his time in office had been "an experi- ence unparalleled in my life be- fore", He commended members of both the town and township councils to the electors saying that "without reservation" every member deserved -nom- ination again. "I was delighted to be a part! of that group," added the 36-| year-old manager of an Ajax in-| dustry. And he went on to clear up a point which had been worrying some residents of the old part of the new town. It was untrue, he said, that they would bear the cost for new services which they neither wanted nor needed. The new services in a par- ticular area would be paid for by the people in that particular area. "The future will be beyond our wildest dreams," the mayor added. Before closing he warned against the new plans to abol- ish and consolidate school boards. This would remove con- trol of education 'far from the people". He called it "the most crucial question in this prov- ince today'. DELIGHTED After the meeting, Mayor Newman confessed he had been a little surprised to find Dr. Hobbs' name opposing him but "I would not presume to "That leaves. 64 persons not accounted for, I don't want to Monday night to care for the in- jured. down a few hundred yards past the edge, in plain sight of the The plane was a TWA Convair 880 Flight 128 bound from Los from Hawaii where she visited her husband, recuperating from Say they are all dead, but I The debris-strewn crash scene runway lights, i |fice. Angeles to Cincinnati, Pitts. wounds suffered in Vietnam. Labor Backs Lower Pound LONDON (AP) -- Opposition] However, left-wing Laborites;more unpopularity for the Labor Conservatives prepared a House| who have fought government! party, of Commons campaign today to| deflationary policies for months} Increased earnings overseas censure Prime Minister Wil-jrallied around James Calla-|for British manufactures, Calla- son's government but dissident) ghan, chancellor of the ex-ighan.argued, should put the bal- factions in his Labor party ma-jchequer, in the Commons Mon-|ance of payments in the black -- ges ranks behind the|day as he told jeering Conserva-|jin about 18 months, devalued pound to ensure thel|tives: 'You left us in this M Z ; i : Michael Foot, the Lab: government will remain in of-|state,"* | most articulate ouicns, tus ' ' -nte| MARKET EDGE him: 'Many MPs now rejoice paose's F vege markets) Callaghan said the devalua-|that we have got this albatross devaluation to $2.40 from $2 go/Canadian funds it dropped from| Sixteen Labor MPs represent- US Saturday and the pound $3 to approximately $2.57--\ing all sections of the party is- opened atrone! would give British exports anjsued a statement Monday night ' gly--up nearly two ': yi . et points over the new official Case in world markets but only|backing devaluation. They also ith "The stock market plunged wage and price increases|disclosed they had appealed to Howe Bh Z giwere checked at home. This|Wilson to devalue at the height ever, and was off nearly 12 : : : ; ; points below Friday's closing.|™eans more belt tightening forjof Britain's monetary crisis last *i -libé a the British working man andiweek, But by noon big investors were in with buy orders. e The rise in the pound nk of e e the prospect that the Bank of Pp i E i ad England would he obliged to sell) ipe ine xp @) es N Huntsvill ing when it goes two points JTSVILLE, $ ian below par and sell to keep elas TS MBiglGre IED Bit ideE gant ber from being overvalued when it/explosion ripped open a 30-inch|88, escaped injury. ' reaches two points above par. pipeline Monday night and left} Robert Snider, general super- The bank has been buying/400 homes without heat in be-|intendent of Northern Ontario pounds, sometimes frantically/low-freezing temperatures, Natural Gas Co., said about 500 during crisis periods, for years.| The blast destroyed two|customers in the town, most of Selling will be a new experi-/barns, damaged a home and left|them homeowners, would be ence, a crater 125 feet wide in a field/without heat until breakfast Conservative party Leaderjnear this town of 3,000, in the|time today when service would sterling for the first time in} years. | Under the post-war Bretton| Woods accord Britain is obliged to support its currency by buy- Rights Bill Need REGINA (CP) Ontario Premier John Robarts said Monday discussion at the Con- deny him the right. of running". He said he was delighted with what had happened and pleased to see that Dr. Hobbs' talents were going to be employed as | Edward Heath set the tone for|Muskoka region of Ontario, 90/be partially restored. Full serv- |the two-day attack on the gov-|miles north of Barrie. ice was expected to be restored jernment's economic policy} There were no injuries in the by noon. Only Huntsville was af- when he told a television audi-|blast which ripped. the Trans-|fected by the gas stoppage. ence Monday night: "We have/Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. natural} The line is part of the main _ tion of Tomorrow conference will be able to consider at least two basic questions: federation of Tomorrow confer- ence in Toronto next week will include examination of the need for a national bill of rights. The idea of a national bill of rights as a step in constitutional reform was advanced last spring by Prime Minister Pear- son and was a subject of discus- "Shall the bill of rights be written into our Canadian con- stitution so that it will be a fun- damental law of the land? Should there be individual bills} of rights for each province?" The talks on ways to improve the federal system could also cover reform of the Senate and experienced people," he added, a councillor. "I think we are going to have a very fine council made up of Peace Plan reached the depth of disappoint-)gas line on the outskirts of thelline from Alberta gas fields ment and frustration. Last Sat-|town. |which supplies Eastern Canada. urday night (when devaluation] "I thought it was an earth-|When the blast occurred, gas was announced) was failure. It/quake,"' said Mrs. Ronald Lang-|was drawn from storage fields was an admission of defeat."' ford, on whose farm propertyjin southwestern Ontario to avoid In attacking the 143-per-cent|the explosion occurred at 5:30 disruption of service in areas drop in the pound's ratio to the|p.m. lother than Huntsville, U.S. dollar, Heath reminded} "There was so much noise Occupants of at least 15 and heat it was hard to tell viewers that Wilson had pledged homes within a quarter of a the Supreme Court. mile of the blast was evacuated. sion at an informational feder- 20 times in his 37 months in of-|what was happening. It looked al-provincial conference July 5. It will also be the major point of discussion at a federal-prov- incial conference planned for early next year. Mr. Robarts told a combined service clubs meeting here that there have been many sugges- tions concerning the bill of rights enacted by the federal government in 1960. At present the bill has no constitutional status. The Ontario premier suggest- ed delegates to the Confedera- "Suggestions for reform of the Senate have been forthcoming since the very outset of Confed- eration,"' he said. "Many question whether the present form of the Senate al- lows it to play a useful role in a modern, democratic, parliamen- tary system of government." Assured Of Approval UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- Despite a new Soviet delay, in- formed sources said today that Mr. Robarts predicted the conference will be the 'most significant discussion of the fu- ture of Canada'"' since the Char- lottetown conference of 1864 and} the Quebec conference in 1865. US. Planes Trapped Paratroopers SAIGON (CP) -- US. artil- lery and planes today pounded dug-in North Vietnamese gun- ners delaying the evacuation of scores of _wounded U.S. para- troops trapped on a_ hillside near Dak To. U.S. casualties mounted to at least 239 dead and 822 wounded in the 19th day of fighting around the Dak To valley, the second most costly battle of the Vietnam war for'the Americans. Twenty of the Americans were Try To Free The wounded trapped on Hill 875 near Dak To were part of the 173rd Airborne Brigade's 2nd battalion that had been bat- tling North Vietnamese troops on the hill since Sunday morn- ing. U.S, spokesman reported 71 Americans killed so far in the battle for the hill, 20 of them when a bomb from a U.S. plane mistakenly dropped onto their position. the British Middle East peace plan is assured of approval when the Security Council meets again Wednesday after- noon |. Vasily V. Kuznetsov, Soviet jdeputy foreign minister, ob- tained the 48-hour delay in in- troducing a proposal containing some of the provisions of the British plan. worded in such a way that the resolution was immediately la- But they were belled pro-Arab. The Soviet resolution omitted a_key provision in-three other pending proposals--the appoint- ment of a special UN represent- ative to aid in peace efforts. Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban.zejected the Soviet resolu- tion as did the United States. Britain's Lord Caradon ex- pressed surprise that the Soviet proposal made no mention of a special UN representative. There appeared little chance that the Soviet plan would get the necessary nine votes. "Hi there. My name is Susan. Susan McGee and I'm three years old and I live at 636 Balmoral Dr., Oshawa: I've never talked to a talking phone before but it's a lot of fun. I know JUST TELL HIM I'VE BEEN GOOD' you must talk to a lot of people every day but may- be you could talk to Santa for me. There are so many nice things in Toyland I don't know what to ask Santa to bring me for Christ- mas, But if you just tell | him I've been a pretty good girl all year he'll bring me something nice."' ' (Oshawa Times Photo) TEL AVIV (CP) ---Israeli jet fighter-bombers attacked Jor- danian positions on the east bank of the Jordan River today for the first time since the Arab-Israeli war in June. Jordan claimed two Israeli planes were shot down and said the pilot of the first one bailed out and was killed. Israel admitted the loss of one killed by their own b It rivalled in intensity the 1965 fighting in the Ia Drang valley --also in the central highlands and also just before U.S. Thanksgiving--in which 310 Americans were killed. Brig.-Gen. L. H. Schweiter, commander of the 173rd Air- borne Brigade, said the North Vietnamese were dug in so well on Hill 875 the U.S. guns and bombs couldn't hit their bunk- ers. "We're going to have to dig them out man by man," he said. So far, 10 choppers were hit trying to get to the Allied wound- ed and returned disabled to nearby base camps. WOUNDED WILL DIG 'It will be too late for many of those guys,' one doctor said. "In this climate gangrene sets in overnight." a CHICAGO (AP) -- A jet age airport on the bottom of Lake Michigan? A "hole" in Lake Michigan off Chicago's South Side--sur- rounded by a dike and acces- sible from shore by a combi- nation bridge-tunnel--is one of 15 proposed sites for the city's third major airport. Engineers and city officials say the project is not only possible, but practical. And expensive. "With an airport in the lake, Chicago would be the only city in the world which would be capable of handling h Jet Airport In Lake Proposed For Chicago the present family of jets, jumbo jets and the supersonic jet aircraft in an airport lo- cated in the heart of the city,"' says Mayor Richard J. Daley. City officials have given no indication of when a site for a new airport will be given final approval. But aviation experts say the city will need a new airport by 1975, despite the planned expansion of O'Hare International and Midway air- ports. LARGEST, IN U.S. O'Hare ig the busiest airport & in the United States. In Sep- tember, there were 52,242 flights carrying 2,363,795 pas- sengers, The possibility of almost un- limited expansion is one of the advantages of an airport in the lake. A feasibility study con- cluded that the lake site could be prepared in four years at a cost ranging from $247,000,000 to $284,000,000. The task of wresting the land from the-lake would be similar to Holland's. centu- ries-old struggle to reclaim Jordan Shoots Down Two Israeli Bombers of its French Mysteres and said) the pilot bailed out over Jordan-| ian territory. The Israeli Army claimed six Jordanian tanks and one ar- mored car destroyed. Amman radio said the Jordanians lost only one military vehicle and there were no casualties to Jor- danian personnel. It claimed Israeli tanks and other equipment were set ablaze, two Israeli gun positions were destroyed and most of their personnel were killed. ' Amman radio said King Hus- sein, now in London, was in con- stant telephone contact with his OPP Chase Light In Sky BARRIE (CP) -- Provincial police cruisers chased a speed- ing light in the Alliston - Cooks- town - Barrie area early today. The brilliant white light in the sky was first spotted by «a constable at Alliston about 4 a.m. Minutes later Constable Paul Kendrick on Highway 27 and Constable Harold Rose at the Cookstown cloverleaf of Highway 400 saw the light and \d | brother, Crown Prince Hassan,; until the fighting stopped, and that Jordan's delegate to the United Nations had been _ in- structed to inform UN members! of the battle. The Israelis said their air force went into action after the Jordanians moved tanks up to the ceasefire line and fired across the river. The Jordanians countered that Israelis started the attack with artillery and tank fire, fice not to devalue the pound. like the whole world was on/They began returning -home |today for a week-long visit and 'these were scratched even be- |together Wednesday and again )Sunday when the Canadian lead- PM Arrives LONDON (CP) -- Prime Min ister Pearson arrived quietly! talks with Prime Minister Wil- son. But with no meetings im- mediately ahead, Pearson re- tired to his hotel suite to.catch up on his sleep after a nine-hour transatlantic hop. Originally there had been ten- tative plans that he might con- fer with Wilson later today but fore devaluation of the pound was announced, Pearson and Wilson will get er dines. .with--Wilson at. his. country residenge Chequers: The two leaders are likely to hold a general discussion on world affairs and bilateral is- sues but there is no doubt deval- uation of the pound will be a central point of discussion. Jail Employees then called in their planes when Jordanian positions returned the! fire. | It was the fourth consecutive) ay of firing across the river. An Israeli spokesman said Jordanian tanks opened fire at 8:45 am. (1:45a.m. EST) a few miles south of the Umm- Shart Bridge, at a point where Israeli and Jordanian gunners duelled for two hours Monday. RETURNS FIRE "Israeli forces returned the fire to silence the source of the enemy shelling," the spokesman continued, '"The enemy fire did not stop, so the air force was called in." The Jordanian communique said the Israeli attack was con+ centrated in the area of the Al- lenby Bridge, 10 miles. north of| beaten land from the North Sea, A « tried to catch up to it. the Dead Sea. |their, beds, Suspended LINDSAY, Ont. (CP) -- Three Victoria County Jail employees ;were suspended Monday pend-|~ jing the outcome of an investiga-| 7 two = tion into charges that youths were beaten at the jail William Meneely, acting jail) governor, ~ two guards, Al- bert Lees d Maurice Wil- liams, were told not to report to |work until the investigation is completed and a report is sub- mitted to Victoria County coun- cil. The Ontario, reform institu- tions department was asked to investigate the charges by the county's jail and property com- mittee after Laverne Morrison, 17, of Lindsay, and John Ostler, 19, of Toronto, said they were for refusing to leave iy pusciisead |) «Sie | |property were destroyed by fire} and when a piece of frozen clay tore In London jan 18-inch-square hole in the 'kitchen ceiling. jabout four hours after the explo- Two barns on the Langford|sion. Flames shot 200 feet into the the house was damaged|sky and could be seen as far away as Orillia, 60 miles south, and Midland, 70 miles to the southwest. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Liberal Speculates On Leadership KINGSTON (CP) -- Prime Minister Pearson may not run in another general election, a Hamilton Liberal mem- ber of Parliament said Monday night. John Munro, MP for Hamilton East, said Liberals who would like to see Mr. Pearson retire as leader because they believe this would keep the party in power, are wrong. "The change in leadership would not solve the Liberal_popularity problem as some party members seem to think," he said. Newborm Baby Girl Abandoned TORONTO (CP) -- A baby girl less than a week old was foufid adandoned in a suitcase Monday in the wome- en's washroom of a department store at the suburban York- dale shopping centre. Police said the baby might have died if she had not begun to cry. Shoppers and store em- ployees heard her, The child was taken to hospital and is in good condition. ..In THE TIMES Today .. : Deleaations D 9 Whitby Nominotions--P. 5 3 Mel-Rons Lose--P.6 Ann Landers--10 Ajax News--5 Gity News--9 : Clossified--14, 15,16, 17 = Comics--19 Editorial--4 Financial--18 Obituaries--17 E Sports--6, 7 S Television --19 Theatres--13 Weather--2 Whitby News--5 --10,.11 | Women's +s 4 t