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Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Jul 1966, p. 1

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Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. 2 naam Ie Single Cony S5c Per Week Home Delivered i She Oshawa Gunes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JULY ii, 1966 a ow "Ottawa and for pay! Weather Report Tuesday sunny, with cloudy periods, Some thundershow- ers, Low tonight 65; high to- morrow 85. ; oe Malt Fost Oitice spar iment ent of P. in Cash. TWENTY-TWO PAGES Early fashions and pretty girls -- were on dis- play Saturday at the Straw- berry Festival and Colon- ial Fashion Show at the Brougham museum grounds, Cindy. Cox (right), of 393 Jay Bell Grove Westridge, wears the-fash+ EARLY FASHIONS, PRETTY GIRLS HIGHLIGHT SHOW jonable Parisian attire of Helene de Champlain, wife of Samuel de Champlain, Maieka Lindon of 832 Narock Blvd., Bay Ridges, portrays the maid. More than 600 persons attended the open-air "variety and fashion show. --Oshawa Times Photo FIVE AIRLINES OUT Strike Hits | Thousands WASHINGTON (AP) -- Nego- tiators meet today to tackle|tween the two rooms, arranged the wage issue and other dis- putes in the strike against five U.S. airlines which has grounded thousands of travel-| lers at the peak of the summer vacation season. No progress toward a settle-| Wirtz, who was touring the Far| more than 3,000 persons at- jEast when the strike started, of the joint bargaining session| ment was reported in advance scheduled for midmorning of the strike's fourth day. This marks the first time ne-| gotiators have met face-to-face, since more than 35,000 ground personnel walked off their jobs with the five major airlines Fri- day. During fruitless weekend ne- gotiations, officials of the Inter- national Association of Machin- ists (AFL-CIO) met in one con- 'erence room in the basement of the labor department build- dng, airline officials in another. James J. Reynolds, assistant labor secretary who shuttled be- the joint meeting, telling re- porters that 10 hours of talks| Saturday and Sunday had brought no progress. WIRTZ ENTERS TALKS Labor Secretary W. Willard} entered the sluggish negotia- tions Sunday, As talks moved} into the night, he told report-} ers, 'I should say with all can-| dor that there is no reasonable) basis for expecting any major| developments in the situation." Wages remain the major is- sue, The union is seeking in- creases of about 53 cents an hour over three years, while the airlines have offered a_ three- year contract with a 30-cent raise. Top-rated mechanics now receive $3.52 an hour with pay ranging down to $2.25 for jani- tors. Viet Cong Bags 'Copter' Kills 13 -- Four U.S. Men From AP-Reuters SAIGON (CP)--The Viet Cong shot down three U.S. helicopters in South Viet Nam, killing four U.S. and nine South Vietnamese soldiers, while two more U.S jets were lost in the air war against the Communist north, an American spokesman an- nounced today A zhter-bomber _ be- came the 285th plane lost in the 17-month air war against North Viet Nam early today. The bombing continued with an at- tack on another oil storage de- pot 130 miles westnorthwest of Hanoi near the old French base of Dien Bien .Phu. The reported two buildings aged Ground fighting in South Viet Nam died down, with both U.S, and Vietnamese headquarters reporting only light patrol con- tacts. In the jumeéts northwest of Saigon, a battered Viet regiment escaped Cambodian bord leaving least 238 dead after the U.S le Infantry Division .decoyed pilots daim- Con toward. the af the guerrillas fight. All 13 helicopter deaths came when a U.S. UH-1D Iroquois was shot down 18 miles south- east of Ca Mau in southernmost An Xuyen province, which has been relatively quiet in recent months. The U.S. spokesman had no further details. NO CASUALTIES The two helicopters -- both marine CH-34 troop-cargo car- riers--went down in the north- ern part of the country 12 miles northwest of the marine base at Chu Lai. There were no casual ties in either crash | The Communists nailed aj chopper as it ferried in marines to protect another CH-34 which had gone down Sunday night with mechanical trouble. A sec- ond CH-34 was brought down by this morning in the same area. However, the original helicop- ter was repaired and returnee to action, a spokesman said | In scattered clashes in the northern provinces, the marine reported : Viet Sunday, into a furious Cong culture Minister Greene after SENATOR HAYS' SILLABUB NOW HAS DRUGSTORE FLAVOR CALGARY (CP) -- Senator Harry Hays's_ celebrated Stampede sillabub took on a drugstore flavor. Sunday as he added nasal congestion pills to an ever-growing list of ingredients. But the effect of the gin- based drink, spiked with milk, cold cream cherry brandy, stomach powder, winé and headache pills, remained as the senator promised. 'Incredible,' agreed Agri- tending the senator's 13th an- nual outdoor breakfast. The breakfast was one of several outdoor events, in- cluding barbecues, square dances and an exhibition foot- ball game, which kept thou- sands occupied during the pre-Stampede weekend. The Stampede opens today. Senator Hays, clad in a fringed buckskin coat and plum - colored cowboy hat, promised guests at his south- east Calgary farm the silla- bub would '"'make old ladies young and old men tired." US. Global Disarmament Plan Unworkable, Panel Maintains WASHINGTON (AP) -- A re-|U.S. blueprint, does, search panel's opinion that the U.S. plan for eventual global disarmament is unworkable and possibly dangerous is disclosed in a report to the U.S. disarm- ament agency made _ public Sunday night. An underlying theme in the a hesitant sip. He was one of t provide adequate alternative machinery to protect national interests in a troubled world. The two year study of the U.S. plan for general and com- plete disarmament was made by a seven --man panel of ex- perts at Johns Hopkins Univer- 129-page study is that the scrap-'sity's Washington Centre of ping of national armed forces) Foreign Police Research under in favor of a powerful United'a $87,308 contract with the Nations peace force, as envi-/arms control and disarmament saged in the final stage of the' agency. China Aide Sees Russ Ally Of U.S. TOKYO (AP)--Chinese jeign Minister Chen Yi charged) Sunday the Soviet Union is de- ploying troops along the Chinese} border and is an "ignominious| accomplice' of the United) States in Viet Nam. | Chen addressed a rally held) in Peking to denounce U.S. air| strikes on fuel oil facilities in the Hanoi and Haiphong areas of North Viet Nam. His re- marks were reported by Pe- king's official New China news agency. | The Soviet Union, he said, is! making military deployments | along iitie Chinese border in co- ordination with the U.S. imper- ialist encirclement of China." Chen said no more about the border situation. But he went on} to a bitter denunciation of the "Soviet leading clique for seek-} jing a detente and a reduction of jarmed forces in Europe so that the United States could draw away forces to cope with the Vietnamese people."' He scored what he said were the "traitorous features of the Soviet revisionist leading clique in its sham support but real ple's struggle against U.S. ag- gression and for national salva- tion."' Chen also charged the Soviet Union with "spreading lies and slanders everywhere, accusing China of obstructing the transit of aid traterials to Viet Nam. aa % Young Woman Shoots It Out POST FALLS, Idaho (AP)--| [Lillian Jo Ramus, the young] {woman who charged out of a jmotel room spraying bullets from a gold-plated M1 carbine at policemen and FBI agents, lay seriously wounded today} but was responding to. treat ment; One FBI agent was wounded in the shoot-out just before midnight Saturday before the |28-year-old woman fell with bul-| jlet wounds in the head and left! jhip. After emergency surgery | at a hospital in Spokane, Wash.,| 20 miles away, she was taken} off the critical list, and doctors said she will recover. "After we told her to come out, she opened and closed the motel door several times, then} fired a single shot inside the, room, apparently. to. make us think she had shot herself," said FBI special agent Robert Rock- well of Coeur d'Alene, who was shot in the leg. "We told the officers over the bill horn to stay back, then she opened the door and started fir- ing," he said. There were "al most a hundred" officers sur- rounding the motel, said the wife of the owner, Mrs. David Doty. The sawed-off M1 carbine has been fitted with a pistol handle so it could be used as a hand gun. betrayal of the Vietnamese peo:|? Rocales July 23-24, jthe legislature Friday by Pre- CALGARY MOB OF 700 RIOTS IN DOWNTOWN Police Use Dogs, Water For-\@ \fire to garbage cans CALGARY (CP)--Police used dogs and water trucks early to- day to disperse a mob. of more than 700 persons who tore down signs and mailboxes and set in the |} downtown area, | POLICE USED DOGS and water trucks to break up a wandering mob of more than 700 persons who Russia Wont Play MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet Union announced today its track and field and basketball teams will not play against the U.S.| view) said today in an interview this year in protest of thejhe hopes '"'our antiquated elec- United States' war in Viet Nam, |tion laws will be brought up to the news agency Tass reported.|date"" after the committee The Soviet men'é and wom- brings in its recommendations. track team. was | Appointment of the 13 - man sched- | : : : in Los |Committee was announced in caused damage estimated at several thousand dollars in downtown Calgary today. (CP Wirephoto) Key Revision Statutes Seen By Liberal MPP TORONTO (CP) -- A mem- ber of the newly - appointed legislature select committee on jOntario election laws says he |hopes for major revision of the Statutes as the result of com- mittee studies, Vernon Singer (L -- Downs- en's uled to meet the U.S, mier Robarts \prorogation of the 110-day ses- sion. The premier said the commit- Tass said the two Soviet teams have refused to partici- pate in the meets because of the ers ; tee, headed by Dalton Bales OVER-ALL POLICY (PC -- York Mills) will exam- Non - Communist observers|ine the province's election laws saw the team's decisions as|and make recommendations '"'in part of the over - all Soviet|the light of modern needs." Communist leadership's policy| Mr. Singer said he hopes the on Viet Nam rather than as the;committee will inquire especi- idea of the athletes. jally into areas dealing with Tass reported that the ath- election expenses and their full letes met in the Moscow Chessjdisclosure, the system of enu- Club today and passed a protest|/meration, the marking of ballots resolution. land advance polls. GEN. AG. McNAUGHTON, 80, DIES MONTEBELLO, Que Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton, 80, the 1s took overseas who Army in World War, died here early to- day He had been in apparent good health but died at home about 4 a.m There was no immediate word on funeral arrangements Gen, McNaughton's career fields. of public As service, including pre-war pres- spanned many of the Natior Council, wartime mander, brief fence minister and idency nadian chairman of the national Joint Com held the latter post tirement in 1962, His tinguished studded with political defeat his determination:a kept his reputation even after wartime 13 d at tl EN. McNAUGHTON service as ontroverss nd brilliance (CP)-- mand of the 7 He was at st. Canadian major milita the Second tion and use Army overse conscription war he was Atomic and Canada' the his summer EDT chairma section Joint Swervingly de tion of Car later as Ca- use of water Inter- and the mission. tie interest. until his re- He was a tor and was ent of the and ada and the Yet development River While he of ial Research army com- le t de- te career 0lIs untarnished loss of com- pa Second World War -- composi- Eners United Nations. Commis United States had an later, treaty in the.negotiations he. later de- nounced the treaty approved by the federal cabinet as a sell- out to the United States for the power and water-storage devel- opment of the great western river, He had helped wring some return for Canada from the huge power developments. As wartime commander over- seas, he fought efforts to split up the Canadian forces and in- sisted on keeping them intact a fighting force He was relieved of his com- mand--the official reason given was illness--then returned home to an unusual period of relative calm. Nine months later he emerged again into the public eye to fight a losing battle to save the voluntary character of the enlistment program. Col. J, L. Ralston, the defence minister, was forced to resign Noy. 1, 1944, over his advocacy of conscription and Mc- Naughton replaced him, Canadian Army, the centre of two ry issues of the of the Canadian and the 1944 crisis. After the president of the zy Control Board s ambassador to as n of the Canadian the International as sion, he was un- voted to the pro- 1adian interests in rs where Canada principal negotias a bitter oppon- between Can- United States for of the Columbia rlicipated actively Gen shortly before) The crowd, mostly youths, set off fire alarms, ripped down store displays and damaged) cars, About 15 persons were ar- rested, Police barricades were torn down, fencing ripped and debris thrown into the street. Police, who had strengthened patrols in case of repetition of outbreaks which occurred dur- ing the pre - stampede weekend last year, broke up the crowd three hours after it formed. The mob built up after a city- sponsored teen - age dance, or- ganized to keep youths oc- cupied. Marchers blocked traf- fic, lifted a car and four pas- sengers onto the sidewalk and invaded a downtown hotel. Water trucks opened up with high + pressure sprays and po- lice moved in with dogs. LINE UP FOR PARADE Crowds lined the two - mile route of the annual stampede parade more than three hours before the parade was to start. Overnight showers gave way to sun but a threat of showers remained for tonight's of the six-day exhibition. A brief thunderstorm Sunday 'night cut into some outdoor ac- tivities but weather was sunny and warm as thousands at- tended open. + air breakfasts, dances and other events over the weekend. Hundreds of teen-agers walked or drove through the downtown area Sunday night, accompanied by a wild chorus ances which occurred last year. "They were real quiet," said a city police spokesman. Sev- eral hundred attended a city- sponsored dance, organized to keep them occupied. Police pa- trols had been strengthened over the weekend. KENNEDY TO OFFICIATE U.S. Senator Robert F. Ken- nedy is to open the stampede tonight and then return to Washington. More than 559,000 attended last year and an es- timated 180,000 watched last year's, colorful parade. About 31,000 persons attended outdoor breakfasts at two shop- ping centres, 8,000 a service club barbecue and more than 3,000 turned up for sillabub at Senator Harry Hays' annual breakfast Sunday. The senator gave the gin- based sillabub a new flavor this year, the 13th, by adding nasal congestion pills. Other ingredi- ents included milk, headache pills, wine, stomach powder, cherry brandy and hair spray, Traffic was piled for blocks near the Stampede Grounds Sunday as visitors took a sneak preview of Stampede and Ca- nadian Petroleum E x p o sition exhibits, The Stampede this year salutes the oil industry, WILL RACE EACH DAY ae events and livestock judging we' parade. f bred ehuckwagon races will be held each day: The stampede closes at midnight Saturday and next year will run nine days. Guests at Senator Hays' farm for the egg-and-sausage break. fast included Agriculture Min- ister Greene, Resources Minis« ter Pepin and many of 68 Ca- ribbean parliamentarians who of auto horns. But there was no repetition of major disturb- came here after an Ottawa con- ference. | | | | U.S. Plans For New Build-ups Of Her Forces In Viet Nam NEW YORK (AP) -- The United States has begun a ma- jor expansion of its armed forces and is planning further troop buildups in war-torn Viet Nam despite official optimism about the war's progress, the New York Times reports in a dispatch from Washington. No official pronouncements about the buildups have been made, but as of June 30, U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force and Ma- rine forces exceed their budget levels by 100,000 men, the Times says. The army, it was reported, recruit training at a level of 50,000 men a month for at least the next three months. U.S. troops in South Viet Nam now number 280,000. The Times reports that high- ranking military sources said President Johnson would in- crease that force to 375,000 by the end of the year and to 425,- 000 by next spring. However, such buildups are not inconsistent with reports that the United States has turned the tide of battle to its favor, the newspaper says. The larger force is needed to hasten the successful outcome of the has been instructed to continue war. manne nna Yugoslav Immigra HAMILTON (CP) slavian immigrant, today wa charge of murder, laid after Park Sunday night of Musif -- Lufti Ajro, NEWS HIGHLIGHTS nt Remanded 27-year-old Yugo- s remanded to Aug. 9 on a the shooting death in Gage Ziberia, 35. Police in laying the charge did not specify whether it was capital or non- capital murder and neither did the charge read in court. The Crown attorney's office to lay such a charge when said it is 'perfectly legal' more evidence is needed. In fair condition after emergency surgery in hospital is Is- mail Islami, 30, also of Hamilton, with bullet wounds in his chest and hand, Early P.E.I. Vote Light SOURIS, P.E.I. (CP) -- as "quite heavy"? in today's Prince Edward Island's King Early voting was described crucial deferred election in s ist riding. Polls opened at 9 a.m, ADT under grey skies with temperature near 70 degrees. The weatherman had called for occasional sho- wers but promised sunnier condition before the polls close at 6 p.m. St gta eT DHA LT - ... In THE TIMES lodty van 35,000 Attend UAW Picnic -- P. 20 Fashions Fascinate -- P. 5 Galt Slees Win All Ontario Tourney -- P. 9 Ann Landers--12 City News--11 Classified--18 to 21 Comics--16 Editorial--4 Financial--17 Obits--21 Sports--8, 9,10. Theatre--7 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax News--5, 6 Women's---12, 13, 14 MAMMA TTT

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