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Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Aug 1966, p. 1

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lewspaper , Whitby, Bowman- x, Pickering and g centres in Ont- Durham Counties. 10¢ Single OSHAWA BSc Per Week Home TNVV EN, iN ee es livered VOL. 95 -- No. if ONTARIO. MONDAY AUGUST 22. 1966 Oshawa Times Authorized es Second Class Mail Otter Weather Report Cloudy, cool with showers. Low tonight, 60; row, 72, Post Office Department wa and for payment of Postage in Cash high tomor- TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES NET inca ni, enone at ieee Meaaniiataetaahis ee IN SERIOUS SI carte tay Bare es ae ERZURUM, TURKEY (AP)-- Another series of earth shocks hit eastern Turkey today as re- lief crews fought to help surviv- lors of the earthquake Friday = |that left thousands dead and in- jured. | New shocks rumbled through \the eastern provinces already E marked by the ruins of hun- dreds of wrecked villages. The new tremors hit before | dawn as hundreds of thousands }of peasants from quake-stricken |communities were sleeping out- | doors. The latest quake caused a {wave of fear and panic. but § \there were no reports of any | ties. The fresh quakes came in two waves. One lasted three sec- onds. The second hit six min- lutes later and rumbled for | seven seconds. | They struck as the govern- ment fought to ward off threats of hunger and epidemic among aster. COUNT 2,300 BODIES More than 2,300 bodies left by the killer quake already are counted. Officials in this provin- cial capital in the heart of the stricken area estimated the fi- Bodies pulled from the de of the quake that struck hun- Inflation Critical Topic At Campobello Talks WELSHPOOL, Campobello Is-,economic affairs, Viet Nam, | channels to bring about a basis land, N.B. (CP) -- President} NATO, Rhodesia and the Carib-|for negotiation with North Viet Johnson and Prime Minister}bean -- with no indication on|Nam. Pearson lined up economic|either side of policy changes in| "fxceptional good humor" problems for an intensive look | the wind. was reported in the meeting, Sunday during a short but "use-| The Pearson government has|Richard O'Hagan, Mr. Pear-! ful" meeting on the eastern sea-|been reluctant, in dealing with|son's press secretary, said the board. the Canadian economy, to fol-|prime minister had described They also dealt with foreign|low the U.S. example with|the exchange as an "altogether policy, but inflation at home | guidelines -- voluntary, specific! hetptul meeting." drew special attention. Aides|!mits on wages and prices. by st Pearson-Johnson said Mr. Johnson made a pitch| Both leaders face labor un- itouee wey Ge m tangy for Canada's support for his|rest and a broadening concern David, Md., the president was guidelines on wage and price|among consumers about prices. reported "Cool" to the prime increases. Mr. Pearson faced the crisis of |W inister because of Mr. Pear- Mr. Pearson said the two lead-|2 threatened rail strike on his son's public suggestion shortly ers "used every minute" of gies ident 4 ; their 2% hours in conference, ne president said we were) +... of North Viet Nam. The sug- mostly with advisers on hand,|® lot better with guideposts--| fio Came ahead of the of-| and partly over a lamb-chop even though some of them had/?~ ; : é ats if been fractured -- than without ficial American policy. tempor Ji i co of a|them," said Bill Moyers, presi-| plas : ae sammy tan vs tn oe hee dential press secretary. This time the prime minister wick mainland near St, An-| The prime minister was re-|made a pointed deletion from drews provided the setting for Ported to have followed Mr.|the text of his speech, elimina- the eighth meeting of the two Johnson's arguments on the ting in delivery the reference to leaders in three years. oan --, : bombs in the sentence: e flown to the inn at; Both men restated that posi-| t Fs Pre gel vie pepenetar om tions on the Vietnamese war,|Viet Nam and all the guns gether here, and returned here|Which lay behind almost every everywhere may soon cease to after the talks to deliver one|phrase in their later speeches. sy gga the bombs may cease speech apiece and lay a corner- OFFERS ASSISTANCE pea eer ' | pa Postal The ceremony) The prime minister assured, Mr. O'Hagan said the prime recalled Campobello's close ties|Mr. Johnson of Canada's con- with the late president Franklin| tinued support of the objectives Delano Roosevelt. of U.S. policies in Viet Nam. ; es There were five topics of con-|And he kept open the offer of that impression. iS anat versation --a broad range of/assistance through diplomatic) ,. 5™all fleets of U.S. and Cana- Not Son's Body In Casket Parents Find At Funeral iti BLIND RIVER, Ont. (CP)--|trict registrar. It said he died|in Maine and Mr. Pearson left A body flown from Vancouver! of a brain atrophy. er Mave from gee pda for burial here is not their son,| 3 . \after switching to a transpor Mr. and Mrs. Antoine Blais of Goat et pega neni department aircraft. ! Blind River said today. |body, said there was ro possi.|,.c@mpobello Island and its 1,- This was discovered Satur- bility of an error in ite handl- (200 Canadian citizens are 1s0- day, the day set for the funeral, ing It said the body sent onal lated from the New Brunswick when the casket Was opened sO as Lionel Blais was the same ™ainland and only a bridge the parents and Lionel's four one, identified by an arm tat- 5P42% away from Maine The is- brothers and sister could view too, as the body received from 1494 was overflowing with both him for the last time. the coroner's office. Canadians and Americans Sun- Inside, they said, was a man __day, all carefully controlled by 49 Sentenced other pause and was concerned the leaders and their parties) {through sunny weather to the is} 'land for church, to and from) "the talks, and finally away jagain on the first leg home to |their respective capitals. Mr in his 50s, with reddish instead | 125 secret service men, 60 of black hair. Lionel, who had {RCMP in red coats, and 20 all his teeth, weighed 175 |state troopers. pounds. The older-man, weigh- C 4 At the afternoon ceremony, ing about 100 pounds, had no By alro Court the cornerstone was laid for a teeth 'Ate ' reception centre near the 17- Now the relatives are trying a, a A R. (Reuters) -- bedroom, three - storey home to find 'out if Lionel is indeed "© Supreme State Security where Roosevelt spent many Court today sentenced 49 per- summer ¥acation between sons, alleged to be members of | and '1939. the banned Moslem Brother-| at the same site. two years hood Organization, to prison ago Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. terms ranging from a year's! Pearson opened the U.S.-Cana- dead and if so, what happened. 1905 Accompanying the body were all Lionel's identifying papers. The parents said they were notified their son died in Van- couver General Hospital Aug.|!™Prisonment to 10 years hard'qian Roosevelt Campobello In 16. They made arrangements to !abor ternational Park have the body flown to Sault All the accused were charged 'In his address, Mr. Johnson ; Ste. Marie, 65 miles west of with attempts to revive the or- said the U.S. has the means of here, and brought here. With it ganization and conspiring to as-;unlimited destruction "but we was a death certificate signed|sassinate top Egyptian govern-|do not have the power alone to by R. V. Morris, Vancouver dis-\ment officials, lwage peace." vssnitie r | jthat the phrase would convey CALL ANYWHERE, BUT FIRE HALL BELLEVILLE, Ind. (AP) Members of the Belleville volufteer fire department decided to have an alarm set up which would trigger the telephone bell in the home of every fireman in | ctricken villages, cut off from| case of a blaze. | the A recent alarm got a slow | response, however | All the firemen were at- tending a meeting at the fire station. There's no telephone | there. Alpinists Edge Down Icy Face CHAMONIX, (Reut- France bedore of a pause in the bomb-|ers)--Two weary West German disaster region by the Turkish} mountaineers edged slowly through driving snow today \down the icy sheer west face of | arily suspending bombing raids.|the 12,300-foot Aiguille du Dru| provinces and seven others! in the French Alps which had} held them prisoner for more! than a week. tescuers who freed them Sun-} dreds of _ vil s in four prov- inces last ees were' being buried even before identification |serious new damage or casual- f the survivors of Friday's dis- § nal toll would go beyond 3,000, bris,. ' ~-AT 'Hints in Erzurum stroyed? by earthquake. An intact school was trans- , Turkey, was de- © formed into a hospital to treat the (AP Wirephoto by radio from. Istanbul) to ward off disease. The health ministry ordered mass inoculation against ty- phoid and told authorities in the disaster zone to add chlorine to all drinking water. PLANES DROP FOOD | At the same time airplanes) dropped food to. dozens of! outside when landslides, triggered by the gigantic quake, | covered roads. Twenty-nine vil- lages were isolated. Having experienced two suc- cessive days of tremors follow-| ing the initial quake, the peas- ants continued to sleep in fields, | The cutter Ingham, with a |under cone - shaped tents or|doctor aboard, reached the ee The wrapped in thick home-made} blankets. Some survivors asked their dead relatives. : Supplies being flown into the government include wheat,| margarine and milk powder. | Tremors shook four stricken! throughout most of Sunday, but were not reported to have caused new casualties. At least five were Coastguard Gropes In Fog To Rescue Ailing Skipper (AP)--A U.S. groping through fog far out in the At- NEW YORK Coast Guard cutter, Willis, who sailed the South) Pacific alone, left here al months ago today in the Little lantic, has reached the 11-foot}One--named for his wife, Tess| sailboat carrying an ailing 72-|--bound for Plymouth, England. | year-old skipper who had been| heading solo for England. craft late Sunday night. sailor, Capt. William Willis, had for| reported to a passing freighter} picks and shovels to dig out/that he was suffering from an)tg Newfoundland from Norfolk, apparently strangulated hernia.|ya, was directed to Willis Tilco Reneged, Hearing Told TORONTO (CP)--The man- felt)agement of Tilco Plastics Ltd. day reported that the Germans, | through the early afternoon Sun-|2!, Peterborough reneged on a mann Muller, 25, were in good health althdugh fatigued. | But their progress down the} slippery face' was so slow that) it seemed unlikely they would minister is not suggesting an- COVer the 430 yards to the base begun providing new housing before nightfall A four-man team he Germans from frozen snow-swept extricated a_ narrow, | dian navy helicopters shuttled the summit of the mountain. |more than 2,800 dwellings. sons, which somehow survived| three days of quakes with no} more damage than 100 cracked |i. picket lines tried to get a} buildings. The government has already The Turkish Regiment was the victims. Infantry for 221st sent to Arliova in Bingol prov-|plication by the union for per-|of dying from blood poisoning" ledge near|ince to help rebuild or repair mission to prosecute Tilco for|or failure to bargain in good faith.| gangrenous. "So I hope that the guns of Heinz Ramisch, 23, and Her-| day in this city of 91,000 per ringing '0 eres 0. ae }bers of the Textile Workers of on a strike by mem- America, then by actions on |violent reaction from the strik-} jers, a labor hearing was told today. relations board The board is hearing an ap- Asked whether Willis would] Rail Unions Call For Strike Friday HUNGER, EPIDEMIC THREATEN Special Cabinet Committee BULLETIN MONTREAL (CP) -- Fri- day, Aug. 26, was an- nounced today as the date for the beginning of a strike by 120,000 employees | against the CNR, CPR and | five other Canadian rail- | Ways. | MONTREAL (CP)--The gov- ernment and the unions are poised today for an impending lstrike of the nation's railways. |A special cabinet committee meets this afternoon to consider the situation and union leaders [meet this morning in Montreal to set the strike date. | A press conference at noon is non - operating employees of Canada's major railways will walk off the job. The men are part of three groups of unions; the eight-un- ion 'residual' non-ops, the Ca- nadian Brotherhood of Railway Transport and General Work- Federated Shop Crafts. A fourth group, the Brother- hood of Railway Trainmen, rep- resenting about 20,000 workers, will also act in concert with the non-ops. A union leader has re- ported this will mark the first time an operating union, the |BRT, has acted in unison with the non-ops. Each of the groups will be represented by a' negotiating committee averaging 10 -mem- b lus the ' executives. SITUATION QUIER On the wildcat strike front, where 3,600 non-op thé weekend. Crews on all the railways were considerably reduced Sat- urday and Sunday. ers, and Division No. 4 of the} -- New Shocks Rumble Meeting This Afternoon Through Quake Ruins \the 200-man 4 p.m. Sunday shift jat the CNR's Point St. Charles jcoach yard and diesel shops re- {mained away. Previous shifts, jover the weekend, ran about the |same with 50 per cent out. Some 2.000 shop craftsmen were out |Friday. All the other CNR. staffs in |Montreal who normally work on |the weekend were on the job. |NO CPR MEN OUT | The CPR reported that none jof its men were out across the lentire system. | In North Sydney, N.S., the lo- |cal CBRT local meets today to jconsider a strike, which could jaffect ferry service between S!Nova Scoti d Newf land. =* |expected to reveal when 100,000/ N04 Recta an lewfoundland In Sydney, N.S., 135 non-ops jremained out during: the week- jend. Freight traffic in the re- \gion was affected. In Ontario, the CNR, as of last Friday, had about 1,280 em- ployees on strike at its Toronto, Windsor, Sarnia and London in- stallations. Dratt Canada, Bid Seen At UN OTTAWA (CP) '--- Canada is expected to be drafted by the | West European countries to | serve on the United Nations Se- curity Council for the next two years, it was learned today. Canada has not been seeking such # draft and is not particu- larly anxious to serve on the Security Council when the lat- eps|ter is facing such problems as were out last week, the situa- tion was. relatively quiet during mandatory sanctions against Rhodesia. However, this country is re- ported prepared to accept a draft call. Canada was last represented on the Security In Montreal, 100 workmen in Council in 1957-58. Bland, Fence-Sitting Press Lambasted By Publisher WATERLOO, Ont. (CP)--A be taken aboard the cutter and|responsible press should never sent to a hospital, a coast guard spokesman said the doctor "will | evaluate and let that guide | them." The Ingham, on a routine trip }when about 150 miles from his | given position, 850 miles east of |New York and 350 miles south }of Cape Race, Nfid. The cutter had been called by the American freighter Sapphire was told he was ill. Willis refused to go aboard |the freighter, which was route to Holland, saying he pre-| ferred to wait for the coast guard, which gave him honor- ary master's papers just before classroom workshop sored by the Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Associa- Gladys which spotted Willis and re and about 60 delegates be equated with a 'bland, un- enterprising, fence press," says Basil Dean, pub- lisher of the Edmonton Journal. - sitting Mr. Dean today told a class- room workshop at the Univer- sity of Waterloo that newspa- pers should cherish their roles as watchdogs of the public good. in - the- is 'spon- The newspaper - rom Canada and the United States are attending eht two- en| Week meeting. A newspaper should not aban- don its essential role as a watch- dog which can safeguard the liberties of the individual by protecting him against abuses by governments or by any arm of the executive authority, he said. Teachers and newspaper men "are both compelled to live j}with the fact that the world is |full of people who think they can do the job that both of us are trying to do very much better than we can." Teachers and newspaper men both must "'try to bear as pa- tiently as we can" with persons who ". , . condemn us for say- ing things which we did not say and had no intention of say- ing." Excerpts of Mr. Dean's ad- dress were issued to the press prior to delivery. he left on the voyage. " | A doctor at Beekman Down- |town Hospital said Willis is in "serious trouble' if his self- diagnosis is correct. The doctor }said Willis could be 'in danger the hernia could become ROCKY, ARID AREA OF TURKEY Life Ever Cruel, Even Before '(Quake ISTANBUL (AP)--The quake-. devastated 'section of eastern§ Turkey is a mountainous and arid area where life has always been hard. Barren mountains dominate the four provinces of Erzurum, Mus, Bitlis and Bingol. The peo- ple farm and raise sheep and cattle on its plateaus and in its valleys. The total population of the four provinces is just more than 1,000,000. Outside the cities, people live frugally in single-storey home frugally in single-storey homes af sun-baked mud with flat earthen roofs. The roads are & bad, So are communications, In % winter, when the temperature / drops below zero, horse-drawn j Sleighs are the only way to get @ around Erzurum is the biggest of the four disaster provinces. It has ,000 of the aréa's population. zurum City itself, where dame. § ige- Was light, has 91,000. citi- 701 y of them work in leather tanneries and sugar re- fineries, while their rural neigh ibors produce wool, farm pro- LEBANON WHERE DISAS' TER STRUCK ; Romans in 422 on what now is , 1828 and 1878, and again in 1916. | : city's * houses of two and three storeys. | = duce and dairy products. | Erzurum, an almost circular} city ringed by ancient fortifica- tion walls, was founded by the the main road to Iran. The Turks annexed it in 1048 from the Byzantine Empire. | RESISTED INVASION The Russians occupied it in| Its inhabitants are known| among their fellow Turks as stout resisters to Russian vasion. = Erzurum is the cultural cen-|= tre. of eastern Turkey. Its schools include Ataturk Univer- sity, founded with the help of the University of Nebraska in| : the United States. Mosques and| inns dominate the skyline. The} people live in stone} = The area has been racked by| 3 destructive earthquakes fh the past. In 1939, 23,000 persons were killed in a quake at Er- xincan, just east of the present disaster zone. In 1859, Erzurum City was almost destroyed by aj = quake. | ine | amin i] Ca gum m NEWS HIGHLIGHT Divers Search For Four Missing RENFREW, Ont. (CP) -- Provincial police, with the aid of skin divers, began a search today in the Ottawa River near this town 50 miles west of Ottawa for four fishermen reported missing found floating in the river, after their empty boat was Geneva Pact Defied In Laos LONDON (AP) -- Brita of North Vietnamese troops in released today a report in Laos last year in defi- ance of the 1962 Geneva agreements. The report was made by the Indian and Canadian members of the In- ternational Control Commissi fused to participate. Arson Investigated on. The Polish member re- , In Toronto TORONTO (CP) -- Arson squad officers are investi- gating the burning Sunday night of a truck parked in the yara of Taggart Service independent Teamsters Union nner ..In THE TIMES Today.. | Pickering Church Celebrates 100th Year -- P. 5 $10 Million Fire Loss In B.C. -- P. 20 3 Sewage Plant In Operation -- P. 9 = Ann Landers--10 Obits--19 City News--9 Sports--6, 7, 8 Classified--16 to 19 Theatre--12 Comics--14 » Editorial--4 Financial--15 UNUM Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax News--5 Women's--10,.11 Ltd. where members of the are seeking a first contract. f ric snonyutt mn UAUIUACAQE0D AMES 2 ho Si AB 3 & ' a 4

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