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Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Jul 1967, p. 1

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AR each one no extra tion now! @ Powder. iquid Make-up. 1.75 Serene rspirant, Roll, Double-Check 2u de Parfum. l.oz urizer Emul- Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 26--NO. 159 She Oshawa Zines 10¢ Single € SSc Per Week "Home "Gellvered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Offi id ce Department Ottawa and for poyment of Postage in Cash Weather Report Cooler air expected to reach Southern Ontario tomorrow morning. Low tonight, 65; high tomorrow, 78. SIXTEEN PAGES Israeli Refusal On Jerusalem Slated For UN UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) UN Secretary - General U Thant was expected to report today a refusal by Israel to relinquish|!jem irmati i r y : and a ie Welle @f Serums reaffirmation that its , |reunification was irrevoc Israel Foreign Minister Abba iscabiib esas Eban's reply was delivered to| REAFFIRM CONTROL Thant Monday night after the| Eban warned the assembly reply but jit Was understood to be a detailed explanation of Is- rael's policy towards Jezusa- secretary - general sought com- sages with a resolution passed yy the General Assembly July 14 invalidating any change in the city's status. The resolution also called for cancellation of measures al- ready taken to bring Jerusalein under the total Israeli adminis- trative control. Israeli sources declined to dis- close the contents of Eban's maintain the unity of the city when he addressed the assembly priof to last week's vote. State- jments of responsible Israeli leaders since then have indi- jcated no change in this policy. | Eban and other officials also |declared their wish to ensure freedom of access for members |of the major faiths to the holy 'places, that Israel was determined to/| ale agency said the Soviet of- eld, Soviet Admiral Pledges Aid To Support Arab Defences CAIRO (CP) -- A Soviet ad-| policy of confining its aid to the miral visiting Egypt with 12 Arabs to political moves and re- warships promised the Egyp-|placement of some of the arms tians Monday to help "'repel|they lost in the war with Is- any aggression" as Arab lead-|rael. ers conferred in Cairo in search| At a little summit, Egyptian of a united policy against Is-|President. Nasser, Algerian rael. | President Houari Boumedienne Many Egyptians interpretedjof Jordan conferred for 2% the promise of help from Ad-|hours in Cairo Monday after miral Igor Molochov as a major|Nasser and Hussein met alone. change in the Soviet Union's! Cairo radio said their main cautious Middle East policy. objective is "to erase the con- Considerable significance also| sequences of aggression . . . un- was attached to the arrival|til every inch of Arab land-:now Monday of the Soviet warships|in Israeli hands is liberated." --eight of them at Port Said, at} Informed sources in Cairo be- the northern end of the Suez|lieved the three leaders may dif- Canal, close to the area where|fer significantly on methods of Israeli and Egyptian jets and|confronting Israel in the wake artillery fought Saturday. of the Arab military setback in Soviet Deputy Foreign Minis-|/the June war. | ter Jacob Malik arrived unex- pectedly in Cairo early today Middle East news agency as the|all 13 Arab states tentatively jgagements of One problem confronting | Elisabeth's 13 - them is a proposed general sum-| | | PREMIER ROBICHAUD | of New Brunswick was on | hand to welcome the Queen Mother when she arrived in Saint John, N.B., Mon- day. At left is Mrs. Robi- chaud, while Lt.-Goy. J. B. MeNair is partly-hidden be- hind the premier. Standing behind the Queen Mother Busy Schedule SAINT JOHN, N.B. The first round of official en- Queen Mother! day centennial on what was described by the|mit conference of the leaders of! was scheduled for foday. | first leg of a tour, of Arab cap- toum, The > 'day. "important/have dimmed as leaders of the Scheduled to take place in Khar-|Canada's Centennial and, dur- talks" with Egyptian officials. There has been no sign in Moscow, however, of any change in the Soviet Union's Socialist republics renewed their attacks on the conserva- tive oi] monarchs led by King Faisal of Saudi Arabia. Peking Sympathizers Stall Hong Kong Transportation HONG KONG (CP) -- Pro- Peking gangs, stepping up their terror tactics in an effort to keep Hong Kong's transport workers off the job, killed two men and set fire to two street- cars and three buses in a series of attacks today. Hundreds of frightened bus contacts in this British colony, said local Communist' leaders planned "two or three killings a day" to try to scare transport workers off their jobs. The in- formants said-the terror cam- paign was planned after a Com- munist strike last month failed to halt transport. The failure, regarded as a set- nena ONE 725.7373 and streetcar operators stayed home despite government prom- ises of 'effective protection" for those who reported for work. back for Hong Kong's Red lead- ers, roused the ire of Peking, which increased its propaganda attacks against the British re- The accent of the visit is on} the aey, she will meet de- rived in Saint John. Fog, which had shrouded the city most of the day, lifted) and warn. welcome when she arrived at the airport from Hali-|Of 100 men of the Black Watch, fax: A crowd of. several. tiundred| The Queen Mo New 'athers of Confederation and| will unveil a plaque at Rock- a Centennial Park in the city. | and a visit to a veterans hos- pital before the Queen Mother returns to the.royal yacht Bri- tannia, her home during the tour, for a dinner party in the evening. Queen Mother a day to remem-| ber. Flags are flying from build- ings in the city and many local residents have hung Union Jacks and Canadian flags out- side their homes. have been "'ironed-out."" ROAD SMOOTHED out the road from the airport to) *aw the Queen po touched down 'at 4:32 p.m, 'There will be a civie luncheon |doubt over how she felt about/,¢nor Saint John's Loy: the tour. ; "Isn't it wonderful here," she said as the official) ment headed by|wearing white breeches, blue H. J. Robichaud, federal fisher-| cut-away coats and white cock- | Bruns-|ades in their black tricorn hats, Saint John is set to give the) wick's representative in the cab-|fired a 21-gun salute. welcoming party, ies minister and New lother's|Black --Watch's are Fisheries Minister H. J, Robichaud and _ his wife, (CP Wirephoto) Queen Mother Faces Today sCr ye [tore the. Queen Mother ar-linet,. moved forward to greet| They her. Wearing eral minutes inspecting a guar lined up on the tarmac. slowly 'kilted soldiers, As she reviewed the ditions were not forgotten. Men to bejof the 3rd Field Artillery Regi- company," "the loyal 28 Paratroopers wane aero Viet Battle Toll SAIGON (Reuters)--At 'least|lands area where an entire U.S. |the easterners suffered heavy|attack that bogged down and New Brunswick works depart-| 26 American paratroopers were! paratroop company was almost | casualties as federal troops -pen- claimed that the campaign was) ment crews finished smoothing|killed and 38 were wounded wiped out' three weeks ago. | A U.S. spokesman said six their encirclement of the stra- He Pugsley Wharf, where the Bri-|with North Vietnamese regu-|North Vietnamese dead were | tegic university town of Nsukka, were still encircling Nsukka and tannia is berthed, only minuites|lars in the same central high-| left behind after i Monday in a two-hour battle Transport Commissioner A. n gime. Britain has sed China J. Shephard declined to say : of using its armed forces in the what protective measures were| start of the new violence Satur- being taken "'because we do not/day, when five Hong Kong po- want to reveal our plans until|jicemen were killed in a ma- they become needed." chine-gun attack from across Chinese claiming Communist|the border on a frontier village. camp is located in the cen- A SOUTH 'VIETNAMESE Montagnard Special Forces soldier carries his child in sling on his back as he walks on road toward Spe- cial Forces camp near D&k To, South Vietnam. Thg tral highlands some 310 miles northeast of Saigon. He wears a "tiger stripe" camouflage fatigue uni- form, (AP Wirephoto) \ -- [Press For Inc SAIGON (AP)--Defence Sec- retary Robert McNamara will not recommend sending all whe additional troops the U.S. com-} fully, a high American source said today. | McNamara, on his ninth trip to Vietnam, also ordered Gen. William C. Westmoreland's con-mand to cut away the fat from the 466,000.man American military force and step up. the effectiveness of the U.S. fight- ing machine. The .U.S. command normally has only about 40,000 to 50,000 combat troops available for op-| erations. | The secretary was reliably reported to have pressed for) limited integration of South Vietnamese troops into Ameri- can units to get the Saigon army to handle a bigger share of the fighting, now done mostly by American battalions. However, some additional) troops are expected to be sent Typhoon Clara Hits Formosa TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) -- | Typhoon Clara hit the northeast coast of Formosa today with winds of 105 miles an hour. It struck between Taipei and Hual- ien, on the Pacific coast 75 miles to the south. Torrential downpours battered the capital apd other areas as the typhoon cut its way north- westward on a path toward the Formosa Strait and China. All Taipei schoolé were closed and thousands of office workers McNamara To Cut Request reased Effort ~ | Kontum north of Saigon and 10 miles province, 270 ON PROF Mercenaries | Deny U:S.Plane Right To Land UAW TESTS FORD IT SHARE Opening Round Launches Demands For Profit Slice DETROIT (CP)--The- United \utoworkers Union: took its de mands for enriched labor tracts--including profit --to Ford Motor Co tempted to cool off speculation about the possibility of a strike Both Reuther and Seaton told reporters that they were ready to bargain in good faith and are con sharing today as KINSHASA, )The Congo (CP) Foreign neereenaries dug in at Kisangani airport today refused to allow a U.S. Air Force trans jport plane to land and evacuate |hostages, diplomatic sources | here reported The plane flew low over Ki- |sangani, formerly Stanleyville, [this morning, after Congo Presi- dent Joseph Mobutu called on the mercenaries Monday to sur render or at least give up men, women and children they held as hostages The plane, one of three U.S C-130s which arrived Monday to provide logtstic support for the Congolese government, was on! a mission to try to pick up the the opening round of negotia- hopeful that there will be no tions moved to the No. 2 auto-)walkouts after contracts expire maker Sept. 6 on a ranpage whet they re UAW President Walter entered the town Reuther launched 1967. auto. 'STRIKABLE ISSUES' One European, who asked to| makers--labor bargaining Mon But both sides have said pri remain anonymous, said at least) day by telling General Motors, YMtely that several "strikable seven Kuropeans were killed the industry leader, that the }sues" are among the union's and there were a number of! union wants a slice of the prof demands which Reuther has de- cases of rape its scribed as the "longest and All night, Kinshasa radio re-) Reyther said workers should Ost ambitious" list ever pre- peated Mobutu's appeal to the' get bonuses based on profits at) Sented Kisangani mercenaries, in the end of the fiscal year just. They. Include a substantial which he told them to put alas company executives get bon. W8se increase, a guaranteed white sheet on the runway if uses and stockholders get extra they were willing to let the! dividends plane land, or a black sheet if! Louis Seaton. GM vice presi they refused. dent for personnel, declined to} jtake a position on the profit |UAW demand | But he told reporters that 20 |years ago the unions was firmly UN Requests sharing proposal. or any other), annual income, wage parity for Canadian workers and a limit on sub-contracting which the UAW says takes jobs away from its members In the opening GM_ session, euther outlined the union's proposals in general terms. He spoke for. more than. three a pale silk aquama- ; and ; rine dress and coat with match- our of the Atlantic provinces! enough for her to get s »| ing flowered hat, she spent sev- g get a sunny P 'said casualties in the brief re-\throw the Congo government ther, who is the colonelsin-chiet, | 2°Unce?: ng the lines of opping to talk The Queen Mother left, 'no/t?,40me of tie men. Mercenaries | Training End | UNITED NATIONS (Reuters hostages. The mercenaries were be lieved to be the last. hold-outs from a rebellion in which they jwere reported to have led for }mer members of the Katanga ) gendarmerie last week The Security Council agreed ttacked three eastern Monday to call on all govern- Congo towns, but today were re-, ments to prohibit on their terri- ported to hold only the airport tory the recruitment, training {and hospital in Kisangani. and transit of mercenaries al- | Cong-o government sources\leged to be plotting to over- \bellion were 'heavy, and-in-| Ethiopia, India, Mali and cluded many Europeans, though|geria offered the formal resolu. who d to) C cross the border | wi-|GM, Ford and Chrysler--thus no official figures have been an-| tion to the council at an emer-|\°P . gency meeting, during which| A to Burundi|zumbuir repeated charges of in-) Der of from Bukavu, one of the cities|tervention in his country spon-!Profit-sharing plans has more ' | briefly held by. the rebels, said sored by Western business inter-|than doubled in the last decade, °f!Congolese' army soldiers wentlests. ' Sad to well over 2,000,000, 0 i | tra- jhours, then left the spelling out | Opposed fo any profit-sharing! or some specific demands to plan. |Leonard Woodcock, UAW vice- PLAN FLOPS AT AMC president, at an afternoon ses- The UAW has had a profit. S!0" : sharing -- dubbed "progress-| Negotiations with Chrysler be- sharing' -- agreement with 8!" Wednesday. American Motors since 1961,). A Secret. poll of UAW men jbut. this company has had no|bers indicated that higher \profits to share during the last|Wages ranked No, 1 in their |two years. priority jist 9 demands, with " ef ' retirement improvements sec- The automotive big yathus |e and a guaranteed annual in- come a distant third. far have been adamant in their) tot \ workers covered by | Nigerian Federal F orces Claim New Successes LAGOS (Reuters) -- Nigerian | of taptured rebel soldiers me "lfederal authorities today taken to prisoner-of-war camps. claimed new success in their The announcement said fed-| six - day - old military cam-,eral troops took the town of jpaign to crush the secession of/ Okuji and all other villages sur- |the Eastern region, the self-|rounding Nsukka. |proglaimed republic of Biafra. | A government spokesman de- that the federal army's An official announcement said|nied The survey, released Monday é in Washington in a monthly re- TI e port on labor statistics, also re- vealed that profit sharing was | pain much more common in non- ra plants. BRUSSELS (Reuters) -- The As they opened negotiations,;European Comm-on Market both the UAW and GM at-;Council of Ministers today agreed on a mandate for the jopening of a preferential trade /agreement with Spain. Soviet J etliner | The date for the opening of negotiations with Spain will be Set For D Run set by the market's executive ry |commission, and the Spanish na _ | government, the sources said. MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet, The mandate given to the Union's IL-62, a new four-jet| commission provides for an in- commercial airliner, will make jtial six-year period which both a dry run to Montreal around'the Common Market and Spain etrated deeper and 'continued going according to plan. |Aug. 1, sources said today. would make substantial reduc- labor department way ECM C¢ C 1 : cil delegate Theodore Id-|Shows, however, that the num-| said government forces} south of the Montagnard town |Biafra's forces had driven alljthe seat of Lt.-Col. Odumegwu of Dak To. He said two companies of the|tory. The broadcast, monitored 173rd Airborne Brigade were on/in Cameroon, said federal units that the military head of Ni-| ment with Air' Canada. federal troops out of its terri-|Ojukwu's Biafran regime. Biafra radio also a search - and - destroy mission |were in retreat everywhere eX-|sarjia's federal government, when they ran into the North|cept at one border town, Jasan, Mai. - Vietnamese, who attacked them|where fighting continued. asserted;now under an exchange agree- The plane is expected to be tions in tariffs on industrial put into regular service to Mont- ot s nes said. the battle in|on the road to the eastern capi- would soon capture it. ! B products, the sources said miles | tal of Enugu. real shortly thereafter, depend-| Council sources said the man- : Only 41 miles of good road ing on the success of the test date was agreed upon as the Biafra radio said Monday that\separate Nsukka and Enugu, | flights. six ministers began the last day The Soviet airline Aeroflot/of their current session here makes regular flights to Canada after hearing renewed French opposition to early British mem= \bership in the market. Gen. Yakubu Gowon, jasked Britain for two warships following the secretary's report) from behind fortified bunkers) Today's Lagos announcement and planes for the battle against to President Johnson. moreland was reported to have asked for 100,000 to 140,000 men studies of what ler amounts of troops. Louis G. Seaton, left, vice-president of General Motors and director of per- sonnel, and Walter Reu- stayed home. | ther, president of the West-| with machineguns, mortars. _com The battle took place in the : mand in Vietnam told him it)to prosecute the war at ali OP- same area as the one three cluding several white mercen needs to prosecute the war) timun. speed. He also submitted weeks ago when the North Viet- Washington namese 24th Regiment almost |eould expect with various smal- wiped out a company from the|at only six men killed and 1? gion's military. governor.| rifles and Biafra, It said the request was believed to have been turned down. - laries, were wiped out. Nigeria's Eastern region, se- | H a) amenatting Ceded May 30 with a proclama- It reported federal casualties tion issued by Ojukwu, the re- said three Biafran companies, |totalling more than 300 men, in- {wounded and said the first batch Giukwu claimed his region had SEATON, REUTHER START GM NEGOTIATIONS United Auto Workers, shake hands across the bargaining table as Gen- eral Motors contract talks began in Detroit today. Be- not been fairly treated by the federal military regime. York Farmers To Request Aid NEWMARKET, Ont. (CP) --| A meeting of 850 York County | farmers, organized by the! county federation of agriculture, to discuss the condition of rain- damaged crops, Monday night} formed a committee to seek| provincial aid. The committee was ordered to consult with a similar body in Simcoe County, formed at a closed meeting in Barrie Mon- day night. ee Ballet. Dancers SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--Po- lice, raiding a party in hippie- |fied by police as ballet dancers| |dotph Nureyev. hind Reyther is Leonard Woodcock, UAW vice-presi- dent and director of UAW's GM department. (AP. Wirephoto) tigation of whether they should be charged with visiting a place where marijuana was 4 Caught In Raid' land early today, arrested 17) = persons -- including two identi-| = {Dame Margot Fonteyn and Ru-|: All 17 were booked for inves- = being | = jused, and disturbing the peace. | dminiowmmusinin ina NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 100 Lindsay Workers Walk Out LINDSAY, Ont. (CP) -- About 100 workers of the Dominion Rubber (Uniroyal) Ltd. plant here walked off their jobs Monday night after one worker was fired for misbehavior. Early today, only four workers were left in the fac.ory. Company officials said the walkout, not union backed, was illegal. Israel Formally Accepts, Observers UNITED NATJONS (Reuters) -- Israel formally noti- fied United Nations Secretary-General U Thant today of its acceptance of UN military observers to supervise a ceasefire with Egypt in the Suez Canal area. The Israeli chief delegate, Gideon Rafael, informed Thant of his gov- ernment's response to Monday's Security Council decision to set up the UN peace presence in the area. Grade 13 Results By August 15 TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's Grade 13 examination results, about 45,000 cf them, will be known about Aug. 15. More than 1,360 teachers now are marking 175,000 papers. Tais is 25 per cent fewer than last year, when the re- quirement for Grade 13 standing was nine credits in- stead of the present seven. Poms ginn aA eva sh mitten .. In THE TIMES Today .. Town, Township Officials Optimistic -- P. 9 Historical Society Urges Support -- P. 5 Green Gaels Stop Brampton -- P. 6 = A le | Ann Landers -- 10 Pickering News -- 5 . Ajox News -- 5 Sports -- 6, 7 Fe City News -- 9 Television -- 8 : Classified -- 13, 14, 15 Theatres -- 8 = Comics -- 8 Weather -- 2 : Editorial -- 4 Whitby News -- 5 Financial -- 12 Women's -- 10, 1) Obituaries -- 15 Tran sen ETO) MA "081 eS ? '

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