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Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Aug 1967, p. 1

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», your home at rayon-acetate, _ prints, florals, ed with sateen, we finish them Come early to ase allow four 2+ 48') to pairs 125 ". 18.09 1, 1 pr. 3 widths windows . 1895 (452) ONE 725-7373 0 Saturday, m. } Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, VOL. 26--NO. 178 10c Single Copy 55c Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1967 Weather Report Increasing cloudiness will be followed by thundershowers tonight, clearing Thursday, She Oshawa Gimes == morrow 82. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Deportment Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash PREMIERS DANIEL Johnson (left) of Quebec and John Robarts of On- tario took advantage of a break in the premiers' con- ference in Fredericton to- day for some private con- versation, The eighth an- nual conference opened Tuesday morning with six tending. Premier of Newfoundland, Robert L. Stanfield of Nova Scotia, of Canada's 10 premiers at- Duff Roblin Missing are J. H. Smallwood and Ross Thatcher of Sas- kaitchewan. --CP Wirephoto Milwaukee Snipers 8 Echo Guns In East, By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, In Providence, the sniping! In Milwaukee sporadic snipe ne : : prompted a call for 100 state|fire swept across a Negro neigh- Sniper fire ripped the riot-con-| policemen and a brief alert ofjborhood for about three hours trolling curfew in Milwaukee, the national guard. The situation'before national guardsmen and pian and _ Israeli Wis., early today while in eror in the predominantly dence, R.I., police engaged TOv-|South Providence section was! shooting ing bands of young Negroes iN)prought under control about 2 running gunbattles. lam. The violence that struck again) the general calm that prevailed to enier the area of the distur- over most of the U.S. cities.jbance -- were picked up. Two NO CONSPIRACY--HOOVER Washington was quiet after;young Negroes were shot, one seriously. Tuesday's disturbances. Federal Troops Ready _ Before Request Received WASHINGTON (AP) -- At-|finally sent a 10.46 telegram re- Show "'that at least some of the! positions with small arms. c leaders of these riots are asso- says federal troops were ready, Romney has said he requested, Ciated with and directed by the shooting lasted for about 55) course with simultaneous inter- to be dispatched to riot-torn De- the troops in a telephone cail/Communists.'* troit last week: hours before|before 3 a.m. He said also Clark Michigan Governor George told him at first that an oral request would be satisfactory, Clark told a news conference but later demanded a written Tuesday Romney did not ask for| request torney - General Ramsey Clark Romney asked for them. questing the troops. heard 24, eight hours after the gov- able to control. ernor had said he requested them. POLITICS--ROMNEY Outlining events during what Romney charged Prasi- Train Crash Clark called that "'t:agic morn-|4ent Johnson with playing poli-| ing in American history," the tics at the expense of the people attorney-gencral said the first|/0f Detroit, and that Clark's de- direct contact he had with Rom-|mand for a written request was ney was at 2.40 a.m. He said/more political than legal. In announcing he was sending) TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario with heavy |provincial police today said one four other armed cars, the com- |erew member is dead and three munique asserted. others are missing in the head-| on crash of two Canadian Na- tional Railways trains near the|sustained on of Dunrankin, 45 forces of the enemy.' the governor telephoned then and termed the situation in De- federal troops into Detroit, the president went to some lengths He said Romney reported 80 to emphasize he was doing so untended fires and widespread because of the inability of state looting and said he thought re lait local officials to control the troit "'very bad." might need about 5,000 army forth telephoning between himja Cuban Radicals, Moderates HAVANA (Reuters)--A split|was between Cuban - style sso ali as seeing the possibil-| and Soviet-supported moderates situation. He mentioned that troops. But Clark said it was|point and Romney's name seven only after hours of back-and-|times in his brief statenient to| nationwide television audi- and Romney that the governor|ence. ity of U.S. President Johnson) became more apparent today and British Prime Minister Wil-| Canadian National and police officials were proceeding to the scene by helicopter and a spe- cial train. | The wreck occurred . s {4:25 a.m. ] C f | A spokesman Split Guerril a on erence ..i: the trains were the west-!dent of the - Voice where L ' |bound Supercontinental passen-|says this year's main effort of Positive sopinperawrye rp of the per- : : ger train and a freight east- the organization will be to try|S0n Was not avaliable. AY Pen Pe eer at e ayia z t lto stop the sale of Canadian| At one point, the 85 firefight-/nounced that six Vietnamese jets swarmed over the Hanoi Thunderstorm Warnings Given ers, who converged Muriel Duckworth of Halifax,|Trans-Canada highway commu-| wounded by U.S three locomotives, two coaches,|on a three-day visit to Toronto, |nity about 200 miles northeast air strike mistakes. In a thir quoted by Communist} President commission on civil disorders Director J. Edgar It Hoover advise 'there is no in- telligence on which to base @ claimed there were no casu- conclusion of conspiracy" be-|ajties on the Jordanian side. it to an end. An Israeli spokesman in Tel| said one , saw Communists as wounded. ts in city rioting and) The spokesman said the first Senator Milton R. Young (Rep.| exchange took place when Jor-| set negotiations started," the N.D.) said hind the recent disorders. | But Senator Strom Thurmond! Aviv (Rep. S.C.) the cataly In other overnight action po- incident lice put down a rock - throwing, when predominantly Negro Long and directed that he land community of Wyandanch, federal troops to help quell the specify there was an insurrec-|N Y. Police said about 100 teen- Detroit riot until 11 a.m. July|tion in Detroit which he was un- ager 'Kills One community miles northwest of Folyet in' Jt was the fifth Northern Ontario. bound out of Winnipeg. | Three locomotives and 26 ofjarms to the U.S. 84 cars in the freight train, and| Negro| police were able to control the broken today with gunfire erupt- ing across the River Jordan for {yg In Washington Tuesday, as the the second straight day : overnight disturbance cooled the' A Jordanian Potice said 57 persons -- most debate over the cause and cure munique in Amman said the in those two cities stood out injof them white youths who tried/of rioting heated up Johnson's advisory reaks easetire fire. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kenneth Lee of London, head " ' 0 The ceasefire between Jorda- the peace military com- two sides exchanged fire for one hour, broke off for five minutes and then resumed. The shooting| Declaring that was still going on this after- noon, it said. said the Israelis suffered losses in men and vehicles but GRE BORO, joperations on a present The Quaker peace said the National Front -- Viet Cong -- in South | Vietnam should be represented at a reconvening of the Geneva Conference during f the committee troops was Vietnam. Israeli waS!of the U.S. and the inquiries willjdanian troops fired on Israeli | statement said The Israelis replied and the jfire - unles minutes, he said. occurred danian positions in the hills east Jordanian forces returned the fire and the €x-\off by South Vietnam's former chance lasted an hour, it said.| Diem government, The Israelis used four arm- followed by the swelling mili- of the river. It then su The second |national inspection and at 3 p.m./quest for reconvening the Ge- the Jordanians a gainjneva Conference. firebombing disturbance in the opened fire, and received re- The statement said with the Is- turn fire, the spokesman added. |ceasefire "it must RETURN FIRE The Jordanian stood .that there prompt and complete ored troop carriers, four cars|tary operations. June. The communique said "It was | believed that many losses were the mechanized VOW Attempts about! To Stop Arms Sale "as. machine-guns and) Quaker Offered (AP)-- France that Canada will not ac-) yyjnj The Quakers offered today a és formula for a ceasefire in Viet nam and asked for a reconven- ling of the Geneva Conference to work out a peace settlement. To open the way for negotia- tions, they urged that the United Manitoba (|States, North Vietnam | South Vietnam halt all military "ceasefire-un- less-fired-upon basis."' The appeal was ad - nine days of work by a special jsection of the Friends Conference meeting here. Qua- ker representatives countries are attending. than a dozen Canadians and wn up in World from 35 proposal Liberation cease- Statement, was worked out after consulta- tions with officials of both the government and North The Quaker statement on the j world peace also criticized the major powers for pouring more armaments into the Middle East. the Vietnam war "'is solving and can solve nothing," they urged the world's peoples to "demand that their governments withdraw all sup- port'? from the war, and bring "A-dramatic act on the part" its allies, in- cluding the government of South | Vietnam, is required in order to ested the "cease- - fired - upon" a re- under- A WOUNDED Vietnam- by bomb fragments during be a ese girl stands. beside a Those agreements | free elections, which were put promised ie | sce race and the Mans cat Fatal Fire | Three U.S. Planes Down , , R H t | mand ghnounced today the loss Saigon, killing one U.S. soldier of thrée more U.S. planes in and wounding seven NEWS HIGHLIGHTS t violation of azes 0 e comba\. Field commanders in the delta the ceasefire on the River Jor- | Folyet is 175 miles northwest;dan since the six-day war in SALMON ARM, 'of Sudbury. (CP)-- Wont Accept rench Meddling -- eace Plan ietnam Canada Reiterates Stand: Terse Reply To France | OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson has curtly informed fe cept any outside interference in its internal affairs In the latest move of ther iberal party's Quebec wing transatlantic ruckus, the prime was re fi minister issued a terse, 46-word response Tuesday to President Quebec de Gaulle's pledge to help French Canada achieve its free dom aims. > While it stopped short of di- yjoyyciy rectly accusing the French q leader of interference, the Pear son statement was unmistakably pointed: "The government of Canada has noted the statement by the president of the French Repub- lic regarding his recent visit to, Cana ' it said. "It has already made its posi tion clear on the unacceptability of any outside interference Canadian affairs and has noth- ing to add in present circum- stances power Minister Marchand More equality and fraternity." are Miquelon.' dians "realize the freedom aims ister. they have set for themselves." Quebec last week. situation will boil down," Before issuing the statement,' added. TWENTY-FOUR PAGES By CARMAN CUMMING §|the prime n.uinister talked it over with several cabinet col- leagues, including External Af- airs Minister Martin, Justice ster Trudeau, and Man- | Mr. Marchand, leader of the ached after some diffi- culty while on a fishing trip in Mr. Trudeau in a Montreal in- terview said it was difficult to take the French statement se- t is absurb that the French cabinet should agree to say that the British North America Act of 1867 has not assured Quebec. ers of their own land, liberty, "It is as though the Canadian government allowed itself to say the present French constitution ... does not provide justice for jthe Basques, for Brittany and in| for the islands of St. Pierre and While the prime minister con- : ferrea with several colleagues The statement came morejover the response to de Gaulle, | 9 ~ | avatind jthan 24 hours after de Gaulle,|a spokesman said there was sald it jin a statement backed by his no formal meeting on the ques- full. cabinet, said France in- tion and that the decision was tended to help French - Cana-| primarily that of the prime min- 4 source close to Mr. Pearson Mr. Pearson was reported] said the prime minister favored "very unhappy" about the the terse comment over the al- French move but was said to|ternatives of ignoring the have decided on the brief re-| French statenent or engaging sponse in hopes of toning down!in a long "diatribe" with Paris. \the controversy that grew out of} 'It is hoped by the Canadian de Gaulle's shortened visit to| government that this whole silly he "= For Colonial Oppression ing the dissolution of its far-;ment, the ancient Tynwald. an air strike. Elements of with- U.S. soldier waiting for the U.S, 25th Infantry The Isle of Man -- known} aes ment jchiefly for its annual motor-| SAIGON (AP)--The U.S. com-|Division 22 miles northeast of The ground war lapsed back operation made estimates of into a lull with no further fight-| enemy dead ranging from 150 to One person is dead and others|i.5 yenorted in the 10,000-man|350. The U.S. command put the} US. Denies Peace Move --------------_---- eared: dead in levelled half a business jearly today and threatened the jentire downtown section of this block that Operation Colorado II in the Me- figure at 200. The Saigon head-} WASHINGION (AP) -- The state department denied kong Delta south of Saigon quarters also reported 16 Ameri-| today that the United States is planning some spectacular Two of the planes were lost|¢ans killed and 59 wounded so) peace move to end the Vietnam war. In a public comment over North Vietnam and the|far in the sweep on a CBS television news story, the department said the | Police identified the victim as 9ther in South Vietnam, bring-| Action Tuesday was was de-| 1 ¢ continues a never-ending search for peace in South- for the CNR| TORONTO (CP) -- The presi-|@ visitor to the Montebello. Ho- of Women|tel where the blaze broke out. ing the total number of U.S.|Scribed as "'light to moderate planes reported lost in the war and scattered" as the massive to 825. search for guerrillas continued In the air war, U.S. Air Force east Asia but needs some response from North Vietnam to peace proposals. The U.S. command also an the|civilians were killed and 23,tesion and blasted a North artillery and Vietnamese army barracks, a ¢ qitail siding and the Bac Giang) Some heavy thunderstorm activity will move across Lake. Huren and Lake St. Clair into southwestern Ontario this afternoon. A severe thunderstorn. warning of possible as Latin America's revolution-\son being assassinated in re-|, ji) and two baggage cars|said in an interview Tuesday|of Vancouver, feared the entire such incident, a U.S, Army heli- electric power plant, 28 miles' ji) and briefly strong wind gusts today has been issued ary power conference began its yonge for the murder of Negro! of {he passenger train, were de-|Canada sold $300,000,000 worth|downtown area would be en- copter accidentally fired on northeast Ot Mandl. 7 Some of the delegates who| leaders. _ WON'T BACK DOWN : : bd | State Opera Tuesday night while singing the title role in La 1 r SS 1S uc < LIMA (Reiters)--Fears of aj} Traviata. The Toronto-born singer was rushed to a hospital Qu e O e military coup increased today| and was reported improved today, A spokesman for the third day. spoke Tuesday did not support) the Cuban hard line that armed) struggle is the only means of achieving anti-imperialist aims. Alexander Dzasojov, Russia's observer to the Latin American Solidarity Conference, did not even refer to armed struggle in his speech. | His country supports the Vene- zuelan Communist party which has declared itself for peaceful means but was excluded from the nine-day conference. Speak- ers from. Costa Rica and El Salvador came out for various forms of struggle. But the more radical delegates from such countries as Cuba, Guatemala and Brazil are still to be heard from So far all of the speakers have assailed the common en- emy of 'Yankee imperialism," calling for continental strategy against it. Thcy also paid homage to the North Vietnamese. and Viet Cong, and expres: solidarity with U.S, Negroes. U.S. Black Power advocate Stokely Carmichael Tues day ; railed. of weapons to the U.S. last year.|gulfed in flames. By CARL MOLLINS Canadian Press Staff Writer The shock value of the French government's statement about French Canada is as much in the manner as the content. Against the background of last week's diplomatic dust-up in Canada and the certainty that President de Gaulle had no in- tention of backing down publicly on his "free Quebec" remarks, renewed controversy was_ in- evitable. His many opponents at home.and abroad were poised to pounce on another example of Gaullist arrogance. But, beyond Monday's formal insistence by the French gov- ernment that de Gaulle was right and the federal govern- ment of Canada was wrong, } there are indications that de Gaulle will not press his luck in further action and is ready to let the wordy furore die a nat- ural death. Shorn of its adamant tone, de Gaulle's affirmation, through the government statement, of France's special interest in Que- bec's affairs is an observation of the obvious kinship between peo- ples of the same language. Its promise to help French- speaking Canadians reach their "freedom aims" codifies in a formal policy statement the practice of recent years. The statement indicates that the help is to be cultural, economic, stientific and technical. While the statement reiterates the offending reference to "Que- bec libre," the accompanying of- ficial interpretation insists that the slogan does not constitute Gaullist support for a politically- independent Quebec. FREEDOM IS TRUTH The official explanation of the adjectives "libre" and '"'libera- teur" in the formal statement and in de Gaulle's Montreal speech is that they indicate free- dom of spirit in the sense of the expression "the truth shall make you free." Truth in this context, a government spokesman said Tuesday, would mean French culture and tradition. Thus, de Gaulle personally has declined to yield publicly to criticism . while instructing his spokesmen to explain away the chief source of the criticism dir rected against him. WILL LET FURORE pie Peru Fears from Lake Huron eastward into the cottage country and as far south as Lakes Erie and Ontario. Teresa Stratas Collapses In Munich troops of the U.S. Ist Infantry; explained as a natural response | to the enthusiastic greeting he received, an eagerness to repay the enthusiasm by showing that France is anxious to make up for past neglect of her Quebec cousins and offer spiritual en- couragement. fo divert de Gaulle's critics. Louis Gabriel-Robinet, director of the conservative Paris news- paper Le Figaro, says in a signed front-page editorial that de Gaulle's answer "shifts, rather than resolves, the prob- policy to return to reality. MUNICH, West Germany (AP) -- Metropolitan Opera soprano Teresa Stratas collapsed on stage at the Bavarian Military Coup as senators of all parties sought] opera company said it is not certain whether she would be ways to end a political cricis} able to appear this weekend in a second scheduled per- caused by the appointment of an! formance of Traviata, being given as part of the Munich jopposition member as new pres- festival, ident of the Peruvian Senate. "They (the army) would like to close Congress and call a con- |stituent assembly to reform the| constitution',' said one opposi- tion congressman | Observers here said opposi- tion senators are anxious to find} a quick solution to the impasse) which followed a walkout of 19} government men and two inde- pendents last Thursday in pro- test against election of opposi-| jtion members Julio de la Piedra | His intentions in Quebec are _ Ip THE TIMES Today .. Youth's Body Found Near Bowmanville -- P. 13 Book On Whitby History Published -- P. 5 Don Calder Tosses No-Hit Game -- P. 10 Ann Landers--14 Sports--10, 11, 12 Ajax News--5 Television--23 City News----13 Theatres--24 Classified--20, 21, 22 Weather--2 The explanations have failed lem" created by his Canadian as Senate president. | Comics--23 Whitby News--5 visit. The 21 threatened to stay Editoriel---4 Werren's--14, 15 But Gabriel-Robinet concludes away from the Senate until Findieliol-19 Obituories--22 that the fuss could cause French Piedra stepped down. But he Pickering News--S has refused to resign, Man NAM aw , \ f Isle Of Man Cites Britain | LONDON (AP)--Already har-|tion' of its own, Britatn handles assed by probléms accompany-| foreign affairs for its parlia- flung empire, Britain now faces} Man's people, customs and a revolt in its own back yard.}way of life are as British as Charging "colonial oppres-|neighboring Cumberland on the sion,"' the Isle of Man, in the|mainland. But the islanders pi. [Irish Sea 16 miles off northern/have always been fiercely England, is threatening to take|jealous of their right to man- pte Pe communique drawal of all foreign mliitary - vision, part of Task Force were involved, ___| said 12 Israeli vehicles rolled|forces from Vietnam and a per. CYacuation from a village Orecon. were on a search |its case to the United Nations. |age their domestic affairs. down to the river about two} manent peace settlement based "Car Duc Pho to a beach end Meae sweep of the | The 24 members of Parlia-| The dispute was brought to a miles north of the Damia Bridge|on the Geneva agree site on the South: China area g tin ment who represent the holiday} head by British legislation ban- e Geneva agreements of area at the time and z . : : : 5 at 11:55 a.m. and fired on Jor-| 1954." Sea. The girl was wounded (AP. Wirephoto) island will vote next Tuesday on|ning pirate radio stations which an emergency resolution calling}beam non-stop pop music from {for a UN investigation into an|ships just outside British wa- attempt to enforce British do-| ters. One of the biggest stations s s seat a 5 is: {i ' . io "t Viet Ground War Declines, iin? ° °° 1S nine sser sens covery made clear the ban will apply to it despite the rejection of a similar bill by the Tynwald.

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