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

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owing 4.95 95 4.95 n. the purchase of yourself and your coats, blouses, or it what you save in ems, This depend- sachine of today is on buttons, over- yrams. Has built-in id pressure release --. just drop in one designs. It's fun to buy it,--during our PHONE 725-7373 FINISHES RBELIZING to demonstrate this , furniture, picture . Helpful. pamphiets Yy questions you may ) - 5:00 PT. 274 day through this Until 9 spats Uo ties ft Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman« ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, VOL. 26--NO. 185 10¢ Single Co) She Oshawa Gunes py SSe Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1967 CASTRO RAPS US. Cuba Asks Allies Aid Negroes HAVANA (CP)--Premierjrevolutionary movement of the Fidel Castro said Thursdayjentire world should give it (th night a new revolution in the}US Negro revolt) its support," United States will sprout from] Castro said. | the Negro sector--"bent by: American Black Power advo-| daily oppression'--and called cate Stokely Carmichael ap-| on the world's revolutionaries peared beside Castro on the po-| to support that revolt. dium as guest of honor. "Rapprochement of the revo-- Speaking for three hours and lution of the United States and}40 minutes to the closing ses-| those of Latin America is the sion of the thing. Organization The|Latin American Solidarity, the| Cuban leader also charged that} President Johnson was respon-| sible for an abortive plot to kill him. -} most natural without making public a resolu- tion that delegate sources said condemned Communist coun-| tries that have financial agree- ments Latin American governments. The resolution, a slap at the) Soviet Union, was approved in| a secret committee meeting. | Castro in his speech criticized the Soviet Union and other Communist countries that give| financial and technical aid to Latin participants in the United States' economic blockade of his government. Referring to Communist credit agreements with Colom- bia, Castro said it was "ab- surd" to give loans in dollars to a government which is "fight- ing and murdering guerrillas." : Castro said Cuba had made. wil its opinion clear to Russia on the question of aid, evidently referring to his talks with Pre- mier Alexei Kosygin in Havana in June The conference approved a resolution declaring that "ra- cial discrimination is inherent in the capitalist system,, calling on. U.S. Negroes to en-| gage in CUBAN PRIME MINI- STER Fidel Castro pauses during a 3-hour 40-minute speech in Havana last night. Castro, speaking at closing session of the Organization of Latin American poligart. ty, 8 4 i wil es 5's. trom the Negro sector. Mercury Drops To Record Lows Ontario temperatures dipped|lost six degrees to 61 from the Thursday and 16 points in the|1965 record of 67. province tied or reached record| Windsor dropped to 65--one lows. degree below a record first set Lowest point was reached injin 1882 and equalled in 1965.| Nakina, where the temperature | London dropped from the 1960 matched the 1954 record of 56./record of 67 to 63 and Mount Earlton and Simcoe also ticd|Forest to 60 from the 1965 rec- record lows; Earlton touched|ord of 62. | the 1946 record of 57, Simcoe} At Kitchener Thursday's| the 66 degree mark set in 1960.|reading was 60, eight degrees Sault Ste. Marie fell to 58 de-|below the 1965 record of 68. At|kal, Airport, |Cairo y of 62 set in 1965; North Bay's| the temperature fell four de-|said in a signed | low of 57 was well below the|grees from the 1965 record ijvw| 'Only a miracle will prevent a} | return to the battlefield, and I} Killaloe fell three degrees todo not think we live in an age previous record of 61 set in| 62 from the low of 65 set in 1965|0f miracles." grees, shattering the old mark| Toronto International 1946 and 1954 records of 65. Sudbury fell to 60 from the of 70 to 66. 1954; Gore Bay to 63 from the and Ottawa lost two degrees to, 1950, 1951, 1964 and 1965 record} recorded in 1953. of 66; Wiarton to 61 from the Kennedy Raps_ Viet Regime WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sena- tor Robert F. Kennedy said) today there is "mounting and! distressing evidence' that South Vietnam's military re- gime is interfering with free choice in that country's coming presidential election. The New York Democrat said) such interference would be aj betrayal of the cause for which 12,000 Americans have died. His New York colleague, Re- publican Senator Jacob K. Ja- vits, said the South Vietnam elections should "mark the be-| ginning of an end of our com-| mitment there."' He said a new, | the Vietnam political situation in Senate speeches. Texts were made available to the press be- fore delivery. Their statements followed by a day issuance by 57 House of Representative Democrats -- representing both backers and opponents of President John- son's Vietnam policies--of a statement warning the South Vietnamese election may be a sham*unless steps are taken " guarantee freedom of choice. "We urge the President to make the strongest representa- tions that steps be taken promptly to prevent a further CO ee The 1l-day conference ended Aes : with non-Communist! #3 A MM Me nn OE LLL BUFFALO TO OSHAWA FLIGHT ENDS SHORT OF TARGET ~~. Commercial Pilot W. E. Woodill's Plane Was Not Damaged Authorized o8 Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Co: Weather Report Clear and cool tonight. Satur day sunny and a little warmer. Low tonight 52. High to- morrow 75. SIXTEEN PAGES iii AIRCRAFT LANDS ON HIGHWAY WHITBY (Staff) -- The west- bound lane of the Macdonald- Cartier Freeway, just east of Thickson's Road, became an emergency airfield at 3.30 a.m. today when a two-seater Cessna made a forced landing. Neither the commercial pilot, W. E. (Ted) Woodill of Wind- sor nor the plane, were in- jured. Mr. Woodill was returning to the Oshawa airport from Buf- falo when the plane's engine By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) confidant predicted today that) : ved war with Israel is vir-|¥ ridden By THE CANADIAN PRESS /1965-record of 63 while Muskoka Ph tetrad elk and King Hus.| State Penitentiary who worked with her parents in Montreal/said in an {in Canada for almost two years) and had enough money to keep the/ her comfortable for a while. The escapee named _ himself! sein warned that Jordan would fight again unless the Israelis |give back Old Jerusalem. The belligerent sounded as Yugoslav President} /Tito opened talks in Cairo with |Nasser in an effort to sell the ~ Egyptian leader a peace formu- la for the Middle East. Mohammed : 4 5 ; ; editor of the semi-official| While using the name Alex Bor-| where I'd be if I slipped." Edmonton an immigration hearing) chance to stay in Canada ear- 64 degrees from the 66 degrees Nasser's spokesman, said the | first task facing Egypt is "res- toration of the army to its fight- ing readiness." before it surrenders the Ara sector of Jerusalem to Israel. President Nasser's closest notes were Hassanein newspaper Al to Heikal, generally regarded as Hussein said in Amman that would return to Canada after/chief engineer on the Germannamed Alexander Peter Bor-/his domestic and foreign poli- Jordan "'is determined to sie', completing his sentence. Hisipavilion job at Expo. "We are determined not to; atten | PRESCOTT, Ont. {George Ben Edmondson, ear-old fugitive from Missouri being was handed over to ays U.S. Federal Bureau of Investi-| ser Nazi fugitive Martin Bor- this firm. gation officials at this St. Law- |rence River border point Thurs- befor RCM Edmondson, who built German pavilion at Ahram, | mann, editorial: | after ona Thursday for armed when he escaped Aug. 3, and expects to get.at least two clined to intervene. more years for his escape. A week He said in an interview in Ot- Montreal he was hired as Alex he did not know whether he Montreal cede any part of our beloved land nor any stone of our sa-| cred Jerusalem,"' Hussein said in a speech Thursday 9n the) eve of the 15th anniversary of his becoming king. | 5,000 More Lots Ready BRAMALEA, Ont. (CP) -- Five thousand more govern- elected government shouid set eroding of confidence in the ment-owned building be made available at Brama'ea through the Ontario govern- ment's Home Ownership Made Easy Plan, it was announced) Thursday. | lots will] H. W. Suters, director of the to work to take responsibility} for its own security, and the United States should look to- ward disengagement. Presidential elections are elections," they said, adding the elections may be regarded "as little more than a sham un- less remedial measures are un- dertaken immediately by the Ontario Housing Corp., said the lots will be marketed "as soon) as possible" in response to en-| thusiastic public reaction to 621 lots offered for sale or leasing! scheduled in Vietnam Sept. 3. Ky government and the :nili-|at Bramalea. Tuesday. Eleven tickets are entered, in- cluding a military pairing com- posed of Lt.-Gen. Nguyen Van; tary group in authority. Thieu, chief of state, and Nguy-| Breach Of Act en Cao Ky, now premier. Ky 1s running for vice-president. Kennedy charged that would-} be candidates have been barred from the election because their views were deemed unaccepta- ble: that oppenents of the Ky regime have been jailed; that| the presidential campaigners) are being hampered by havaus ment; that the military govern- ment is moving to perpetuate its power whatever the election outcome. Kennedy and Javits talked of|be prosecuted. Charge Studied LONDON (AP)--Scotland Yard is investigating a com- plaint that a former Conserva- tive cabinet minister, Duncan Sandys, breached Britain's Race Relations Act in a televi- sion interview. Police took action after a group of West Indian immi- grants demanded that Sandys The 5,000 new lots will bring; the total. of HOME lots at Bra-| malea, a "satellite community" on the western, fringes of Met- ropolitan Toronto, to 6,666. Of these, 621 are the. serviced lots marketed Tuesday, 1,045 are) unserviced lots which will be} made available as facilities ave| installed and the rest are the 5,000 announced Thursday. had been sold or leased by late Thursday. other brisk business. The 40 lots there} were all snapped up by mid- Wednesday. Some 460 of the original 621 Peterborough is the only HOME site to revort H. Rap Brown, left mili- tant national chairman of the Student Nonviolent Co- ordinating Committee, made started acting up and it was almost out of gas. Airport offi- cials were expecting the plane but Mr. Woodill decided to Jand on the highway. After the plane rolled to a stop, he pushed it off the road onto the grassy shoulder. At 8.30 a.m. a tow truck pulled the craft back onto the highway after an airport crew refilled the gas tanks. Ontario Provincial Police cruisers from the Whitby detachment stopped NaN urge grunge (CP) 30-| baby. caught by mann the most world," he the, view. Expo 67} ordered deported} He still had 1965, | tion tawa before his departure that, Bormann by G. Ross dent of RAP BROWN VISITS ATLANTA CONVENTION a surprise visit Thursday to the predominently Negro As- sociation of Radio An- nouncers which is holding a 8 --jwife Ginette has just He said his wife would live! wanted man in the A "T felt the name would serve Hei-|and married a Montreal girl'tg remind me every day of struction site at lost his last. He : 4%llier when the immigration ap-| was years of a 10-year prison term|peal board upheld a federal de-| wher arrested. robbery portation order and Immigra- "I Minister Marchand de- shock," traffic (which resulted in a traffic jam). The engine roared and the-plane rushed eastbound on the westbound lane into the air. Mr. Woodill stopped briefly at the airport before starting the last leg of his journey at 9.45 a.m, to Buffalo. Last night Mr. Woodill flew a load of parts (from the Chrys- ler Automotive Trim plant at Ajax) to Buffalo from the city airport. He was returning to Tn had a, project Fort, Que. became chief making went. just "T had no idea I ign " Peace Hopes FBI Takes Ben Edmondson Seen Din For Return To US. Prison _|Hits Again I'd still pick Alex,' Mr. Ryan interview "He obviously knew his stuff. "You can tell him there's al- ways a job waiting for him with After the Expo job, he went in the 'nter- with Rust Associates Ltd, as a engineer on 000,000 pulp and paper mill con- a Portage-du- engineer, | then chief of cost control, and| $14,000 a blank with he said of the arrest after his arrival in| placed on the FBI list." Four days later his wife, a) ego} earlier the city this morning to pick up a second load when he made the forced landing Airport manager George Slocombe said today Mr. Woodill slept at the flying club. Both men had about one and one-half hours sleep. While the plane was being towed back onto the highway this morning, a motorist in the eastbound Jane glanced his car off a parked car on the shoul- der of the road causing minor damage. NANA RY De Gaulle PARIS (Reuters) -- Presi-| RCMP headquarters said today.| © "If I had 100 certified engi-,dent de Gaulle made a | a_| f jneers among whom to choose! counter-attack against his crit- ics Thursday night, but several! commentators suggested today the 76-year-old general was on| j; : the defensive for the first time. sia antes ment of France. $60,- the general's midsummer television year ? cast to the nation. De Gaulle assailed his critics | 76 and "experts indisparage. ment"? who oppose the develo. "Yesterday de Gaulle came down into the arena," the Con- servative newspaper Le Figaro says in a front-page editorial on unprecedented | ,.°" *. ; : broad- Fitzsimmons, a native of West- Similar views were expressed | by the Liberal Combat and the) named shortly. had been! right-wing L'Aurore. : The newspapers in giving a 1 reception to de Gaulle's| HONG KONG DISTRICT SHUT OFF HONG KONG (Reuters)--] The Chinese later handed British authorities today closed back the seized weapons and part of the border between returned to Chinese territory. |Hong Kong and China after, The incident was over a Communist Chinese workers harbed-wire barricade put up temporarily took over a Hong py British troops Thursday to Kong border police post prevent a recurrence of an in- After the workers went back {rusion last Saturday. The to Chinese territory and that|deciaration signed by Bedford | part of the frontier was closed, called for removal of the British troops used tear-gas to) barbed wire, compensation for disperse about 30 Chinese farm-;a man said to have been in- ers who broke through a border jured when his wheelbarrow fence, went into the wire, and for The farmers said later they, Hong Kong authorities to abide only wanted to work their land) by an agreement reached Sat- on the Hong Kong side as|urday to permit Chinese work- {usual, and had no connection' ers to sing songs. with the 50 men who broke into the police post at } Thursday night The Hong Kong government closed the frontier at Man Kam |To, where the incident took |place, but left open two other jcrossing points, at Shau Tau accident Kok and the Lowu rail bridge. Te : eis H | A Hong Kong spokesman said *°"S!on on the Chain omic. 3 the Chinese who entered the po-| Kong border has risen following lice post forced British district}a spate of incident during the officer Trevor Bedford to sign 8! struggle between local leftists declaration at knifepoint. jand authorities inside the col- He said the Chinese surround-| ony, ed the post, disarmed its} 3 guards and seized their weap-! ons, British troops in turn encir- cled the Chinese but no shots, were fired : But Hong Kong authorities midnight jater rejected the declaration because of the circumstances junder which it was signed .The Hong Kong spokesman said the man for whom compensation jwas demanded had faked his Fitzsimmons | -| RCMP Deputy | OTTAWA (CP)--Assistant Commissioner Weldon Jack |Fitzsimmons, 54, in charge of| ;the RCMP provincial force, in | Alberta, will assume the duties of deputy commissioner in charge of administration in| Ottawa early next month, --- The post is generally consid-| ered the third highest in the / force, ranking below the com-| # missioner and deputy commis-| ¢ harge of operations. | Commissioner George \-- ULTIMATUM SENT is La hularpiee |Lellan is scheduled to retire This roun'ee French independence|Scot. 15 to take the Job of om-| schramm, 'Belgian » born "because he's probably' RARNS $14,000 A YEAR budsman in Alberta. He will b> i commander of white mer- cenaries in The Congo, wha today in Bakavu gave Con- golese President Gen. J. D. Mobutu a ten-day ultimatum to discuss with him the future of The Congo. Other- wise, he hinted, he would possibly consider marching boro, Ont., has. been with the, on the Conga capital of force for 32 years. His succes-| Kinsbasa. sor in Alberta is expected to be| "{sueceeded by Deputy Commis- "sioner M. F. A. Lindsay, who now is in charge of. operations. Deputy Commissioner Lind- say's successor has not yet been named | Assistant Commissioner (AP Wirephoto via cable from London) F. Ryan, presi- pretty Montreal school teacher pronouncements suggest he was | and Anglin, ajhe met while working at Expo, | trying to justify himself in the engineering firm, as|gave birth to a son. The son is ¢ NEWS HIGHLIGHTS British Charge Muslim Leader READING, Engiand (Reuters) -- Michael de Freitas, Britain's Black Muslim leader, was charged in court today ace of mounting criticism over \mann. cies. However, the president con- centrated almost exclusively on! France's general foreign policy| aims. recent discontent--his | aims" jada, the reform of France's sharing plan. Toll Hits 11 Train Fatality He made only passing! reference to the chief cause of outspo- {ken support for the 'freedom of French-speaking Can- so- cial security system and intro- | duction of a workers' profit- with publicly trying to stir race hatred. The court set Sept. 8 as the date for a hearing and granted bail of 50 pounds ($150) after defence lawyer Maitland Davies said the charge would be strongly opposed. Two detectives with an arrest warrant drove 35 mijies from here this morning to pick up de Freitas at his home in north London, The charge alleged that in a speech here last month he used insulting words intended to stir race hatred on grounds of color. | Agreement Seen On Nuclear Pact | | WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. Ambassador William Foster | disclosed today that he is rushing back to Geneva in expectation of a prompt agreement with Russia on a draft of a nuclear non-proliferation treaty and its presens tation promptly to an 18-nation disarmament conference, Police Break Up Salisbury Outbreak SALISBURY, Rhodesia (Reuters) -- Police today used dogs to break up a demonstration by 200 whites, Asian and ODENSE, Denmark (AP) --| Eleven persons died Thursday in the crash of one passenger train into the rear of another that had stopped on a bridge. It was Denmark's worst rail dis-| aster in more than 50 years. Thirty-three persons were jured in the crash Hans Christian Andersen. crane or embankment. in- on Den- mark's central-island of Funen near the birthplace of author slid down a muddy Danish state railway officials | African students staging a sitdown demonstration in front of the Rhodesian Parliament. The demonstration by University College students was called to protest against the white-minority government's order Thursday restrict- ing Michael Holman, student council president, to the area of his hometown. Rescue work was slowed be-| Oshawa Lasco Steelers Even Senior "B' Series P. 6 cause hundreds of gallons of mat f " ™ spilled diesel oil made use of) = 3 blowtorches dangerous. Be- M P 3 cause the trains were on an ov- ahs In THE TI ES Today z E erpass, the injured and dead Conference Planned With Labor Specialists P. 9 E had to be lifted down by a Whitby Tax Collection Procedures Will Change PLS z= Ann Landers -- 10 Obituaries -- 14 said the first train had stopped) = on its way east to Copenhagen| because of a minor fire in its! jelectrical system and the sec- fond train, travelling about 70 imiles an hour, apparently was Sports -- 6, 7, 8 Television -- 15 Theatres -- 8 Weather -- 2 Whitby News -- 3 Women's -- 10 Ajox News -- S$ City News -- 9 Classified -- 12, 13, 14 Comics -- 15 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 11 } gig 4-day convention in Atlanta. Sitting beside him is jazz not notified in time. They said) = singer Nina Simone. visibility was reduced by a = (AP Wirephoto) 'heavy rain. pian uM ® >

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