Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, ' Weather Report > Sunny and a little warmer to- day and on Sundy. Low to- 6 SET .99 17 Specially Priced. sn co-ordinating x 534" drainer slates. 18 x 21" elevate one end thick enough to om Rubbermaid 'Sclair" sight plastic ean de- stand Canada's cli- Years! It's tested- m splitting in below gged enough to be round . . . and sur- 6%2"" high, 202" np. gallons. Copper 7.95. 6.99 size with bail handle, PHONE 725-7373 ishion"' 7" 6,99 "9° 11,88 21.98 17 55 ' 8 77:9 22.33 'aay 89 _-- 1.79 i a9 made to last sistant Melimac, chen or cottacve shelf pattern in ied by turquoise, nge. Accessory turquoise. (397) ARES, , DEPT. 254 25-7373 9 P.M. VOL. 26--NO. 186 10¢ Single Coy 45 Per Week Home Bolivered She Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, AUGUST 12, 1967 night 55. Hig tomorrow 78, Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Off s s lea Deport: Ottawa ond for payment of Postage in Cosh Hiselad EIGHTEEN PAGES PASSENGER TRAIN MONTREAL BOUND FROM N.Y. Freight Crashes Train Iwo Killed, 40 Injured SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y, (AP)--The Delaware and Hud- son's Montreal Limited, bound for Montreal with about 300 Passengers, collided early today with a freight train near this upstate resort, and two passen- gers were known dead. About 40 persons also were reported injured including at least one Canadian woman in the crash of the Montreal Limit- ed which left New York Citq at 11 p.m. Friday, and the 100-car freight train bound from White- hall to Oneonta. Saratoga Hospital said one of the dead was an elderly man, a native of Denmark travelling with a son, who survived. Three passenger cars and seven freight trains overturned. rail spokesman said the southbound freight train was pulling onto a siding to let the Passenger go through on a sin- gle track when the crash oc- curred, GOING TO EXPO "The crash couldn't have happened at a worse time," the spokesman said. The Montreal- bound train carries its greatest number of passengers Friday night, most of them going to Expo 67. The crash occurred at: about 4:30 a.m. near Route 50. Nearly 20 ambulances were sent to the scene, some from as far as Glens Falls, abuot 20 miles north of here. William Sheft, who lives near the crash scene, told a reporter he was awakened by what sounded like "'a clap of thun- der." An ambulance official and others said they knew of only two dead, three hours after the accident. USE TORCHES James Canavan of Glens Falls, disaster chairman, said Ss" freight cars landed on of two overturned passen- ger cars and corridors of the cars were 80 tel d tha An injured passenger is lifted from the wreckage of the Montreal Limited train after it was side swipped by a RED GUA Ru SSi Boer War Vet Opens ' Caravan | Imperils Boy's | LENORE, W. Va. (AP)--A WHITBY (Staff) -- Ninety-|Second cave-in shortly before seven-year-old Harold Moore of|® 4-m. buried 15-year-old Leon- Fairview Lodge was the sur-| td Boyce up to his chest again prise celebrity who opened the|just as rescue workers had al- Confederation Caravan at 11:30|™most freed him from a 13-hour a.m. today for its five-day stay|¢mtrapment in a well. here. : : | After br inging in heavy Moore, formerly an Ajax resi-|earth-moving equipment, work- dent who has been at the lodge|ers dug a deep trench and had for 10 months, said he felt|Boyce free except for one leg elated for being given the oppor-|and a foot when the second ey i oer the first four} cave-in occurred. notes. 0} anada at the open-| Sheriff Steve i ing in the town's Centennial] some "0 vik ato Gare ~-- ; ce |toiled through the night to res- oore Is a veteran of the|cue the boy, said "it looks like Boer War of the Northwest In-|another four hours at this + cdi a and the First/point." : or ar. yas in} w. Birmingham, te al ae --_-- ee -- to Canada before the First|!¥ in clearing rocks and dirt € bout 5 - miles aratoga Springs, t torches, saws and jacks were required. The wreck, described by city officials as the worst in the his- tory of Saratoga Srpings, oc- curred about a half mile from the Saratoga Performing Arts Centre, The crash cars spewed paper products near the road, which links Saratoga and Schenec- tady. Guerrillas Strike Hard and Mail says the Ontario Com- mittee on Taxation will likely urge the Ontario government to assume more of the cost of edu- cation, using income tax to sup- ply the necessary revenue. New Tax On Income Seen For Education gether from sources close tojed for such a shift counld come|east coast of Vancouver Island,' Vatican ecumenical council. the study." five-man committee headed by/share of that already collected! Vancouver. Toronto Smith will be presented to the|from a new provincial income|about 6 a.m. Friday. Her hull provincial government early) tax. 'next month, the Globe and Mail] The paper said the Smith Re-|water poured into the engine poy. The paper said its predietion|said. It was commissioned in) port will be based on the existing! room. jon the content of the report "is| February, SAIGON (AP)--Viet Cong|based on information pieced to- TORONTO (CP)--The Globe; guerrillas unleashed co-ordinat- ed attacks against four South Viet: army Pp ds in sensitive Quang Tri province just below the demilitarized zone today. The attackers penetrated the Nine Killed defence line of the compound at)nercons, five of them members Trieu Phong two miles nor-|of a family headed for a lake-| cpp) INCOME SOURCE | printing of the report will be! pb a lB wae" oo, -- side vacation, died dbs d nig | ' after a two-car, head-on colli-| the 100 defenders. Two Austral-| i, four miles west of this! ian advisers were wounded. Forty-one Viet Cong dead were counted outside two of the attacked posts. U.S. pilots ranged over North Vietnam Friday on 150 strike missions, shaking off several MiG interceptors and a barrage of surface-to-missiles. In the most dramatic raid, U.S. Air Force jets scored four direct hits on the Doumer Bridge 1.7 miles from th cen- tre of Hanoi, and dropped the centre span into the Red River. The mile-long bridge carries all rail traffic out of Hanoi bound for China. North Vietnam, meanwhile, charged that U.S. planes at- tacked residential quarters in the heart of Hanoi Friday and hit the city's outskirts in a "new and extremely serious es- northeast Mississippi town. One girl survived. | The victims: Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm M. Wadlington, both about 45; their three daughters, Judy, 13, Jane, 11, and Ann, 10; Betty Brown, 10; Don Geno, 35, a mechanic; Burton Davis, 35,| a farmer, and Billy O'Neal. Reuters Suspended In Congo Move | KINSHASA __ (Reuters)--The Congolese government issued a decree Friday night suspending the acitvities of Reuters News Agency in The Congo. The decree said the action was taken because Reuters acted as a publicity agent for the mercenary forces in the calation" of the Vietnam war. work that summer. recommend that more, if not|Car' } : all, the financial burden of edu-|Which recommends a new i aon a close look impossible. | up to him. cation be transferred from hal aaa tax relation-| |nicipalities to the province, the|S™P : As Cars Crash |paper said. The provincial gov- A study of the Carter Report CORINTH, Miss. (AP)--Nine ernment now pays about 45 per World War. In 1915 he enlisted from around the boy because of in 4 124th Regiment and/the danger of more falling rock. Served as 2 private overseas. | A temporary wooden hood was jconstructed over his head to Ferry protect him from rocks, | Authorities also sent for a \doctor because they said the groun | boy was nearing the point of exhaustion. He kept pleading \from his entrapment 14 feet un- Divers and tugboats today con-| stop."" tinued the task of trying to free ech ats Queen of Prince Ru- : : f while investi- frieght train early Sat- occurred a agri urday morning, "Officials south ot rg aoe oo ope i said there were two known _N.Y. gers: \ ' dead and approximately | None of the shipwreckd was was helped by a swarm of fish- ing craft and other local power| VATICAN CITY (AP)--Pope boats. Paul decreed today that bishops Capt. John Callan, sk of| ch from di around the 3,500-ton flagship of the gov-|the world would be assigned posts in the Rome Curia to give SEND FOR DOCTOR ALER1 BAY, B.C. (CP)--\derground: 'Tell them don't 40 - injured. The crash (AP Wirephoto) | injured as.a calm and orderly| N D escape in lifeboats and rafts ew ecree ernment-owned B.C. ferry fleet, the Vatican wider international remained aboard while passen- gers were removed and taken|representtion.. 3% miles to shore, most of} The decree put into effect a them to Alert Bay off the north-'recommendation of the 1962-65 The report of the|/from application for a greater|about 183 miles northwest of It is part of the developing a process of reforming the tradi- jtional conservative Curia, a PR |process recommended by the plates buckled amidships and council and promised by the accountant Lancelot)by the federal government, or) The 325-foot ship ran agroun started| tax relationship between Otta-| Divers made several at- Pope Paul declared that ap- RESCUE WORKERS waand the province. It will only|tempts Fridy afternoon to as- pointment of the diocesan bish- work in ® foodlighted and the province. It will only|sess damage, but the ship was|ops--ordinarily seven for each : ter Report on taxation,|resting on its damaged plates,,Curia congregation--wouid be) trench as they attempt to | reach Leonard Boyce, 15, 1963, and It appears the committee will|¥4 {would have delayed the report two years, the article said. The Globe and Mail said first cent of education costs. The likeliest source of the ad-| 10,000 copies. Cost of the study) ditional provincial revenue need-}is likely to exceed $1,000,000, Delivered To Peking MOSCOW (CP)--Chinese Red Guards attacked a Soviet mer- chant ship in the Manchurian port of Dairen for the second consecutive day today and smashed equipment aboard the vessel, the Russian news agency Tass reported. The 'agency said '"'an enor- . |mous mob is raving on the em- |bankment" where the ship, the |freighter Svirsk, was moored. *| The Soviet government -pre- viously sent a strong protest to |Peking, accusing Chinese au- thorities of seizing the ship and |"'capturing" its captain Friday. | Tass quoted shipping officials at the Russian port of Vladivostok as saying that "'red |Guards stormed onto the deck |of the ship and began smashing ju its equipment" this morning, MASTER BEATEN Tass also said the ship's mas- ter, identified as Viktor Kor- shov, was beaten following his arrest Friday. It said Korshov \was brought back to the dock jarea today and was taunted by \a mob of Chinese. The crew of the Russian ship was beseiged and unable to go to the captain's rescue, the agency said. The report said Life | Second Well Cave-In Strong Hote: handed over to them, mded to further complicate |Soviet-Chinese relations." immediate release. connivance, Chinese citizens was assembled near the ship," the note charged, "many of whom stormed on board and tried to h die crew m s. [WROTE ON SHIP | "The rampaging hooligans |wrote and pasted all over the ship dirty slogans containing threats and insults against the Soviet state and its people." The Soviet note also demand- ed "the strict punishment of those | guilty of the arbitrari- ness." who is trapped 14 feet down in a well. The trench was Slanted into the well to reach the youth, who was caught Friday afternoon by crumbling rock walls. A tn eR 'NEWS HIGHLIGHTS | Army Officers Said Anti-Mao TOKYO Reuters - A Japanese correspondent in Peking re- | ported today that Deputy Chinese Premier Hsieh Fu-chih said the Chinese' were demanding a the ship's navigator also It accused the Chinese of "unprecedented bandit actions" and demanded the vessel's ted bandit actions against the Soviet ship and members of its crew," said the note, "took place in the presence of official Chinese au- thorities and with their direct "A crowd of about 1,000 eastern borders of the country. South Viet Cost-0-Living Shoots Up 35 PC This Year SAIGON (AP)--Soaring food|months predicted that an In- prices have pushed the South/crease in prices from 30 to 50 Vietnamese cost of living up |per cent this year could prove some 35 per cent so far this! disastrous year and the overheated econ-| The chief causes of the spurt omy may spin out of control en-,in prices--12 per cent since) tirely in the months ahead, eco-| June--are rising food costs and nomic sources indicate. |the tremendous amount of Because of the impact on the)money being poured into the! | peasants and working class, the) Vitnamese economy. ec battle is considered a} vital part of the political war in) FISH MORE COSTLY Vietnam. | The price of fish, for instance Not all economists are agreed|has gone up 47 per cent in the on how serious the current situ-|last year. Since Jan. 1, other ation is. However, one who had/key price boosts included pork, army officers influenced farmers to oppose Communist party | Chairman Mao Tse-tung. The correspondent of the newspaper | Sankei Shimbun quoted Hsieh, public security minister in the Chinese government, as saying that anti-Mao resistance was serious in the three central Chinese provinces of Hupeh, Hunan | and Kiangsi. The correspondent quoted Hsieh as saying farm- ers were being provoked to storm cities and surround them - a tactic edvocatd by Mao for conducting a revolution. Anti-Nuclear Pact Hopes Grow | | | | WASHINGTON AP - William Foster, chief U.S, disarma- | ment regotiater, flies to Geneva today to open a new and | prorhising chapter in the bid for a treaty barring the spread | of nuclear weapons. Word that the Russians are ready to pre- | sent a joint U.S. - Soviet draft treaty at the 17-nation Geneva | disarmament conference came Friday from Foster after he | met with President Johnson, watched the economy for many 54 per cent; eggs, 50 per cent. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE AT UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO Paralyzed Girl Seeks PhD. CLEVELAND -- (AP)--Being paralysed from the waist down and confined to a wheel chair for the last nine years hasn't stopped Penny Miller from doing the things she wants to do. And it won't stop her from working toward a Ph.D. in Pp science beginning this fall at the University of To- ronto. "I want to get more deeply into the field," said the 26- year-old computer program- mer, who works for Bell Aero- systems near Niagara Falls, But to work for her doctorate, Penny needed mobility around the campus. So she advertised in the Toronto papers for a student who will live with and aid a handicapped U. of T. girl student." Karen Johnston, an 18-year- old freshman from Islington, Ont., answered the advertise- ment and got the job. She wants to teach English. NOT NEW PROBLEMS Finding a way to get around campus and commuting aren't new to Penny Miller, She com- N.Y. "I want to get into what's behind programming." muted while taking a bachelor -y roommate, a "reasonable girl) of arts degree from the State] She lived with a husband and University of New York at Buf-|wife who were medical stu- falo, about 20 miles from her! dents, The wife took care of her home at Lockport, N.Y. at home and members of Pi "My mother took me. She, Beta Phi sorority helped her to went to classes with me and/and from classes. took notes," said Penny. '"I} Penny is taking another leave wrote my own assignments, but from her $9,600-a-year job to go I couldn't write fast enough for/4, roronto, otes."" x : , Penny usually lives with her She graduated with distinc- tion in 1963. Penny went to work for Bell Aerosystems after graduating at Buffalo and in 1964 she took a leave of absence to earn a master's degree at the Univer- sity of Michigan, parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Miller, but comes to Highland View for treatment. Penny has been paralysed since she was seven, but doesn't know what caused. the paralysis. Doctors think it may have been encephalitis, Arabs Attack U.K. Nationalists | ADEN Reuters -- Arab Nationalists launched a series of mor- | tar atiacks on British installations here today as Aden enter- | ed the second day of a 48-hour general strike. No British or | Arab casualties were reported in the dawn raids. One attack | on petroleum storage tanks in Steamer Point, Aden's main | shopping area, failed when six mortars fired from back streets | fell short of their target. | -sumumpun ("In THE TIMES Today .. Surveyors Proised For Accurate Work P.9 Six-Weeks Of Fun ond Games Ends At Willow Perk P. & = Argos Edge Montreal P. 6 a rs | nya am gn a Obituories -- 17 Sports -- 6, 7 Television -- 12, 13 Theetres -- 12 Weather -- 2 Whitby News -- S$ | |= Ann Lenders -- 10 3 = Ajox News -- 5 a Churches -- 8 City News -- 9 Classitied -- 15, 16, 17 Comics -- 13 goes for treatment. Penny, from Lockport, N.Y., works for Bell Aerosystems near PENNY MILLER, who is pursuing her goal of earn- Highland View Cuyahoga County Hospital in Cleve- land, Ohio. Deborah is a ing a Ph.D. in computer sci- : ence at the University of physical therapist at the Niagara, N.Y., as a com- |: Editoriol -- 4 Women's -- 10 Toronto, watches as her sis- hospital, where Penny, par- puter programmer. z ual ter Deborah pours tea at alyzed from the waist down, --AP Wirephoto 'i MM A i 4