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Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Sep 1967, p. 9

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Y white walls, deluxe *3495 tible electrie elock, re- , shade light wind- wheel dises. Serial *4285 transmission, power 3195 in, eustom interior, wr chrome package, *3695 *2195 igh level fresh air regular equipment '2267 E 725-6501 (96 Prime Minister Pearson highlighted two Oshawa girls' trip to the Ottawa valley recently. Seven-year- old Susan Nisbet, left, and sister Catherine, 9, stopped the prime minister on Par- & PM GREETS TWO OSHAWA GIRLS liament Hill to ask him to pose with them while fath- er took a picture. The PM obliged. Catherine says she will always remember the handshake that passed her THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, September ¥, 1967 9 Will Power Keeps Man Safe CHONGYANG, South Korea (AP)--Rescue workers brought to the surface today a 35-year- old Korean gold miner who had been trapped 410 feet under- ground more than-two weeks. Doctors said Kim Chang-son was in fair condition. Doctors described Kim as a "nran of unusually strong will' and said it was largely his will power that had kept him alive during the 15 days he had spent alone in the mine. The miner, a veteran of the Korean War, drank water and ate wood bark he found in the mine, Fellow workers brought him up in a mine lift. Rescue was delayed when diggers struggling to clear the debris from a cave-in at the Kubang gold mine Aug. 22 encountered falling rocks, earth and pieces of mine pillars. Among the last obstacles was a five-ton boulder that they had to bypass. Northwest Fires Out By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS All major forest fires in the Northwest states were reported ; |controlled or near containment and the prime minister. She used the wrong hand. The girls and their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Nisbet, visited Upper Canada Vill- age, Cornwall, and Ottawa. Investigators Conclude Airliner Lacked Recorder GANDER, Nfld. (CP)--There were indications today a Cze- choslovakian Airliner carried no flight recorder to tell the technical tale of its crash near Gander International Airport early Tuesday. A revised count today listed 34 dead and 35 Injured. A, N. LeCheminant, head of the federal transport depart- ment's 10-man team of investi- gators, said 'as far as we know" the turbo-prop Ilyushin 18 did not carry a flight record- er. A delicate instrument that transcribes all vital functions of an aircraft, the recorder might have shed some light on the pre-dawn accident. Mr. LeCheminant said there was no indication that a bomb or any kind of explosive had caused the crash, The Russian-built aircraft, which carried 6,100 tons of fuel after a refuelling stop here, burst into a ball of flames when it came down about a half-mile from the end of the runway. SORT THROUGH WRECKAGE The 10 senior erpresentatives of the transport department's accident investigation division at Ottawa continued to -sort through bits of wreckage today trying to find a clue to the crash, the worst in the history of this airport town in north- eastern Newfoundland. W. M. Johnson, operations superintendent of the investiga- tion division, said the Ilyushin 18 would be reassembled as " Police Department Orders Civil Rights Pamphlets TORONTO (CP)--A civil lib- erties pamphlet describing citi- zens' rights and responsibilities in the event of police question- ing, search and arrest has found an interested audience-- in Metropolitan Toronto's police department. Police. Chief James Mackey was so impressed with the six- page pamphlet prepared by the Canadian Civil Liberties Asso- ciation last July that he ordered 250 copies to be distrib- uted among his men. Last week, police ordered 500 more copies, They are being circulat- ed to all police divisions, the training college and youth bureau speakers. Nicholas Pawley, executive director of the association, said the pamphlet also has been ordered by the Company of Young Canadians, University of Waterloo, Toronto high schools and the provincial legal aid office. Printing of the pamphlet was financed 'by a $10,000 grant from the Atkinson Charitable minal here. Despite the fact that the plane disintegrated into small bits and pieces spread over a wide area, Mr. Johnson said: 'It's all there some- where,"" Meanwhile, 18 survivors remained in critical condition in hospital at Halifax today. Seven persons were in Montreal hospital and 10 were being treated in hospital here. A hospital spokesman here said 37 survivors were original- ly admitted following the crash, but two had since died. There were 61 passengers and eight crew members aboard the ill- fated plane. COMPOSER INJURED Among passengers flown to Montreal for treatment were Cuban composer Geraldo Piloto and Ruiz Ezequiol Lopez, high- ranking public relations officer with the Cuban commerce department. Both suffered third-degree burns and were in critical condition. The plane, bound for Havana from Prague, made a half-hour refuelling stop here. After being serviced, the aircraft taxied down the runway and apparent- ly lifted enough to clear about 1,500 yards of open ground before it came to the CNR's main railway line. Then for some reason it dipped into a shallow ditch through which the rail line) runs, tore off at least one of its four propellers and spun across | Foundation. 1,000 yards of spongy marsh. | \trolled = durii th well as possible at the air ter-| yore 'haa 11.000 one acres of today. | North Idaho crews appeared j}to be winning their 25-day bat- |tle against the 16,500-acre Trap- per Peak fire 10 miles south of the Canadian border. The blaze was contained Tuesday and near control this morning. The huge Sundance Mountain fire was still uncontrolled 18 miles south of Trapper Peak lines. Nearly 2,000 men have completed 40 miles of fire lines and containment is expcted by Thursday, barring heavy winds. In Montana, the 2,000-acre Glacier Wall fire in Glacier National Park was near con- trol. No other major fires were reported. No new fires had broken out in Washington and Oregon, where major blazes were con- weekend. forest land has been reopened in eastern Oregon, while all forests west of the Cascade Mountains remained closed to the public. Henry Miller Marries Pianist TOKYO (AP) -- The parents of a Japanese jazz pianist said today their daughter will marry Henry Miller, author of the con- troversial novels Tropic of Can- cer and Tropic of Capricorn. Roukuro Tokuda, father of the 32-year-old pianist, Hoki Tokuda said the marriage will be in Los Angeles today, Miller is 75. Tokuda said his daughter called him from Los Angeles to tell him about the wedding. Miller, who lives in a spa- cious home in Pacific Pali- sades, Calif., near Los Angeles, grew first notorious, then famous, from his use of four- letter words in his Tropic books. In 1963, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to upset a ruling that Tropic of Cancer is not hard-core pornography. ALL MAY DIE Some meteorologists fear that at the present rate of increase, the world's atmosphere may be so polluted in 100 years that human life may be wiped out. It's Happening at STARR % + + + % + % + + + This economical Consolette has a fresh' porary flair. In selected hard- wood veneers and solids neers of Natural Walnut. '729 AND TRADE All Other Color and Black and White Models in Stock ! STARR FURNITURE & APPLIANCES 491 RITSON RD. S., OSHAWA KM MK KM KK KH MH RCA COLOR | RCA Victor Contem- with ve- 723-3343 dilustrated 1, to r. The WAGNER, The ROBBINS. Switch up to Premium Values that only the Leader can offer! 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