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Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Sep 1967, p. 1

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' waiting in tter way to ces to drive thoroughly. cold water ie finger to 1ONE 725-7373 - . get pre- base with micro-thin surfaces to sion. Non- tion to as vhen added 9 , 8 728.7373 SEALER AMR IIS See gem ' investigation tribunal, and--af- Of Oshawa, ville, 'neighboring 26--NO. 215 Ajax, Home Newspaper Whitby, Bowman- Pickering and centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. She Oshawa Times 10¢ Single Co SSe Per Week tame Belivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1967 Weather Report Pleasant weather will contin- ue throughout weekend. Low tonight, 52; high Sunday, 80. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash EIGHTEEN PAGES Q Coach 'Ike' Hildebrand "hit the road" early -- in fact the Oshawa Generals opened their 1967-68 hockey Season this morning with an out-of-town trip. Until the Home Show is over, they cannot start flooding at Civic Auditorium so the Generals held their first GENERALS MAKE FIRST TRIP EARLY IN SEASON workout at Whitby They donned gear in their own dressing rooms and then took a bus to Whitby. Coach Ike, armed with his Arena. HURRIC CLAIMI - TS U.S. 1 Sees Year-End SAIGON (AP) -- Foreign Minister, Tran Van Do of South | Vietnam predicted today peace g |negotiations between North and 4% |South Vietnam are possible | before the end of this year. Do said in an interview that a recent statement by North Viet- |namese Premier Phan Van 'Dong "'is a slight shift, a little {different from previous North 4 Vietnamese statenients about |possible negotiations. | Do's feeling is not reflected in } Washington. State Secretary 5 ,|Dean Rusk said Friday he } jcould see no sign that North ##% | Vietnam was willing to go to the conference table. | Rusk was commenting on a {Press report that talks could , | start within a few days. TALK WITH CANADA | His statement came a day jafter External Affairs Minister TRAN VAN DO e+» South Vietnam tab-board of facts and statis- Foon "ee in oe be s . tics and own skates, is orthern officials _ expresse t t . shown here with some of |interest in talks with Canada ime 0 e | e: his prospective talent, lover ways to end the war, Mar- tin added that he sees "not boarding the bus. nu ») |much change" of peace talks at| thi (Oshawa Times Photo Constitution Splits Top Quebec Liberals QUEBEC (CP) --The consti- tution has proved to be an irresistable subject for Que- bec's federal Liberals who offi- cially are not supposed to be talking about it. The agenda of the four-day thinkers conference of Quebec Liberal MPs does-not mention the constitution. The theme of the conference which began Wednesday is "real issues" such as unemployment and housing. But constitutional questions have been raised by the three major speakers of the meeting Lesage, leader of the Quebec Liberal party, has lent addition- al emphasis to the constitution- al issues. Yet behind the closed doors of a Dominican retreat known as Maison Montmorency, Quebec's Liberal MPs are said to be gathering information on other issues. : chairman, said in an interview the MPs have been questions of university profes-| sors and specialists at the "study sessions'. --Manpower Minister Mar- chand, former immigration minister Rene Tremblay and| Senator Maurice Lamontagne. | And a war of words launched at the federal Liberals by Jean! He said one of the conference | objectives is to arm Quebec) MPs with up-to-date informa- tion on issues other than| changes to the British North America Act of 1867. Nasser Former Confidant Takes Poison, Suicides CAIRO (AP) -- Egypt's for-! mer No. 2 man, blamed by!) President Nasser for Egypt's war loss to Israel last June and| later accused of plotting against Nasser, has killed him- self with poison, the govern- ment said Friday. It said Field Marshal Abdel Hakim Amer attempted suicide Wednesday, soon after he was told he must face a_ special ter one dose of poison was pumped out of him--succeeded Rap Brown Transferred RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -- H. Rap Brown, U.S. Black Power leader, was transferred from Richmond city jail to the Vir- ginia prison farm in_ rural Powhatan County, 20 miles away, early Friday night at the request of worried city officials. The transfer was aimed at averting further incidents out- side the city lockup, where pickets marched and groups of Negroes taunted police and hurled rocks Thursday night and early Friday morning. A spokesman for the Virginia department of welfare and institutions said Brown was removed from the Richmond jail because "'city officials expressed concern about his presence in the Richmond met- ropolitan area." The picketing at the city jail Thursday night and early Fri- day, by about 40 supporters of Brown, was peaceful. But in the early - morning hours, police said there was sporadic rock- throwing by groups of Negroes, who were ranged on the hill adjacent to the jail's parking tote in taking his life Thursday night. Reuters news agency said Amer tried to kill himself twice before--once during the Middle East war and once in August. The official announcement, nearly 30 hours after Amer died, said he already had been! buried in his native village oi Menia, 200 miles south of cairo.! FAMILY TIES Amer, 47, had been extremely close to Nasser. His daughter married Nasser's youngest brother and Nasser's second son was named for Amer. Mr. Tr his time.. | Do said there were several reasons why Hanoi might be Montreal Faces Strike MONTREAL (CP) -- Two weekend meetings between the Montreal Transportation ,Com- bargaining table: --'North Vietnam ' war ays and (net Ue've military bombing North vietnam, tion minister in Prime Minister Pearson's government, predict- ed Canada 'will eventually be a republic and said Liberals should recognize this in their platform. Justice Minister Trudeau | called a press conference Fri- jday night to defend himself Jean-Pierre Goyer, MP for | against Mr. Lesage's attack, Dollard who is conference|made Thursday night in a speech before a meeting by asking | provincial Liberal women. Mr. Lesage said Mr. theory are out of touch with once i 'a- Tru-/sonnel, in conference with the| sided today with the U.S. Navy deau's views on the two-nation| MTC. | SI 3 3 I and unions represent- ia to' to ing 6,000 transit employees paePeapeion and Chita har're|the four 'patnts have been called in an effort to| .uch internal dissension she is|Hanoi as a basis for settlement settle their current wage dis-| vot much help." of the Vietnam problem, .* . | Trinh received this corre- he first, scheduled for spondent at the government today, brings together manage- U S N guest house and in a two-hour ment and four small unions) alds avy |interview underlined H anoi's pie ig 800 re |position on negotiations, | personnel. 1] bb: d A . | The second, Sunday, will find| C 0. ere | It the py gel gee Bs [fhe memaises! Traneogrt WOE) SAIGON (AP) -- A slust'|cratic, Republic of Vietnam, | ah £000 ds 8 more two-day running battle through) must unconditionally stop the psd Us ang subway Per-|Mekong Delta Swamplands sub-|hombing of North Vietnam and| jother acts of war against this st combat country, Trinh said, | casualties of the Vietnam war | |suffering its highest All five labor groups are affil- majority opinion. But Mr. Tru-jiated to the Confederation of and a battered Viet Cong bat-| ESCALATING WAR | deau said he has as much right! National Trades Unions. to speak for French-Canadians as has Mr. Lesage. yaMr. Trudeau also defended) nis proposal to have a bill of rights written into the constitu- tion to guarantee linguistic as well as human rights. | Mr. Lesage said the proposal is unacceptable to Quebec| because it would take authority} away from the legislature and give it to constitutional courts, Mr. Trudeau said his propos- al is to give the proyinces power to name members, while Mr. Lesage argued that consti- tutional courts, '"'whatever their | opposition, become a_ central authority,"" Apart from the opposition of Mr. Lesage, the justice minis- ter is said to have opponents within the caucus who would like to see him take a more mellow constitutional stand. Auguste Choquette, MP for Lotbiniere, said in an interview Mr. Trudeau's public state- ments have been "'out of line" with the official position of| Prime Minister Pearson. | . talion melting into marshes and! Instead of yielding to world-; Meanwhile, MTC employees | bamboo forests. wide pressure for it to do just} were ordered by injunction Fri-| "Battle reports listed 70 Viet this, he continued, "the United! day to halt slow-down tactics, Cong dead in the fight and said|States has been taking more| which they claim were started|/, navy gunboat force took a|serious steps to escalate the to capture public attention. beating when it landed army|war." South Viet Minister Talks North Viet Premier : rica HANOI (A P )--N orth Viet-| Security Council are "complete-| miles east southeast of Wallops|the three illi to come to the|nam's deputy premier and for-|ly unacceptable" to Hanoi since|[sland, moving west southwest. | A P more willing to come to een mini ater, Newven DiKlPAliese are isioke and deces: flooding tides could cut off is con-| Trinh, said Wednesday that the|tions designed to mask another eight feet above normal yere vinced it no longer can win a\time is "'not yet se for peace step in the escalation of the|, military victory, It is convinced|talks on Vietnam because the|war."' , light sipiat the mouth of Dele-| on q f iding in ietermina United States is intensifying the| 2, Initiatives from intermedi-|wate Bay was on doors of persons res! of American 4d tion te in South Vietnam and|aries "cannot bring about any\to 35 feet. --"They the*'Neirth can't| Furthermore, he said, the/lem unless they are based on|in history to come inland along 4 U.S, is not prepared to accept/the premise that the United/the mid-Atlantic coast from an presented by|States is the aggressor." Boston Woman Drowns | Two Children Missing | NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -- Hur-! flooding jricane Doria screamed toward) before daybreak. already had begun the U.S. Middle Atlantic coast) Evacuation, though not com- |today, claiming her first lives| plete, was the rule on a stretch while still offshore. of Atlantic coastline from Reho- A Boston woman drowned both Beach, Del., to Cape and her two children were! Charles, Va., 125 miles south. missing after the storm's winds and high seas whipped their 38-| LASHES YUCATAN : foot cabin cruiser out of control). 4 stronger but more remote throughout the night off Ocean| Beulah, ranged across the west- City, N.J. ern Caribbean toward the The vessel's owner, Robert Northeast tip of the Yucatan Wood, 29, was in hospital in| Peninsula in Mexico with winds shock and incoherent after the) UP to ae ae cdot boat finally grounded near|_ "OVINg west «| ' Brigantine Stoalk. Beulah, which has killed 18 per- 4 Meanwhile, Doria slowed her| ore hab p ie 4 Pars Gemmmal ar i \for a clos [ay ---- ae aN Island, 550 miles southwest of Residents of low-lying areas|Miami, late today, in the path of the unpredictable| Another hurricane, Chloe, storm fled to higher ground,|With 110 m.p.h. winds, threshed but major flooding at mid-|northwest in the Atlantic north- 4|morning was reported only at|east of a -- Ocean City, Md., where water ecet red a ciy Ao Fray areas y i a y. was three feet deep in some)" yoria began moving full tilt : ys wae : \toward the Virginia, Maryland | WINDS WERE HIGH and Delaware coasts Friday, Winds near the centre of the |changing her course from north |storm were estimated at about| northwest to west-southwest {80 m.p.h., and coastline points | ynexpecteldy. |were reporting 60 m.p.h. gusts By 10 p.m. the weather by mid-morning. |bureau was recommending | At 10 a.m., the centre of Hur-|immediate evacuation of the ne Doria was about 45lentire eastern shore areas of states -- fearing NGUYEN DUY TRINH «+» North Vietnam A spokesman said tides six t0| escape routes. A Police turned back tourists xpected, He said the Delaware peaded to resorts and knocked \™ d.coastal towns, sug- /Sesting evacuation, Doria was the first hurricane) Sara Whips Wake Island WAKE ISLAND (AP)--tTy- phoon Sara whipped through US. Stalls On UN Hel EVACUATE HOMES |this mid-Pacific isi ; | this I. and toda' Pp Thousangs of residents in) with winds of nearly 140 miles UNITED NATIONS (AP) --|Coastal areas of Maryland and! The United States seems in no/Virginia left their homes during Seat een ae Ls fined hurry to call a meeting of the|the night. to. smashed 'windows as Security Council to seek an end| At Wallops Island, where the| Persons in non-essential iob to the Vietnam war. -- U.S. government has a space! were 'asked to leave the i eae Although U.S. officials have|launching facility, National|though, by Feder statis been sounding members of the/Aeronautics and Space Admin- Agency are: ee ee 15-nation council, American |istration personnel worked LaCaill @ Manager George sources say the talks have pro- through the night to dismantle The a . duced slight hope of a profita-|missiles and equipment vital to|standi b said jets were ble meeting. The reactions have/the program. haltw i at Johnson Island, ranged from outright discour-| Evacuation centres were set|Hawsi; to hee Wake, and agement of a U.S. call for ajup to receive thousands of per-|some of Wak. ae evacuating council session to "interest but|sons fleeting the hurricane,| LaCaille oan ge sear j 1 ns ; settlement of the Vietnam prob- easterly direction, the weather bureau said. The effects of the hurricane were being felt along the coast of Delaware, New Jersey, New York and Long Island. no enthusiasm, An MTC spokesman said there appeared to be no appre- ciable change in the slow-down but that the injunction would not be really tested until today's rush hours. Lawyer Seeks Nomination LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Fran- cis G, Frank Carter, a London lawyer, announced Friday night he will seek the Liberal party nomination to oppose Premier Robarts in London North riding in the Oct. tion, A nomination meeting for the riding is to be held Sept. 21. The 45-year-old Mr. Carter is the first to declare his intention of seeking the namination. No candidate has yet been nomi-)the fiercest fight for the rive- nated by the New Democratic Party. 17 provincial elec-| scattered. infantrymen on the Rach Ba River at dawn Friday. Firing from hidden positions on the river bank, guerrillas cut into the gunboats and land- ing craft with machine-guns and recoilless rifles, Three sai- lors were killed and 59 wounded in the battle, with most U.S. casualties coming in the first furious minutes. Over-all, the 2,000-man U.S. river assault lost nine dead and 104 wounded in twisting canals and muddy ground 45 miles south of Saigon, before the crack Viet Cong 263rd Battalion! Apart from aircraft-carrier disasters such as the fire that) killed 132 aboard the Forrestal, the casualties and damage were the worst suffered by the navy in Vietnam. It was by far rine force since it began operat- ing in the delta early this year. Trinh cited two points rele-| vant to negotiations: 1. The U.S. moves to bring the Vietnam problem either to the United Nations General| Assembly this fall or to the| Canada is a member of the Affairs Minister Martin said here recently the UN cannot "free itself'? of the responsibil- ity of discussing Vietnam. Searchers Work All Night: Find Body Of One Miner ST. LAWRENCE, Nfld. (CP) -- A small group of searchers worked through the night in the battered Newfoundland Fluor- spar Co. mine here in an effort to recover the bodies of two miners. Three men were killed eariy Friday when an underground upheaval sent 1,000 tons of rock crashing into an area about 500 THOUSANDS WAVE ON FINAL VOYAGE mine in_ this south coast community. A rescue _ crew Warren, 24, youngest of the vic tims. Still missing, and Edwards, 36. feet below the surface of the Newfoundland clawed through the rock Friday night to recover the body of Noei listed as dead by company officials, are John Slaney, 35, and Robert The three miners were mar- State police, firemen, jrescue units stood by to lend jaid. Wind-whipped, rising tides jposed a major danger. Some national|were injuri : i jguardsmen, Red Cross Person- but details of jSecurity Council. Externalinel, coast guardsmen and other in the typhoon, | of the injuries were not immediately available. Some communications anten- nae were knocked down on the ie 2,300 miles west of Hon- lu. Police say the men (whose mathematical confusions, UNITED NATIONS NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Police Nab Fraud Suspects Whitby police believe they-have caught up with two quick-change artists. Two Toronto men, aged 21 and 30, | were arrested during the shopping rush-hour last night and charged with two counts each of attempted fraud, Queen SOUTHAMPTON, England (CP)--As thousands waved and wept and sang The Queen, the 81,000-ton Queen Mary steamed out of this harbor today for her last transatlantic round trip. The 31-year-old liner that has won the hearts of thousands sounded deep-throated blasts in reply to sirens from ships in the busy port. Her. sides were festooned with colored strea- mers. Passengers lined the ship's rails and waved to crowds ashore as five tugs pulled her from the dock. A flotilla of yachts, speed boats and ferries followed her out to sea and two aircraft swooped low overhead. Before she sailed Captain John Treasure Jones said he hopes the old ship will "go out in a blaze of glory and high spirits." \ The 31-year-old liner was to leave this morning from Southampton, England, on her 500th and last voyage to New York, She is carrying 1,300 pas- sengers -- about two-thirds capacity -- 744 bottles of cham- pagne and 450 cross-channel trippers to Cherbourg, France, the largest number ever. There are no big names on the westbound run, but the final crossing home from New York Sept. 22 will be packed to the bulkheads with American tycoons, actors and assorted celebrities including harmonica player Larry Adler who sailed on the Queen Mary's maiden voyage in 1936, c NO NOSTALGIA HERE Capt. (Treasure) Jones, 62- year-old Welshman who has captained the Queen Mary for Only 18 months, told reporters he was not nostalgic about the last voyage. He took the Maure- tania to her graveyard in 1965 and he was getting a bit used to farewell voyages. But he added the Mary was going to a "very nice home" at Long' Beach, Calif., where she will become a combined con- vention centre and maritime museum. The captain said Americans were "every bit as fond of the Queen Mary as the British--in fact more Americans than Brit- Ons have travelled on her'. "This is the finest ship that ever sailed on the ocean and they'll never build her like again, But the trade doesn't go for it. This was the one and only luxury vessel when sea was the only way to travel." The ship has had the run of her life, he said, but there had been lack of support, especially among the first-class travellers Mary Bid Fond Farewell and she had been losing too much mgney for her owners to g0 9) ESCORT TO CHANNEL Three bands have volunteered to play the Mary out today on her last trip down Southampton water and a pleasure steamer will escort her into the channel. Friday night was the first time the Queen Mary had pas- sengers aboard before sailings and there were grumbles aplenty when customs officials would not allow drinks to be served after 10:30 p.m. -- even in cabins to passengers want- ing to give the old ship a proper send-off. When the Queen Mary sails into New York Sept. 21 for the last time, she will be flying the world's longest flag--a 310-foot red, white and blue pennant, 10-feet long for each year she has plied the Atlantic, ried and leave a total of 18 chil- dren, Mine Manager Rupert Wise- man said a close watch was being kept on conditions in the mine as efforts continued to recover the bodies. He said aj. number of rockbursts, which he| = quakes,"* had occurred and it} might be necessary to order the| © searchers out of the mine, =| Mr. Wiseman said a rock-|= burst was similar to "bumps" which hit No, 2 colliery at}: Springhill, N.S., for many years. A violent bump erupted Oct. 23, 1958,- and killed 75 of|- the 175 men working in the pit. Egypt Denies Nasser Resigns CAIRO .(AP)--An Egyptian government spokesman today|~ denied foreign press' reports|~ claiming that President Nasser} -- has resigned. = A spokesman said reports are| = "completely untrue," F » z described as "little earth-| = uve i] names were withheld) at- tempted to defraud two confectionery cashiers by creating U Thant Hopes For Viet Peace (AP) Thant expressed hope today that Unitel Nations. members would support new peace initiatives on Vietnam, but said for the time being he had suspended his own efforts in -- Secretary-General U the search for a setilement. "I am hopeful," he told a press conference at UN headquarters, "that new peace initiatives based on the principles of the charter will be seriuusly considered by all members of the United Naticns,"" "In THE TIMES Today . Durham College--P, 9 Brooklin Ready--P, 6 Tray Presented--P, S$ Ann Landers--8 Ajax News--5 Churches--10, 11 City News--? Classifed--12, 13, 14 Comics--17 E Editorial--4 Obituaries--14 Sports--6, 7 Television--17 Weather--2 Whitby News--S Women's---8 Theatres--16 AE BEBE VAULT

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