1.4.-THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, September 29, 1967 comm Lynda Johnson, eldest daughter of the president, stepped to the door of her plane in Mexico City for a look around during a stop- over on a flight to Acapulco where she will spend a week's vacation. Accom- panying her are Mr. and LINDA TAKES VIEW ai * public safety > along the Mrs. Warren Woodnard. Woodnard was identified as vice president of the airline. | Capt. Charles Robb, Miss Johnson's fiance, was said | by airline employees to be | on the plane also but he did not appear at the door. | (AP Wirephoto) | Leaders Target For Angry MPs that party changes are mean-|the Caribbean and the Yucatan By CY Cox LONDON (CP) -- Backbench MPs in Britain's two major political parties are raising @ fuss with grumbles against their own leaders. But they have been' upstaged by a former top man in the) civil service who has launched| a blistering attack on the coun-| try's administrative class. | Indicating the administrators} as shoddy, feeble, stupid and unscientific is Max Nicholson, in a headline - winning book called The System: The Mis- government of Modern Britain. In 525 pages, he pictures the British civil service as "the last and most obsessive stronghold of amateurism." Without its reform, the country will stay in the state of decline that already has lasted more than 100 years, Nicholson says. POPULARITY WANES One of the backbench grum- bis against current party lead- ership came Sunday from Sir Gerald Nabarro, @ Conservative| MP who said the popularity of his party chief, Edward Heath, is lagging behind that of the Conservative organization as @ whole } Despite their two byelection | victories over the. governing jai]. An official told them that} Labor party last week, COn-|the inmates were merely cheer- | servatives are "deeply A@ppre-ling a cricket match between) hensive" about the question of Heath's personal standing, | Nabarro said in a statement. | He disclaimed any interest in! a leadership change but talked of 'men standing in the wings.' Meantime, MP. Desmond Don-; nelly had unkind words for his party leader, Prime Minister Wilson. Summing up the lessons Labor must learn from its byelection setbacks, Donnelly said Wilson has to realize that no one can run a political oper- ation by himself With a big parliamentary rity, Wilson may not call election until 1970 but sts anoth Nicholson's new book su ERIC REPRICH presents Concerto at Ni Featuring « complete symphonic work on each program Monday to Friday from 9 to 10 P.M. CKQS 94,9 Prien QUALITY STEREO EM RADIO ingless without civil service reform: SERVICE A 'MISFIT' he says. 1] ARAB TERRORISTS WOUNDED TEL AVIV (AP)--Israel, indi- cating plans to stay put in some captured Arab lands, has announced that she will move Jewish settlers into occupied Syria and Jordan. Israeli troops and helicopter gunners wounded 11 Arab ter- rorists Sunday in the Jordanian sector the Jews plan to resettle, Prime Minister Levi Eshkol announced Isreal will resettle the area on the west bank of th Jordan River between Beth- lehem and Hebron where Jew- ish pioneers lived until the first Arab-Israeli war in 1948. Young, army-trained pioneers already are heading into the Golan Heights just beyond Israel's old border with Syria to start a new community. They will live in concrete huts along the Bonias ridge, a protected fortification for Syrian artillery firing at Israeli farms until the six-day June war ended with Israeli occupation of the area. The area is within 40 miles of Nablus, an Arab town where Israeli Army units said they captured 13 El Fatah terrorists and Soviet automatic arms, Czech mines and Syrian hand grenades Sunday. Gun battles ariund the town continued for the second straight day, The area has been a stronghold of resistance and scores of terrorists have been rounded up during an increase of bombing and sabotage dur- ing the last two weeks. Israeli security patrols flushed out El Fatah squads, believed to be infiltrating across the Jordan River fron- tier with Jordan, from hills along the west bank. RE-SETTLEMENT PROGRAM SLATED At the United Nations, Israsll Foreign Minister Abba Eban was reported missing with 'a large degree of understanding" from other foreign ministers on Israeli's demand for direct negotiations with the Arabs to settle their perpetual crisis relationship. A well-placed source said "there is a feeling that maybe there is an opportunity now to try and get some kind of direct negotiations'--a course the Arab states have rejected until now. Jews Set To Occupy Syria And Jordan Areas The informant said Israel would prefer separate negotia- tions with each of the Arab ciuntries involved, although she would not object to a round- table conference. Gen. Odd Bull of Norway, chief UN truce supervisor in the Middle East, was to fly to Jerusalem today from Cairo after inspecting damage on the Egyptian side of the Suez Canal resulting from a week of fire- fights and artillery exchanges with Israel. HAD SCHOOLS Before 1868, during the 300- year Tokygawa Period, Japan and local schools run by Bud- dhist and Shinto priest as well as those financed by feudal lords where wealthy children were required to learn astrono- my, law and medicine. HAS WIDE SPACE The Canadian North with 1,- 500,000 square miles makes up about 40 per cent of Canada. By Savage Rio Grande a debris, the Rio Grande ripped The service "is not merely ®/out the steel and concrete dam misfit but a multiple misfit,"inear Mercedes, HARLINGEN, Tex. (AP)--| ed to monstrous size and fury by Hurricane Beulah's cloud- bursts, threatened five South churning wall of water and surged down a side chan- nel. side channel, and Lozano to flee ground. in the Arroyo. The Arroyo car-| The Texas department ofjlated by : warned residents|Nueces, Frio and Atascosa riv-|@8 to whether or not Is saia|received money for it will be} investigated by Rene Bayeur Of| not taken the poem from a book of! but from a notebook in her own Officials said they could not thelers. Civil defence officia Arroyo Colorado, in Mercedes,/they had moved 1,500 people} = La Feria, Harlingen, Rio Hondo|from low areas to the only high|Quebec City, to high'ground in Three Rivers. The dam on the Arroyo Colo- The department said Harlin-/\rado broke about 7 p.m. An gen was in the most danger,|hour and a half later, Harlingen with 37 feet of water expected|got the word from police. Many residents reacted ried a flood crest of 34.2 feet in|immediately. mark early today and continued! rising. here, a record flood crest on STAY AMID SHELTERS Throughout a Beulah's winds, drenched by) her rains, overrun by flooding streams and slashed by tor- nadoes, thousands remained in shelters--some of them short on food and water. But the water was receding in many places. Beulah's death toll stood at 44, 24 in her first sweep through in northern Mexico. Boiling and charged with 14 miles upstream from here. |1958. The new flood topped that)/REACTION CHAOTIC Service stations g |jammed with people frantically Meanwhile, 150 miles north of/filling their automobile tanks. I Officers rushed into the low |the Nueces River bore down on/areas with bullhorns to warn |Corpus Christi and its suburbs. |residents to get a move on. Many families were loadin ; , 40,000-square|furniture and appliances mile area in towns whipped by | vans and trailers. Urgent calls by from Edinburg to Mercedes. { : tan|/Rio Grande Valley Sunday pick-| Peninsula, 11 in Texas and nine|ing up refugees on both sides of|make a full investigation as to \whether there had been a con- Farther upstream, 11,500 per- |test and whether 'the girl was sons--9,000 of them from thejgiven money. Mexican town of Camargo--|RETURNS GIFT were in shelters at Rio Grande! City, Tex. the river. into| |Levesque, president of the Soci- officials for|/ety of French-Canadian poetry, volunteers to place sandbags|told him the poem had been were issued Sunday in cities) copied from an earlier one enti- jtled Il Etait Une Rose--There Dozens of army trucks loaded| was a Rose, by the French poet with troops and civilian teen-a-|S. Bres. gers moved to the levee banks south of McAllen. Helicopter hummed over the/tury. His administrative record includes work as a senior advis- er to a powerhouse of the Labor! government elected in 1945, the Minnie Mangum, late Herbert Morrison. | Parolee, Dies The 63-year-old critic includes \limited self - government for | England, Scotland and Wales in his list of needed governmental reforms. "His bureaucratic chums will be shocked," says the left - wing Daily Mirror in a massive spread on Nicholson's book. Other papers are more reserved in their appraisals. In echoing the call for high - powered transformation of the civil service, The Mirror argues that "Britain can't expand in a straitjacket." GAVE FALSE ALARM DOUGLAS, Isle of Man (CP) --Worried Manxmen thought a riot was occurring when they heard shouting and swearing coming from inside the island's prisoners' teams. GROW WEEDS The Japanese have cultivated | marine plants for three centu-| and use. concrete, ropes and nets as plant beds. f ries PORTSMOUTH, Va. (AP Miss Minnie M 71, ciation, secretary-treasurer of the now- defunct savings and loan asso-\since returned was found guilty of)/Armand Nadeau. embezzling more than $1,000,000 and sentenced to 20 years in\Sherbrooke La_ Tribune, ? prison. published Saturday, Miss Gen- Charges that co-ordinator centennial events. music and recorded. were|NO CONTEST Mr. Bayeur said he knows of no poetry contest involving Miss Gendron's poem "although we have certainly published it in our little review Nouveau | Depart." He said Mrs. Alice Mr. Miss Grendon However, city of Sherbrooke. In an to the Queen during her July visit to Canada and been set a } Lemieux: | The Bres poem was published in Paris at the turn of the cen- Bayeur said he would) is | | known to have received a small| |gift, a cut glass lamp, from the| She has) it to Mayor | interview with plump and jolly spinster whose million - dollar embezzlement wrecked a Norfolk savings and loan association 12 years ago, died Sunday in hospital. The cause of death was not immediately disclosed. Miss Minnie was rounding out 28 years with the Common- wealth Savings and Loan Asso- ciation in Norfolk when federal bank examiners walked into her office in December, 1955. They accused her of lavishing gifts on friends, relatives and charities with nearly $3,000,000 span of years. Miss Minnie her- self was noted for her modest living. Several months later Miss Minnie, who had been assistant | N SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP)--)dron denied that her poem had The savage Rio Grande, bloat- tell exactly how much water|The tangled fuss over a id 8 plagiarized, tasine that was released by the break. But/sirj's centennial poem has led|many people watched her work A. M. Moore, project engineer/tg an investigation by Quebec's|on it. i B ; jof the International Boundary |co.ordinator of centennial cele- ' Texas cities today with ajand Water Commission, said: | hrations that|"Flooding in low areas will be ; smashed a flood control dam there for days." Tiny Three Rivers, northw of Corpus Christi, remained iso- the flooding of the The newspaper also published |a letter from Miss Gendron in Suzanne Gen-|which she said: est dron's poem, La Rose du Cen-| have had this poem in my pos- |tenaire--the Centenary Rose--|session for a long time and that |was plagiarized and a question | I embellished it for the occa- she| sion." The letter also said she had handwriting. In the interview "It is true I Texas Cities Threatened |Girl's Centennial Poem 'Sparks Inquiry In Quebec dron said she decided to enter the contest after seeing an announcement in a Montrea newspaper. WON FIRST PRIZE |and never had been. Miss Gen- In her She had written to the Quebec City division of the centennial commission and had received a reply from a Mr. Guy Lelievre telling her shé was among the first three in the contest. Later she had received a tele- phone call from Mr. Lelievre telling her she won first prize. Spr Mr. Bayeur has since said Miss Gendron told a reporter} "I did not know of its exist-|there was no Lelievre on the the poem had won her a $250\ence elsewhere," the letter|centenniat commission staff first prize in a centennial poe-| added. | try contest, had been presented interview with La Tribune, Miss Gendron said she went to Quebec City where an "elegantly dressed' man she could not name told her she would get the prize in October. 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