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Local Highlight DOUBT IS CAST on results in Lisbon school election. See Page 6. ®$U unburn Weather Forecast (lay. High in the upper Hits. VOL. 26, NO. 2377 OGDENSBURG, N. Y., FRIDAY, JULY U . 1967 SINGLE COPY !Uc Strike Threats And Walkouts Widespread By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An Associated Press survey shows that dozens of industries across the nation are contending with strikes, with the rubber industry hardest hit. Strike threats hang over the head of three major industries — railroads, autos and copper — while smaller strikes are in progress involving building con- . tractors,, shipbuilders, garbagt collectors, plumbers and pipefit- ters, electricians, brewery workers, teamsters, smelting workers, bricklayers, textile workers, sugar workers, news- paper workers and hotel and restaurant employes. Many of the 21,000 Goodyear employes began a walkout at midnight, joining 53,000 other United Rubber Workers who have been striking Firestone, B.F, Goodrich and Uniroyal since April 21. Picketing at Goodyear plants in Akron, Ohio, began shortly after midnight. • The first break in the rubber industry tieup came Thursday when negotiators agreed on a contract covering 3,300 General Tire & Rubber Co. employes in Akron, Ohio, and Waco, Tex. They bad been on strike since June 22, In the auto industry bargain- ing began this week and Louis G. Seaton, vice president-per- sonnel for General Motors, said, \some of these things (union demands) are damned expen- sive.\ One big UAW demand, a guaranteed annual income, is expected to spark bitter contro- i versy. Six .shcpcraft unions ThurHay announced to Senate and House conferees that they will strike the nation's railroads at mid- night Saturday if compulsory settlement legislation is passed They promised previously not to strike. Several proposed pieces of legislation ask for compulso- ry settlements. In the copper negotiations, Anaconda Oo. presented its first reply to union demands Thurs- day in Montana. A company official in Butte refused to com- ment on negotiations, which will affect 7,500 members of 33 un- ions in Montana. The contract expires at midnight today, and talks are going on in three west- ern states. In the building trade, an esti- mated $250 million in construc- tion has been halted by strikes in the Lake Charles, La., area, where eight unions struck Asso- ciated General Contractors June 5, putting 5,000 persons out of work. Two unions have settled, but have honored the six strik- ing unions' picket lines. A building trades strike af- fecting Western Pennsylvania, West Virginia and parts of Ohio has affected 25,000 workers and projects worth $1 billion since it began May 31. A building trades strike in the Cincinnati area involved about 10,000 workeis when it began May 31, but con- struction was not halted and all but a few hundred have re- turned to their jobs. Also in Cincinnati, some 1,500 electrical workers at Cincinna' 1 : Gas & Electric Co. have been on strike over wages since May 10, but many of the strikers report- edly have gotten other jobs. Negro Youth Killed In N.J. Rioting Newark, N. J. — (AP) — Negro rioting erupted Into looting and gunfire which fa- tally wounded one boy before a combination of daylight, state police and National Guardsmen halted the vio- lence early today. Calm came with dawn to the slum business district wracked by looters during a night that began with rock throwing and ended with shooting. A 16-year-old Negro boy died in a hospital of a gunshot wound. The violence spread to all parts of the city. I am determined to re- store law and order to every street in Newark,\ said May- or Hugh Addonizio, OLD SWIMMING HOLE at Rochester, \ v has been Lake Ontario But it's loo polluted for swimming this year so I he city i» turning to a SvM.n mobile; '• The port- able pool will be trucked through the inner city, teach- ing as many as 40 children an hour swimming funda- mentals. Below, Mary Jane Ehmann, 18. Melvina Welch, 9, and Paul Briggs, 12, get a pool preview. (NEA Tele- photos) Truce Again Broken; Israel Plans To Tap Egypt's Oil Reserves Surveyor Sends B Perfect Signals Speeds To The U.S. Bombers Raid SAM Sites; Wild Missile Destroys Village By ROBERT TUCKMAN my ground fire and took five j artillerv positions in the ,io th &A1GON (AP) - U.S. pilots|hits before completing the res- ern half of the demilitarized flew :70 missions against North cue. Neither the Vietnamese zone and [roup concenfat on. n V.etnam Thursday, their fourth helicopter crew nor the Amen- the southern half Aerial spo lvghest total of the war, attack- can flier was injured. ters reported \excellent to ti ng missile sites around Hanoi | Destroyers of the U.S. 7th age.\ The Ware was fired on b\ pi» tct offu u and Haiphong, oil storage de- Fleet continued shelling coastal:coastal batteries, but a t S Uackine the mnu<r& pots m the Haiphong area and j defenses in North Vietnam: spokesman said the ship w Thursday. The Morton pounded not hit. mi sirsoTirvivrs \ni pit. ttr !. - PfiAetm. f ' t tl ' r .i neat peiftcl put \nu> l 1 i I lit ii lugged lunai tenain with a ma„t.ei si ovel diid n.\ »1 n t, cin u.i e\c in d stud i) how the .nion ciaut 1 - aic tinned F' en'hm By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tank and artillery fire rattled across the Suez Canal cease-fire line again today, and the Egyp- tians claimed they destroyed an Israeli launch and a number of rubber boats the Israelis were trying to launch in the water- way. The Israeli army reported Atty. Gen. Arthur J. Sillsithat sporadic attacks by Egyp- ordered 300 state policemen to the city. Maj. Gen. James Can'well called oi*i the Ra- tional Guard but he did not say how many troops were in- volved. Addonuio asked for the attempt by the Israelis to cross from the east side of the canal, which has been in Israeli hands since the cease-fire ended the Egyptian - Israeli fighting early in June. Israel said nothing about whether the boat that was hit was trying to cross. The Cairo communique said the Israelis tried to cross in the El Quantara area 27 miles south of Port Said at the can- tian artillery, mortars, tank and machine guns began at sunset !aPs northern entrance. Thursday and continued today',,,.. . , „ ± at points ranging from the' A « *e/tootmg^continued, Lt, southern end of the canal to El' 0 * 1 - odd Bull, the L.N Pates- Qantara, near the northern end. ! tae truce observer, headed The Israelis claimed thev ;fro m Calro l o ™ A ™ to dis- help after he said rovingj knocked out three Egyptian \ c \ss stationing of U.N observ- - • tanks while suffering several' er s atal € the cease-fire line. bands of Negroes spread vio lence and destruction throughout the city \in a de- termined manner.\ Twi direct spurs to the mayor's request were a ma- jor downtown business dis- trict fire which his office said was started by a fire bomb and several gun battles between policemen and roof- top sharpshooters. WALKING TOUR SET BY CON-CON GROUP Albany, N.Y. — (AP) — The Constitution Conven- tion's Committee on Natural Resources and Agriculture will head for the woods Sat- urday for a walking inspec- tion tour of about six miles of the Adirondack Forest Pre- serve near Northville in Ful- ton County. The committee is consider- ing proposals both to loosen and to tighten constitutional provisions on the use of state forest land. casualties to their troops. An Egyptian communique, reporting only one 45-minute exchange of fire this morning, said the Israelis fired first near El Qantara with artillery and machine guns. The communique claimed return Egyptian fire destroyed an Israeli tank. Israel said the firing be- tween Egyptians and Israelis continued all morning with the main action centered later on the southern end of the canal. The Israelis claimed they shelled an Egyptian boat after one of theirs was hit by Egyptian artillery fire. The boats were not officially iden- tified, but they are believed to be either motorboats or land- ing craft. The fighting began with Egyp- tian fiat-trajectory fire aimed at Israeli forces, Israel said. Later the Egyptians brought tanks and artillery into play and later mortars joined in. Cairo said this was the first Damage To Expo Sculpture Cause For Grave Concern Bull met Wednesday with Isra- eli army officials in Tel Aviv and Thursday with the Egyp- tions in Cairo, Meanwhile, Israel turned an- other screw on Egypt's stran- gling economy, announcing it Communist army barracks Navy fliers reported one SAM missile fired at them went wild and hit a village 12 miles south- west of Haiphong. They said the village went up in flames. Viet Cong guerrillas overran a coastal hamlet 3-12 miles north- east of Saigon today, inflicting heavy casualties on the 25 mili- tiamen defending the village, wounding six Vietnamese civil- ians and kidnaping 11, a Viet- namese spokesman reported. Six of ihe raiders were killed in the attack on Guan Co, on the South China Sea. Little other ground action was reported. Twenty-four Ameri- cans were wounded in two mor- tar attacks Thursday night 25 miles northwest and 35 miles southeast of Saigon. South Viet- namese military headquarters said the Viet Cong peppered four scattered Vietnamese in- fantry positions with light mor- tar shelling early today, causing light casualties to the troops and wounding 10 civilians in one attack. Britain May Accept U.S. Offer Of Military Planes After French Say 'Non' nok= 11 il ^ond iffi cd a f ,. for seuial hum The spacecraft is gi\ t - just Rieat Sur Flignt coiholleis \ > -1 U i ] f said ton > ppul on tne iroon only j 2U miles '\outhi est nf if\ t^iget zone— 'craft tn ad)tist dIJtdI C til t it on a pe'fect By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER AP Special Correspondent WASHINGTON (API - Ti United States is standing by, jdue though as silently as possible, to days help the hard-pressed British government pick up the pieces of its shattered warplane deal with France — if the British want U.S. help. Dennis Healey. Debate on a mo- tion of censure against the gov eminent over the plane issue i< Parliament One outcome of the still devel- oping political-military crisis centered in London could be heavy new British purchases of the U.S.-built supersonic fighter bomber, the Fill. This political storm in Britain appears the main reason why U.S. officials prefer net lo dis- cuss the matter. Privately, authorities here concede they are deeply con- j cerned with the crisis and prepared to do what they can. In Britain government critics have warned against any solu- tion which would mean more SUvCJLU 1 S^llaOlb SUL.tt.SS fully locked onto the sun. The sun and star Canopus, later in e is | the flight, are to orient the few j craft during its 63-hour, 224,- 30-mile voyage to the moon. The robol prospector blast- ed off at 7:53 a.m. (EDT) to- day aboard a fiery Atlas-Cen- taur rocket, aiming to soft landing Sunday at 10:30 p.m. on rough Sinus Medii, the central bay region, almost squarely in the center of the moon's visible face as it is seen from earth. profits flowing from Britain to But U.S. officials understand [U.S. corporations. Britain's Labor government j The problem suddenly devel- A U.S. spokesman reported no I may prefer eventually a Euro- oped last week when\ Healey planes lost during the raids on pean solution to its problem of!announced to Parliament that North Vietnam Thursday and providing a suitable very high [France decided to withdraw said no Communist MIG inter-(speed tactical strike-reconnais-from a year-old agreement for sance plane for the mid-1970s, [joint development of a British- Central to the military and | French swing-wing plane serv- economic issues involved, in- ing a number of military pur-| 0 f Surveyor's three-foot pads. eluding the future impact on poses — a European counter-; \ Britain's aircraft industry, is an part of the Fill, One major con- •' If fragments stick to the mag- immediate political crisis which sideration, experts here noted, net - if would lend support to a has jeopardized seriously the; was to keep aircraft industries ! theory that the moon's craters ceptors were sighted. In South Vietnam, however, a U.S. Air Force propeller-driven Skyraider was shot down near Khe Sanh in the northwest corner of the country near Laos It was the 193rd U.S. combat plane reported lost in South Vietnam. The pilot whose plane was hit will tap the Egyptian oil wells in, whik h e was makin a ^mb the Sinai desert which yield j baile d ou t He was picked nearly 5 million tons a year. | up by a ^m Vietnamese heli- Finance Minister Pinhas Sa-j copter which flew through ene- pir said Thursday the Egyptian oil will be used to meet Israel's domestic requirement of 3 mil- Iron tons annually. He did not say whether the Israelis plan to export the balance. The Haifa refineries are re- ported to have completed tests for refining the Sinai oil. The wells were operated by the Egyptian government and ENI, the Italian oil monopoly, until Israeli troops seized the field at Belagm in the June war. Presidents Gamal Abdel Nas- ser of Egypt, Noureddin Atassi of Syria, Abdel Rahman Aref of Iraq and Houari Boumedienne of Algeria—the most radical chiefs of state of the Arab world continued a meeting in Cairo in an effort to reach agreement. ^ Cigarette Stocks In Confusion New York — (AP) — The stock market advanced in active trading early Friday. Some of the cigarette stocks were delayed in open- ing following the confusion of statements about the in- troduction of a new, sup- posedly safer filter. Liggett & Myers was changed In addition to taking thou- sands of pictures at the site with its television camera, the 2,290-pound moon robot was equipped with an extendible claw-like shovel to test the soil's strength and deposit fragments from the lunar surface near a small magnet attached to one position of Defense Minister busy in the two countries. West Virginia Baptists Prepare A Bear Feast By JIM HOWARD enough culinary advice in the MORGANTOWN, W. Va. (AP) [past ten days to provide a dif- — Riddle: what do you soak inherent-tasting bear-feast for sev- brine, mixed spices, lemon juice jeral anniversaries. and vinegar 24 hours, then baste j .„, , . . . , . in buckwheat honey and black-! ' W e were buried with bear ben-v wine and roast for nearlv!^ cli f S ' Smd th e GV Mr ' ' ;Gluck. By BILL BANTEY Montreal — No matter where immediate responsibility lies, what has been happening to sculpture at Expo in recent days reflects poorly on too many people. The situation came to a head with the toppling at the Olym- pic House lot of a sculpture that the Finns consider some thing of a national monument— the 1,400-pound bronze statue of runner Paavo Nurbmi It has provoked the strongest language yet used against Expo — publicly, at any rate — by any of the participants and there is undoubtedly regret on both sides that these charges have had to explode. The truth of the matter is that the angry protests of the people affected by the latest in- cident serve to spotlight other recent instances of vandalism involving important sculpture- instances where there was lit- tle publicity because the own- ers chose not to engage in re- criminations. Two Other Pieces Damaged As recently as Monday and had withdrawn its Homme Cac- tus No. 1 by Julio Gonzalez from Expo's international exhibition of contemporary sculpture be- cause of damage. The work by the pioneer of welded sculpture was the first to be acquired by a public in- stitution in Canada and had been taken out of Expo's show, Director David G. Carter ex- plained, because it had \sus- tained loss of a part from caus- es still to be determined.\ The very next day, it became known that a sculpture created for Africa Place by one of that continent's foremost artists, Papa Ibra Tall, was damaged badly in front of the pavilion of Senegal. As in the case of the Zonzalez, on a joint future policy toward Israel. Informed sources believe the four socialist chiefs, who depend volved with either the Gonzalez on the Soviet Union for econom- or the Finnish sculpture since'ic and military aid. are consid- both are of bronze. A wilful'ering proclaiming a federation; destructive act appears far! Nasser, whose forces were more likely if not, indeed, the! shattered in the conflict, is be- only possible hypothesis. jlieved balking at pressure from There is no question here of • Boumedienne and Atassi for a trying to blame Expo. ! renewal of the fighting. „ . . . In the case of the Finnish! At U.N. headquarters in New \\j\\{\ /YCCldeilt work, loaned by the City fo Hel-JYork, the Soviet Union is mak- sinki, Expo has said surveil-'ing another attempt to get Latin lance of the premises is con-'American support for a rcsolu- tractually the responsibility of lion in the General Assembly Olympic\House. That may well that would call for withdrawal of Israeli troops from Arab ter- ritory. City Recreation Dances To Start Saturday, Aug. 5 Tuesday this newspaper carried! why air y civilized person would brief stories about damage toi lean against a scultpre defies two other pieces of sculpture. ; imagination. The first revealed that the[ It is hard to believe, how Monlreal Museum of Fine Artsiever, that an accident was in be. Presumably, the same po- sition would be advanced in connection with the Papa Ibra Tall sculpture. Expo's Responsibility The Gonzalez is something else. The international sculpture exhibition in which it had been there were no bitter words. A;shown is an Expo undertaking pavilion spokesman said only-and, as such, surveillance 1 The Saturday night Block that a large number of persons should have been Expo's pre-' Dan ces will stan on Saturday, had had (heir pictures taken \ occupation. .„i August 5. They will be held a, ng against the In the final analysis, it will| in th o n . lcl nn tho r . enr0( 1 Ha l be the insurers more than any- one else who will want to re- solve the riddle of direct re- sponsibility. Here, the concern is that this; Recreation dances will be vandalism is occurring withheld only at times when there Fatal To Boy Champlain, N. Y. - (AP) - Dennis N. Babbie, 13, of the hamlet of Perry's Mill, west of this northeastern New York vil- lage, was killed Thursday when a revolver a friend was examin- ing discharged accidentally, Stale Police said. Babbie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Babbie, was struck in the right chest bv a .22-caliber bullet. were formed by the impact of I iron-bearing meteors rather 'than volcanic action. The two-inch-iong magnet, ! a bonus experiment being ! flown for the first time on any ' U.S. moonship, could attract i ierrous objects ihe size of a : paper clip, officials said. . Some scientists estimate : that as much as 10 percent of the lunar surface may consist , of iron-bearing meteoric dust. \The little magnet may elim- iinatc some scientific concepts'' five hours? .uiuc*. i about the makeup of the lunar Answer: black bear. ' And he's gotten a kick out of [surface, said Benjamin Mil- There are many other ways of] reading them. Nearly all the h'itsky, surveyor program man- preparing West Virginia's state ' recipes included instructions forjager for NASA headquarters in animal for a feast. The Rev. Joe [marinating, or pickling the bear j Washington, DC. Gluck, part-time pastor of the-meat. But the duration of the ,T cau tioned however that 192-year-old Fork-of-Cheat Bap-'soaking varied from two weeks, |he exDerimen ^ s resu i ts w fu tist Church near Stewartstown, j to as little as 25 minutes. n be J oncIusiv e because ^ mag . six miles north of here, can ver-1 The ^.^^ ai th e pjcklin g netica% attractive metals oth- iry that. \ an ^ basting juices were differ-jer than iron could also stick to ent in most of the recipes. One 'the magnet, wag advised: baste for another, _, five hours, throw out the meatj fh e mooncraf s extendible and serve the juice.\ SC00 P ,'f a twi \ o f l ' l e on e suc ; [cessrully used on Surveyor 3. k said those'That craft soft-landed last April . who had tasted bear meat say j 19 on the moon's Ocean of But the congregation had to]either, \Tt's horrible,\ or it's!Storms and used its shovel to advertise for a recipe to renew \ the best wild game ever put on J find out that the lunar surface the church's traditional anniver- a table.\ There apparently lis strong enough to support an sary bear feast. aren't many \micldlc-of-the-' \pollo spaceship and a walk- Tile church probably collected road\ bear eaters ! ing astionaut When he and his congregation Lorillard off about of 60 asked for \the makin's\ of I a bear feast to celebrate the General Electric rose 3. 192nd anniversary' of their TJMC corp, advanced about 2.khurch next Sunday, they were Gains of around a point or quickly assured they could have The Rev, Mr. C better were made by J. I. a 275-pound sow bruin '-'•- v —• '~- i ~ 1 Case, Raytheon, U.S. Smelt- ing and E. W. Bliss. Down about a point were Du Pont and New York Central. Sunbeam opened on 25,000 shares, unchanged at 53. next to, or leaning against sculpture K 1 perhaps someone had leaned too hard. It Defies Imagination It may well be that the dam- age to the Papa Ibra Tall sculp- ture was accidental, though in the past on the George Hall parking lot. Dancing will be from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. Dress will be summer attire. GRAIN SLIDE BURIES AN ONEONTA MAN Schenevns, N. V. — (AP) - Harry R, Sinninger, 53, of One- onta, was killed Thursday when he was buried under several tons of grain in a mixing bin at a feed mill in this village near alarming frequency and neither|is not a teenage dance beingjOneonta. Expo nor the public can be es- ! sponsored by some other or-, Sinninger was attempting to pecially proud of its individual !ganization. On July 22 the Ski dislodge grain that had stuck or collective record. [Club will hold a dance al Moris- in the chub> a! the top of Ihe <From Montreal Gazette) ! sotte Park. 'bin, when he slipped and fell. TEARFUL TALE FROM CONGO — Mrs. Mertens breaks into tears at Brussels air- port in Relgium as she tells how she saw her father shot down by Congolese sold- iers in her garden in Bukavu, the Congo. Mrs. Merten's husband, left, escaped with her. They wete jniong ihe lust gioup of Europeans to return from the Congo, where government forces have been bat- tling mercenaries. CAP Wirephoto via cable from Brussels)