Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Ottawa Journal from Ottawa, Ontario, Canada • Page 1

Location:
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 -i-' r-; i i "i '5 i -('j V. 1 t' 0 til 84th Year-181 lprTi SUNNY; 65 and 85 Monday. JU1V 14. nmi i I w. Fhon 7b-bll lir- Hnmn RaIiuai-V- 60e Wnnblu 38 Poflet Trying to Steal Spotlight 11 hi 11 11 1, i 11 11 1111 1 tv 'Mil Bit -1 vi jj in ii i 11 11 a-av 7 nu Couple 1.

I i THE NATION at the Lmeral party's fall convention. much more likely to create the type of we want to avoid than would reopen leadership Mr Wagner said an interview. N. 0 tie Men and the Job j-1 Top picture is tan laiVs dniTjtog of the- astronauts -whose; Apollo II spaceship '-will lift off fixim Cape Kennedy Wednesday morning: Left, to nght Neil. Armstrong, -1 TORCm)WCBXyirul imiA a.1,575-''' loot radio and television brcedcasting: tower m.

downtownl Toronto's WDion-doJlar mle- A spokesman for the' CBC 'said no date has been set' for construction of. the' tower in the Metropolitan Centre area to be devel-4 oped by CN and CP railways. But dty ball sources said construction will start within matter of The. plan -caJl for office- and anartrnent fade centre and transport tatiolt terminal bq. 190 acres, owned by toe two raftways between': Von od Front Streets amf, wGaidliief 1 aecuon or tne ovejojjneiiu- Split WidcKOtoenT QUEBFXjOaude who has cbal- v' Lfteral Party- leader Jean Lesage's Tjositton.

said FridayTthe "fdTrner" premiera for-a vote of confloence by secret bal- kt to confirm his leadership could spnr the Jarty wide open. -Mr-Lesage made the announcement at a ftewe conference when be said he would re ''Sign if he fails to win the vote-of confidence'' 1 French Language Forces C5Jr3EC Defence Minister Leo Cadieux said Sunday that the- traduction of trench-language training program the '-armed forces will allow Frericb-Cariadians to play a full role in Canada's unified Mr. Cadietuc was speaking at military serv- Ices marking the inauguration of a new division responsible for the administration of French-Unguage armed forces schools. The schools would permit not only in-' atroction the servteeman's native language but also allow him to learn in. his own cul-'' ttiral 1 1 -Trieday wasrnarkedby fuUmrUtaiy cere-.

monies highfTghted' by the appearancft of Gcveroor-Generai Roland Mkhener. Michael Collins and Edwin Aldrin. At bot-' tom.1Sj anrartist's conception of two men collecting swf ace samples on the ON A FRIENDLIER SEA To 45 Miles a By THOR BEYERDAHL AT SEA. July ll-lfBy Ra'dio Under fuU sail, hut with her stem bent -down like a floating beach, Ra continues her voyage through a friendlier 1 UVih'afiv faeachJ waves Njxoit'(CaIls "A national awareness of the attack the situation, including new' legislation deal with marihiana, rolling up in a surf. On the starboard side, Ihey are permitted On the Inside to roll unimpeded all the way" forward until they' tumble' over-'" board.

But on the port side. we have built a bulwark of cent-' mic jars and baskets covered by spare sail to prevent the assaulting waves' from reaching as far up as the open cabin door. While, working to fight Jt 4 'i seasl'. we have- to- alter i Oh Drug Abuse: to-keep, atop' th a which rea-" too our daily prpgrts is some- ip 1.. nr Atni iit 'tk minlmnm dent Nixon called today for a splnf on board 7s.

excel-crackdown-, on JrugX abuse lent and the friendship mod co-which he said had reached operation could hot he better proportions of YLa 1 serious had -all seven" come from one national threat" to Americans' family, not to say a singld na health and safety. Our. general direction is lor toe time Being anerw op- gTajrttyjjiCtuationis'f islands of Martinique needed. the chief executive na oarnaaos 01 me isser An- -told congress in a special jnes-U-andhejrern jrrt of 'sase; He outlined 10 steos to the South American The dead, at noon (tocalVtoday on- sun Mines taken yesteTday-, norths' Bi (WrltHiv tmf 1.,. vi LOTS OF FENCES The PM is off on a western fence-mending tour and bell find lots of things Jn need of repair.

Page 7 AXE SWINGING AND LOG ROUJNG--The Hun Raftsmen festival ended Sunday with flying axes' and i many splashes. Page 3' 1 Where to Find It i aw SJ Btrthl, DmHis Kad 1. TV at Violence In Ireland Screaming Mobs Loot and Burn Three Towns From Renters-AP LONDONDERRY (CP Prime Minister James Chichester-Clark called an emergency cabinet meeting of his Protestant-based Unionist government today 'after screaming mobs looted and burned in three Northern Ireland towns Sunday night in the latest outburst of centuries-old religious hatred. Torn to Page S-VIOLKNCE FIRE HOSES USED i lit Riot Averted By MIKE GILLESPIE CARLETON PLACE (Staff)-' Mayor James Arnold Julian Frm AP-Renleri MOSCOW (CP) An unmanned' Soviet spaceship headed for the moon today" amid speculation that its mission is to take some of the spotlight away from Apollo 11, getting samples of the moon's and returning them to earUC. i If all goes normally, he Luna XV.

spaceship should approach the moon Wednesday, at about the time the United States sends" its three astronauts off forflie-r- lunar landing. Vi. The first American to walk on the moon is not scheduled to do. so until early Monday. k' Tass, the Soviet news agency, announced that Lnna XV was "launched to the moon from the orbit of an artificial earth's satellite" at a-m.

Sunday and six hours later was 40,306 miles from the One Western diplomat in Moscow suggested that the Russians Were trying for another space -first the landing on the moon of an unmanned ship which would scoop up some moon sod and return it to earth before U.S. make their landing Sunday. MAY WATCH LANDING If this is not the mission, the diplomat said, Luna XV may orbit close to the moon so that it can observe the U.S. astronauts after their Tass said Luna XV will con- duct further scientific exploration of the moon and space near CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) Launch crews, undismayed by an apparent -Soviet gamble to upstage them, turned on Apollo "ll's vital generators today and rolled toward the start in two days of America's climactic moon expedition, ft Apollo 11 astronauts Neil A. Armstrong Michael Collins and Edwin E.

Aldrin got in some final brush up practice in pacecraft From all. appearances, they are ready to set out at 1.32 a.m. EDT Wednesday on man's- first atteaapt to land on the moon. "Everything is going along beautifully. -a space -agency official reported.

The moonship's fuel cell power generators were activated before dawn and some parts of the countdown were running ahead of schedule. But launch director Rocco A. Petrone warned before, the final 48 hours of the countdown began, "we've got some big steps ahead of us." Spaceflight weathermen e-dicted satisfactory conditions for launch time and the defence department -reported its global force of support personnel was; deploying on schedule. The Firemen onelled hetthv reutas witk fire hundreds fled the snldwav ander a hall ef stents Saturday threatened to read and hrekan glass. the Riot Act and tnrow a curfew over Carte ton Place as; gangs of carnival employees and angry local teenagers threatened to riot at Riverside Park.

The confrontation followed the -finaf night of King's show. small midway carnival which has been operating daring tt town's ISOth annlversar; val. -Trudeau ath rch ill To Mend Fences' CHURCHILL. Man. (CP) Prime Minister Trndeau arrived here Sunday night It was still light at 11 p.m.

CDT to begin a week-long tour of the Prairie provinces. About the first thing he said: "I came to mend fences and I don't see any However, if he had been able to peer more closely he would have seen a small group of persons kept behind a wire fence near the airport hanger. Mr. Trndeau flew to this community, about 808 miles north of Winnipeg, from Montreal, in a transport department Jetslar which couldn't make It all the way to the hanger because of a gravel apron About 108 persons, "many of them sitting in automobiles to get away from the Mackfties, turned out to see Mr. Trndeau but the first persons the Prime Minister chatted with were reporters, mainly from Ottawa.

Prime Minister is staying at the Aurora Borealls hotel, with Motilities stationed at each end of the corridors. Prime Minister Is to visit a rocket launching site today and the harbor front before fly ing to Thompson, about 408 miles north of Winnipeg, to see a nickel mine and smelter and talk with people in the community hatU the moon." No details' were Soviet cosmonaut Gerogy Ber-egovoi said in Helsinki, Finland, Sunday that although he had 'ho details of the flight, he thought Luna XV might land on the moon and probe the consistency of the pocked lunar surface. But he said he did not know If it would bring back moon chunks. Turn to Pag SOVIET I Last Lrucial Tests For The Apollo aircraft carrier Hornet, set to recover the moon voyagers July 24. is now steaming toward its Pacific Ocean splashdown sta- -tkm.

The three astronauts, now in the strict stages of a pre-launch quarantine, plan to brief news media tonight in -a .38 minute press conference carried out via "television "between buildings 28; i miles apart." They wound up their last full day of training Saturday and took Sunday off and went ingv. They plan to rest some more Tuesday and make a final: review of preparations for their $350 million Junar landing .5 Tnra te Page 3 LAST Chinese Resqiri MOSCOW (AP) The. Chinese Communists said they will return to the table with Soviet negotiators today after a walkout of only two days from talks on navigation along their disputed Asian border. After nearly a month of meetings in the Soviet border town of Khabarovsk, on the Amur River, the negotiators reached an impasse last week and the Chinese walked out Saturday. Tass," the Soviet news announced Sunday that the -Chinese delegation had told Jhe Russians that "contrary, to its As a group of about SO carni- statements of July 12.

it has de- val workers faced off with more than 108 taunting Carleton Place area youths, Mayor Julian ordered the crowd to dis- or accept the conse- The mayor said- today If the situation had become any more trious, he would have read the Riot AcL Tnra to Page 8 CARLETON cided to remain in Khabarovsk." Turn to Page 3 CHINESE Quebec Workers Return to Jobs QUEBEC (CP) Some 12.000 construction workers returned to work today in the Quebec Townshins ending a lone. "VIoIeTicetorrrstmci Various locals affiliated with the Confederation of National Trade Unions have voted their approval of an agreement reached by. the CNTU last He came the last mile, in a Thursday settling differences with five employer groups and with the rival, Quebec Federation 'of Labor. v-, Chased Car Buzzed On Road To Petawawa PETAWAWA (Staff) Stffl obviously shaken by his experience, 47-year-old Edgar quette of Petawawa told ers Sunday afternoon he had been chased by an unidentified flying object. 13 hours earlier while driving on the Black Bay Road.

77" His description of a strange white light moving through the" sky between 3 a.m. and 6 a.m-was verified by at least 10 persons including three policemen. OPP constables Jack McKay and Grant Chaplin -arrived at Petawawa at 3.M a.m. to to- vestigate reports that a woman had been terrified by a bright light moving in the sky. Const, McKay said it was not A- This was really bright, mister," he said.

'There wasn't another thing in the sky at the time and it was daylight before "it disappeared." 7 He and Const Chaplin kept the light in view for 38 minutes as it travelled southeast at. a high altitude. Driving to Pembroke, from Petawawa, the policeman lost sight of the UFO when their line of vision was cut by trees, Turn to Page 8 CHASED -s -t mm- LT. BRIAN ALSTON lest Red Knight Killed MOOsk JAW (CP) Lt Brian Alston, 23, the Canadian Forces' youngest Red Knight aerobatics pilot, died Sun-' day night in the flaming crash of a Tudor Jet at CFB Moose Alston, appointed a Red Knight about a month ago, killed while practising for an air show. Witnesses said the sin-.

gle-engined plane, burst into flames impact with a run-way. Cause of the accident was not' immediately known. Bora in Calgary, Alston Is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gavin Alston and brother, Richard, all of Toronto.

The last' accidental death Involving the Forces aerobatics team was that of Captain John A. Reid, an understudy to the Red Knight, who was fatally injured in a crash at Portage la Prairie on May 22, The Red Knight then. Captain ton was scheduled to perform In 35 shows -across Canada this summer. In a recent interview he said he got his kicks from rocketing bis bright red Jet In low. screaming passes, flipping it belly-up and snapping into the clouds, i Why Ga to the Moon? On tk editorial page ioJaf motti biochemist mnd scientist, Isaac Asimov, answers the New- York Times entry "Whf to to the Moonf" with a learned and yet eerie jonrney into the mysteries of space and men's minds.

"By takinf the lonf trip to the moon' he says, "we may be takinf the shortest rente to masking tke riddle of disease 0 avawaaa1TtTyaaThsMaavs.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Ottawa Journal
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Ottawa Journal Archive

Pages Available:
843,608
Years Available:
1885-1980