Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 25 Aug 1961, p. 2

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OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, August 25, 196) rer 2 ™ = A tear falls from the eye of Myung Joon Chung, 6, Ko- rean orphan, while aboard plane that brought her to the United States recently. She was homesick for the only home she knew, the orphan- age of Oregon farmer Harry Holt at Seoul, Korea. Holt has moved to Korea to spend all his time working with orphans, most of them fathered by American service men. Law under which they were brought HOMESICK FOR SEOUL to this country has expired. This sad little girl, photo- graphed by Phil Wolcott of Eugene, Ore., Register-Guard who accompanied flight, cheer- ed up on arrival in Portland, | Ore. --(AP Wirephoto) Money Troubles For UBC Students In Water, VANCOUVER (CP)--Many of| academic achievement -- should 22 Hours Murder Charged In 1919 Slaying PEMBROKE (CP) -- Clifford O'Brien, 66, has returned to this Ottawa Valley town where he lived 40 years ago to face a murder charge resulting out of the 1919 death of Michael Legge. He was brought Thursday by police from Sault Ste, Marie to Renfrew County jail. On arrival he was taken before Justice of the Peace Susan Thorpe, and re- manded to Monday for prelim- inary hearing. Legge was found dead on the morning of July 8, 1919 after apparently being crushed under the wheels of a train. Although a coroner's jury ruled at the time that the death was acci- dental, newspaper reports from September of the same year show that two men were charged with murder in the case but the charges were dropped. O'Brien, dressed in a grey suit, shirt and tie, seemed per- fectly calm and under control, allowing photographers to take several shots as he was escorted to the jail. 10-Year-Old Girl . Can't Keep Boat AMHERSTBURG (CP) Ten-year-old Marjie Gwyther's claim to a battered metal boat | she found floating in Lake Erie| Monday has been severed, her| mother said Thursday night. Marjie had claimed salvage rights to the boat after she swam several hundred yards and hauled it to shore. For some time she refused to leave the| {boat even for meals. | Mrs. Gwyther said she and Marijie left the boat on a beach| when they moved from their cot- [tage to their Windsor home {Tuesday night and that instruc-| tions were given to police to let| the boat's owner, Mrs. H. A} Sherman of Detroit, know where| the vessel could be picked up. | Mrs. Sherman said earlier the] boat had been stolen from a dock at her cottage near here. | another name O'Brien was arrested Tuesday in Wawa, Ont.; 100 miles north of Sault Ste. Marie after he went to police voluntarily in connec- tion with the Legge death. He told reporters that he had punched Legge and 'he fell on the railroad tracks." In Pembroke, O'Brien's 61- year - old brother Delmar, dis- counted his brother's account of involvement of Legge's death. He said Clifford was addicted to telling tall tales especially when drinking. Gouzenko Is Sued By Bank For Loans TORONTC (CP) -- Igor Gou- zenko, former clerk in the Sov- iet Embassy in Ottawa who ex- posed a Russian spy ring in 1945, is being suad by the Bank of Montreal, The bank is suing for $1,808.47 in principal and $41.40 in inter- est on six promissory notes given the hank. The bank also seeks other charges and interest on an overdraft, A writ issued Thursday de: scribed Gouzenko as living in York County. Since 1945 he has been living in seclusion, under NOT A DRUNK JUST A KOOK | from {seared and blistered TORONTO (CP) -- Magis- trate Joseph Addison listened incredulously Thursday as po- lice described why Simone Gustin, 29, was in court on | a drunk charge. She was dancing by herself at a downtown intersection at midnight, testified Const. Law- rence Hiles. When a line of cars stopped for a red light, she jumped on the hood of one and refused to get off when it turned green. When he talked to her, she grabbed him and began waltz- ing him arour:d in the middle of the street. At the police station she en- tertained officers by leaping to a table and doing a peek- a-boo dance. Train-Truck Crash Kills 3InFog DETROIT (AP)--Three men died at a fog-shrouded railroad crossing in hearby Taylor Town- ship Thursday when a passenger train tore into a tandem truck, igniting the vehicle's 11,000-gal- lon load of gasoline. The crash, followed by two ex- plosions and a tremendous fire, left two train crew members and the truck driver dead. No passengers were injured, The dead were identified as Edward Rychlinski, 39, the truck driver, and William Du. vall, 69, the train engineer, both of Detroit, and Karl Bushway, 40, of Lincoln Park, Mich., the train fireman, The eight - car Wabash Rail road train, bound here from St. Louis, carried 36 passengers and a crew of baggagemen and mail sorters, The train rolled a half mile before it stoped, its two diesel units in front engulfed in a mass of flames. The force of the impact and the resulting fire peeled the sides of the leading diesel units, Paint on cars six lengths back the diesel units was PRESERVE THEATRE LIVERPOOL, England (CP)-- Art-conscious citizens formed a preservation society when the New Shakespeare Theatre here| was closed two years ago. Now they have obtained agreement| to hold a public inquiry into a move to turn the building into a shop. SWIM COSTUME An English Bay sun-bather couldn't believe his eyes when he saw Mrs. Maria Kalve, 78, frolicking in the offshore surf. Police came running and waved her in. The Estonian- Prevented Cancer In Animals CLEVELAND (AP)--A Cleve- land scientist said night he has developed an im munizing serum that has treated and prevented cancer and leu- kemia in animals. He said he is ready to start making the serum in Jargtt quantities so it can be in about a year to test on human cancers. Dr. Sergio de Varvalho said in an interview he s this same serum may work on a wide variety of tumors. With this serum, he said, he has protected rats with a hi susceptibility to cancer so that no cancer implants take hold in them. He said preliminary indica- tions are encouraging, but it may be several years before conclusive findings can be reached. Dr. de Carvalho said hotses will be used to grow antibodies to fight cancer in humans, He and others working in co-opera- tion with. Parke, Davis and Company scientists in Detroit developed the serum, he said. TOUGH FISH A bullet is the only thing that will penetrate the protective scales and bones of the gar, member of an ancient fish species. Canadian mother of five as- sured them there was no trouble. She always likes to swim in her housedress. ~(CP Wirephoto) INTERPRETING TH E NEWS By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer | Watch for another angry pro-| Breton Youths Quit Hard Life transition from a rural to an in- dustrial economy. The "paysans'" proved hospi- test by the farmers of Brittany table, but bitter. Sipping home- within the next few weeks. Imade cider, a young farmer They are far from happy. The wiped a moist finger on his bare 9 the Helmstadt Gate CLOSES Guianaian Requests U.S. Money GEORGETOWN (Reuters) -- Dr. Cheddi Jagan, premier-des- ignate of British Guiana, called Thursday for "large sums of money" from the United States to aid his left - wing People's Your Booklet No Support ORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. (AP) States Need New French men who squirted liquid man-| pronzed chest and said: bracior borsiadas a ime. "It is time I quit the land the country. springs surprisingly deter. Today is my 25th birthday. I| Dr. Jagan, a 43-year-old dent- Hiined deitionsirations regard| Work 16 hours a day, seven days ist who learned his profession récedt government moves 10> week, and I never have a holi-/in Chicago, was the victor in ee day. {elections Monday to provide the University of British Colum-|be tripled immediately to meet | bia's 12,000 - member student|the need. | ¢ body face a financial squeeze] UBC's major student group, tah wid when th new term opens This he Alma' Mater, Society, hs C1" FES Sat, | fail. For some it may mean wiged the formation of 2 fed- | rhyrsday after he floated and postponing or even giving up|eral-provincial student aid pro. v 1 Mrs. Gustin said she came Progressive. Party in running to Toronto looking for a job as a stripteaser "but no one will hire me because they think I'm a kook." Magistrate Addison ac- "11 Steps to Survival" meet their protests as feeble iui i {swam for about 22 hours in the plans for continuing their edu | Gulf of Mexico without {jacket or other support. Also rescued after six hours land 45 minutes in the water cation. | Those hardest hit are students) who must earn to learn. Be- cause of the tight employment situation it is estimated some gram. Immediate target would be 100 bursaries a year valued at $800 each. life-| Station OTTAWA (CP)--There is an quitted her. "I don't know how anyone could tell whether you were 2,000 students who would ordin- arily earn at least part of their college fees, couldn't find sum- mer jobs this year. The lack of student cash is reflected in a sharp increase in the number of students seeking aid through UBC's student loan fund, which totalled more than 900 loans aggregating $266,338 last year. Students must pay these back, either at the end of the term or following gradua- tion. Dean Geoffrey Andrew, UBC deputy president, says the num- ber of bursaries--awards based on financial need as well as The society also has asked the provincial government to con-|"' : sider a state scholarship plan|Were twa Cn PaO ok ty similar to that operating in Brit- ey y ba oh oT a . ain, involving a means test for| 1c Hallers are HIOLNETS. the families concerned. Rickie a o pJespetatly ion op. | SWiMMIIN, r 3 In 1959 the Provincial BOVEIN:| niles away after their 12-foot Be ey Toor | skiff sank, and how Seals fell A ih {tarther and farther behind. The it first class students with 80|y spare clung together for sup- per cent or better get half their| port Seals said, "I thought I was tuition paid by the government| 65 to 79 per cent, get a third of going to drown anyway and I Rickie | and second-class sudents with their fees. {wished it would hurry up." drunk or sober," he said. Four Children, Father, Dead urgent need for another French| radio station in Montreal, the] |board of Broadcast Governors |was told Thursday. | Mario Verdon, bidding for a radio licence on behalf of a new company which he heads, told a BBG hearing that no new French station has been lic- ensed for Montreal in the last] 15 years despite a tremendous] growth in population. | He said Radio Laval Incor-| porated would present an entir-| lely loca! schedule with and another child were killed in what police called a deliberate traffic crash. | the| t stress on *"'cultural and artistic" | and inadequate. It is areal problem. There is a measure of prosperity in the { "golden belt" of Brittany, the coastal strip of one of France's| most ruggedly picturesque prov-| inces. Fishing, tourists and al sprinkling of industry fill the, pockets of the seaward-looking Bretons. Things are vastly different in look | ward. Breans are suspicious | Youth is leaving in great numbers. Today there are about 250,000 Bretons living in Paris compared with the 150,000 popu- lation in Rennes, the bourgeois capital of Brittany. SOME GO TO US. Every year, some 20,000 Bre- tons forsake their native. prov- ince. One small village, Rou- douallec, is said to have lost COUNCIL BLUFFS, lowa he bleak interior, the heartland about three - quarters of its {(AP) --» Three children Were| of a province that many Freach-| young married people to the found dead in their home Thurs-| men from other areas day shorily after their father|qown upon as vaguely back-|or four years. United States in the last three Farmers list | British Guiana with complete in- {ternal self-government for the first time. many griev-| characters, the visitor is told,| oc It now takes two kilos of | Pilot fish nuzzling him kep RECORD SEASON {him conscious during the night, A record bag of 12,058 moose Seals said. Hope rose and faded was recorded in Ontario in 1960,(as he heard boats passing in compared with 8,925 in 1959. 'the darkness. Sal oo MASE OH 5% fl) . (grams hit a snag during the i (hearing. CKLC-FM now trans- i |experiment might depend larg- . (up with the CBC-FM network] ¥ (line which runs past Kingston, ( 3 i on, Codi y § sa ifak SCATTERED SHOWERS | |Stewart, Police said the children, Mary| programs. {Frances Maguire, 14, and A request from CKLC - FM Kingston, for permission to ex- {periment with separate fre- |quency modulation (FM) pro- 12, appeared gassed. Imits the regular programs of CKLC, a standard radio outlet. NEEDS HOOKUP Robert S. Grant, CKLC-FM president, said success of the the rear of a truck parked off a highway north of here. Inves- tigators found a note in Ma- guire's billfold which indicated the writer was "suffering from pains." | Maguire's widow, Julida, has |going between Toronto and|Peen in & hospital for the past |{Montreal. | week. Ron Fraser, CBC vice-presi-| . {dent, was asked by Dr. Andrew | bac yo; fnarev| Rgree On Laos {whether the Kingston FM hook- | Troop Withdrawal up would be granted. Mr. Fraser said the FM net-| GENEVA (Reuters)--The 14- work is'an experiment at this power Laoiian conference stage and the CBC would not|reached broad agreement likely consider affiliation re-|Thursday on the withdrawal of quests until the future of the foreign troops and military per- network was clear. sonnel from Laos. Dr. Stewart said the board) The conference accepted a does not like to provide a serv-| suggestion by Malcolm MacDon- ice and then take it away. He|ald, British delegate and co- iely on the station's bid to hook asked Mr. Grant if the Kingston | chairman, that all her| brothers, Floyd, 13, and William, SWITCH PAINFUL to have been) The father of the children,|lower part of 5 Wilfred J. Maguire, 32, and an-|visiting farms in the Morbihan| process of '"remembrement," or other son, Danny, 6, were killed|district. This is one of the hard-|redistribution, is going on but it| when Maguire's car rammed|est hit in the province's painful' takes time. four drafts] they cling to the old ways and| they don't like strangers. Early in August, this reporter | toured 'basse Bretagne' -- the the province-- butter to buy a bag of fertiilzer: In other words, costs have risen while prices the farmers re- ceive for their products remain | stable. Farmers are too small {for economic agriculture: A TO COMPL by popular deman MORE DISNEYKINS Available "free" from E.M. 0. BOX 10 OSHAWA AIRPORT The East Indian follower of Cuba's Premier Fidel Castro is awaiting the call from Governor Sir Ralph Grey to form a new government. British Guiana is Britain's only Sotith American colony. Jagan said he would follow a foreign policy of neutralism "as advoraned by Ghana and In- Oshawa's ONLY QUALITY Fur Store AUGUST FUR SALE 75 KING EAST -- Opposite Genosha Hotel d ETE YOUR SET | | AUG bid could be held back pending|on the question--United States, | ~ [the CBC decision on its network. | Soviet, Indian and French--be |Mr. Grant agreed it might be | referred to a drafting commit- | best to wait. |tee. WEATHER FORECAST General Cloudy State Persists Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m. EDT: Synopsis: Extensive fog cov- ers most of the province this morning and will persist until mid-morning. A clearing trend is in sight for the North as cooler air moves in from the west today and Saturday. Gen- erally cloudy conditions are ex- pected to persist into Saturday for southern areas. Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Nia- gara, Lake Ontario, Haliburton, southern Georgian Bay regions, Windsor, London, Toronto, Ha- milton: Extensive fog, clearing this morning. Cloudy with scat- tered showers or thundershow- ers today. Saturday variable cloudiness, little change in tem- perature. winds light. Northern Georgian Bay, Al- goma regions, Sault Ste. Marie, North Bay, Sudbury: Fog Clear- ing this morning. Cloudy with scattered afternoon and evening showers or thundershowers. Sa- turday partly cloudy, winds light, not much change in tem- perature, | White River, Cochrane re {gions: Partly cloudy today with showers or thundershowers. Sa- turday mainly clear, a little cooler. Winds light, becoming northeast 15 to 20 tonight. Marine forecasts valid until 11 a.m. EDT Saturday: Lake Huron, Georgian Bay, HOME APPLIANCES (OSHAWA) LTD. GIGANTIC CLEARANCE Lower Than Discount House Prices Lake Erie, Lake Ontario: Winds south - to southwest 10 to 15 knots. Cloudy with scattered: showers and thunderstorms with extensive fog at night. 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