Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Feb 1964, p. 2

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QZ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridsy; Fodrwary 7, 1954 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN -- ACCIDENTS COST $150,000,000 ANNUALLY Did you know that 785 boys and girls graduated from the Pro Drivers training course offered by the Ontario Safety League in 1963? The Pro Drivers Club, the newest and most effective driver training program de- veloped outside the sphere of the High Schools, has risen to new heights in the eyes of Toronto Metro resi- dents, The course consists of 25 hours' classroom instruc- tion, 10 hours behind. the wheel and 18 hours of ob- servation time. High School teachers conduct the class- room portion with co-ordin- ated - behind the-wheel-work handled by graduates of the League's Commercial Driv- ing Instruction Course, The above information is at ae . ae 3 MUMMY NEARL at the age of 10 or 12. Work- e) FIN Y 18 CENTURIES OLD ; \capital of Rwanda, before army " perts said the mummy was | ling. The Watutsi raiders, many officer, took a number of pris- joners and advanced about 60 lretreat, the spokesman said, bows and arrows and a few rif- Rwanda Troops! INTERPRETING THE NEWS Repulse 3000 Angry Watutsi KIGALE, Rwanda (AP) Rwanda troops have repulsed $,000 Watutsi warriors who at-| tacked from The Congo to avenge the. massacre of thous- ands of their tribesmen in an ancient blood feud with the Ba- hutus, A government spokesman said Thursday Belgian - offi- cered army units, equipped with machine-guns, mortars and au- tomatic rifles, drove the Wat- uts! forces back across the Ruz- izi River into the former Bel- gian Congo after heavy fight- seven feet tall, killed a customs miles to the outskirts of Kigale, troops finally threw them into Informants said 300 of the Watutsis, armed with spears, es, may have been killed in the hate W. E. AUSTIN contained in the 50th, annual report of the Ontario Safety League, president of which is Mr. William E, Austin of Osh- awa (who is assistant to Mr, E. H, Walker, president of Gen- eral Motors of Canada.) - Accidents in Ontario are costing more than $150,000,000 annually. The OSL knows there are tried and successful methods of reducing accidental deaths and injuries, but to do this requires the strong financial support of the whole com- munity. WRITING TEXTBOOKS A "GOLD MINE"? Who are the highest paid writers of history? Investigator holds necklace on mummy found at the edge of Rome and said by experts Thursday to be the body of a girl who died 1,800 years ago men found a pink marble sar- cophagus while excavating for a new apartment house and called archeologists. Ex- | | | | 'wonderfully preserved"', One, Dr, Catia Caprino, said it was the only known mummy from Separatism Echo Of Past, Says Power Corp. President l the ancient Roman civiliza- |jatest mass attack seeking re- tion, \venge for the massacre ae . hutus of a reported 20,000 Wat- --(AP_ Wirephoto via cable | utsis in Rwanda in the last two from Rome) /months. eae Thousands of the Watutsi, for- mer overlords in Rwanda, fled into"The Congo and other neigh- boring countries in 1960 and 1961 after the Bahutus over- threw them, The shorter Bahu- tus make up about 80 per cent) of Rwanda's 3,000,000 popula-| tion. Watutsi raids from. their No New For U.S. By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer The front line of U.S, foreign policy appears to be sagging in many parts of the world, But though Uncle Sam's popularity apparently is taking a beating, thete is no indication that any major policy revision ts likely in .this presidential election year, President Johnson, whose main interest in the past has been domestic politics rather than foreign affairs, is facing Republican charges that he lacks leadership qualities, These charges come at a time when the Communists and na- tionalists ar° stirring up new American campaigns, while some of the Allies, such as France, are falling away from adherence to Western .sol- idarity, Johnson is trying to show a position of strength without causing @ major upset in the slender peace between the N egroes Irked By CNR Policy On Promotions MONTREAL (CP)--A spokes- man for Negro employees of Makeup Face |Western world and the Soviet bloc, The result has been, in some cases, a standsifli in U.S. foreign policy; creating cavu- ums which critics of Uncle Sam tend to exploit, This period of trying to hold the policy line through local patchwork rather than major new installations {is likely to continue until the November elections are over, ATTACK VITRIOLIC At this time, there isn't much the U.S. ts likely to do to coun- ter Red Ohina's exploitation of anti - American sentiment in East Africa, Nor is there much hope that the U.S, can restore good relations with Ghana where a vitriolic campaign against the Americans followed a reported assassination at- tempt against President Kwame Nkrumah, - Even in Cyprus, where Amer- fea's allies are directly in- volved, the most outspoken. sen- timent is voiced against the U.S., when all the U.S, tried to do is support Britain's proposal for a North Atlantic peace- keeping operation on that race- torn island, Thus, Johnson has been warned by some political advisers to keep clear of the Cyprus maelstrom, The lesson that may be ex- tracted from all the outburst, from South Viet Nam to Pan- ama and Cuba, is that there Are they the fiction men like Hemingway, Steinbeck and camps in The Congo's KivUlthe CNR said Thursday the pub- after are a growing number of coun- Fitzgerald, the ad-writers from Madison Avenue (some of whom have received as much as $2,000 per word)? Or are they among that prolific author-illustrator group that churns out the current crop of beautifully illustrated, tiny-vocabulary books for the very young -- Grade 1 stu- dents to be exact -- not on the curriculum but, nevertheless, recommended by Educationists as auxiliary reading? Have you seen them? They're small (7 by 5 inches) with no more than 50 to 60 pages, with prices that seem astrono- mical, keeping in mind that they are designed, written to atimulate interest in reading, for beginners. Some of the titles (with prices bracketed) are: "Are You My Mother?" ($2.49) by P, D. Eastman, author of "Mr, McGoo"', and "Gerald McBoing Boing" with a 110-word vocabulary; "Put Me In The Zoo" ($2.40) by Robert Lop- shire, 100-word vocabulary; Dr. Seuss"s "A, B, C" ($2.49) composed of a 26-letter range to help children enjoy the sound of words; "The Cat In The Hat" ($2.49) by Dr. Seuss with 220-word vocabulary; '"'Green Eggs and Ham" ($2.49) by Dr. Seuss with 50-word vocabulary; and "Go, Dog, Go" ($2.49) by Dr. Seuss with 70-word vocabulary. In fairness to the TORONTO (CP) -- Business-|without the 'honesty that char- man Peter N, Thomson of Mont-\acterized the soul-searching of real said Thursday Canada|French settlers in the early needs a revised constitution 'to|days." save Confederation, At the same! He said the early French set- time he criticized French-speak- f'ers largely ignored industry ing Canadians for blaming theirjand agriculture 'with the re- English - speaking counterparts |sult that eventually the English for many of their problems, colonies outgrew New France in Mr, Thomson, president of|population, wealth, trade and Power Corporation, told a meet-/command of the sea." ing of the Empire Club of Can-| The traditions of French-Can- ada that' more and more) aqa's classical colleges also pre- French-Canadians believe their|yenteq students from playing a future lies, not in separatism, /fyy) part in the scientific, en- fo in a "revised ~ Canadian: gineering and business develop- This should occur within a) ments of thelr province, new constitution 'that will give, OPPORTUNITIES PRESENT the French-Canadian the realiz-/always been present in Quebec ation that he has the right to/for both races, That the French- stand equally beside the mil-|Canadian prepared himself for lions of other. Canadians of/politics, the professions andt he many origins who accept Can-| priesthood in preference to com- ada as their own country," {merce and industry was of his dians who belong to 'the colon-,U.S, Congress or Senate though ial school of thought," jit shares in defence and other | province began shortly Christmas. In reprisal Bahutus "They believe that all Que- bec has to do to regain its feet is to: free itself from the 'col- onialism' of the English regime, However honestly held, this view is fallacious, for French- Canadian colonialism is a state of mind, and not a reality." He said separatists are un- realistic in their stand on bilin- gualism, Even if all English- Canadians learned speak French, what about 180,- to the Canadians had to trade? "Guarantees of the right to their own language in all French-Canadian institutions of learning, government and law \have, in fact, contributed to the ivory economic dependency they Jare now bemoaning, for it is 000,000. Americans with whom) activities, Mr, Gregoire reiterated de- mands made recently by the Creditistes that more constitu- cong powers be granted Que- ac, Prayed For Those He Beat To Death bodies later and burn them in cremation ovens or open pits. Bednarek said a "horrible stench" of burning bodies hung over Auschwitz but was always "worst when the gassing com- mandos came back from work." |slaughtered thousands of Watu- \tsis still living in Rwanda and this massacre brought on the largest Watutsi attack yet in he undeclared war beween the ri- val tribes, FRANKFURT, West Germany Reuters)--A defendant in the trial here of 22 officials of the Nazi Auschwitz concentration camp denied Thursday he used to pray beside the bodies of persons he beat to death, be- licly-owned railway is failing to carry out an agreement that) would give them a chance to) earn promotion, D, E. Fenton, chairman of the grievance committee, Montreal Local 128 of the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Trans- port and General Workers (CLC), said such an agreement was reached at a meeting last year under the auspices of the federal labor department and was to have been implemented last Nov. 1. The agreement was to elim- inate a traditional division of sleeping and dining car em- ployees into two grou 1 comprising conductors, stew 2 comprising porters, Pp ards, cooks and waiters, Group He said in a statement that, by an "unwritten law," Negroes can apply for jobs only in Group tries which the U.S, does not trust and which do not trust the U.S, American largesse, in the form of large-scale foreign ald, may in the past have tended to muffle this inner opposition to. American policy, Now, with the knowledge that U.S, ald is be- ing reduced, these countries may feel they have nothing to lose in expressing thelr long- held sentiments, Mets toe prepentaranty 6? spite the p rance nuclear strength in American: arsenals, the U.S. may have to lean heavier on her remainin friends for diplomatic suppo? in this sensitive presidential election year. For example, in the wake of the French break with U.S, pol- icy on Red China, Johnson may |through their language that they|fore going on to kill more. German historians were to seek more support from Can- above authors, they also did the illustrations, Perhaps the above are not classified as text-books but they did recall a recent headline in The Oshawa Times (Janu- ary 31, 1964): "Writing Textbooks Termed 'Gold Mine'"' -- underneath Cultural Affairs Minister Lapalme of the Province of Quebec was quoted as saying a Royal Commission report on book publishing indicated a few people in Quebec had "a gold mine" going for them in textbook sales. Education is expensive for most people said, but a " mine for a few. Why is & necessary to charge $2.49 retail for an illus- tated 60-page child's book with a 75-word vocabulary? ithe French-Canadian feels that/arena later than his jhe has been treated like an in-/-noaking contemporaries, no English Canadians "must/own choosing, take a share of the blame if} "J¢ he entered the business English- ferior citizen." one is to blame but those who "Whether by accident or de-|nornetuated the parochial edu- sign many of us have made NO) cation system that failed to pre effort to speak French in cen-|nare him for a role in busi tres Radar French yt _ Pre-| ness. : dominant language, thereby im- "The French-Canadian is a parthig Ta ma of English product of his own system--of SUpSTIORIy, a system which he himself has SENTIMENT GROWS controlled from the beginning Mr. Thomson. said there is a/and to which the English-speak- "growing sentiment among the|ing Quebecker has had little or OSHAWA'S BUS DEFICIT $49,978 IN '63 Telking about annual deficits for City-owned bus opera- tions, did you see Kingston's (anticipated) for 1964? It will Mkely hit the $150,000 mark -- it was $105,000 last \that separatists and their supporters|"0 say whatever," anything that is wrong) Mr. Thomson said that to ar- with Quebec must be the fault'sue French-Canadians were de- of the English, . . . Inied business opportunities was |separated themselves from the |main stream of progress and \development in North America. "T am not arguing that" it jshould have been otherwise, | |merely point out that exclusive development in French 'has been a greater inhibiting factor than any other." MONTREAL (CP) Gilles Gregoire, parliamentary leader of Le Ralliement des Credi- tistes, said Thursday Quebec jshould withdraw its members from the federal Parliament af- iter the province has. won what he called "complete legislative, lexecutive and judicial powers," "Other prisoners who were |there, too, can tell you this was jnot so," "mil Bednarek, 57, told the judge questioning him. Bednarek and Gerhard Neu- bert, 55, were the last two de- ifendants to appear before the begin telling the court today about terrorism in the Third Reich, The court will not be in ses- sion next week because the courtroom, in Fransfurt's city hall, is needed for carnival \Group 1, motional and classification sen jcourt in preliminary question-| week festivities. jority structure." 2 and there is no passage to A CNR spokesman said the railway is prepared to amalga- mate the two groups but wants it done in such a way as to maintain 'the recognized pro- ada, Britain, West Germany and Australia, Prime Minister Lester B, Pearson has years of experience in foreign diplo- macy and Canada's name car- ries a great deal of prestige and goodwill in many of the world's capitals, jing. Bednarek was a trusty in the Birkenau compound at Ausch- witz, a prisoner given broad authority to command and pun- ish other prisoners, Neubert was a Nazi male nurse at Auschwitz from 1943 until the Russians swept over the camp in 1945, All the defendants in the trial "T suggest to you that the sep-|,, | titha| |aratists are wrong, that the fault|mvrtag 'Frenchcanadians who| jlies as much in themselves aS\j,ave contributed to the grand- In anything the English have! eyr of this country and of their| jdone or have not done with re-| nrovince." , | |spect to French-Canadians, . . .| | "We find in separatism an|HITS COLONIAL SCHOOL echo from Quebec's past, but' He criticized French + Cana- | WEATHER FORECAST : Turning Colder With More Snow 32 year. Oshawa's 1963 bus operation deficit was $49,978. We sin- cerely hope that Chairman Ed. Armstrong and his colleagues on the PUC will not use this as an excuse for buying more of those super de-luxe Diesel usbes. Kingston has a population of: 48,300 -- Oshawa's 5,500, Kingston has no Sunday bus service at present -- Oshawa has a skeleton service Sunday on Simcoe street every hour from 9 a.m. to midnight, but no other service is provided. Oshawa also has the most courteous bus drivers in Ontario despite what some cranks might say. Hospitals Must Report Deaths TORONTO (CP) -- Attorney-jof political interference in his Forecasts issued by the Tor- Sault Ste. Marie.. onto weather office at 5:30 a.m.) Kapuskasing Synopsis: Cold air, which/Earlton ...... moved into Northern Ontario|North Bay,...... jwill spread into southern On-|Sudbury (Motor Co. of Canada Ltd. had Mr. Gregoire told a group of cheering University of Mont- real students that Quebec's sta- tus relative to Canada could be similar to that of Puerto Rico relative to the United States. "If we pay no moret axes to Ottawa, that means we don't need to send MPs to Ottawa/to select prisoners to be killed any more," he 'aid, lwith gas, He said only the He said Puerto Rico has no|camp doctor selected persons voting representatives in the|for execution. re ee ----~! He also said if he had known prisoners were being brought to Ford Shows -- {issttsattiny Save raul $9 Million Profit Dip to carry out my duty," OAKVILLE (CP)--The are accused of mass murder in an undetermined number of cases. Some 4,000,000 persons \died at Auschwitz, most of them | Jews. ACCUSED OF HELPING Neubert is accused of helping Bednarek is accused of mur- der and torture. He denied the charges, but described some of the things that went on. at Auschwitz, He said his block in the Bir- 'ore F 1 kenau compound was near one General Fred Cass said Thurs-|department. W. B. Common, the day hospitals have not been fol-/deputy attorney - general, has lowing the letter of the law injsuggested abolishing the chief jtario today accompanied by|Muskoka ... jlight snowfalls and considerable, Windsor ., snowsquall activity in the lee|LOndon ...eseseees a $9,600,000 drop in 'net profit for 1963 despite a sales increase of $118,400,000, the compeny an- occuped by Jews whose job it was to lead victims naked to the gas chambers, remove the AM ea ULE Did" CMM, CE: LLM supplying coroners with infor-|coroner's job. mation on deaths. Mr, Cass said conflict had! Lake St. Clair, southern Lake|Trenton He told a press conferencejarisen between Dr. Shulman|Huron, Lake Erie, Windsor,} hospitals should report all casesjand the attorney-general's de-|London: Variable cloudiness of unusual deaths to a coroner|partment on a lower level than | and colder with snowflurries DEATHS and let him decide whether or that hed = gory Mr, Cass|Saturday clearing during not an inquest is necessary.|said he himself had 'no axe to/afternoon, Winds west 15 Satur-| By nC , This was not being done, grind" with Dr. Shulman, day. By THE CANADIAN PRESS The matter was brought up| The difficulty was, he said,) Niagara, Lake Ontario, in reference to the case uncov-|that while Dr, Shulman was ex-|burton, Northern Georgian Bay,} ered by Dr. Morton Shulman,jercising what he understood|Toronto, Sudbury: Beconiing! chief coroner of Metropolitaniwere his duties, Mr. Common/colder with snowflurries tonight Toronto, of a surgical instru-|had told him that under the lawjand Saturday, Winds. 20 Satur. : ment being left in a woman's/he did not have the right to do day. Halifax--Dr, Jane 1. Bell, body after an operation everything he wanted to do. Northern Lake Huron, Al-\94, one of the first women to The woman, Patricia Morgan, DIDN'T ACCEPT goma, southern Georgian sera eo . on eee in the 32, died 18 days later in East) Dr, Shulman, however, had Heavy drifting, Cloudy with) United States who er General Hospital, However, the|not accepted that opinion, Mr,|SnoWflurries and colder Satur.| 10 and practiond in Heme hospital did not report the un-|Cass hoped these differences "x; Winds west 20 Saturday. |f@x | usual circumstances of the/could be resolved without the) p; eth | Cochrane, White) London--Mrs. Jenny Crosse,| death, including the fact that/need of legislation, This appar:| iver: Variable cloudiness and/46, wife of Patrick Crosse, a/ the woman's physician was in- ently was a reference to legis- wd tonight and Saturday./deputy. general manager of terrupted mid-way in the oper-jlation to abolish the chief cor- inds light Saturday, Reuters news agency, and who, ation. oner's office. : Observed Temperatures as Jenny Nicholson, was a well-| When Dr. Shulman brought it} Mr. Cass said Dr, Shulman Low overnight, high Thursday |known journalist and author; | to the attention of Mr. Cass, an|deserved credit for bringing} Dawson 3 19 jafter a short illness. inquest was ordered into the)Some things into the public Vancouver ....... 28 45 | - oe death. Date for the hearing has|view. But he just couldn't/ Victoria 34 not yet been set. jchange the coroners' system|Edmonton . overnight. \Calgary .... 30 WANTS REPORTS lof the lakes. Toronto ... nounced Tuesday. Ford, Canada's second larg- est auto manufacturer after) General Motors Corp, of Can-| ada, had net profit for the year| ended Dec. 31, 1963, of $23,400, 000 or $14.14 a share compared with $33,000,000 or $19.91 a share in 1962. 778,400,009 com- pared with $655,000,000, President Karl FE, Scott) blamed the profit drop on lower Asstralian sales and 'a combin- ation of manufacturing cost pen- alties incurred in meeting un- precedented demand = for the company's products." ANNUAL MEETING of the GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST! HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS MU=24N roa @ i Toronto -- Hali- Ian Thompson "S| Strachan 65, a former Liberal) party whip under the late pre-| jmier Mitchell Hepburn of On-| se eeeenens -- -- NEED... FUEL OIL? Call PERRY 30 BSc "Some of the things Dr. Shul-| Saskatoon , 10 Mr, Cass said in his. opinion\man proposes are entirely|Regina any similar cases should be re-jagainst opinions and views of| Winnipeg . ported by hospital officials to/the medical profession," he said|Lakehead .. the coroner. "That's what the/without elaboration. White River Day or Night 723.3443 law says now, but it's not been Pia Cans eld he thought Dr.| SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Shulman had overstepped his Industrial and bounds. Commercial He said his study of the case makes it absolutely clear to'him The established, reliable Gas Decler in your eres. that Dr. Shulman tried to do 31 CELINA ST. things he has no authority to do (Corner of Athel) The attorney-general said he would discuss the hospital situ- ation with Dr. Shulman when the latter returns from a two- week vacation. OIL PAINTING SALE By well known European Artists On display at GENOSHA HOTEL -- OSHAWA FEBRUARY 7th & 8th 12 noon until 10:00 P.M. Room 205 ALSO PRINTS -- WHOLESALE under the laws governing in- 728-9441 The two men met recently to discuss Dr. Shulman's charges) @ Business Sess Public Cordially quests. t l Wednesday, Feb. 19th | ADELAIDE HOUSE ion 7:30 p.m, @ Invited to Attend * H. E. PIERSON, President

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