Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, February 10, 1964 Liberals Facing GOOD EVENING -- By JACKGEARIN -- By-Election Test LOCAL 222 ELECTIONS START WEDNESDAY The stage is all set for those big elections in the political world of Local 222, UAW-CLC this week. "As an indication of the importance of these elections, there were 14,852 paid-up members of Local 222 this month, The Democratic Right-Wing Group swept the seven-man Election committee race last Thursday, which means that. they will be in charge of the Local's election machinery for the next two years. One of the most important elections this week will be for the G.M. Top Shop (Negotiating) committee consisting of a chairman and seven district committeemen -- in addition, there will be the vote to select delegates to the UAW Consti- tutional convention in Atlantic City (15 from GM, two from Duplate, two from Houdaille, and one from the balance of the Local) and delegates to the Canadian Labor Congress con- vention in Montreal (nine from GM, one each from Duplate and Houdaille and one from the balance of the Local). The election will extend from Wednesday to Saturday morning. PC's PLAN PARLIAMENTARY DINNER NOTES FROM THE HUSTINGS: The Ontario Riding (Federal!) Progressive Conservative Association will hold a Parliamentary Dinner in the Ajax Community Hall Saturday, February 29. Special guests for the oc- easion will be Michael Starr, MP, Ontario Riding; the Hon- orable Allister Grosart, the fledgling senator from Pick- ~4 ering; Dr. Matthew Dymond, Provincial Health Minister; and Albert V. Walker, MPP, Oshawa (Provincial) Riding. With all of this political activity out and around the 7 hustings, can a Federal elec- tion be far off? Senator Grosart will have a chance to meet many of his PC friends in the riding where he worked so long and i hard throughout the year to DR. DYMOND advance the cause of the party. Of all the champions of John Diefenbaker, Senator Grosart has been the most successful -- he. will undoubtedly have ome words of wisdom concerning 'The Chief's" recent vic- tory at the national PC convention in Ottawa. FOLK FESTIVAL PLANS ARE ADVANCED There's nothing like being prepared. With this in mind, General Chairman Jan Drygala of the Oshawa Folk Festival and his committee are working hard for this year's big date -- Wednesday, July 1. That's when the Folk Festival will take place in Alex- andra Park from 8 a.m. to midnight, the first time in the four year history of the event that it has been extended all day long. Efforts will be made to obtain additional space for the big show, including the Armories on Simcoe street north. Mr. Drygala said the response thus far from city organiza- tions anxious to participate has been 'most encouraging." LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THE: The Sergeants' Mess of the Ontario aes has two big social events upcoming -- the members will hlay host to the Cobourg Artillery Regiment at a dance next Saturday evening in the Armories. The Klondike Night, February 28, will be a colorful affair with guests attired in the Trail of '98 regalia such as plaid shirts, etc . . . . Andrew Thompson, MPP, Toronto-Dovercourt, who attended the Liberal rally here Saturday holds a BA from Queen's University and a MA (in Social Work) for the University of British Columbia. He is a native of Ireland and a veteran of the Royal Canadian Navy. CITY IS A $244,000,000 BUSINESS "Just as the three departments now under my con- trol are no longer islands by themselves and cannot con- tinue to work independently of each other so also must a new look be taken at all the operations of the City. Can you imagine General Motors having chassis department, a body department, an engine section, an electrical sec- tion, a transmission department and a painting section all working independent of each other -- with the minimum of contact and each doing what it thinks best with no thought of what kind of a Chev or Pontiac is going to come off the assembly line. Mind you each section is hard-working, efficient and doing its best, How would you like the car they would turn out? Well, we have much the same situation today in Oshawa Civic government .. ." KEVIN CAHILL, City Director of Operations to the Osh- awa Chamber of Commerce Civic Affairs committee. Mr. Cahill turned out to be an alert, articulate speaker, with an ingratiating Irish accent (and. a neat turn of phrase punctuated occasionally with Irish wit), He pointed out that the three departments under his juris- diction (Parks and Recreation, Board of Works Yard and Engineering) were once "islands" operating "'by themselves," "The three are no longer islands by themselves and can- not continue to work independently of each other," he said. "With a $244,000,000 business to operate we can't afford the luxury of mistakes nor can we afford the time to remedy them." Mr. Cahill didn't mention it, but because of the archaic municipal set-up in Oshawa, City Hall Department heads sometimes went as long as 12 months without a general con- ference. Creation of the office of Director of Operations was a progressive step forward, and Council should be commended, but it's only an infinitesimal idea of what must be done if our municipal machinery is to be modernized to meet mod- ern demands. CITY REALTORS AT TORONTO CONVENTION One of the veteran Trade Unionists seeking appointment this week as a delegate to the UAW convention in Atlantic City, N.J. and the Canadian Labor Congress in Montreal is John M. Black; former treasurer of Local 222 for seven years ++ « « « More than 40 members of the Oshawa and District Real Estate Board are attending the annual convention of the Ontario Association of Real Estate Boards in the Royal MONTREAL (CP)--Voters go to the polls in two Montreal rid- ings today to elect successors to a pair of former Liberal cab- inet members now retired from the House of Commons. A total of 60,868 are eligible to vote in the predominantly (jFrench + speaking ridings of 'Laurier and St. Denis, both up to now Liberal strongiiolds, Besides showing how Liberal 'months, the byelections could also show whether the stock of Creditiste Leader Real Caouette is going up or down in Quebec as a result of his split with the Soviet Credit party, The two former cabinet mem- bers whose resignations created the vacancies in the ridings are former justice minister Lionel Chevrier, who had sat in the Commons fo" Laurier, and for- mer postmaster-general Azellus Denis, previously the member for St, Denis, Mr, Chevrier left the 265- strength has stood up in recent|8 tical scientist, in St, Denis, and Fernand Leblanc, 46, a chart: ered accountant, in Laurier, Mr, Caouette's son, Gilles, 24, an industrial designer, is the Creditiste candidate in Laurier, and Henri Paquet, 34, an auto parts dealer, in St, Denis, The Creditistes finished see: ond under thy Social Credit ban- ner in both ridings in the fed- eral general election last April But their Quebec strength dropped to 20 from the 26 seats they had won in 1962, and this is their first electoral test since last year's races, The Laurier and St, Denis seats now are the only vacan- cies in the House, Party standings are Liberals 127, Progressive Conservatives 95, New Democratic Party 17, Creditistes 18 and Social Credit 1, Robert Thompson's Social Credit party, from which the Creditistes broke away | last still has seven federal member House last month tojyear, become high commissioner to the United Kingdom while Mr. Denis was appointed to the Sen- ate, 11 SEEK SEATS Six candidates are in the race in St. Denis, five in Laurier. Seeking to hold the two seats minority government haye been Marcel Prud'homme, 29, a poli- Mac Quitting UK. Political Scene Soon mer prime minister Harold Macmillan marktd his 70th for prime minister Pearson's) LONDON (Reuters) -- For-| members from Quebec but did not enter candidates in the cur: rent contests, |. The Conservative candidates are Rodolphe Sauve, 42, a hab- erdasher, in St, Denis and Rene Paquin, 50, a publicist, in Lau- |rler. The NDP has entered Mrs, |Rejeanne Dinelle, 43, a mother of two: and veteran Jabor organ- izer, in St. Denis, and Geard |Picard, 57, the party's Quebec leader, in Laurier, A new group called the Rhino- ceros party also is on the bal- lots in both ridings, with Dr. /Paul- Ferron, 37, a physician, jin St.Denis, and Andre Goulet, /27 a printer, in Laurier, as can- \didates, | Henri-Georges Grenier, 55, a jreal estate broker, is running in |St. Denis for the Human and |Family Party (Prati Humain BEATLE BROWS REHEARSE stage, left to right, they are: Ringo Starr on drums; Paul McCartney, smaker guitar; George Harrison, bass guitar, and Lennon, John Lennon of the Beatles, British performers, appears on television screen as the group rehearsed in New York Sun- day for their act on the Ed INTERPRETING THE NEWS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chen En-lai's seven-week, 10- country African safari scored some gains for Communist macy on the African continent will never be quite the same again, The premier of Communist and aloof way, that his country is on the African scene to etay, to vie with the United States, the Soviet Union and other na- tions for influence on that vast land mass. The main thing about Chou that im African hosts was his dogged determination, To Asians, in the Tokyo view, that Chou wag a pretty smooth salesman for Chinese - African aid and trade, saying in effect: China provides economic aid in China and took some losses but it underlined one thing: Diplo- China served notice, in his stiff sed his) the dominant impression was proceeded through Algeria, Mo- recco, Tunisia, Ghana, Mali, Guinea, Sudan, Ethiopia and Somalia--was a feat of endur- ance, It obviously left the 65- year-old Chinese leader weary, But he still had determina. tion at his final stop, in mon- soon-swept Somalia, to hold a press conference that ran al. most two hours and went on past midnight, though his face he A eg lined and his smile This determination, linked with the Chinese involvement in the Zanzibar revolt, which Chou denied, plus the army mutinies in Kenya, Tanganyika and Uganda, served to make sure Afnicans will from now on take China seriously, These revolts resulted in can: cellations of trips to Kenya and Tanganyika and cost Chou so: cial standing with some African birthday today by announcing) pamilial), m | ina Sullivan television show, On (AP Wirephoto) his impending retirement fro parliamentary politics. Ae Macmillan disclosed he will e e not seek re-election to the House : of Commons in the forthcoming | al Ke | 1c] is : i ree British general election which must: be held by October. The date has not been set yet. The former Conservative party leader resigned the pr- mirship after undergoing a 'Wint prostate gland operation in Oc- tober. He was succeeded by Sir} "y en CANADIAN = Alec Douglas-Home, | Canada's 65-member Olympic In a letter to the chairman|team tied for ninth place with of his local Conservative party|Italy in the 36-country ninth association in nearby Bromley,|Olympic Games ai Innsbruck, Kent, Macmillan said he '"'really| Austria, that ended Sunday. cannot undertake the full duties) Canada won one gold medal of a conscientious member." in the four-man bobsiedding, Another former Conservative|placed fourth in the two-man prime minister, Sir Winston/hobs and took third - place Churchill, 90 next November,|pronze medais in the pairs end said last May he would not seek/women's figure skating, The a in the next general| hockey team wound up fourth. election. | s : He became prime minister|, D&sed on the traditional 10- aftr Sir Anthony Eden's sud: | oa 3:2oL unofficial syste m of 2 elles scoring points for the six first den resignation because of ill r placings in each event, Canada health at the time of the Seuz)):i-, ath & Gaal ar M4 crisis in 1957. up more than half the Cana- idian points--13. Canadians took part in 27 of the 34 championships. Canada Head-On Cra On Hill, 6 Die |: nr compete' nine tree LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Six per-|pionships, the women's single sons, including four members of|juge (toboggan), men's double one family, are dead following|luge and the biathlon, a shoot- a two-car head-on collision onjing and cross-country skiing Highway 81 about 15 miles! competition. northwest of here Saturday. In the 1960 Winter Games at Five of the dead come from) squaw Valley. Calif. Canada nearby Strathroy and the sixth| finished eighth in the team from here. | ; ; Dead are William Greaves, 24; standing with 32. polnts. Thirty leaders, At the same time they showed the unmistakable influ- ence of China, + The revolts contrasted sharply with Chou's peaceful demeanor and served to height: en the air of mystery surround. ing him, On a continent where politics is intensely personal, he Car, Truck Production Still Soars TORONTO (CP)--Voehicle pro- duction in 1964 continues to re- main ahead of the record-set- ting pace of last year, with 72,- the form of interest-free or low: interest loans to help develop- ing nations stando n their own feet--and contribute to peace, In Washington, the first view was that Chou made some head- way in presenting himself to Af- rica as a peace-loving and law- abiding citizen of the world, ready to fight the remnants of colonialism and develop newly independent countries, The early feeling in the U.S, capital, ing full evaluation, was that Chou sought to polish up Communist China's tarnished image but that the over-all im- pact was small, IMPRESSED HOSTS There is scant doubt that he impressed his African hosts, and mystified them, too, That may have been just what he in- tended, The tour--which began before Christmas in Cairo and _--|points. The bobsledders picked Games Medals surgeon, completed the winning|slalom; She was rated eighth in crew, jthe world Alpine combined Vic Emery and Kirby placed| championship, fourth in the two-man bobsled; Peter Duncan of Mont Trem- competition won by Britain's)blant, Que,, was the best. all- |Tony Nash and Robin Dixon in/round Canadian in the men's 4:21.90, The Canadians missed a/Alpine skiing. He paced 19th in third-place bronze by 86-100ths/the slalom, 25th in the giant of a second, They clocked | slalom and Sth in the down 4:23.49, hill, Debbie Wilkes of Unionville,| The International Skiing Fed- Ont,, and Guy Revell of New-jeration rated aim 10th in the market, Ont., placed third injworld combin championship the pairs figure skating with/standing. 5 35.5 ordinals and 98.5 points Other Canadians to finish in The gold. medal-winning Ris-|the first 10 were: Doreen Me- sian pair of Ludmilla Belousova|Cannell of Winnipeg, sighth in and Oleg Protopopov had 13.0/the women's 3,000-metre speed- ordinals and 104.4 points. skating--the best showing of Dutch-born Petra Rurka ofjany of the Canadian speedskat- Toronto captured the other Ca-jers; Don Kmght. of Dunas, nadian medal, finishing third in the women's figure skating with 1,940.0 points, Gold medallist Sjoukje Dijkstra of The Nether- lands scored 2,018.5 points, Canada's hockey team fin: ished with five wins and two losses for 10 points, the same won-lost record as Sweden and Czechoslovakia, But the Cana- dians had a poorer record in the scoring column and were placed fourth. Russia won with a prefect 7-0 record, Sweden was second and Czechoslovakia Ont,, ninth in the men's figure skating; Mrs. Doreen Ryan of Edmonton, 10th in the wonen's 500 . metre speedskating, and Wendy Griner of Toronto, 10th in the women's figure skating Court Quashes. Trading Stamp his brother Donald, 22; Don'ld"s countries were entered, Canada won two gold medals in the pairs figure skating and wom- en's slalom skiing, a silver) medal for second place in the hockey and a bronze medal in the men's figure skating. wife Ann, 18; the Greaves' half- brother, Robert Best, 31; Mrs. Roy Beirnes, 22, who lived with! the Greaves family in Strath- roy; John William Klumpp, 25,| of London. Charges LONDON, Ont, (CP) -- Find. ling that merchandise certifi: cates issued by retail stores ac-/ tually fit the meaning of "goods" as described in the third, B.C, GIRL A STANDOUT In the women's Alpine skiing, Nancy Greene of Rossland, B.C,, was the outstanding Ca- nadian competitor, The 20-year- Police said the two cars, /|RORSLEDDERS WIN driven by Best and Kiumpp,! at Innsbruck, Vie Emery of met head-on on the crest of a Montreal led the Canadian bob- hill. sled foursome to the Olympic and world championship, win- HEAVY FIRE. DAMAGE by more than a second over 16) FLIN FLON, Man, (CP)--jother sleds in four minutes,| Sixty-five fires in this northern|14.46 seconds for four heats.) Manitoba town of 11,000 caused|Peter Kirby of St. Jovite, Que.,| [an estimated $680,362 damage Doug Anakin of Montreal and during - 1963. Vic's brother, John, a Toronto | WEATHER FORECAST Remaining Cold; Mostly Sunny | Forecasts issued by the Tor-;Sault Ste, Marie... | onto weather office at 5:30 a.m |Kapuskasing Synopsis: An area of high) White River pressure drifting slowly east-/Moosonee .... ward across the Great Lakes is! Timmins producing seasonably pieasant Observed Temperatures weather over Ontario. _ |Low overnight, high Sunday Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni-! pawson 3 2 agara, Lake Ontario, Lake Hu-|yjctoria .... ' ron, Haliburton, Georgian Bay, mamonton . Windsor, London, Hamiiton,/Rogina ... oO Toronto: Mainly sunny and cold | Winnipeg .. neleaaae | Tuesday, Winds light. Lakehead .... | Algoma, Timagami, Coch-|White River....... rane, North Bay, Sudbury: In-|Kapuskasing .... creasing cloudiness and notis. § Marie | | | | old Ottawa born secretary|criminal Code, Magistrate Don-| sjj;lald B. Menzies Friday dis-/ ae in Christ Dede gre missed @ trading stamp charge| Pd pi 1 with against the Robert Simpson te Di the gold meda Company Limited. i Miss Greene was 16th in the} Loblaw Groceteria Company jant slalom and 15tn in the|Limited, which has been issuing Simpsons merchandise certifi- George Drew toee Gites Seca: kee eee On 3-Month Holiday Trip charged jointly with the depart- ment store firm with disposing LONDON (CP) George Drew and wife Fiorenza, drove of trading stamps, Although the magistrate cates were legally "goods," he} found the grocery firm guilty of redeeming its own Green Stamps at stores other than the W Store at which they were is- to Southampton today on th@/sued and fined the firm $100 start of a three-month holiday! without costs Later today the Drews were|with disposing of trading to board the liner Oriana for &/ stamps to June Malm, a police. four-day cruise to Naples. They| woman, between Sept. 24 and will return to Canada late in/Qet, 23 last year, May m The test case, possibly appli-| Drew retired as Canadian|cable to all of Canada, hinged! high commissioner in Londoniqn the interpretation of the! NEW SECRETARY Canon Ralph R_ Latimer, rector of the Church of St. James the Apostle in Mont- real, who hes been named General Secretary of the An- giicen Church of Canada's General Synod. 7/916, in January, 1963, the Cana- Fidian Automobile Chamber of 7\Commerce reports }|production of more than 630,000 4\vehicles likely will be surpassed 811 cars and trucks produced last month compared with 58,- Production last month was made up of 62,174 cars and 10,- 637 trucks, compared with 50,- 765 cars and 8,151 trucks a year ago, Industry sources said indica- tions are that last year's record by a wide margin. Car production by company last month, with January, 1963, figures in brackets: American Motors 2,720 (3,303), Chrysler [8,833 (6,568), Ford 16,763 (12, 824), General Motors $3,386 (27.- 78), Studebaker 576 (592). |Volve 197 (no comparable fig- ure), Truck production: Chrysler 1,057 ab). Ford 3,549 (2,241), Genera! ternational Harve jotors 4,785 (4,186). Ins er 1,246 Communist Chinese In African Stakes made almost no outward effort to project himself qs 'a man of the people," The Chinese attitude of aloof: ness and stiffness in meeting the Africans--a warm and ex: iocad Wis tied ot uced the immediate impact of the visit, 'hig Members of Chou's 60«man party were obviously embar- rassed in talking with outsiders, Such stand - offishness rankled friendly Africans, who gener. hae like nothing better than to talk. een ganieangs on mene security dampened receptions almost enrvenean, But in vate, Chou evidently made siderable impact, He had set out, most diplo mats believe, to convince Afri+ cans of his: reasonable nature, They concede that in substan- tial measure he succeeded, He also set out to undermine the United States in particular and Russia to a lesser extent, In this he largely failed, Girl Jealousy Fires Quebec Train Melee QUEBEC (CP) -- Two men fighting over a girl touched off a brawl aboard a special CPR train carrying merrymakers to the Quebec winter carnival Sat- urday, Bottles were thrown and win- dows. smashed at the height of the tussling, and some of the participants suffered minor cuts and bruises, None required hos- pital treatment, CPR officials viewed the dam- Tle tnan eae ate hal "These things are a p> pen on special trains Cooma for the winter carnival or the Grey Cup," 'said investigator Jean- Louls McKay. "Damage was not too exten- sive--about $500 or $600," The investigator said seven eight passengers had been q tioned about the brawl and leased, ' Four of the 14 coaches an train, which brought 1,200 sengers from M 1, damaged, The fight after the train pass vieres, about half-way Montreal and Quebec, pris cone SELL WHEAT TO CHI BUENOS AIRES (Reuti The Argentine ; thursdtase night insuea a deer permitting sale of (1,003), China, Corvair Team Triumphs Rid Refusals Cause College Slump -- Dons TORONTO (CP)-The Ontario beouncil of University Associa- tions has complained to the pro- vincial government that univer- sity standards are declining be- cause the government refuses to provide necessary facilities. Excerpts of the association's brief, submitted without pubii- city in December, were pub- lished Friday. The entire brief was made public Sunday. It claimed Ontario university standards fall far below those of the leading British and United States universities in re- search, libraries and graduate studies, Without research and gradu- ate study facilities, the report said, wnriversities will not be able to attract numbers of top- flight teachers needed. The demand for these teach- ers is world-wide, said the brief, and most will go whre condi. tions are best, Without them, and the physical facilities, it will be impossible to meet the de- mand for another 5,800 univer. sity teachers in Ontario by 1970, The brief also outlines other problems of universitits, It noted that some high school teachers make more mo than university professors a it is not uncommong for 20 fac- ulty members to share a single telephone in a campus corridor. found the merchandise certifi- trip to Italy and Sicily, The two firms were charged) last weekend, |word "goods." | | RUSSIANS BUILD BASE | DAKAR, Senegal (AP)--Pres-| ident Philibert Tsiranana of the} te Malagasy republic says Russia} is building a $60,000,000 military | t base in the Somali Republic, | presumably for Somalia's!}s forces. Tsiranana made the statement in an interview with Definition of Happiness For Sister Susie, happiness moy mean a worm puppy; for Brother Bill, it may pe @ hot. basketball TORONTO (CP) -- Lou La- nde and John Jones of Tor- onto drove their 1064 Corvair over a 1,250-mile course to win the three-day 12th annual Cana. dian Winter Car Rally, The veteran team covered the rally route in 36% hours of driv- ing and arrived at the finish line here Sunday night with only two penalty points, Another Toronto team, Klaus Bartels and Bruce Simpson, driving a Volkswagen, also hit the finish line with two penal- ties and rally judges had to resort to a tie-breaking rule to decide the winner, Lalonde and Jones were two seconds late in reporting to one of about 50 checkpoints in the rally, The Bartel-Simpson team missed a check-point 6! four minutes and was placed in sec- ond spot. Bartels requested a recheck and after the judges met behind closed doors their protest was disallowed, Dick Doyen and Clay Gibbs, both from Wisconsin, were tied at the finish with Jerry Bloom At Winter Rally Finish Officials reported 40 of 141 _ that -- oe here Fri- jay were forced to it of the rally before reaching 'North Bay and a 10-hour compulsory bg Saturday a. eavy snow squalls ha: drivers during the first wi of the rally and probably ac- counted for the dropouts, offi- cials said, Four more cars left the rally on the North Bay-Toronto le Sunday when back roads an logging trails turned to ice, Of ficlals were not sure how m jcars would complete the test, falthough they expected some would finish early today, The only all-girl team, Diana Carter of Toronto and Gilliam Field of Adams, N.Y, in a Volvo, completed the rally to claim the Coupes des Dames division, walter oun ton tie navigators east from through Renfrew Counfy, north to North Bay, then south through Huntsville to Toronto, a LN of Detroit and Harry Ward of Utica, Mich,, both coming in/ with three alties, | The decision went to Doyen) and Gibbs, who reached the second checkpoint right on schedule while Bloom and Ward E EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 Y appointment o F} R. BLACK, O.D. NORTH 136 SIMCOE ST. were four seconds late, Yo CANT SAVING U MISS 3 WITH PSP tors of wheat to Communist ; t between {) Ta |the Dakar newspaper Unite Af- ) .. > jricaine. {Sudbury %... '<s 2 | }Muskoka ... Windsor ... London .,.. Toronto .... |Trenton .. iOttawa .. | Montreal | Quebec ea gome. But for MOTHER AND DAD, who ore looking for a home, nothing can be hop- pier than. finding the right house = © cool shower ofter Ethiopia sent an urgent mes-/ sage to African heads of state =i) "tailored to their needs ---- at terms suited: to their situation If you're looking eround, why not come in and let us put you on the road to happiness! HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST, VOTE miss your savings target with PSP "Over A Quarter Centuiy of Service" the life-insured guaranteed savings plan. | Southeast 15 Tuesday. S ali Tr Forecast Temperatures J ® s Hit Ethiopia |"'the latest in a series of inci-|/London ... . dents which have been. provoked| Kitchener .. following what it called|2.999 Somali troops attack by Somali forces on Ethiopia Friday P York Hotel, Toronto. Oshawa delegates played host to realtors p : from several Ontario points at a coffee party Sunday night, |quile so cold Tuesday, Winds parton Low tonight, high Tuesday to inform them of the border| Windsor 15 clash, which he described as|St. Thomas. ADDIS ABABA (Reutefs) --|PY atmed bands from Somalia." Mount Forest. Ethiopia today declared a state, Information. Minister Blattal Hamilton a of emergency on its border with|Germachu Teklehawariat the Ethiopian frontier post of Tog Wajaleh. support. (The Somali government earl-- He said 20 Somali emergency.) Emperor Haile Selassie of|cent casualty figures. said /St. Catharines. harvadya Serene ith y eter! oroug ™ artillery Retest es soldiers Muskoka ier declared a similar-state of/were killed in the first clash,|North Bay jbut he could not give more re-|Sudbury A. E. JOHNSON 0.D, OPTOMETRIST @ EYES EXAMINED © PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED 14% King St. & 723.2721 n Killaloe .... eens LE arlton oo eseccees 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS - LIMITED 360. KING WEST SCHOFIELD-AKER Get full details from anyone who works at Scotiabank, exclusive with cS, : 4) sANK