Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 Oct 1964, p. 2

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ORT RR aN RT ee meen mm @ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, October 3, 1964 Seda aig at aan GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN -- ARMORED CORPS COMMANDERS HOLD PARLEY "Lt.-Col, Jaties R. Warnica, officer commanding of the. Ontario Regiment, is at Camp Borden this weekend attending Ebay a conference of Canadian Ar- mored Corps 'commanders. ... MEMO TO RESIDENTS OF FAIRPORT AREA, PICKERING TOWNSHIP: the Hon. Charles Mills Dru- ry, Minister of Defence In- dustry in Ottawa, clarified the following point this week for Michsél Starr, MP, On- ) tario riding -- the Ontario } Hydro Electrie Power Com- ) mission has fot yet submit- ted the site of the proposed new $288,000,000 atomic energy plant near Toronto to the Atomic Energy Crown & Corporation for formal ap- 5 rimary respon- SRASteS DAUR tote ie ante we sate belong to the Ontario Commission. Its choice is subject to ap- proval by Atomic Energy of Canada Limited. Fairport, has heen reported previously as the site, but this has not been confirmed as yet. T. D. AND CHRISTINE TO SHOW SLIDES NOTES FROM THE HUSTINGS: The NDP (Provincial) Association of Oshawa riding has invited the public to a s6cial evening in the Piccadilly Room of the Hotel (enosha, Sunday, October 18. Prime purpose of the. get-together will be to see colored still slides of South Africa taken by T. D. 'Tommy' Thomas and his wife, Christine, on their recent 4%-month trip in South Africa. The Thomases had a unique close-up of the Dark Conti- fient, including a visit to a native Township (Soweto, outside Johannesburgn) with a population of more than 500,000, They Visited North and South Rhodesia, German West Africa and Portuguese East Africa. _ "The tension and unrest there was most evident," said "Tommy" Thomas Friday. SPEAKING OF DEBENTURE ISSUES VISITORS-IN-OUR-TOWN DEPT.: -- Arthur J. Reaumé, that colorful Liberal member of the Légisiature from Essex North, was at City Hall Thursday. His firm (Arthur J. Reaume Investments Ltd., Windsor) was an tnsuccéssful bidder for a new City debenture issue of/ $1,088,500 -- he was acting as agent for the Canadian UAW. Reaume has been a member of the Legislature since 1941. He was mayor of Windsor from 1940 to 1954. LOCAL AUTONOMY CARRIES RESPONSIBILITIES Premier John Robarts was in angry mood Tuesday at London, Ont. He bluntly warned Ontario municipalities that Queen's Park would "intrude further' upon their autonomy if they did not adhere to sound community planning in future. Such warning was long overdue from the office of the Premier, (and his predecessor, Mr. Frost), and it should not be confined to the field of community planing alone. Municipalities should be 'reminded in no uncertain terms that local autonomy carries with it grave responsibilities, and that serious abuse of it will tiot be tolérated at the Proviacial level. As one overburdened taxpayer put it so succinetly re- cently: "It's all well and good for councils and school boards around the Province to shriek: 'If this sort of thinking doesn't stop we're going to-lose our autonomy'. But what about the poor taxpayer? 'If the abuse of municipal autonomy con- tinues, he is going to lose his home, There is too much need- less waste, overspending, duplication of services. Why should any municipality, as an example, have three purchas- ing departments when one would suffice?" A little more of this strong talk from Mr. Robarts could do a lot of good. CITY MOTORISTS SET RECORDS, WRONG KIND Sgt. Norman Smythe of the traffic division of the City Police Department predicted today that Oshawa motorists would be breaking some new records this year, but they will be the wrong kind. AS an example: Traffic charges for moving violations (which frequently lead to accidents) totalled 5,131 for the period, January 1 to Sept. 30, 1964, as compared with 4,288 for the same period jast year. Such totals are. exclusive of parking tickets, ¢riv- ing licence violations, etc. wae eae Speeding is the most pre- OR Re A ae ' INTERPRETING THE NEWS By ROD CURRIE it's hard to imagine anything more complicated than the Northern Ireland. Even the British people are + | dering 'who's who in the criss- cross of party lines drawn acrese the tiny country that New Irish 'Troubles' Leave Britain Dazed Canadian Press Staff. Writer | the official opposition but since | vilians were injured may seem | | term the "partition game of politics as played in| and do not recognize the au- | speaker recognizes left shaking their heads, won-| Sl say the Youramen Labor hardin Ireland, | party with nine members, would form| which 14 policemen and 16 ci- they refuse to accept what thev| somewhat unreasonable. But of Ireland) memories of the figh a persecution that set Unionist against Nationalist, Protestant against Roman Catholic and the orange against the green die as opposition leader, | Some political observers pre- Riots developed when Home dict that, barring an unforeséen thority of the House, they re- to f sag in this capacity. In- | fuse | stead HILDA POSES THREAT borders the Irish Republic but is constitutionally part of the United Kingdom. Bloody riots in Belfast in re- cent days have drawn attention to the situation--and added to the confusion since the Irish disturbances, rarely makes any commoiion in Northern Ireland except at the time of British elections, Otherwise, the banner of Ul- stermen who demand that Northetn Ireland renounce its Republican party, centre of the} | Affairs Minister Brian McCon- 'nell ordered police removal of |a tri-color flag of thé Republic \of Ireland from the window of the Republican héadquarters. Even beforé that, the campaign was building up as one of the | most vigorous in Britain. | A record 38 candidates have | announced they will contest the | 12 seats, including full slates by |the Unionists and Republicans. The latter party elso contested all seats in 1959, 'hen under the banner of Sinn Fein -- "Our- selves Alone," the battle cry upset, 11 and possibly all 12 constituencies will remain Un- man will tell you, their prob- lems "are not political, they are | religious," and even a hational | swing in political opinion may not upset the religious bias that favors the Unionists, who are mainly Protestants. ~ When the six countries were separated from the 26 of the Republic, the population in the north was madé up mainly of descendants of earlier Protest- ant Scottish and English setti- ionist. But as almost any Irish-| With 130-mile-an-hour winds was about 225 miles south- in the conter, hurricane Hilda is bearing down on the Loui- | Siana coast from which more | than 125,000 persons had fled. The massive storm, bigger than all New England, is ad- vancing six miles an hour and shifting course toward the east slightly. At nightfall it west of New Orleans, Black area indicates hurricane warn- ing area, Gale warnings ex- tend from Texas to Mobile, Ala. Hilda has gale force winds extending 200 miles to north and east and 100 miles | north and east and 106 miles to southwest. --(AP Wirephoto Map) main body of opposition in the | Northern Ireland parliament. \always been the same. BECAME A PROVINCE Union Seeks For Strike At Hospital SARNIA (CP)--John Askin, president and business manager |of Local 220, Building Service Employee's International Un- {ion (CLC), said Friday the lo- cal will seék sanction from the international exécutive to take Hospital. The local represents 175 em- ployees in the categories of |nursing assistants, housekeep- ing, dietary, orderlies and maintenance. Mr. Askin said the action was decided following a breakdown in negotiations with the hospital management committee over a/ new contract. The local rejected) an arbitration board recommen-| dation on wage and contract is-| sues a week ago and voted 90 per cent in favor of strike ac-| j tion. strike action at Sarnia General; with the Conseérvatives, Approval | 1921. The six counties have be- come the equivalent of a Cana- |dian province. In the last British Parliament jall 12 Irish members were Un- | He said a telegram is being} ionists, elected in 1959 with ma- prepared by the union commit-|jorities ranging from almost|something the West has often|the Russians, probably because teé to be sent to, International) 9,00? to a massive 50,734. President David Sullivan in Chi- cago a strike. Hospital | mittee members said Friday) they had t to. make! NE B f pag peligro 1 md ee S The hp pha onal g art o e recommended increases 'our For 67 Fair . . Competition management com-)~ Up cénts an hour for female em- ployees and five cents an hour for men in the first year of a/ two-year contract and similar| increases in the second year,| said Mr. Askin. Hospital officials said the un- ion originally asked for jin-|faced with fonmidable competi- creases of 15 cents for women|tion in 1967 from the Montreal workers and 25 cents for mén.|wortd's fair, announced plans They said most women workers| Friday to beef up Toronto's an- in the union now earn $1.34 an hour and men $1.50. centennial year. ties with Westminster and join heard during the violént 1920s ers, ' with the republic in a united) when the now outlawéd Irish) Ireland is carried by the less| Republican Army was at its northern 1,500,000 population| boisterous Nationalist party, the height. But no matter how rough. the; ,70 the outsider, police seizure/ the Republicans and other par-| game is played, the winner has|%! the flag and the riots in| ties. | The Unionist party, affiliated | ' has) been ii power ever since North-| ern Ireland was established in| At home the Unionists tiave impress at least some uncom-|have known only the Western seeking authorization for, 34 of ite 52 seats in the Irish|mitted nations Parliament. The Nationalists,|that the Soviet Union is a colo- : aaa --------jinial power. | | TORONTO (CP) -- The Ca-jnally published, : : nadian National Exhibition,| monly blunt. It tauntéd the Chi-|of its campaign, informed ob- | | nual August fair im Canada's|the world." | Hiram McCallum, general|and Soviet Press, Mao not only Even today, two-thirds of aré Protestants, They, in al gen-| eral, pport ists) while Catholics the Uni s Jean towards STRONG MEMORIES Peking Colonialism Rap Upstages Western Effort By JOHN BEST | The West has never had miuch| MOSCOW (CP) -- China may|sticcess in trying to bend eolo- be in the process of achieving|Mialism charges back agaifist tried to do with little success--|Africans and Asians generally charges|brand of colonialism. | But since China itself used to} be under foreign damination| There are indications that|and can therefore identify with Mao /Tse-tung struck a raw|the ' anti-colonial revolution, its nerve in the Kremlin when he|shafts may prove acutely em- told a group of Japanese Social-|barrassing to the Soviet Union ists in Peking several weeks|in Africa and Asia, not to men- ago: "There ate too many|tion the unsettling effect they places occtipied by the Soviet|may produce in Eastern Eur- Union," ee | Ope. Moscow's response, when fi-| Without knowing how far the was uncom-|Chinese will go with this facet with here say it has the nese leaders for "great-power|Servers for a lot of mischief- chauvinism and hegemonism'"|Potential and warned against any at-|making. tempt '"'to recarve the map of| Moscow {tself has _ displayed) }some nervousness over the pos-| sibility of Peking. going on with! its attacks. ' } As quoted in the Japanese | WEATHER FORECAST Sunny, Cloudy Periods | Seasonable Temperature Forecasts issued by the Tor-|day cloudy with sunny periods, onto weather office at 5:30 a.m.|little change in temperature. Synopsis: Gusty winds owen oie southwest 20 to 30 today | cooler air across Ontario Fri-|northwest 20 Sunday. day evening touching off thun-| Cochrane Timagami, south- derstorms in many localities./omn White' River, western Skies gradually cleared and) james Bay regions: Mainly winds dropped off during the|gioudy with occasional showers jnight. Another rapidly moving |togay and Sunday. Cool. Winds |storm was crossing southern | northwest 20 except light to- |Manitoba this morning and will | night. jbegin spreading cloud across \eentral and northern areas dur-| TORONTO (CP) -- Marine ing the day. Considerable cloud-| forecasts issued by the weather iness is expected to linger Sun-|office at 8:15 a.m., valid until day in the wake of the storm,|11 a.m. Sunday: but there should be some sun-| Jake Superior: Winds south- shine during the day. west 30 to 3% knots a gd Lake St. Clair, Lake Enie,/northwest by evening and - |Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On-| coming -- " to BeBe: | \tariom, southern Georgian Bay Sunday; cloudy; a few wers, regions, Windsor, London, Ham-| [ake Huron, Georgian Bay: rng Toronto: Rags with a) Winds southwest 20 og -- ew choudy Ss and season-| increasing to 25 to 35 this after- able fomporemures today, Vari- pea poy shifting to northwest able cloudiness tonight and Sun-| 95 to 35 early Sunday; clear be- day. Winds hight increasing to|}coming cloudy tonight, |southwest 20 this afternoon and) fake Brie: Winds southwest shifting to northwest Sunday 99 to 39 knots shifting to north- manager of the exhibition for|laid claim to more than 500,000 12 years, has been appointed|square miles of Soviet Asia, he morning. west eatly Sunday; mainly managing director of The CNE 1967 Centennial Exhibition, the board of directors announced. L. C. Powell, assistant general manager since 1963, takes over as genenal manager. For 1967, the directors said, i'tmany special features are to be arranged" and Mr. McCai- lum will be required to travel widely in preparing the show. The. board also announced that between $8,000 and $10,000 has been earmarked for an en- gineering survey to determine the feasibility of enlarging CNE facilities, inchxling . extending the stedium to seat 45,000 in- stead of the present 33,000. | Jack Arthur's contract as executive producer of the CNE)| \grandstand show has been éx- tended for another year. thoes should be returned by the! lalso dabbled in territorial mat- ters that don't affect China directly but do affect the Krem- "Only those who find it profit- able for some reasons to sow distrust and animosity between the peoples of socialist coun- tries can act in such a man- lin's relations with its European neighbors. "They have appropriated part of Romania; Mao declared. ner," said the Soviet reply. "It is\ precisely with this aim that Mao Tse-tung is trying to fabricate the so-called territor- "Having separated part of Eastlial issues between a number of Germany, they expelled the/socialist countries. But these local inhabitants to the western|attempts are doomed to failure part. Having séparated part of|in advance... ." Poland, they included it into Russia, giving Poland in com- pensation part of East Ger- many. The same happened in Finland. They have separated anything that could be separ-| Strike Over Pay | nted."" : | KINGSTON (CP)--About 300] RETURN KURILS \uenat Anema ee He also declared the Kuril Is-| (CLC), gti pny spite ae Gu Aluminium Company of Canada) __|plant Friday after contract ne- 300 Machinists Soviet: Union to Japan, Cuban Exiles Plotting Third Invasion Bid | SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP);Guard halted the second try} Cuban exile|July 11, stopping Ray's boat in| {Manuel Ray leader, is pldnning a third at-|the Florida Keys. to enter Cuba--but with \tempt fee |less reliance on Florida as a|DELAYED BY FAILURE censre of operations. |gotiations broke down. jnational Teamsters Union Members of Locai 91, Inter-| fee) EXPLOSIVE Firemen place hose inside the gas tank of a burning automobile in downtown Ed- monton after the car burned in an elevated parking lot. Cause of the fire, which oc- SITUATION curred Thursday afternoon, was not immediately known. Smoke damage was caused to two nearby vehicles, (--CP Wirephote) MINISTER: Married. "Can Be OTTAWA (CP) Camleton University's student paper, in| an imterview with Rey. Gerald) Paul, the university's interde- nominational chaplain, quotes him as saying that "the condi- tions of Christian love can in practice never be met by pre- marital sexual intercourse." "By Christian love I mean what Jesus Christ stiys to me from the cross, namely giving up of selfish interests in order to contribute to the growth in value of the other person." The imterview was published as as attempt to clarify the United Church minister's arti- cle on sex relations, which caused a storm of controversy early this week. The article "lacked clarity and was too condensed," Mr, Paul said. Its 'closing para- graphs made it very clear that pre-marital sex relations are} wrong." | "Some people are moving | away from absolutes to a rela-| tive ethic. This means if you! like it you do it. Sex Wrong' "The relative ethic in grand- father's day was supported by fear of infection, conception, aipilii, 3 server. for hust."' YOUR FREE BLANKET is ot Nuway Rrg Cleaners PHONE US 728-4681 |(ind.) waid they would not cross | \the picket lines. But officials of Local 343 of the United Steel- workers of America (CLC), rep-| resenting other plant workers, said they, would honor their con-| a tract signed earlier this year) jand report for work as usual.| | Negotiations between the jcompany and machinists began| "After those two failures,"|in February but broke down valent offence with 3,946 charges this year until the end of September as com- pared with 3,296 charges for be he ' j,|"ay said, "we decided to post-\when the panties were Algoma, northern Georgian|clear becoming partly cloudy! 'I do plan to go to Cuba this| one for a very short while fur- Pega ey pee bg é 1B é a Oe, Ry said ina inter: i ty enter Se pe SRE ; Hatiburton;--Kilietoe;--North tonight: F The & hase. id attempts "to enter --C mands for higher wages. Bay, Sudbury: Sunny and) jake Ontario: Southwest 0 to| View ae Ms home here. Me Salt aid to study carefully how to) | his presence in Cuba is neces-|svoiq future failure." | A plant spokesman said the| cooler today . with increasing! 39 today increasing to 25 to 35 ie at | ctoudiness. Mainly cloudy with! jhic evening and shifting to @"Y to "'crystalize" the under-| One result, Ray said, was the|plant, which employs about) the same period last year. Sgt. Smythe added that etraffic and speeding charges this year would set an all- time high mark. "The public apathy in most of these cases' is a shocking thing," he con- tinued. 'Every day these of- fences and violations are costing more and more mon- ey and endangering lives, It is costing more in the way of highway insurance, more police protection and money SGT. SMYTHE spent on car repairs." Worst offenders for moving violations are the 18-25 age group. The City has done little in the past 12 months in the way @ supplying more equipment for the traffic division to enforce the law -- in a municipality such as this with a population @f 67,000, only four motorcycles are available for traffic, one more than last year, and two radar sets. The Police depart- ment has seven cruisers but they are for genera} duty Some observers of the City's disturbing traffic scene are Of the opinion that the courts are far too lenient -- they feel ¥ there should be more maximum sentences for flagrant viola- tions. There never seems to be a maximum term for careless driving these days, although there are some for lesser of- fences. This observation has nothing to do with the City's atroe- fous traffic safety record, but more and more High School students: are driving cars. "These children drive cars as good or better than do the teachers," said one parent the other day. "Why I counted more than 150 cars alone in the yard of ohe Oshawa high athool recently -- not more than 50 belonged to teachers and other salaried personnel." A a few showers tonight. Cloudy northwest Sunday morning; iwith sunny periods Sunday.| mainly clear today, partly | Winds southwest 20 to 30 today! cloudy tonight. ivhifting to northwest Sunday ' Northern White River region: | Forecast Temperatures: Sunny becoming echoudy with @ - Low tonight, high Sunday: .. few showers this aflemoon. Sun-| windsoy : 55 St. Thomas. London ... | Kitchener ...+ Twenty-Three Back On Job Mount Forest GUELPH (CP) -- Twenty. Hamilton .... \three women employees of eg | aa jenal Controls Company (Cana- |dian) Limited, who waiked oft Feterborough their jobs in protest against working conditions earlier in ithe day, réturned to work Fri- er Z |day afternoon. Peed | Charles Pinson, area SupeT-| Marlton ......++6 « visor of the United Steelworkers | gay Ste. Marie ... 42 lot America (CLC), which rep-| Kapuskasing ...... 98 resents the women, said the white River ...... 38 grievances have been cleared) Moosonee .. up but would not elaborate on Timmins . ii the cause of the walkout by) ee members of union Local 6340, | NEED A NEW... + The company manufactures OIL FURNACE? | automatic pressure, témpera-| Call ture level and flow controts, PERRY 723-3443 | | SESSESE - a |CONSUMED WITH INTEREST DARTMOUTH, N.S. (CP)--A mobile incinerator said to be lable to consume within an hour |the garbage from 100 homes has | |been demonstrated here, Fired) by proparie gas, the incinerator | |operates at 2,000 degrees and }can handle refuse, cans and bot- tles, Officials of the firm man- vfacturing the device say it will Day or night COSENS & MARTIN Insurance 67 King St, E., Oshawe 728-7515 All Lines ef Insurance Res: 728-2809 or 728-7412 i ground operations of his anti-/ diversification - of - bases pro-|2,000 workers, would not close. | \Castro organization, the Revol-| uwiionary Junta (Jure). | Ray has spent most of his'pases would be used to supply| jtime since mid-July travelling|(he underground. | jin the Caribbean, He said, he is) -While the 38 - year - old Ray| finding new bases from which (rayels, he leaves his wife and Jure can operate with greater tive children here. jefficiency. Ray, a civil engineer, served | "We have placed too much re-|jas Fidel Castre's public works | liance on Florida in the past,"|minister until he broke with the| |Ray said. 'It wasn't possible to| Cuban prime minister in late |do anything and keep it secret.' 1959. | | Both Ray's earlier attempts) He has been a controversial ito teach Cuba originated in/exile leader since. His views on Florida, Both were made|social reform had led his critics |aboard fast motor launches. Alto say he is an advocate of gram, He would not give de- |tails, except to say that the|planned for the ear future. | No further negotiations were Spaciousness and privacy is yours PAUL RISTOW LTD. REALTOR : 728-9474 187 King St. Eost 9 BAGOT STREET } REAL VALUE $18,450.00 home, Immediate possession, This imposing two storey home meets all the requirements of the larger family, The kitchen with its large eatirig area and abundance of cupboards --+ @ dining room adequate for the whole family and guests -- 4 bright bedrooms -- 2 baths and on attached garage. See us NOW! At ORCHARD VIEW and SOMMERVILLE. OPEN HOUSE 2 - 5 P.M. H. MILLEN REAL ESTATE LTD. in this surprisingly economical 728-1679 |British destroyer's crew caught |"Fidelismo without Fidel." His| |Ray's firet party June 1 on a/supporters say he has moderate | tiny Bahamas key 30 miles | political beliefs and therefore | north of Cuba. The U.S. Coast/enjoys popular support in Cuba. | Course In Advanced Welding Sponsored by the Advisory Vocetionel Committee of the Oshawe Board of Education, in cooperetion with the Eutectic . Welding Institute of Canade, Mon., Oct. 5, through Fri., Oct. 9, 1964 @ AFTERNOON COURSE United: Auto Workers Hall 44 Bond St. East, Oshawa, Ontarie e@ EVENING COURSE R. S. McLaughlin Vocational & Collegiate Institute a Stevenson Road North, Oshawa, Onterio APPLY AT ABOVE LOCATIONS -- NO CHARGE i 1 ibe pr soon. SAVE WITH DX FUEL OIL CALL US NOW AND SEE HOW MUCH YOU CAN SAVE ON YOUR FUEL BILL THIS WINTER : Dial 668-334] @ PREMIUM QUALITY FUEL Ol! @ OIL BURNER SERVICE DEPARTMENT @ AUTOMATIC DELIVERY

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